Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Space agency leaders call for greater international cooperation


A Long March 5 rocket developed by China, which is one of six nations that have full launch capabilities, carried the Tianwen-1 Mars rover into orbit from Wenchang, Hainan province, China, on July 23. Photo by EPA-EFE/STR CHINA

Oct. 12 (UPI) -- Leaders of seven national space agencies called for greater international cooperation on space endeavors Monday during an online conference, and they cited climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic as areas in which cooperation could pay off.

"I want to work closely with international partners and exchange best practices," said Lisa Campbell, president of the Canadian Space Agency. "We need to do this together to ensure the benefits come back to Earth to solve challenges for future generations."

Campbell was joined by heads of space agencies in the United States, Europe, China, Russia, Japan and India at the 71st International Astronautical Congress, hosted by the Paris-based International Astronautical Federation.


Speakers noted that space activity is still growing despite the pandemic, and as eight nations now have full space exploration programs.

"If the whole world can actually unite together in the space endeavor, we can actually achieve greater success," said Kejian Zhang administrator of the China National Space Administration.

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said the U.S. Artemis program to return people to the moon in 2024 makes international cooperation more important than ever.

"In the International Space Station, we've had 15 countries operating ... for 20 years with humans on board," Bridenstine said. "Now, when we go to the moon under the Artemis program and on to Mars, we can build on that framework and we can have more collaboration than ever before."

He noted that Japan and Europe and other nations are cooperating by building infrastructure for Artemis.

Despite Bridenstine's assessment, the head of Russia's agency, Roscosmos, said that his nation will not participate in the Artemis program because it is too "U.S.-centric."

"The most important thing here would be to base this program on the principles of international cooperation," which were used to fly to the space station, Dmitry Rogozin, the director-general of Roscosmos, said through a translator.

"If we could get back to considering making these principles as the foundation of the program, then Roscosmos could also consider its participation."

Rogozin said that, despite the lack of Russia's participation, he hopes the United States will include a port to accommodate Russian spacecraft on the proposed lunar Gateway, an orbiting station that missions would use as a staging ground to descend to the moon.

Bridenstine later posted on Twitter that the United States and its partners "look forward to working with the international community" on Artemis missions and on the Gateway.

He has said in the past that NASA's proposed Artemis Accords, governing principles for moon missions, will guide international cooperation while the Gateway has been designed using the same framework as the space station.
NASA advances plan to commercialize International Space Station


Axiom Space habitat modules are depicted attached to the International Space Station as part of NASA's plan to further commercialize work in low Earth orbit. Image courtesy of Axiom



ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 12 (UPI) -- The planned launch of a private commercial airlock to the International Space Station in November will accelerate NASA's plan to turn the station into a hub of private industry, space agency officials said.

The commercialization plan also includes the launch of a private habitat and laboratory by 2024 and a project NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine announced on Twitter in May in which actor Tom Cruise will film a movie in space.

The 20-year-old space station may even have a private citizen on board again for the first time in years in late 2021, according to Phil McAlister, NASA's director of commercial spaceflight. It's part of a plan to wean the space station off NASA's public funding of $3 billion to $4 billion per year.

"We expanded the scope and range of activities that can be done on ISS," McAlister said in an interview earlier this year. "We carved out resources -- power, oxygen, data -- and we know we can support a paying customer, probably twice a year for up to a month."


Detailed plans for those stints at the space station are partly proprietary, he said.

Whether private citizens return or not, NASA has increased corporate missions to the space station in recent years.

One example was Estee Lauder, which sent 10 bottles of skin cream to the space station Oct. 1 as part of a $128,000 contract with NASA, according to the company and NASA.

The agency charges $17,500 per hour for the astronauts' time, according to its fee schedule. A representative for Estee Lauder confirmed the project last week, but declined to elaborate.

Anheuser-Busch has sent barley seeds to the ISS several times, including an experiment to see how the seeds could be sprouted, known as malting, in microgravity.

"By exposing barley to microgravity, we learned how to maximize production volumes, grow higher quality crops and overall, what it might take to successfully grow and malt barley in microgravity -- ultimately furthering our understanding of agriculture both on Earth and in space," a report from the beer company said.

Freeing up resources on the existing space station for private use will only take NASA so far, and additional infrastructure is needed in space, commercial spaceflight director McAlister said.

NASA plans to install a private airlock to release science experiments and a private habitation module for more space tourism or private researchers.

Pittsburgh-based space company Nanoracks plans to launch its Bishop Airlock to the space station on the next SpaceX cargo mission, scheduled for Nov. 22, the company and NASA confirmed last week.

Having a private airlock just for science experiments and small satellites will allow more efficient use of the station's airlocks and allow for more commercial activity, McAlister said.

Nanoracks funded the construction of the airlock, which cost about $15 million, for the opportunity to have private enterprise utilize it, according to the company. NASA signed an agreement with the company for the idea.

Houston-based Axiom Space, meanwhile, plans to launch the private habitat to the space station in 2024, the same year that NASA wants to land astronauts again on the moon.

Axiom intends to send multiple modules to the space station, growing its total indoor space exponentially through 2028, according to a company spokesman Beau Holder.

At that point, the space station will be nearing the end of its planned lifespan, and Axiom plans to detach its modules and create a separate space station, eventually freeing NASA from financing the operation.

"What Axiom provides is an opportunity for NASA to free up resources to take on the next exploration challenges while maintaining ability to do on-orbit research and exploration technology demonstrations," Holder said.


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Study: Nearly one in three U.S. college students smokes pot


Marijuana use among college students is on the rise, while alcohol consumption remains stable, a new study has found. Photo Jantaaa/Pixabay

Oct. 12 (UPI) -- Nearly one-third of all college students in the United States smoke marijuana, a study published Monday by JAMA Pediatrics found.

Roughly twice as many -- 62% -- drink alcohol, the data showed.

At the same time, the number of students who say they abstain from both has increased to 28% from just under 20% in the early 2000s.


The percentage of college students who meet the criteria for alcohol use disorder also has declined to 10% over the same period from just under 20%, they said.

RELATED Study: Pot users may need more anesthesia, painkillers during, after surgery

"Abstinence from both alcohol and marijuana have increased," study co-author Ty Schepis,, professor of psychology at Texas State University, told UPI.

And "the number of young adults with alcohol use disorders has significantly declined, [and] the same is true with combined alcohol and marijuana use disorders," he said.

