Good Bye Jack

August 23rd, 2011 Thomasso

I am taking some time out from my busy schedule to write this post becuase I think this is very important, not only to myself, but to the rest of Canada. We lost a great man yesterday, one that I think we will never see the likes again.

I have two reasons for writing this tribute to Jack Layton. First, he was an inspiration to me. I share many of the principles and values that he does, and as such, I followed him him for many years. Second, He was a real person. I have met Stephen Harper, and I found him too sanitised and unapproachable, where as Jack was warm and inviting during the 2011 election when he was in Surrey, British Columbia. Steven Harper had his guards and secret police keeping the voters at bay, while Jack Layton actually left his safe zone and went straight into the crowds to touch their hands after his speech. “A phoney leader versus a real man,” I heard a voter say that day – I agree.

Jack Layton was also a man who spoke clearly and never changed his message. His clarity, in my opinion, was his best quality above all. His message was clear, and he stuck to his guns, never letting down what he stood for.

In Toronto, where he lived, there will be a state funeral in his honour this coming Saturday, August 27, 2011. A fitting tribute to a great man. I will take the time to watch it on television. This will be part of Canadian history, the end of an era, I want to be there to see it.

Even my hard-core, almost “fascist” right-wing friends are in full recognition of Jack Layton’s greatness becuase they knew him as “Jack,” their adversary.  He was “Jack” in their eyes. They had spent so much time bastardising him that when they heard of is passing, they too stopped in silence. Perhaps for one single moment all political stripes joined in thought and prayer at his passing?

Mr. Jack Layton, your legacy will continue, and as we head into the future, and so too will your vision, the idea, and belief that all Canadians deserve an honest government, and that all Canadians are part of Canada, not the ones that can afford it. Thank you for all the work that you have done to this great country of ours. Thank you for your time, your hard work, the vision, and your giving. You will be missed greatly – good bye.

Please click here to read Jack Layton’s letter to Canada, August 20, 2011: http://www.ndp.ca/letter-to-canadians-from-jack-layton

Posted in Events, General | 1 Comment »

Good Bye July

July 31st, 2011 Thomasso

I better get one last post in before the month finally ends. My posting on the blog has come to a stop since I started working full time. All work and no play, makes me too busy to blog I must say.

At least the money is flowing in now. It is so nice to have the steady flow of income once again, but the economic state of our markets is just to shaky for me to start breathing normal yet. I have this fear that the whole country is going to go belly up, and we (including the parasites of society like Bankers, Politicians and Drug Dealers) are going to go down with the ship. I am thinking about the U.S. and its debt problems right now.

I notice the Banks that I deal with have being very mellow these last few months. I cashed a $2200.00 cheque last week, and the teller gave me no speech about why I should open an account with them. Usually I get one. That is scary – something is up?

I still have lots of friends who are struggling to find work. For them, working under the table, as in working for cash only, seems to be what is keeping them from going out onto the streets. One friend, an neighbour, told me that he goes to the food bank once a month just to tie him over. Social services will not even look at him becuase of his status: Male, non visible minority, no dependants. His next move, if he does not find work, will be the streets.

On the other hand, I have some friends who are just as bad as I am – too much work. It seems that in Canada, right now, it is either black or white in contrast when dealing with employment. You are either working too much, or your are not. I never trusted the numbers that are spewed out by the media, even from Stats Canada, becuase those metrics are skewed. The true measure is really what you can see in front of your face, or view the raw data yourself. In my neck of the woods, half of my friends are either employed while the other half are working ridiculous hours.

The happy part of this last month has being working full time. Yup, I am not complaining about work, althought I am putting in some killers time. In fact, I am embracing it becuase I really missed the work while I was a student. Funny eh?

And yes, working full time is way easier than being a student, by a long shot! No home work.

So, I am off to pay pad rent, then figure out what I am going to do today, being that tomorrow is a Stat Holiday. I also love long weekends.

