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Get it on

This Magazine Staff

As the holidays wind down and the election starts to pick up steam, interesting things are coming from the grass roots. Take Get Your Vote On, for example. Originally started by a group in B.C. to engage youth in this spring’s provincial election, GYVO has expanded its reach to increase the youth vote on January […] More »

This National Playlist

This Magazine Staff

You know, it can get too serious around here sometimes. I think it’s time we organized a game. Does anyone pay attention to CBC’s The National Playlist? I kind of like the idea, but I think we could do better. Who would be interested in helping me put together This National Playlist? I propose a […] More »

Meet the World

This Magazine Staff

Sometimes, spending hours a day reading blogs isn’t a waste of time. Have a look at the art campaign “Meet the World” created by Brazilian artist Icaro Doria. He treats each flag as a graph and breaks down what each colour represents. Brilliant stuff. For example, here’s Angola: More »

just one more before the holidays

This Magazine Staff

There will be plenty of time to say Merry this and Happy that on Blog This. Judging by the traffic to most blogs these days, the world is falling into a pre-holiday slumber. As it should be. On the other hand, what the heck is this all about? From The Guardian online: Famed British broadcaster’s […] More »

the creaky democracy down south

This Magazine Staff

Don’t know if y’all are following the snoopgate story down in the States—the Presidential authorization of domestic wiretapping and spying without a warrant or the oversight of the secret court already in place to facilitate such emergency measures. Now the President and Vice-President claim they are simply restoring powers to the Presidency that should never […] More »

The (political) science of topic avoidance

This Magazine Staff

Campaign update: Warren Kinsella calls Jack Layton, “one smart friggin’ customer” this morning. Why? Because of this statement from Layton: “If you think Jean Chretien made the right call on Iraq, vote for the NDP that supported him. Not Paul Martin who undermined him as Prime Minister and Liberal leader.” An NDP leader invoking the […] More »

World Trade Omission

This Magazine Staff

There’s been little said on Blog This, in the daily newspapers, on rabble.ca or most other places I’ve looked recently on what went down at the WTO meetings in Hong Kong last week. A chance bus encounter with The Globe’s Report on Business offered a glimpse, but I hadn’t seen much other than that until […] More »

Greening Cities with Gas—how innovative

This Magazine Staff

Jack Layton making a major policy announcement this morning outside a Toronto Transit station: New Democrats will increase the Gas Tax Transfer to the full five cents per litre requested by the Federation of Canadian Municipalities. Right now – year one. No long Liberal phase-in. No time for Paul Martin to break his word once […] More »

moral purity, political rhetoric, and the lesser evil — Part 2

This Magazine Staff

My preference for where to begin the argument: The invasion of Iraq was a bandit act, an act of blatant state terrorism, demonstrating absolute contempt for the concept of international law. The invasion was an arbitrary military action inspired by a series of lies upon lies and gross manipulation of the media and therefore of […] More »

When a journalist poses as a journalist

This Magazine Staff

The Globe has been following a story since Saturday on a Toronto law professor who is battling Rogers Wireless over charges applied to her cellphone when it was stolen. The interesting part of the story, to me, is that her partner, a technology journalist named Harry Gefen, did some reconnaissance work on her behalf at […] More »

moral purity, political rhetoric, and the lesser evil

This Magazine Staff

During last fall’s US election campaign, I occasionally expressed on this blog the opinion that John Kerrry was hardly the epigone of moral consistency that some of his supporters – in the US and in Canada – had made him out to be. It seemed to me that Kerry had flip-flopped on a number of […] More »