The findings are based on an analysis of data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health for the period of 2002 through 2018, which included information on alcohol and marijuana consumption for between 7,000 and 11,000 young adults annually.

RELATED More using pot for depression, but it may not help, researchers say

In 2018, 31% of college students reported using marijuana, up from 27% in 2002, the data showed.

However, the percentage of students who met the criteria for marijuana use disorder remained stable over the study period, at about 6%, the researchers said.

Marijuana use disorder is a "problematic pattern of ... use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress," according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

RELATED Teen pot use may be climbing again since legalization

Although 62% of college students drank alcohol in 2018, a slight increase from 60% in 2002, the number who met the criteria for alcohol use disorder dropped by half over the same period, the data showed.

People with alcohol use disorder find that "drinking -- or being sick from drinking -- often interfere[s] with taking care of [their] home or family" and causes problems at work, school or home, according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

Still, the percentage of students who reported co-use of alcohol and marijuana increased to 24% in 2018 from 17% in 2002. Young adults who were not in college reported roughly the same rates of alcohol and marijuana use, the researchers said.

"It is helpful for parents to know about the changes in the substance use landscape among adolescents and young adults," study co-author Sean Esteban McCabe told UPI. "These findings remind us that we need comprehensive plans for the full continuum of relationships people have with substances," he said.

"Parents can play a key role by having candid conversations with their kids about how they fit into the substance use landscape and discuss how their strategies are working during challenging times," said McCabe, director of the University of Michigan's Center for the Study of Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking and Health.
WHO: Herd immunity through COVID-19 exposure will cause suffering, death
THE NEW TRUMP DOCTRINE


World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the notion of attempting to achieve herd immunity against the coronavirus by allowing people to become infected was unethical. Photo by Fabrice Coffrini/ EPA-EFE

Oct. 13 (UPI) -- World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus dismissed the idea of attempting to fight the coronavirus with "herd immunity" achieved by allowing COVID-19 to spread, saying this method will only cause suffering and death.

"Never in the history of public health has herd immunity been used as a strategy for responding to an outbreak, let alone a pandemic. It is scientifically and ethically problematic," the head of the U.N. health body said Monday during his opening remarks at a WHO COVID-19 media briefing.

According to the Mayo Clinic, herd immunity is achieved when a large enough portion of a community becomes immune to the virus and can protect those who are susceptible to infection.

Tedros explained the term concerns immunity achieved through vaccination and not from unmitigated infection.

"Herd immunity is achieved by protecting people from a virus, not by exposing them to it," he said.

Much is still unknown about COVID-19 and while many who have been infected show immunity, it is unclear if that immunity will persist, he said, adding that there have been reports of people falling sick a second time and that there is a lack of data concerning the long-term effects of infection.

"Letting the virus circulate unchecked, therefore, means allowing unnecessary infections, suffering and death," he said. "Allowing a dangerous virus that we don't fully understand to run free is simply unethical. It's not an option."

Tedros made the comments as cases continue to skyrocket in Europe and the Americas, with the world setting record daily highs for infections on each of the last four days.

However, the pandemic is uneven, he said, explaining that nearly 70% of the cases reported in the last week were from 10 countries with almost half coming from three.

There are tools to prevent further spread of the virus that are not limited to shutdowns or stay-at-home orders, such as contact tracing, quarantine, physical distancing and many others, he said

"There are no shortcuts and no silver bullets," he said. "The answer is a comprehensive approach, using every tool in the toolbox."

According to a live tracker of the virus by Johns Hopkins University, more than 37.8 million people have been infected with COVID-19, killing more than 1 million of them.



#MEDICAREFORALL
Pandemic-related job cuts have led 14.6M in U.S. to lose insurance


By HealthDay News



Researchers say that job losses related to the COVID-19 pandemic have also led to the loss of health insurance for 14.6 million people in the United States.
Photo by TBIT/Pixab

Up to 7.7 million U.S. workers lost jobs with employer-sponsored health insurance during the coronavirus pandemic, and 6.9 million of their dependents also lost coverage, a new study finds.


Workers in manufacturing, retail, accommodation and food services were especially hard-hit by job losses, but unequally impacted by losses in insurance coverage.

Manufacturing accounted for 12% of unemployed workers in June. But because the sector has one of the highest rates of employer-sponsored coverage at 66%, it accounted for a bigger loss of jobs with insurance -- 18% -- and 19% of potential coverage loss when dependents are included.

Nearly 3.3 million workers in accommodation and food services had lost their jobs as of June -- 30% of the industry's workforce. But only 25% of workers in the sector had employer-sponsored insurance before the pandemic. Seven percent lost jobs with employer-provided coverage.


The situation was similar in the retail sector. Retail workers represented 10% of pre-pandemic employment and 14% of unemployed workers in June. But only 4 in 10 retail workers had employer-sponsored insurance before the pandemic. They accounted for 12% of lost jobs with employer-sponsored insurance and 11% of potential loss including dependents.

The study was a joint project of the Employee Benefit Research Institute, the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research and the Commonwealth Fund.

"Demographics also play an important role. Workers ages 35 to 44 and 45 to 54 bore the brunt of [employer insurance]-covered job losses, in large part because workers in these age groups were the most likely to be covering spouses and other dependents," said Paul Fronstin, director of EBRI's Health Research and Education Program.

"The adverse effects of the pandemic recession also fell disproportionately on women," Fronstin added in an EBRI news release. "Although women made up 47% of pre-pandemic employment, they accounted for 55% of total job losses."

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on COVID-19.
RELATED First case of COVID-19 reinfection in U.S. had no known risk factors for disease



Copyright 2020 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
WTO: EU can impose tariffs on $4 billion of U.S. goods


A view of Boeing's manufacturing facility in El Segundo, Calif. The World Trade Organization ruled Tuesday the European Union could place tariffs on U.S. goods because of illegal subsidies to Boeing. Photo by Ken Wolter/Shutterstock



Oct. 13 (UPI) -- The World Trade Organization ruled Tuesday that the European Union can to hit $4 billion worth of U.S. goods with tariffs in retaliation for outlawed subsides given to Boeing.

The ruling is the latest in a dispute that has been ongoing since 2004 between Boeing and its European rival Airbus.
The WTO's decision was slowed by the coronavirus pandemic.