Posted in Bitching about work, Diatribe, General, Holiday, Humour, Socail Media | 1 Comment »

Twitter Milestone: 500

July 26th, 2011 Thomasso

Today I passed 500 follower milestone. It is an achievement having all theses followers. I started working through Twitter vigorously since my graduation to keep in touch with colleagues, and as a means of keeping up dated with the latest news. From the time since activating my Twitter account in 08 with but a few followers, then seriously using Twitter  just over  seven months ago, the discovery of meeting new people has being fantastic.

Reaching 500 followers is a great!

I have followers from all over the world. I have followers who share the same love of academics as I do, and the rare Criminologists that I have found who also follow me now. The discussions are always very interesting, and many times over, I laugh at the text (the 140 letter posts) as there is always a comedian everyday who Tweets something funny. From art to news, to drama and gossip, there is never a dull moment in the Twittersphere.

Posted in Events, General, Socail Media, Twitter | 3 Comments »

Happy Canada day!

July 1st, 2011 Thomasso

Happy Canada day everyone!

Posted in Events, General, Holiday | 2 Comments »

100 Years of BC License Plates

June 25th, 2011 Thomasso

When my Mother came over for a visit during my convocation a couple of weeks ago, we took in a lot of sites. There were so many places that we went to I am still sorting out all the photos I took. I finally got to the trip we did at the Fort Langley, BC Agriculture Museum that houses so many exhibits that when we were done walking around, finally making it through the whole building, I had taken somewhere in the neighbourhood of 300 photos.

This photo, which I had to cut into two becuase of the details I wanted to show while keeping the image size to my blog’s standard, is a really good example of all those everyday things we take for granted, but rarely get to see in one collection. These are License Plates from when British Columbia started issuing vehicle plates to the motorising public, spanning almost 100 years. The oldest plate in from 1923, going all the way up to present day plates. According to some sources that I looked up on the net, BC Plates have being around for just over 100 years now, so this collection is probably missing a few plates (A History of British Columbia License Plates).

Please come on down to the Fort Langley Agriculture Museum and take a look for yourself. Admission is almost by donation, which I think is a minimum $3.00 fee, but it is well worth the trip and experience.

Posted in Around Town, Events, Family, General, Photographs, Story Telling | Comments Off

Summer – At Last!

June 21st, 2011 Thomasso

OK, this year has been a dismal one for a prolonged winter/spring weather, so far, that just seemed to go on and on and on. Finally hitting the 20C mark for the first time since last October in the first week of June 2011, is just weird, and a sign that Mother nature can still rule our lives any time she wants. No wonder everyone was feeling so down in the dumps-I was too.

I hope we never have another spring and winter like this one for a long time! Anyway…

The summer Solstice has finally arrived. The longest day of the year for us folks in the Northern half of Planet Earth. It is a time for celebrations, BBQ, camping, getting out into nature, mosquitoes, and time to jump into the bathing suite for some splash-time. The ritual of observing the Solstice is a special becuase it is real, it marks time, and marks a turning point in all of us that we can enjoy the Earth around us for the next four months without the effects the cold and wet of the winter months. To wear shorts and a shirt, is sweet.

Today was a really go start for the summer season. It reached 21C, and remained only partly cloudy, and then cleared right up for the remainder of the afternoon into the evening. I wanted to go to the river and jump in, but it is still very high, and will probably flood in mid July, as it always does. I stayed at home and opened all the windows and enjoyed the breezes that flowed through the screens, filtering out the mosquitoes.

So, yay, summer has finally arrived! Yes! Hopefully we are good until, say, October? Oh wouldn’t that be nice?

Posted in Astronomy, Diatribe, Events, flood, General | 3 Comments »

The Blacksmith’s Shop at the Fort

June 19th, 2011 Thomasso

One of the first places me and Mother went to when we visited the Fort Museum back on June 11, 2011, was the Blacksmith shop. I have always had a fascination with metal working, especially these historical methods without the use of modern methods of heating and casting that we have today. It was well informative as the demonstrator used his furnace and showed us the various techniques of bending and heating the iron to make all the tools and things people needed back then to have the creature comforts they wanted.

