be the jedi you want to see in the world

Folks are rather fond of quoting Gandhi in support of their cause du jour. I figure it is time I jumped on that band wagon.

My cause:

Gandhi should be officially recognized as a Jedi.

My Gandhi quote:

“There is an indefinable mysterious power that pervades everything… It transcends the senses… Whilst everything around me is ever changing, ever-dying, there is… a living power that is changeless, that holds all together, that creates, dissolves, and re-creates.”

(first published in the October 11, 1928 edition of his weekly journal “Young India“)

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occupied

October 15  is the premier of a film who release I have been eagerly anticipating! The teasers have left me teasing and the trailers have left me trolling.

Monday night you will find me at the Rio Theater watching The Occupation documentary. It chronicles the rise and fall of Occupy Vancouver. It was shot by two BCIT journalism students who observed the occupation at close range from start to finish.

Doors open at 6 and the show starts at 6:45. Following the screening, there will be a panel discussion involving the documentarians, occupiers, and others.

Tickets are available here. I also picked up a couple of spares – let me know if you want one.

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Getting lapped

This little guy seems to like doing morning laps around the coffee table.

He is moving so fast that frames couldn’t capture him.

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go spidey go!

path length around table: about 4 m

loops count: at least 10 or 11 while I ate breakfast. Lets say 11.

total distance traveled: 44 m

his body span: about 6 cm

my body span: about 183 cm

equivalent distance: 22.4 km

what the shit?!? that little duder pounded out an obstacle-filled half marathon while I ate breakfast.

respec.

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falling

A Sunday excursion to Lindeman Lake revealed the requisite proof to satisfy me: autumn has fallen.

colours are happening everyplace

beauty: activate.

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sore like an eagle

After a weekend of getting pummeled by waves, I am a hurtin’ unit today. I have aches in my most of me.

Victory in the Pacific Rim

This was my third or fourth time surfing and it was a load of fun as usual.

Fun facts:

  • I got water injected into my ears and nose at high speed several times.
  • During evening revelry sometimes saltwater would spontaneously drain from my sinuses down the front of my shirt leading to awkward conversational pauses.
  • No surfboard to the head this time. Also, no fin-lines left on my body.
  • I attributed my mid-afternoon acid reflux entirely to a belly full of brine despite the ocean being ~96% fresh water and the prior night’s belly full of beer being only ~95% fresh water.
  • Once, for about a second, I rode the glory part of the wave where it is steep downhill and not yet broken. Then I hit the water face first as usual.
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Fairies

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Notice the moon rising in the bottom right as we head off on a surfing adventure.

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gorgeous

This past weekend I climbed in the Cheakamus Gorge again. It continues to be an awesome place to go.

This time I went with Tess. It was her first time multi-pitch climbing. She led all four pitches beautifully.

Sitting at the bottom waiting for prior arrivals to clear off the climb

preparing the rope

chillin’ at the halfway point

Victory!

More photos of the scenery here.

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Boeing

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This is apparently what happens when shoe laces require changing and the spares on hand were intended for boots.

“The hard part is knowing which loops to pull to undo it. Two in six chance! “

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strike that

In a conversation on the weekend we came up with a new style of strike action that I think bears some further consideration.

It has become painfully obvious over the past decade that workers are no longer allowed to engage in collective bargaining or take strike action. A quick moment of reflection brings to mind teachers, paramedics, and others across the country.

When I think about teachers, I recall them being told when and where and for how long they were allowed to picket. In addition, there are large fines associated with refusing to work – up to $500/day. While I agree education is important, arguably “essential”, no particular day is all that essential. Striking teachers should have the support of students and parents.

When I think back to the paramedic strike, I recall BC ambulance workers being told that they would face fines or arrest if they declined overtime shifts. Being on strike meant holding a sign outside an administrative or government service building went you weren’t on shift – which wasn’t often. I have spoken with paramedics who would routinely be obligated to work up to 72 hours straight. One of the only ways to legally and easily refuse to go out and drive for another shift was to crack open a beer as soon as you are “off shift” in the hopes of spending time with family or sleeping. By that stage all the paramedics were asking for was binding arbitration using a neutral third party. No paramedics wanted to stop helping people who have called 911 – that was never even a threat. Striking paramedics should have the support of everyone who has ever been a patient.

Air Canada employees recently became another example when their strike was magically made illegal. W T Fuck? There are plenty of ways to fly in Canada! How can this be essential enough to warrant governmental involvement? A strike is supposed to be disruptive. Super bizarre.

In nearly all cases I can think of, essential service or not, striking employees in our lovely democracy have been legislated back to work. It makes me want to barf on our charter.

Basically, striking is illegal in Canada. Obviously we should give our leaders an award for their commitment to democracy and its principles.

But picketing is still relatively legal. That right is rather protected by the charter I barfed on earlier. Section two says that if I am pissed off about something, I can tell people that I am pissed off, and we can go take up public space. It takes something odd like fire code regulations to shut that sort of thing down.

So here is the divergent idea. What if we (those of us who are not teachers or paramedics) took action instead. We could act in that time window during negotiations between when a strike vote is successful but strike notice has not yet been given.

Imagine if next time the teachers are proposing a strike, students do it for them. Imagine a picket line of students and parents blocking teachers from going to work until their employer agrees to a meaningful negotiation done in good faith.

Imagine if next time the paramedics are proposing a strike, former patients do it for them. Imagine a picket line of health care service users blocking access to administrative buildings and other government services (such as liquor stores!) until BC Ambulance Service agrees to binding arbitration with a neutral third party.

I suspect that teachers and government workers can’t be “forced” to cross a picket line. At a minimum it would confuse the shit out of a lot of policy makers. I think that would be good. Our democracy is overdue for some positive disruption.

 

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copy write

The ongoing evolution of music has led to countless copyright cases in memorable history. “Borrowing” from other musicians seems a bit inevitable to me.

I was listening to some MC Yogi recently and noticed that a Hindu temple prayer featured in the album Elephant Power bears a striking resemblance to a controversial Dixie Chicks song. The song was written for them by Dennis Linde –  I wonder how much time he spent in India? It seems unlikely that plagiarism happened in the other direction.

The MC Yogi piece can be sample here:

http://mcyogi.bandcamp.com/track/temple-prayer

The Dixie Chicks song, Goodbye Earl, was controversial for its lyrics, not its apparently borrowed tune. I think it should have been controversial for having a terrible music video.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gw7gNf_9njs

If you are getting excited and want to jump on that band wagon, here are a few better documented examples of imitation in pop music.

I think our current copyright laws are horrific. In Canada the term of a copyright is life of the author plus 50 years and in the US and UK it is life plus 75 up to a maximum of 95 years. Most of these laws are relatively new (1990’s) and retroactive to 1923. This means that in the US and UK nothing new will enter the public domain until at least 2018. This keeps all sorts of old works subject to copyright and ineligible for inclusion in such things as remix without fear of legal retribution. The Canadian government is now facing pressure to jump on that crazy train as they move to join the Trans Pacific Partnership (yet another bad idea).

The purpose of copyright is to promote creativity, not hamper it. Like many of our institutions, this one has been twisted to benefit few at the expense of many.

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