The body said last year that the United States had given Boeing illegal subsidies, suggesting tax breaks the domestic airplane maker received would amount to roughly $6 billion from 2006 to 2040. It also allowed the Trump administration to place tariffs on goods in Europe in response to subsidies given to Airbus.

Boeing had originally accused Airbus of receiving illegal aid from numerous governments to create and build the A350 twin-aisle plane and the related A380 superjumbo aircraft.

"The arbitrator concluded that the European Union may request authorization from the (WTO) to take countermeasures with respect to the United States," the ruling stated.

Before the tariffs can go into effect, the EU must first request authorization from the WTO. An Oct. 26 meeting is the earliest opportunity to do so.

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said the tax breaks cited by the WTO are no longer in effect, making a decision based on them null and void.

"Because Washington state repealed that tax break earlier this year, the EU has no valid basis to retaliate against any U.S. products," Lighthizer said. "Any imposition of tariffs based on a measure that has been eliminated is plainly contrary to WTO principles and will force a U.S. response."

Airbus Chief Executive Guillaume Faury appeared to offer an olive branch, suggesting that differences between it and Boeing and the wider dispute can be hammered out through talks.

"Airbus did not start this WTO dispute, and we do not wish to continue the harm to the customers and suppliers of the aviation industry and to all other sectors impacted," Faury said. "As we have already demonstrated, we remain prepared and ready to support a negotiation process that leads to a fair settlement."
Lebanese expect the worst as poverty surges

Business owners, most of whom had to close their companies, gather with anti-government protesters during a demonstration over deteriorating living conditions and after the government raised bread prices, in Beirut, Lebanon, on July 2. File Photo by Nabil Mounzer/EPA-EFE



BEIRUT, Lebanon, Oct. 13 (UPI) -- With no new government in sight to adopt reforms that would release urgently needed international aid, poverty is growing in Lebanon, with a pervasive fear that it's going to get worse.

The streets are increasingly filled with beggars, mostly Syrian refugees. The minimum monthly wage has fallen to 600,000 Lebanese lira, the equivalent of $400 just a year ago, currently worth $69 at the black market rate

In August, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia estimated Lebanon's poverty rate had surged to 55 percent in May, compared to 28 percent last year.

Bader Jamal el Naboulsi, a construction worker from the Bab al-Tabbaneh neighborhood in Tripoli, has been jobless for months.

RELATED Lebanon's fate linked to regional settlement

"Now, I just do anything like cleaning homes and carpets or [work] as porter to raise at the end of the day 25,000 LL," which equates to $16 at the official rate and less than $3 at the black market rate, Naboulsi, a father of eight, told UPI. "Some days we sleep without food. I never beg for anything."

But his wife, Rima, is obliged to ask her neighbors for "bread, potatoes or anything they can spare" to feed her children. "I need at least 50,000 LL just to put some food on the table for my children."

What the Lebanese people fear most is that the central bank will not be able to maintain the subsidy over basic commodities. What is left of its U.S. dollar reserves, estimated at $1.8 billion, barely allows it to continue subsidizing wheat, fuel and medicine at the official exchange rate of 1,507 Lebanese pound for $1, compared to LL 3,900 per U.S. dollar traded at the banks and nearly LL 8,700 in the black market.

RELATED Lebanon's acting prime minister resigns, endangering reform

Already drivers are seen queuing up at the gas stations to fill their tanks while many are touring the pharmacies to get medications that are in short supply.

Lebanon's descent began a year ago with an unprecedented economic and financial crisis resulting in the national currency losing 80 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar; inflation, poverty and unemployment rates reaching record levels; foreign currency reserves at the Central Bank nearing depletion; and severe banking restrictions depriving depositors of their life savings -- restrictions that remain in place.

The alarming spread of COVID-19 and the Aug. 4 massive blast at the Beirut port accentuated the population's suffering. Many hospitals were badly damaged by the port explosion, at a time the health sector was greatly affected by the financial crisis, facing dwindling medical supplies and shortage of medication due to the lack of liquidity of the dollar.

RELATED Major explosion at arms depot in Lebanon injures 4

Like the Naboulsis, the eight-member family of Khaled Suleiman al Assi only "eat meat and chicken if donated." Everything in their house "is by donation -- the TV, the fridge, the oven and even the closet and the blankets," said 13-year-old Amina.

In the predominantly Shiite southern suburbs of Beirut, a Hezbollah stronghold, people are in no better situation.

"Here, not everyone is being paid by Hezbollah in U.S. dollars," one resident, who refused to be identified or disclose what he does for a living, told UPI. "Many poor people, including Syrians, are seen late at night or early morning rushing to the vegetable and fruit markets to get the leftover for free or whenever they hear that donated food boxes are being distributed."

The man, 46, has been unemployed for more than two years.

"My life was completely destroyed...Not only I cannot support my family, I am about to lose the apartment I bought after so many years of hard work because I can no longer pay my housing loan to the bank," he said. "It is a catastrophe...the situation will turn really bad: People will steal or kill to eat."

Despite the "dreadful situation," Hani Bohsali, the owner of Bohsali Foods and president of the Syndicate of Importers of Foodstuffs in Lebanon, said the country is not at risk of starvation, at least for the time being.

"Anything is possible, but we haven't reached that point...it is not to be compared with Venezuela," Bohsali told UPI, explaining that the country is surviving on its remaining food reserves. "But what will happen in 2021 when no more reserves or money [are] left?"

Venezuela has been in crisis for years, suffering from growing political discontent and a collapsed economy that resulted in skyrocketing hyperinflation, soaring unemployment, widespread poverty and hunger, medicine shortages, power cuts and rising crime rates. Nearly 5 million people have fled the country to seek refuge in neighboring countries.

The humanitarian assistance that poured into Lebanon from numerous countries and international organizations after the Beirut port explosion, which killed more than 190 people and made 300,000 homeless, helped meet immediate needs, but the country cannot survive without sustainable solutions.

Only a big infusion of U.S. dollars -- mainly as part of a program with the International Monetary Fund -- can contribute to adjusting the financial situation, reactivating a stagnant local economy and making fresh U.S. dollars available in the market. However, the IMF and other donor countries won't pay unless the Lebanese authorities adopt requested reforms.

Lebanon's political leaders thus have to end their endless disputes and agree on forming a new government to spare the country another cycle of violence.

"Lifting subsidies mean that the price of bread will triple, 20 liters of gasoline will jump from LL 25,000 to more than LL 75,000 and the salary of an army soldier will drop to $20-$30 a month...and so we will enter an ugly cycle," said Joseph Bahout, the newly appointed director of the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut. "The most important is that violence does not exceed a certain level."

