Changing the Canadian National Anthem

Calgary Realtor Jared Chamberlain video blogs about how the government has proposed to change the National Canadian Anthem to make it more gender friendly. Take our poll here http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/RZPN265.

If you have any comments you can leave them below or email Jared at jared@tcgroup.ca or visit http://www.chamberlaingroup.ca

Tom Brokaw Explains Canada to The United States

Tom Brokaw explains the relationship between Canada and The United States, in a pre-recorded short film that aired on NBC, prior to the Opening Ceremonies of the 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada on Feb. 12th, 2010.

This makes me proud to be Canadian… And I’m VERY glad our economy isn’t like the one of our neighbours to the south.

It’s well worth the 6 minutes to watch this… Very well done!

Historians Reject Depression Fears in Canada

Blair Neatby knows what hardship is. He grew up during the Great Depression in the Prairie village of Wawota, Sask., where for many years there was no work, almost no money, plagues of grasshoppers and droughts so bad he remembers the dust “piling up in drifts, like snow.”

Neatby’s father ran a local grain elevator. His salary depended on how much grain he handled, but there was so little wheat and barley to buy he never brought home much money in the Dirty ’30s.

“We took pride in survival,” Neatby says. “ We shared clothes, we grew our own vegetables, we economized as much as we could. We just assumed we would get through it, and we had little choice.”

When the Depression ended Neatby went to war, fighting through Normandy, Holland and Germany. Forty-two thousand Canadians died in the Second World War, but Neatby survived, returning home and eventually becoming a professor at Carleton University and one of the country’s leading political historians.

He acknowledges the current recession is hurting many Canadians, but he also says today’s economic troubles are nothing compared to the severe insecurity and adversity faced by Canadians in the past.

“Since the war we have enjoyed an extraordinarily stable, peaceful and ascending state for our society,” Neatby says. “Younger generations, people now in their 30s and 40s, have never had to deal before with a serious economic crisis.

“It’s hard for them to understand, but we have a very high standard of living, even compared to the 1960s, never mind the ’30s. And it remains high today.”

There is much to be thankful for, despite the factory layoffs, the lousy stock market and the loss of billions of dollars of retirement savings, all of which are reflected in the daily avalanche of dreary economic news that has cast a shadow across the country.

Certainly there is real trouble in places — in cities such as Windsor, Ont., for example, where decades of carmaking affluence are coming to an end, or Port Alberni, B.C, where once-prosperous forestry mills are in crisis.

Yet Canada remains a land of relative luxury and opportunity, with ample cause for optimism and even celebration. And Canadians seem more positive about the future than the bad economic headlines might suggest.

A new Ipsos Reid poll of 1,001 Canadians conducted in late March for Canwest News Service and Global National shows that 83 per cent of people surveyed are optimistic about Canada’s future as a nation, and about their “standard of living compared to others.”

Eighty-seven per cent said they feel positive about the future “despite everything that’s going on in the world.” Sixty-nine per cent believe Canada will emerge from the recession “stronger than it started,” however only 44 per cent expect the downturn to end this year.

We are “light years” from the Great Depression, says McGill University economist William Watson, writing in the February issue of Policy Options magazine.

No one knows how long or deep this recession will be, but to date our economic output, or gross domestic product, has only fallen for a single quarter, at an annualized rate of 3.4 per cent. During the recession of 1981-82, GDP fell 4.9 per cent each year.

The unemployment rate reached 7.7 per cent in February — not much worse than the 33-year low of six per cent achieved during the boom time of 2007 — and far better than the 12 per cent unemployment of 1983, or the 11.3 per cent of 1993. In the Depression unemployment was estimated at 30 per cent.

There was no employment insurance in the 1930s, no Canada Pension Plan, no severance payments for laid off workers and no provincial welfare programs.

During the 1930s, providing “relief ” to the needy was the responsibility of municipalities, but towns and cities had little help to offer because so few people could pay their property taxes.

There was also no medicare.

“It’s important to keep perspective, because in Canada even in the worst of times, we’re still one of the best off countries in the world,” says Catherine Swift, president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business. “Today most people’s personal circumstances haven’t changed. They’re still employed, they’re still making the same money they were making a year ago.”

While some believe the recession will weaken the West, U.S. author Joshua Kurlantzick calls the global meltdown a more serious threat to the anti-western regimes of China, Russia, Venezuela and the Persian Gulf.

“Such an economic crisis poses a major threat to some of the world’s most resilient autocracies,” writes Kurlantzick in the March issue of The American Prospect magazine. “A strong economy was their only backstop. Now, starved of the growth that keeps them in power, and unable to repress their people as old-fashioned dictators did, these autocracies may have nothing left to fall back on.”

David Giuliano, moderator of the United Church of Canada, has called the crisis a “historic turning point,” in which we might rework the financial system to measure the worth of a company not merely by the size of its shortterm profit, but “according to what it produces and contributes to society.”

Perhaps, says Blair Neatby, the recession might teach younger Canadians who grew up in the age of debt and leverage a simple lesson about the value of saving.

“People like me came home from the war and became a generation of savers,” he says. “And we looked with some concern at our children and grandchildren, who didn’t seem to be as concerned with the importance of saving. They hadn’t lived, as we had, through a time of great insecurity.”

Source: Calgary Herald April 6, 2009

The Ninth Most Dangerous City in The World… Is In Saskatchewan???

Quick: what’s the ninth most dangerous city in the world? Kabul? Rio de Janeiro? Tijuana?

Try Saskatoon, the small Prairie city which recorded just two homicides in 2008 — enough, apparently, for it to crack the Top 10 on one Internet site.

The website RealClearWorld.com has named Saskatoon the ninth most dangerous city in the world, according to a feature posted Sunday.

The list is intended to highlight troubled places beyond headline dominating violent hot spots, such as Baghdad and Kandahar, the editors explain.

Other cities on the list include Johannesburg in seventh place, Detroit in fifth place and the Somalian capital Mogadishu at the top of the list.

The website says Saskatoon earned its place on the list after Maclean’s magazine ranked the city as the most dangerous in Canada. That analysis, based on per-capita crime statistics from 2007, found Saskatoon had the highest rate of aggravated assault and robbery in the country, and was fourth in homicides and sex assaults.

Saskatoon’s mayor and police dismissed that report as misleading and out of date.

“The tourism industry of Saskatchewan (if there is such a thing) probably isn’t too pleased with Maclean’s,” RealClearWorld.com writes in its page on Saskatoon.

Saskatoon police Chief Clive Weighill says putting Saskatoon on a list with cities that need military intervention to stop ethnic cleansing is “ridiculous.”

“To even remotely compare Saskatoon to that is sheer lunacy,” he said.

Saskatoon earned such infamy by placing first in aggravated assault and robbery, fourth in homicide and sexual assault, 20th in breaking and entering, and 21st in vehicle theft among Canadian cities.

The tourism industry of Saskatchewan (if there is such a thing) probably isn’t too pleased with Maclean’s. In the 2008 rankings, the magazine had Regina and Saskatoon placing 1-2.

Sources:
Calgary Herald
RealClearWorld.com


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