Last week - About 150 kilometres north of Vancouver on one of the Gulf islands, I was standing on the deck at our cabin and observing what appeared to be the tail end of this year's warbler migration. Within a few minutes on that drizzly Friday, first a few Wilson warblers, then a pair of yellow warblers and finally a lone yellow-rumped warbler came by. These tiny creatures, none more than 12-centimetres long, stopped briefly to fuel up on insects before continuing north on the Pacific coast flyway on an annual journey that may have begun as far south as Central America and could well end up as far north as Alaska.
I talked to a few people post-election who had been utterly dismissive of Premier Christy Clark for the last two years. A lightweight, they felt. Not up to the job and never will be.
The poll that came closest to calling the result right in Tuesday’s provincial election was still wildly wrong.
“I think, though, this is not a time to commit sociology, if I can use an expression.”
I was as surprised as you were. When I turned on the tube shortly after 8 p.m. Tuesday night I saw the numbers, then listened to the pundits and the party hacks say it was still “too early” to tell.
It’s hard not to admire a church and its pastor for holding their fundamentalist Christian services at a community centre in a neighbourhood with a growing gay population.
People often ask me, “Matthew, what is the best exotic pet, and where can I get one?”
Nobody was happier than Vancouver-Point Grey NDP candidate David Eby when his leader Adrian Dix abandoned his “principled” position to wait and see on the Kinder Morgan pipeline on Earth Day and firmly came out against the project.
The 24-hour news cycle doesn’t favour long-term memory. The continuing fallout from the December 2012 school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, barely registered a blip in the mainstream media by the time the U.S. Senate snuffed a tepid gun control bill in April.
About five years into performing her hit play Dissolve, playwright and actor Meghan Gardiner recalls a young man approaching her after the show to ask her questions about consent. It was an atypical moment.
Glanced at a campaign brochure this week from Oak Bay-Gordon Head. The candidate’s main pitch was the “lack of wholesome government, irresponsible promises and inaccurate and distasteful TV advertising which generates fear and mistrust.”
Except for the prospect of a hockey mom running a red light early in the morning, nothing makes me more nervous than encountering a cyclist threading the needle between my vehicle and a line of parked cars as we proceed west on Cornwall Avenue in rush hour.
Most readers have probably heard about the Prime Minister’s rejection of Justin Trudeau’s advice we explore “the root causes” of terrorism.
We’ve all done it apparently. Purposely running a red light that is. I’m talking, of course, about B.C. Liberal leader Christy Clark’s regrettable decision to run a red light very early one morning after being egged on by her 11-year-old son.
If B.C. NDP leader Adrian Dix wins the May 14 election, there’s going to be a lot more arguments over the finer points.
Let me ask you to suspend your disbelief for a moment. Consider that what we are seeing in the provincial election campaign that was officially kicked of this week, is actually a two-horse race.
“Former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher forced Britain, kicking and screaming, to abandon its tired and tattered security blanket of a class-ridden and hierarchical society,” reads the caption below a picture of the baroness on the front page of the April 9 Vancouver Sun.
“Former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher forced Britain, kicking and screaming, to abandon its tired and tattered security blanket of a class-ridden and hierarchical society,” reads the caption below a picture of the baroness on the front page of the April 9 Vancouver Sun.