With a heavily armed Hezbollah and other groups recently displaying their weapons, the risk of slipping into a civil war is a frightening possibility, former Prime Minister Saad Hariri said Thursday.

"We are all waiting for the U.S. presidential elections, for Washington and Tehran to resume their negotiations and for a big change in the region," Bahout told UPI. "But the situation may not change: Iran might not accept to negotiate and so Washington will increase its sanctions. We don't know what will happen first: Lebanon's collapse or the regional developments."

Raptors coach Nick Nurse says it's a good thing Black Lives Matter has become a bigger part of our lives



Anti-racism protests should have made us all more political: Nurse

CBC Radio · Posted: Oct 13, 2020 
Nick Nurse said the Toronto Raptors had 'very open and candid discussions' about their own experiences following recent anti-racism protests. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)



The Current 19:55
Raptors head coach Nick Nurse on leadership on and off the court
FULL EPISODE: The Current for Oct. 13, 2020

During the global protests that followed the death of George Floyd, Toronto Raptors head coach Nick Nurse says his job was to get his players together "and just let everybody speak."

"We had very open and candid discussions with our players — nothing to do with basketball, just ideas on how we can make the world a better place," said Nurse, who led the Raptors to the team's first NBA championship victory in 2019,

His new book is titled Rapture: Fifteen Teams, Four Countries, One NBA Championship and How to Find a Way to Win — Damn Near Anywhere.

Nurse told The Current's Matt Galloway that the players were "amazing in voicing their concerns," and shared their own stories about "run-ins they had with law enforcement."

"My job was to lead them, to give them a voice, to listen to them, put [an] arm around them if I need to, to help them with their ideas — going forward — of things they wanted to get done, and be part of their group."

Amid anti-Black racism protests, Masai Ujiri urges people to ask: 'Who are you as a person?'
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The killing of George Floyd — an unarmed Black man pinned to the ground by a white police officer kneeling on his neck during his arrest in Minneapolis in May — led to months of protests and global discussions on systemic racism.


How NBA players are pushing for social justice as playoff games resume
Pro sports games have now resumed after NBA players led a boycott this week in solidarity with protests against deadly police violence. The National looks at what they're doing to keep that message at the forefront, and how the NBA reacted much differently to racial unrest in the 1990s. 2:11

In August, NBA players halted play for three days in a protest sparked by the police shooting of Jacob Blake, another Black man in Kenosha, Wis. Play resumed after the league agreed to partner with players on initiatives on racial justice and voting in the upcoming U.S. election.

While U.S. President Donald Trump condemned the protest at the time — saying politics would destroy the sport — Nurse commended the NBA for giving players a platform, and said he hopes the issues raised in recent months have a lasting impact on people.

"I hope it made everybody more political," he told Galloway.

"[When] the pandemic became part of life, you had to start educating yourself on what to do," he said.

"And then Black Lives Matter became part of our lives a little bit more, and it's a good thing. It needed to be."

Nurse signed a multi-year extension to his Raptors contract last month, in the middle of a season interrupted by COVID-19, and ending for his team with a second-round exit against the Boston Celtics.




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While he said resuming the season under strict COVID-19 bubble restrictions "wasn't that fun," he welcomed the chance to get back to work.

"I thought people around the world needed sports, you know, even if it was just on TV to watch it, as some positivity."

Nurse came close to quitting

In August, Nurse was named the NBA's coach of the year. But at tbe beginning of his career in the mid-1990s, he came close to quitting.

Born in Carroll, Iowa, in 1967, Nurse spent his early coaching years in Europe, working with teams in the British Basketball League.

"I was coaching the Birmingham Bullets, my team was eight and eight [wins and losses], and I didn't think I was any good at it," he told Galloway.

Nurse said he started to question whether his move to Europe was paying off, especially as he was away from family and not making much money.

"I went and sat down in my hotel room and wrote down about four other things that I thought about doing instead of coaching, and they all looked like absolute shit to me," he laughed.

"I decided I better get to work and become a better coach."

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Almost 25 years later, he led the Raptors to their first NBA championship. It's the first time a Canadian team has won the league's top prize.

In the book, he describes surrendering control as part of his coaching style.

"I lay out a vision, I try to put out a plan, then I let my assistant coaches coach … and then I let the players play," he said.

"We put in a structure and a framework, but we leave lots of room for freedom so people can show their creativity."




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1 year agoThe parade shut down parts of Toronto's downtown area for cheers, chants and champagne showers. 7:48

Nurse said that he's tried to stay focused on self improvement at every step of his career.

"Each and every season I was trying to find a way to become better, and if I was ever going to get a shot at a really big-time job, I wanted to be ready for it," he said.

His advice to anyone trying to succeed is to "love the job you're in."

"Give that job everything you have, and it'll prepare you for something bigger down the road."

Written by Padraig Moran. Produced by Howard Goldenthal.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians — from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community — check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.



CANADA
Pandemic is creating a new type of homelessness, says outreach worker

New COVID-19 supports mean other homeless individuals finding housing they need

CBC Radio ·  October 13,2020

A homeless person is seen in downtown Toronto, on Wednesday, January 3, 2018. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)



The Current
20:34
How COVID-19 has affected homelessness in Canada
FULL EPISODE: The Current for Oct. 12, 2020


A Halifax-based street outreach worker says that since the pandemic started, he's met more and more people who have likely become homeless for the first time.

"Everywhere I look … I see a place where last year or six months ago, there wasn't somebody sleeping. But now there's people in every park, there's people on so many different benches," said Eric Jonsson, program co-ordinator with Navigator Street Outreach.

"I've been doing this for about 10 years or so, and in previous years … you really had to look. But now you don't have to look very hard to find people who are homeless."

COVID-19 has been particularly hard on Canada's homeless population. With shelters cutting back the number of beds they offer to facilitate physical distancing, many cities have seen homeless encampments popping up in parks as people try to find a safe place to sleep.

One Toronto organization warned earlier this year that the pandemic could push more people into homelessness as people who have lost their jobs struggle to pay their bills.

Eric Jonsson is the program co-ordinator at Navigator Street Outreach in Halifax. (Submitted by Eric Jonsson)

Jonsson is seeing the pandemic's economic toll firsthand.

