CBC’s Tapestry

November 26, 2007

My radio was broken in my last car, may the green machine rest in peace, so for years I drove around in silence.  I am really enjoying listening to the CBC again while driving.  Today, driving back from a jaunt to Rathtrevor Provincial Park near Parksville, which is an incredible spot and only 30 minutes from Nanaimo, I caught the below broadcast on Tapestry which I found thought-provoking. 

The Upper-Middle Path

You’ve heard about the "Middle Path"? It’s one of Buddhism’s key teachings: steer clear of extremes; find a balance between indulging the senses and going overboard on deprivation.

But what happens when the Buddha’s "Middle Path" becomes the "Upper-Middle Path”? Meet Kobai Scott Whitney, a writer and Buddhist prison chaplain. He says North American Buddhists are turning the great tradition into some kind of Buddhism Lite: taking what they like and leaving the rest. Newbie Buddhists, Kobai says, simply ignore anything too demanding, preferring to zone out on their comfy meditation cushions. Mary Hynes meets Kobai Scott Whitney (the name means Old Plum) on Tapestry.

Here are a couple of other references to Kobai Scott Whitney’s thoughts and work:

http://www.wildmind.org/blogs/on-practice/kobai-renunciation#more-454

http://www.prisondharmanetwork.org/


 

CCPA - Medicare Book Launch (Ottawa Nov. 28th at noon)

November 24, 2007

November 23, 2007

You are invited to a reception to mark the 5th anniversary of the Royal Commission Report on the Future of Health Care, and to launch a new book on Medicare.

WHERE:
Former National Press Club Bldg., Room 2-2, Entrance at 165 Sparks St., Ottawa, ON

WHEN:
Noon - 1:00pm, Wednesday, November 28, 2007

OTTAWA 
The Canadian Health Coalition, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, and the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions are holding a reception to mark the fifth anniversary of the tabling of the Romanow Commission Report and to launch a new book entitled: Medicare: Facts, Myths, Problems, Promise.

The book is based on contributions to a remarkable conference — S.O.S. Medicare 2: Looking Forward inspired by Tommy Douglas’ vision for the future of Medicare. Contributors to the book include: Shirley Douglas, Monique Begin, and Tom Kent, to Allan Blakeney, Roy Romanow, Stephen Lewis and Robert McMurtry, MD. In all, 34 leading health policy experts, economists, doctors, nurses and people representing the whole spectrum health care providers contributed to the book.

In attendance will be the following contributors:
  • Linda Silas, RN, President of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions
  • Robert McMurtry, MD, Member of the Health Council of Canada, former Dean of Medicine, University of Western Ontario and special advisor to the Romanow Commission
  • Bruce Campbell, Executive Director, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, Co-editor of Medicare: Facts, Myths, Problems, Promise

For anyone who cares about the future of Medicare, this book offers a unique source of reliable, independent information and analysis. At a time when ideologues and advocates of privatization capture much of the attention of the media and politicians, this book is a timely and invaluable source of information and ideas. Click here to order your copy.

R.V.S.P. is required: dianet@policyalternatives.ca

Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
410-75 Albert Street, Ottawa, ON K1P 5E7
tel: 613-563-1341 fax: 613-233-1458
http://www.policyalternatives.ca
caw567

Yeah, Doris!

October 12, 2007

at http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2007/10/11/nobel-literature.html

New book I want to read

October 6, 2007

The Secret History of the War on Cancer by Devra Davis (Basic Books, $27.95).

Book - “Conspicuous Compassion: Why Sometimes it Really is Cruel to be Kind” by Patrick West

September 3, 2007

 

The report said Diana’s death was the epitome of ‘recreational grief’
"We live in an age of conspicuous compassion. We sport empathy ribbons, send flowers to recently deceased celebrities, weep in public over murdered children, apologize for historical misdemeanors, wear red noses for the starving, go on demonstrations to proclaim ‘Drop the Debt’ or ‘Not in My Name.’"

 

"We feel each other’s pain. We desperately seek a common identity and new social bonds to replace those that have withered in the post-war era - the family, the church, the nation and neighborhood. Mourning sickness is a religion for the lonely crowd that no longer subscribes to orthodox churches. Its flowers and teddies are its rites, its collective minutes’ silences its liturgy and mass."
"This book’s thesis is that such displays of empathy do not change the world for the better: they do not help the poor, diseased, dispossessed or bereaved. Our culture of ostentatious caring is about projecting your ego, and informing others what a deeply caring individual you are. It is about feeling good, not doing good, and illustrates not how altruistic we have become, but how selfish. And, as Patrick West shows in this witty but incisive monograph, sometimes it can be cruel."

 

Source: coronetbooks.com

“Vancouver’s Library Strike: Women’s Pay on the Line”

August 22, 2007

Incredible that there is still so much pay inequity between genders!


from: http://thetyee.ca/News/2007/08/20/LibraryStrike/

Men get nearly $6 more hourly for similar work, says union.

By Tom Sandborn
Published: August 20, 2007
http://thetyee.ca/News/2007/08/20/LibraryStrike/print.html

TheTyee.ca

Vancouver city librarians say a key reason they’re still on
the picket line
is a sexist divide in pay rates. Hourly pay for library
jobs filled mostly
by women start at nearly $6 less than jobs of equal value
that happen to be
filled by a majority of men, a study shows.