The Blacksmith made everything from farm equipment and tools, to everyday household goods such as knives, barrel-straps and eating utensils–even the nails to build the houses they lived in.  There is quite the history when these first settlers came over.

It was very fascinating to see this guy (who I have no idea his name, but he was part of the staff that worked at the museum) shaping and customising this piece of metal into a very cool looking hook for hanging tools on in the barn with. It took him about five mins to create this hook. He gave it to my Mother becuase at the time she was from the farthest place visiting. She in turn left it with me because of her fear that they my not allow it on the bus. The Blacksmith also make the comment that if you are flying, then it would not be a good idea to take it with you also. Oh our modern times are something, eh?

Posted in Around Town, Events, Family, General, Photographs, Vacation and Travel | 2 Comments »

Spending Time with Mother: Hiking!

June 18th, 2011 Thomasso

As some of you now know, my Mother has left back to her home in Alberta, as her visit here had come to an end last Sunday, but it has taken me all of this week to catch up on this blog, entering in the backlog of posts that I want to write in it. I have several hundred photos, both stored on my camera and hard drives, and going through them all has been a test of endurance. With so many photos, and so little time, choosing the best of the best has not been easy.

In this post I want to write about the last evening that my Mother stay with me in Fort Langley, BC. We agreed that a hike along the Fort to Fort trail would in order for the quest of the allusive rabbits (bunnies) that inhabit the forests in the thousands along the shores of the Fraser Rive and beyond. So I captured the journey, and lots of bunny photos from that hike, with my camera.

Perhaps the best part of the trail is along the Derby Reach leg of the hike. Shown above, you are walking through some well groomed, and wide open area that is managed by the Park at the Derby Park end of the trail. You are walking along the edge of farm land and a bird sanctuary by the Park. At this point of the hike, the trail stays along the river after a short detour when it follows a road for about a kilometre. Remember that this photo was taken around 7:00pm in the evening. Still lots of light, but getting late.

Above: The marker says, “Fort Langley – the original Fort Langley was built here in 1827. James McMillan in charge. The site of the first permanent settlement and cultivation of the soil in the Lower Fraser Valley, later known as Derby, home of the Royal Engineers. 1858 – 1859.”

Reaching the marker of the original site of the fort at Fort Langley, BC, this sort of marks the end of this section of trail. There is lots of trail left, but this was as far as we went due to the lack of time we had. Now, from here, we started the trek back to home.

We also took time to admire the setting sun. This section of the trail we incredible for viewing the sunset through the forest and farm land. Oddly enough at this the bunnies started hopping along the trail more frequently too as they crossed it when we walked by. My camera sucked for shooting photos of them becuase of the low light, and crappy flash that I had.

It was good hike, and I did feel it in my legs. My Mother insisted that we do it, and she never complained about the distance. This proves that she is super stubborn, or she is in way better shape than I am?

Posted in Around Town, Family, General, Photographs, Vacation and Travel | 2 Comments »

Was it a Riot? My City is in Shame.

June 16th, 2011 Thomasso

When I got home from work, I prepared myself for the game, as millions of other Canadians did becuase this was the final big game to prove which team was number one. Hockey is, after all, Canada’s game; our favourite past time as most of us as kids played some form of it at one time or another. In anticipation, I made my dinner early and made sure that I was not going to not be disturbed while watching the game. I did, however, know that the momentum of the Vancouver Canucks was on a downwards roll, so everything was on this final game to decide who was going to take home the cup.

I also knew that Vancouver has a history of rioting after such events, for example,  back in the 1994 Stanley Cup play-offs, when the Canucks lost to the New York Rangers, people turned into hooligans then and went on a rioting rampage through the streets causing millions of dollars in damages. But every city has had its share of riots in one form or another. What makes this so embarrassing is that Vancouver was just on the world stage hosting the Olympics, and that seemed to go fairly smoothly with just little hiccups from a few idiots. So what happened to our peaceful attitude?