While mental health and addiction have historically been barriers to people accessing housing, he said that now it seems as though many people simply can't pay their rent.

"We're seeing not only more people, but a whole new, I don't know, type of homeless person," he told The Current's Matt Galloway.

"There's a lot of people who are newly homeless and the main driving factor is there's just no place for them to live."
An affordability crisis

Dr. Andrew Bond, medical director at Inner City Health Associates in Toronto, says Canada's increasing affordability crisis is part of the problem.

While housing prices have been rising, pandemic benefits like the CERB have been difficult to get into the hands of people living on the streets, he said.

"The ability to match income to available, affordable places is certainly a huge challenge that's increased throughout COVID," said Bond.

"People are opting, when they don't have any other options, to go the streets, to go to tents and encampments, to try and get as much distance as they can to keep themselves safe," he added.

"It's very much a self-protective practice that's happening amidst an economic crisis at the same time."

A homeless encampments in Montreal. Sites like this have been popping up in cities across the country since the pandemic began. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

But the pandemic hasn't been all bad news when it comes to addressing homelessness.

Bond said he recognized early on in the health crisis that there was a need for standalone isolation facilities for homeless individuals who were exposed to, or tested positive for the virus. And governments have responded by pouring cash into those kinds of supports.

"In February and March, we were fortunate enough, along with many municipalities across the country, to receive provincial funding … as well as a large federal release of funds that were fairly unrestricted, to allow us to do this kind of work, but also to really advocate for the need for outreach testing and surveillance within the shelters," Bond said.

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Raquel Winslow, who lives in Coquitlam, B.C., is grateful for some of the changes the pandemic has brought.

After living on the streets for several years, she's found relief at a shelter that opened in her city because of the pandemic.

"I was just, like, ecstatic ... to know that I might have a bed and a room of my own after six years," she said. "I mean, you really value that when you don't have it."
I feel safe for the first time in a while.- Raquel Winslow

Winslow now has her own bedroom in a hotel, where the shelter is being run out of.

And she said the program is working and that staff have been helping her get her life back on track.

Raquel Winslow, who was homeless for several years, now has a roof over her head because of a shelter that was set up during the COVID-19 pandemic (Submitted by Phoenix Society)

"People are starting to, you know, trust that maybe there are people here who want to do something more than just give you somewhere to sleep at night," she said.

"I feel safe for the first time in a while."

'There needs to be trust, respect,' says doctor

Bond said building trust between homeless individuals and the communities they are being supported by is key to making them feel welcome.

But not everyone has been happy about shelters springing up during the pandemic.

Demonstrators took to the streets in Toronto's midtown neighbourhood this summer after three city-run homeless shelters opened up there. Some residents say the shelters have made their neighbourhood less safe, while others argue people must show empathy and educate themselves about homelessness and addiction.

Dr. Andrew Bond is the medical director at Inner City Health Associates in Toronto. (Submitted by Andrew Bond)

"Any time you move any group of people into a new place, to a new community, there's bound to be relationship challenges and sort of relationship-building that needs to happen," he said.

"In order to have that happen, there needs to be trust, respect and confidence in what's happening in that space."
It's a shame it took something like COVID for people to see that people need a home and that we're all the same.- Raquel Winslow

We also have to start seeing each other as human beings, Raquel says.

She said she feels like the pandemic has been her chance for people to notice her.

COVID-19 highlights decades of failure to help homeless, but is also a chance for change, says advocate

"It's a shame it took something like COVID for people to see that people need a home and that we're all the same," she said.

"That shouldn't happen in a place like Canada."

Written by Kirsten Fenn. Produced by Ines Colabrese, Mary-Catherine McIntosh and Rachel Levy-McLaughlin.


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THE OCTOBER CRISIS 1970

The lasting legacy of the 1970 FLQ manifesto

Researcher Jean-Philippe Warren says the manifesto had a lasting impact on ordinary Quebecers

CBC Radio · Posted: Oct 13, 2020 
Two Carleton University students hold signs on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Oct. 16, 1970 to show support for the Front de Liberation du Quebec. (Canadian Press)


Ideas53:58
The lasting legacy of the 1970 FLQ manifesto


By October of 1970, the Front de libération du Québec didn't have a lot to show for its seven year campaign of terror. But at the height of the October Crisis, the FLQ did succeed in one lasting achievement: its manifesto was broadcast across the country on the public broadcaster's airwaves.

The words in that document had more lasting power than the hundreds of bombs that had been the FLQ calling card since 1963, says Jean-Philippe Warren, research chair for the study of Quebec at Concordia University in Montreal.

CBC Digital Archives: What is the FLQ?

"The manifesto was part of that new coming of age of the Quebec nation where people were saying, 'Well, you know, we can express ourselves the way we want to express ourselves, the way we usually express ourselves. This is who we are and we should not be ashamed of who we are,'" he said. 

From bombing to political kidnappings

The FLQ was pushing a radical vision of Quebec: one that was independent from anglophone Canada and which rejected the capitalist order.

But seven years of robberies and bombings had landed dozens of its members in jail without bringing them any closer to their stated goals. So in October 1970, they switched tactics from bombing to political kidnappings. They first abducted British Trade Commissioner James Cross and then Quebec Deputy Premier Pierre Laporte.

In exchange for the release of Cross, the abductors issued a list of demands. They were looking for the release of jailed FLQ members, bars of gold and safe passage to either Algeria or Cuba, along with a laundry list of other requests.

Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau faces reporters in Ottawa on Dec. 3, 1970, months after the kidnapping of British diplomat James Cross, telling them that Cross's final release is in the "final stages." (Canadian Press)

One by one, government officials rejected the demands, but they did cede on one point. The kidnappers had created a manifesto that laid out the FLQ's beliefs and vision for the transformation of Quebec. They wanted the document to be published and broadcast for the world to hear.

At first officials balked, fearing it would be giving terrorists a platform. But eventually they relented, and on Oct. 8, the manifesto was read on Radio-Canada by announcer Gaetan Montreuil.


FLQ manifesto read on-air
50 years ago
11:26Manifesto read on-air in Montreal on Radio-Canada during the October Crisis. (Note: Footage in French only.) 11:26


The text was steeped in quasi-Marxist ideology of class struggle. But it was delivered in a plain, direct language aimed at ordinary working class Quebecers. The FLQ wanted their audience to recognize themselves as the victims in a struggle for liberation. While the manifesto was delivered in French, it was peppered with English terms.