The 17.5 per cent raise over five years the city is now
offering is only
part of what the union is fighting for, they said.

Spokespeople for CUPE 391, the local that represents city
librarians, told
The Tyee on Thursday night that they were encouraged that
their employer
had agreed to meet for negotiations on Friday, Aug. 17, but
were cautious about how much progress they could make. They said that
although the city’s
press release announcing the new negotiations indicated a
willingness "to
negotiate wage adjustments as a means of addressing wage
issues raised by
library staff," to date the city negotiators have refused
to discuss any of
the local’s four key bargaining demands: pay equity,
improvements for
part-time workers, job security and general benefit
improvements.

Three weeks into the strike, they say the city’s latest
offer falls short
of others already settled in the Lower Mainland, and
includes a proposal to
add a new, low-wage job classification that would hire
workers at reduced
wages to do work currently done by library assistants.

"Pay equity is a human rights issue," said Laura Safarian,
a librarian at
VPL’s downtown main branch, and a member of her local’s
bargaining committee.

"Canada has signed on to international agreements that
recognize the human
rights implications of gender bias in wages. This statement
from the city,
awkward as it is, represents the first time we’ve seen any
recognition at
all of the issue from the employer. We have made
significant compromises in
our negotiations already, including a reduction in the
special wage
adjustment we’re asking for, for all professional
librarians," Safarian
added….

whole article at :
http://thetyee.ca/News/2007/08/20/LibraryStrike/


Penney Kome, author and journalist
http://penneykome.ca
Editor, Straight Goods, http://straightgoods.com


Men get nearly $6 more hourly for similar work, says union.By Tom SandbornPublished: August 20, 2007Vancouver city librarians say a key reason they’re still onthe picket line is a sexist divide in pay rates. Hourly pay for libraryjobs filled mostly by women start at nearly $6 less than jobs of equal valuethat happen to be filled by a majority of men, a study shows.The 17.5 per cent raise over five years the city is nowoffering is only part of what the union is fighting for, they said.Spokespeople for CUPE 391, the local that represents citylibrarians, told The Tyee on Thursday night that they were encouraged thattheir employer had agreed to meet for negotiations on Friday, Aug. 17, butwere cautious about how much progress they could make. They said thatalthough the city’s press release announcing the new negotiations indicated awillingness "to negotiate wage adjustments as a means of addressing wageissues raised by library staff," to date the city negotiators have refusedto discuss any of the local’s four key bargaining demands: pay equity,improvements for part-time workers, job security and general benefitimprovements.Three weeks into the strike, they say the city’s latestoffer falls short of others already settled in the Lower Mainland, andincludes a proposal to add a new, low-wage job classification that would hireworkers at reduced wages to do work currently done by library assistants."Pay equity is a human rights issue," said Laura Safarian,a librarian at VPL’s downtown main branch, and a member of her local’sbargaining committee." has signed on to international agreements thatrecognize the human rights implications of gender bias in wages. This statementfrom the city, awkward as it is, represents the first time we’ve seen anyrecognition at all of the issue from the employer. We have madesignificant compromises in our negotiations already, including a reduction in thespecial wage adjustment we’re asking for, for all professionallibrarians," Safarian added….whole article at :P enney Kome, author and journalistEditor, Straight Goods,

Autopoiesis

July 8, 2007

see www.prototista.org/E-Zine/Autopoiesis.htm

I often see people use this term in their writing though even after reading this article I need to do some more reading of primary material to like really understand what it means, and then I have to figure out how to pronounce it so I can toss the term out casually in conversation.  From what I gather, autopoiesis theoretical basis is systems complexity and dynamic change rather than the static view found in mechanistic determinism.  Starting with one of the books mentioned, Fritjof Capra’s "The Web of Life," is probably a good place to begin as he writes in an accessible fashion. 

Another reference mentioned in this article is Principia Cybernetica Web (website).

Guy Garcia - Skin Deep (another book to look for)

The narrator of Skin Deep is David Loya, a second generation Chicano from the East L.A. barrio. With a degree from Harvard Law School he is a rising star in a major New York law firm. He returns to L.A. in response to an urgent request from a Harvard friend to find a missing illegal Mexican named Josefina Juarez. David’s search for Juarez takes him deep into the barrio where the mystery of her fate upends his world and forces him to confront long-buried questions about family, love, friendship, and his own identity. Skin Deep is a novel about coming of age in the new America, a place in which races and cultures have not so much melded as collided and in which no identity is secure. Garcia chronicles this new urban landscape with acuity and informed sympathy.

Fyodor Dostoevsky (website)

at http://www.fyodordostoevsky.com/

Sena Jeter Naslund (books)

I read Ahab’s Wife: Or, The Star-gazer: A Novel  by Sena Jeter Naslund while travelling in Mexico, one of those lucky finds at a second-hand bookstore, and would like to read some of her other work:

Ice Skating at the North Pole; The Animal Way to Love; Sherlock in Love; The Disobedience of Water; Four Spirits; Abundance, A Novel of Marie Antionette and others.