Some say, from my Twitter stream, that it was from not enough police on the streets, to the police and the city totally under estimating the potential for such violence to occur. Either way, it did, and we now have a huge P.R. problem becuase of it. But could the police have gone further to at least contain last night’s situation?

I argue that, no, the Vancouver Police could not have gone to point that they could have totally stopped the violence and rioting that we seen last night. Controlling that many people would have required something on the order of what we seen in the G20 protests in Toronto several months back, and that would have being very unacceptable both in terms of Vancouver’s image, and the cost to the taxpayers.

What was intriguing was the use of social media that was given to the police, by the public, so that the police could start identifying and using these images, and videos, as evidence in order to prosecute the accused for their acts of hooliganism. So the age old question of private freedoms versus public rights popped up. The terminology that was used by my Twitter friends was the use social media as a form of surveillance in such cases as last night riots to lay charges by the police.

I am in full complete favour for the use of such media as a tool for laying criminal charges and the prosecution of such individuals by the police. My argument is two fold.

First, police already use such tools out in the public sphere for catching and bringing to justice people who are committing a crime. The courts are already equipped with the tools in the justice system to handle the difference between arbitrary issues and the weight that such evidence is placed against the accused. Photographic evidence is very difficult to use in the courts as it is. The photographer literally must be there as a whiteness if the image is in question, but then now you have a whiteness, which is the strongest form of evidence there it in Canadian Courts, testifying against the accused.

Second, as the use of cameras from smart phones and other devices become the mainstay of everyone around the world, so too does the way these tools are used by all parties in cases of criminal events like rioting. Perhaps the court of public opinion is the most serious for seeing the electronic eyes of these events. The the armchair philosopher who is tying to critically analyse these images, this is secondary to the pure entertainment value that the media gives them while these scenes are played repeatedly every hour of the day until the news losses its splendour. You do not go to a major event without your social media device. Protesters use them, police used them, and the value that we give them changes, from recording history making events, to tools for presenting your side of history, from your point of view. So now the question of surveillance rears its ugly head from the use of social media.

Like yourself witnessing a criminal event, the electronic eye’s gaze is also a party to the criminal event, and at a moral level, and under law in our Criminal Code, you do have an obligation to come forth and  present what you have seen to the police and court of law. But people seem to have a fear of authoritarian governments, and the use of surveillance over the general public they seem to bring with them. (See the movie, or read the book, 1984 as an excellent example). I believe today that the conditions have being met in Canada that justifies the use of such tools for bringing to justice those who cause such damage during acts of great civil unrest. We have balance in our justice system, and a very strong media and public process system that polices the police.

I strongly request that anyone with images of rioters from last night come forward and share your eyes with the police so that justice can be served. For the few people to created such distasteful acts in our city is unacceptable. There is a moral judgement that each person must make, and it is between the public good versus the private rights that each Canadian holds dearly. I hope I have convinced you to make that choice and move forward with it.

Posted in Around Town, Criminal Law, Criminology, Events, General, Law, Law and Order, Socail Media, Social Justice, Twitter | 1 Comment »

Lunch with Mother: Planet Java 50s Cafe

June 13th, 2011 Thomasso

Yesterday me and my mother went out for lunch at the Planet Java 50s Café in Fort Langley, BC just on Glover Road in down town. I thought it would be a cool place to eat becuase it is set up like a restaurant from the 1950s, decked out with a statue of Elvis, and 50s music playing all the time. The look and feel is seemingly authentic, according to my Mother.

 

The meals are not quite what you would have gotten in the 1950s, but it tries to be as authentic as possible. You are not going to buy a meal for $0.35 here.

My Mother loved the table top music selectors they have that only cost $0.25 for each song at each booth. She tried it. You gotta love chrome!

The only glitch we had here was the server got our order mixed up. My Mother wanted the chefs salad and I wanted the Elvis Burger, but instead we both got Chefs Salad.

Posted in Around Town, Events, Family, General, Photographs | 9 Comments »