Saturday, September 10, 2022

Pierre Poilievre's controversy-ridden rise to front-runner status in the Conservative Party leadership race


Pierre Poilievre has made a name for himself by taking a strong stance on issues many Canadians find divisive. His steadfast support of the so-called “Freedom Convoy” and other related groups, including participation in a march with a prominent anti-vaccine-mandate figure, have made him a fixture in headlines and a controversial political figure.

Now, his tactic of leveraging divisive, polarizing issues has catapulted Poilievre into position as front-runner in the Conservative Party of Canada’s leadership race, says one political scientist.

The Carleton MP’s politics revolve around “riling up the base” using “highly partisan rhetoric,” and it appears this strategy is paying off, Max Cameron, a professor of political science at the University of British Columbia, told Canada’s National Observer.

Fifty-seven per cent of Conservative voters have a favourable impression of Poilievre, according to an Ipsos poll conducted on behalf of Global News between Aug. 29 and 31. A sample of 1,001 Canadians aged 18 and over were interviewed for the survey, which saw Poilievre’s popularity climb eight points compared to a similar poll conducted in mid-July. Jean Charest is viewed favourably by 38 per cent of Conservative voters, down seven points, and MP Leslyn Lewis sits at 32 per cent.

The results of the leadership race are to be announced Sept. 10. Besides Poilievre, Charest and Lewis, former Ontario MPP Roman Baber and Conservative MP Scott Aitchison are also in the running.

Poilievre made headlines in recent weeks after a photo surfaced of him shaking hands with Jeremy Mackenzie, founder of a far-right group known as Diagolon, This is one of many controversial moments for the leadership candidate that has elicited both support and outrage from Canadians.

Poilievre did not respond to requests for comment by deadline.

Because politicians meet lots of people, Cameron said he is cautious about making inferences around photos, but noted Poilievre’s divisive strategy is premised on mobilizing a “group of supporters who really are passionate about some change that they want to see.”

On June 30, Poilievre also marched alongside James Topp, a Canadian soldier charged after speaking out against COVID-19 vaccine requirements while in uniform. Topp, who marched from Vancouver to Ottawa to protest COVID-19 vaccine mandates, has also appeared on Mackenzie’s podcast.

Vaccine mandates have been a key aspect of Poilievre’s messaging, and he even used the so-called “Freedom Convoy” that occupied downtown Ottawa for more than three weeks to shoot a promotional video.

His support of the convoy is not unique. Other MPs have taken the same stance, and some, including fellow leadership candidate Lewis, met with Topp and other key convoy organizers.

In Poilievre’s promotional video, he said the convoy represents "the people who want to stand and speak for their freedoms" and "those that our government and our media have insulted and left behind."

This summer, Poilievre has also decried the work of journalists and the mainstream media. On May 9, Poilievre tweeted that he won seven elections by going around liberal media and speaking “directly to Canadians.”

His campaign put out a statement in response to questions posed by a Global News reporter, referring to the questions as “an attack” and accusing “unprofessional journalists” of trying to set “disingenuous traps” to attack opponents.

Anti-vaccine-mandate attitudes, meeting with far-right organizers or skipping a debate are nothing new for the Conservative Party, but Cameron said Poilievre’s opposition to the World Economic Forum is unusual.

“Historically, that's been the sort of thing that Conservatives have embraced,” he explained. “[Former prime minister Stephen] Harper would go to those, and they're sort of a staple of the kind of corporate view of the world.

“It's not unusual to see people on the left criticizing the World Economic Forum … but for somebody on the right to criticize it, that tells us that there's a big pivot happening in the Conservative movement.”

Poilievre has established himself as a Conservative “bulldog” through these types of defining moments, but his legislative track record also speaks volumes, said Cameron.

“Back in 2014, he, as a member of the Harper government, was instrumental in introducing a series of changes to the Canada Elections Act,” Cameron explained.

The proposed changes (none of which are in place today) sought to impose a set of restrictions on voting, change campaign finance rules, raise the bar on voter identification, eliminate vouching and limit Elections Canada’s ability to enforce the Elections Act and the activities it could undertake to encourage participation, he said.

A group of more than 150 political scientists, including Cameron, voiced concerns about the proposed changes. He says this was one of the rare times a majority of the political science community spoke with a unified voice.

“That was my first sense of who Pierre Poilievre is, and it struck me that this was the kind of partisanship and politicization of electoral institutions that we have been seeing down south, and we know what the consequences of that kind of politicization are,” said Cameron.

To Cameron, Poilievre’s record on this issue as minister of state for democratic reform suggests his vision for Canada’s democracy is not inclusive, doesn’t encourage the broadest possible participation and doesn’t honour and respect non-partisan institutions.

“Then you add on to that, you know, the pandering to the truckers convoy, and so forth. And I think that the picture becomes pretty clear.”

Typically, Conservative leadership candidates draw support from the right during leadership contests and then tack towards centre for federal elections to appeal to a wider voter base, like former leader Erin O’Toole did before being ousted, said Cameron. But if he wins, Poilievre may be the exception, he said.

It’s impossible to know what strategies are unfolding in Poilievre’s camp, but “part of his appeal to his base, at least, is the perception that he actually means what he says,” and with strong stances on divisive issues, it would be hard to walk back, said Cameron.

If he wins the leadership contest, Cameron thinks it’s likely Poilievre will stick to his guns and strong reputation as a Conservative “bulldog” in the hopes it's enough to win a federal election.