"The Front de libération du Québec wants total independence for Quebecers, united in a free society and purged for good of the clique of voracious sharks, the patronizing 'big bosses' and their henchmen who have made Quebec their private hunting ground for 'cheap labour' and unscrupulous exploitation," Montreuil read in French.

Concordia University's Warren says that use of English was strategic.

"Part of it is that these expressions are the ones that Quebecers usually use in ordinary life, in their day to day lives in the 60s. So they were not talking about les patrons, they were talking about the 'big boss' to emphasize the fact that people who controlled the finance, people who control the economy were Anglophone," Warren said, adding that the effect of this can't be underestimated.

Engaging with ordinary folk on big societal issues, he said, and doing it in their own language was still a pretty revolutionary idea in Quebec in 1970.
Coming of age for Quebec

"[It] was a time when Quebecers were seeking to see themselves differently," Warren said. "Prior to the 1960s, Quebecers were under the impression that they were never good enough. They were not speaking French properly. They were uneducated."

CBC Digital Archives: Francophone caller supports FLQ manifesto

Quebec playwright Robert Lepage included passages from the manifesto in his autobiographical play 887. He says the document is a significant piece of Quebec cultural history that still has power today.

Quebec playwright, actor, film director and stage director Robert Lepage says the FLQ manifesto is a significant piece of the province's cultural history. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

"There was a kind of a poetry reading a couple of years ago where it was read by an actor who just acted it out the way it was written, and it's an amazing, amazing script. When you take the time to get into character and you do it, whether you like the ideas or not, it's an amazing piece of writing," said Lepage.

He says the manifesto tapped directly into the hearts of ordinary people and that that was really the FLQ's great victory. He says no one really remembers the details of the manifesto, but they remember how they felt hearing those words.

"The FLQ later said...we at least achieved something in that we managed to have a small patriot in every household that evening," Lepage said. "It was a patriot that walked into the houses and then into the apartments of Quebec people, who spoke for them."

This episode was produced by Geoff Turner and Jessica Linzey, with help from Matthew Lazin-Ryder.

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The Demands of the FLQ
 
FLQ communiqué,

 Released to the public October 6, 1970

 The representative of Great Britain in Quebec, Mr J. Cross, is in the hands of the Front de liberation du Quebec. 

Here are the conditions that the ruling authorities must fulfil in order to save the life of the representative of the ancient racist and colonialist British system. 

1. They must see to it that the repressive police forces do not commit the monstrous error of attempting to jeopardize the success of the operation by conducting searches, investigations, raids, arrests by any other means. 

2. The political manifesto which the Front de liberation du Quebec will address to the ruling authorities must appear in full on the front page of all the principal newspapers in Quebec. The ruling authorities, after consulting with the latter, must make public the list of Quebec newspapers agreeing to publish our manifesto. But it should be quite clear that all Quebec regions must be covered. Furthermore, this manifesto must be read in full and commented upon by the political prisoners before their departure during a programme, the length of which will have to be at least thirty minutes, to be televised live or pre-recorded between 8 and 11 PM on Radio-Canada and its affiliated stations in the province. 

3. Liberation of political prisoners: Cyriaque Delisle, Edmond Guenette and François Schirm, Serge Demers, Marcel Faulkner, Gérard Laquerre, Robert Levesque, Réal Mathieu, and Claude Simard; Pierre-Paul Geoffroy, Michel Loriot, Pierre Demers, Gabriel Hudon, Robert Hudon, Marc-André Gagné, François Lanctot, Claude Morency, and André Roy; Pierre Boucher and André Ouellette (recently re-arrested by the police of Drapeau-the-Dog). Wives and children of the political prisoners must be allowed to join them if they so desire. Furthermore, political prisoners André Lessard, Pierre Marcil, and Réjean Tremblay, presently out on bail, must be allowed to join their patriotic comrades and leave Quebec if they so desire. 

4. A plane must be made available to the patriotic political prisoners for their transport to either Cuba or Algeria, once an official agreement has been reached with one of these two countries. Furthermore, they must be allowed to be accompanied by their respective lawyers and by at least two political reporters of two French Quebec dailies. 

5. During a meeting attended by the Lapalme boys and the Postmaster-General - or a representative - the latter must promise to reinstate them. The reinstatement promise must take into account the standards and conditions already secured by the revolutionary workers of Lapalme prior to the breaking off of negotiations. This meeting must be held within forty-eight hours after the release of this communiqué and must be open to newsmen,

 6. A voluntary tax of $500,000 in gold bullion must be put aboard the plane made available to the political prisoners. When one recalls the spendings caused by the recent visit of the Queen of England, the millions of dollars lost by the Post Office Department because of the stubborn millionaire Kierans, the cost of maintaining Quebec within Confederation, etc. ... $500,000 is peanuts! 

7. The NAME and the PICTURE of the informer who led police to the last FLQ cell must be made public and published. The Front de liberation du Quebec is in possession of information dealing with the acts and moves of this louse ... and is only awaiting "official" confirmation to act. 

Through this move, the Front de liberation du Quebec wants to draw the attention of the world to the fate of French-speaking Quebecois, a majority which is jeered at and crushed on its own territory by a faulty political system (Canadian federalism) and by an economy dominated by the interests of American high finance, the racist and imperialist "big bosses.." When you examine the origins of Confederation you are in a better position to understand what were the true interests ($ $ $) which inspired those who were called the Fathers of Confederation.

 Besides, in 1867, the Quebec people (Lower Canada) were not consulted as to the possibility of creating a Confederation of existing provinces. It was a question of big money and these questions are only sorted out by interested parties, the capitalists, those who possess and amass capital and the means of production and who, according to their sole needs and requirements decide on our whole lives as well as those of a race of people. Thousands of Quebecois have understood, as did our ancestors of 1837-38, that the only way to ensure our national as well as economic survival is total independence. 

The Front de liberation du Quebec supports unconditionally the American blacks and those of Africa, the liberation movements of Latin America, of Palestine, and of Asia, the revolutionary Catholics of Northern Ireland and all those who fight for their freedom, their independence, and their dignity. The Front de liberation du Quebec wants to salute the Cuban and Algerian people who are heroically fighting against imperialism and colonialism in all its forms, for a just society where man's exploitation by man is banished. However, we believe that the only really true support we can give these people moving towards their liberations is to liberate ourselves first. During and after our struggle we shall offer much more than the usual sympathy of shocked intellectuals confronted with pictures showing aggression in a peaceful and blissful setting.

Here is how the various steps must be carried out:

1. As soon as this communiqué is received by the ruling authorities, they must immediately free all the aforementioned political prisoners and take them to the Montreal International Airport. There, a private room must be placed at their disposal straightaway so they can fraternize and become acquainted with the manifesto, the conditions outlined as well as the steps of the operation. A full copy of the manifesto and of this communiqué must be given to them. 

2. They must undergo no harm, brutality, torture, or blackmail. 

3. In the hours following the liberation of the political prisoners, a room must be turned into a studio where they will be able to:  Communicate with their respective lawyers;  Make a public announcement of their personal decision. The political prisoners can accept or refuse to leave Quebec; in other words, the imprisoned patriots are allowed to dissent in view of the disparity between the sentences imposed upon each of them;  Read and discuss the manifesto during a televised and broadcast programme, as set out earlier in the conditions;  Meet all the friends and militants who may wish to go and see them. 

4. The ruling authorities must ensure the return to Montreal of legal advisers and newsmen who will accompany the political prisoners to Cuba or Algeria. 

5. The "voluntary tax" of $500,000 in gold bullion must be taken to Dorval airport in nine BRINKS trucks. If this raises any technical problem, the authorities can surely call upon the "experts" who managed to make such a brilliant get-away at the time of the now famous "Brink's show" on the eve of the election. Newsmen (including the one from the Gazette just like in the good old days) must be allowed to attend the departure and arrival of the "happy group." All these conditions and their fulfilment must be dealt with within forty-eight hours from the release of this communiqué.. All these conditions are irrevocable. The life of the diplomat depends therefore on the good-will of the ruling authorities. Once the Front de liberation du Quebec has made sure that the lawyers and newsmen are on their way back and the latter have confirmed the arrival of the political prisoners as well as the voluntary tax which must be checked by Cuban or Algerian experts, and once they have confirmed that everything went according to plan, then and then only will the diplomat be set free. We feel confident that the imprisoned political patriots will benefit from the experience in Cuba or Algiers and we thank them in advance for the concern which they will express for our Quebec comrades. 
We shall overcome! 
Front de liberation du Quebec. 

© 1999, Claude Bélanger, Marianopolis College



Front de Libération du Québec

Manifesto of October 1970


Source: “The FLQ Manifesto,” Marcel Rioux, Quebec in Question (1971), tr. James Boake;
CopyLeftCreative Commons (Attribute & ShareAlike) marxists.org 2004.

Issued by the Front de Libération du Québec and read over CBC/Radio-Canada Oct. 8, 1970 as a condition for the release of kidnapped British trade official James Cross. Cross had been kidnapped on October 5 by the Libération cell of the FLQ, and among their demands for his release was the reading of this manifesto on TV and radio. Three days later the Chenier cell kidnapped Quebec’s Labor and Immigration minister, Pierre Laporte. Cross was released by his captors on December 3 when their hideout was discovered; the felquistes were flown to Cuba. Laporte was found dead in the trunk of a car on October 17.


The people in the Front de Liberation du Québec are neither Messiahs nor modern-day Robin Hoods. They are a group of Quebec workers who have decided to do everything they can to assure that the people of Quebec take their destiny into their own hands, once and for all.

The Front de Libération du Québec wants total independence for Quebeckers; it wants to see them united in a free society, a society purged for good of its gang of rapacious sharks, the big bosses who dish out patronage and their henchmen, who have turned Quebec into a private preserve of cheap labour and unscrupulous exploitation.

The Front de Libération du Québec is not an aggressive movement, but a response to the aggression organized by high finance through its puppets, the federal and provincial governments (the Brinks farce, Bill 69, the electoral map, the so-called “social progress” tax, the Power Corporation, medical insurance — for the doctors, the guys at Lapalme...)

The Front de Libération du Québec finances itself — through voluntary (sic) taxes levied on the enterprises that exploit the workers (banks, finance companies, etc....).

“The money powers of the status quo, the majority of the traditional tutors of our people, have obtained from the voters the reaction they hoped for, a step backwards rather than the changes we have worked for as never before, the changes we will continue to work for.” (René Lévesque, April 29, 1970).

Once, we believed it worthwhile to channel our energy and our impatience, in the apt words of René Lévesque, into the Parti Québécois, but the Liberal victory shows that what is called democracy in Quebec has always been, and still is, nothing but the “democracy” of the rich. In this sense the victory of the Liberal party is in fact nothing but the victory of the Simard-Cotroni election- fixers. Consequently, we wash our hands of the British parliamentary system; the Front de Libération du Québec will never let itself be distracted by the electoral crumbs that the Anglo-Saxon capitalists toss into the Quebec barnyard every four years. Many Quebeckers have realized the truth and are ready to take action. In the coming year Bourassa is going to get what’s coming to him: 100,000 revolutionary workers, armed and organized!

Yes, there are reasons for the Liberal victory. Yes, there are reasons for poverty, unemployment, slums, for the fact that you, Mr. Bergeron of Visitation Street, and you too, Mr. Legendre of Ville de Laval, who make F10,000 a year, do not feel free in our country, Quebec.

Yes, there are reasons, the guys who work for Lord know them, and so do the fishermen of the Gash, the workers on the North Shore; the miners who work for Iron Ore, for Québec Cartier Mining, for Noranda know these reasons too. The honest workingmen at Cabano, the guys they tried to screw still one more time, they know lots of reasons.

Yes, there are reasons why you, Mr. Tremblay of Panet Street and you, Mr. Cloutier who work in construction in St. Jérôme, can’t afford “Golden Vessels” with all the jazzy music and the sharp decor, like Drapeau the aristocrat, the guy who was so concerned about slums that he had coloured billboards stuck up in front of them so that the rich tourists couldn’t see us in our misery.

Yes, Madame Lemay of St. Hyacinthe, there are — reasons why you can’t afford a little junket to Florida like the rotten judges and members of Parliament who travel on our money. The good workers at Vickers and at Davie Shipbuilding, the ones who were given no reason for being thrown out, know these reasons; so do the guys at Murdochville that were smashed only because they wanted to form a union, and whom the rotten judges forced to pay over two million dollars because they had wanted to exercise this elementary right. The guys of Murdochville are familiar with this justice; they know lots of reasons. Yes, there are reasons why you, Mr. Lachance of St. Marguerite Street, go drowning your despair, your bitterness, and your rage in Molson’s horse piss. And you, the Lachance boy, with your marijuana cigarettes...

Yes, there are reasons why you, the welfare cases, are kept from generation to generation on public assistance. There are lots of reasons, the workers for Domtar at Windsor and East Angus know them; the workers for Squibb and Ayers, for the Quebec Liquor Commission and for Seven-up and for Victoria Precision, and the blue collar workers of Laval and of Montreal and the guys at Lapalme know lots of reasons.

The workers at Dupont of Canada know some reasons too, even if they will soon be able to express them only in English (thus assimilated, they will swell the number of New Quebeckers, the immigrants who are the darlings of Bill 69).

These reasons ought to have been understood by the policemen of Montreal, the system’s muscle; they ought to have realized that we live in a terrorized society, because without their force and their violence, everything fell apart on October 7.

We've had enough of a Canadian federalism which penalizes the dairy farmers of Quebec to satisfy the requirements of the Anglo-Saxons of the Commonwealth; which keeps the honest taxi drivers of Montreal in a state of semi-slavery by shamefully protecting the exclusive monopoly of the nauseating Murray Hill, and its owner — the murderer Charles Hershorn and his son Paul who, the night of October 7, repeatedly tore a .22 rifle out of the hands of his employees to fire on the taxi drivers and thereby mortally wounded Corporal Dumas, killed as a demonstrator. Canadian federalism pursues a reckless import policy, thereby throwing out of work the people who earn low wages in the textile and shoe industries, the most downtrodden people in Quebec, and all to line the pockets of a handful of filthy “money-makers” in Cadillacs. We are fed up with a federalism which classes the Quebec nation among the ethnic minorities of Canada.

We, and more and more Quebeckers too, have had it with a government of pussy-footers who perform a hundred and one tricks to charm the American millionaires, begging them to come and invest in Quebec, the Beautiful Province where thousands of square miles of forests full of game and of lakes full of fish are the exclusive property of these all-powerful lords of the twentieth century. We are sick of a government in the hands of a hypocrite like Bourassa who depends on Brinks armoured trucks, an authentic symbol of the foreign occupation of Quebec, to keep the poor Quebec “natives” fearful of that poverty and unemployment to which we are so accustomed.

We are fed up with the taxes we pay that Ottawa’s agent in Quebec would give to the English-speaking bosses as an “incentive” for them to speak French, to negotiate in French. Repeat after me: “Cheap labour is main d'oeuvre à bon marché in French.”

We have had enough of promises of work and of prosperity, when in fact we will always be the diligent servants and bootlickers of the big shots, as long as there is a Westmount, a Town of Mount Royal, a Hampstead, an Outremont, all these veritable fortresses of the high finance of St. James Street and Wall Street; we will be slaves until Quebeckers, all of us, have used every means, including dynamite and guns, to drive out these big bosses of the economy and of politics, who will stoop to any action however base, the better to screw us.

We live in a society of terrorized slaves, terrorized by the big bosses, Steinberg, Clark, Bronfman, Smith, Neopole, Timmins, Geoffrion, J.L. Lévesque, Hershorn, Thompson, Nesbitt, Desmarais, Kierans (next to these, Rémi Popol the Nightstick, Drapeau the Dog, the Simards’ Simple Simon and Trudeau the Pansy are peanuts!).

We are terrorized by the Roman Capitalist Church, though this is less and less true today (who owns the square where the Stock Exchange was built?); terrorized by the payments owing to Household Finance, by the advertising of the grand masters of consumption, Eaton’s, Simpson’s, Morgan’s, Steinberg’s, General Motors — terrorized by those exclusive clubs of science and culture, the universities, and by their boss-directors Gaudry and Dorais, and by the vice-boss Robert Shaw.

There are more and more of us who know and suffer under this terrorist society, and the day is coming when all the Westmounts of Quebec will disappear from the map.

Workers in industry, in mines and in the forests! Workers in the service industries, teachers, students and unemployed! Take what belongs to you, your jobs, your determination and your freedom. And you, the workers at General Electric, you make your factories run; you are the only ones able to produce; without you, General Electric is nothing!

Workers of Quebec, begin from this day forward to take back what is yours; take yourselves what belongs to you. Only you know your factories, your machines, your hotels, your universities, your unions; do not wait for some organization to produce a miracle.

Make your revolution yourselves in your neighbourhoods, in your places of work. If you don’t do it yourselves, other usurpers, technocrats or someone else, will replace the handful of cigar-smokers we know today and everything will have to be done all over again. Only you are capable of building a free society.

We must struggle not individually but together, till victory is obtained, with every means at our disposal, like the Patriots of 1897-1898 (those whom Our Holy Mother Church hastened to excommunicate, the better to sell out to British interests).

In the four corners of Quebec, may those who have been disdainfully called lousy Frenchmen and alcoholics begin a vigorous battle against those who have muzzled liberty and justice; may they put out of commission all the professional holdup artists and swindlers: bankers, businessmen, judges and corrupt political wheeler-dealers. ...

We are Quebec workers and we are prepared to go all the way. With the help of the entire population, we want to replace this society of slaves by a free society, operating by itself and for itself, a society open on the world. Our struggle can only be victorious. A people that has awakened cannot long be kept in misery and contempt.

Long live Free Quebec!

Long live our comrades the political prisoners!

Long live the Quebec Revolution!

Long live the Front de Libération du Québec!

 



Front de Libération
du Québec

1963-1971



Historical Introduction, by Mitch Abidor

Message of the FLQ to the Nation, April 16 1963
Our Position, June 1963
Declaration of Principles, September 1963
Is It Necessary to Become a Policeman?, 1963
Quebec Should Denounce Terror, 1964
Our National “Harkis”, 1964
The Revolution on the March, February 1964 - October 1965
The Canadian Communist Party and the Independence of Quebec, January 1965
Does the FLQ Exist?, October 1965
Strategic Retreat and Rearguard bases, March 1966
Defense of Québécois Political Prisoners, June 1968
For a Multinational Common Liberation Front, February 1970
FLQ Manifesto, June 1970
FLQ Manifesto, October 1970
Defense Speech of Paul Rose, March 1971
A Pimp Named Trudeau, Gérald Godin 1971
The Execution of Pierre Laporte, Pierre Vallières 1977

Paul RoseJacques RoseBernard LortieFrancis Simard