Natasha Bulowski, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Canada's National Observer


Opposition MPs voice concern at possibility of Pierre Poilievre leading the federal Conservatives

The Conservative Party of Canada will name its new leader Saturday evening, and the results will have serious implications for all Canadians, Liberal and NDP MPs say.

“It has been a race with a lot of focusing on making the fears of our country bigger and not looking at progressive ways to help one another move along in this country,” NDP MP and party whip Rachel Blaney told Canada’s National Observer.

The winner will be named at Ottawa’s Shaw Centre, and although Carleton MP Pierre Poilievre is the front-runner based on recent polling, Blaney said, “You can never be sure until the final ballots are cast and counted.”

Poilievre is up against former Quebec premier Jean Charest, Ontario MP Leslyn Lewis, former Ontario MPP Roman Baber and Conservative MP Scott Aitchison.

Of the candidates, Poilievre has the most MP endorsements, with 63 to Charest’s 16, according to their respective websites. In B.C., 10 of the province’s 13 Conservative MPs endorse Poilievre.

In an emailed statement to Canada’s National Observer, Charest’s campaign manager Chris Rougier said: “We knew we were up against a movement that had been building towards this moment long before Jean entered the race. We are feeling cautiously optimistic but agree, no matter the outcome, we need to move forward as a united Conservative Party to bring an end to Trudeau’s politics of division.”

In an interview, Liberal MP Hedy Fry told Canada’s National Observer that as far as she’s concerned, the race is still up in the air but expressed concern about the potential for Poilievre to take the helm of the Conservative Party.

The Vancouver Centre MP said Poilievre supporting the so-called “Freedom Convoy” and encouraging its revolutionary attitude and the sort of people looking at violence and overthrowing an elected government is troubling to her, both as an MP and a Canadian.

“How do you want to be a prime minister when you don't want to obey the rule of law?” she asked.

Poilievre did not respond to requests for comment by deadline.

Poilievre’s adversarial style is nothing new in the House of Commons, but there is potential for the debate to devolve even further, which will undermine Canadians’ trust in parliamentarians and institutions, Fry said.

“They're just going to think that all we ever care about is not what is best for them and for the future of the country, but what's best for the political decision-makers,” said Fry. “And I think that is going to be quite devastating for the country and where we're heading.” If Poilievre does become leader of the party, Fry hopes he will change tack and “lead with a certain amount of dignity.”

“The signals from his leadership race so far have not been encouraging in terms of that kind of stability and the kind of leader we're looking for in a democracy,” she said.

Rather than working together to improve the lives of Canadians, Poilievre takes a confrontational stance focused on “getting a good hit,” said Blaney.

“What we keep hearing from him is that he cares, but he's actually not offering anything that is going to make a difference.”

Related video: What Pierre Poilievre's leadership could mean for the Conservative Party's political future   Duration 2:08   View on Watch


Blaming the federal government for inflation — which, Blaney emphasized, is a worldwide issue — does nothing to help Canadians make ends meet. Poilievre has yet to stand up to industries and companies raking in excess profits while people struggle to put food on the table, she said.

Right now, Blaney says Canadians need leaders who will work together. She pointed to former premier of Saskatchewan and federal NDP leader Tommy Douglas working with former Liberal prime minister Lester B. Pearson to make Canada’s universal publicly funded health-care system a reality. Poilievre, on the other hand, is about fragmenting the country and separating people, said Blaney.

She said his “very close links” to parts of “the [Freedom] Convoy, which were really focused on white supremacy,” are a serious concern.

“We saw what happened when our neighbours had a leader that really connected closely to the right wing of the country.”

A July 7 statement from Poilievre’s campaign said he “has stated unequivocally that ‘any and all racism is evil and must be stopped.’”

Anger is something that can be used or misused to promote action — it can be messy, but things get done and people can be mobilized and satisfied, Liberal MP Ken Hardie told Canada’s National Observer in an interview.

But, he warned, much of the anger we’re seeing is focused on individuals, not issues.

“This is where it gets destructive. This is what breeds hate,” said Hardie. “And that is clearly a growing issue. It's a growing issue for journalists, especially women journalists.”

Hardie says he has also had to take extra measures to keep himself safe.

He is also of the mind that Canada needs a strong Conservative Party but is unsure what will come out in the wash.

“We have an individual who has been quite critical of people in his own caucus, and you wonder if, in fact, there's going to be a significant party left after this vote if Mr. Poilievre becomes the leader,” said Hardie.

Since former prime minister Stephen Harper’s resignation in 2015, the Conservative Party has seen two leaders come and go. Many Conservative MPs have hitched their wagon to Poilievre, and Hardie noted that any time a party changes leadership, there are all sorts of considerations that come into play.

“You can see the desire to align with an individual who's maybe going to have an oversized say in your role as a member of Parliament on that side of the house. So, you know, who gets to sit on the committees, who gets to sit on the front bench, who gets relegated to the backbench…” he said.

Canada’s National Observer reached out to all 13 Conservative B.C. MPs for comment; only five replied. The office of MP Tako van Popta responded but declined to comment on his endorsement of Poilievre, as did a representative from MP Ed Fast’s office, who endorsed Charest.

A representative from MP Mark Strahl’s office responded with his March 7 statement of support for Poilievre, which declared the party needs a “principled leader” to make the case for conservatism in this country, “a champion who will stand up for our rights and freedoms and won’t back down from Justin Trudeau.”

Likewise, the office of MP Marc Dalton did not answer specific questions — Dalton entered the race but failed to come up with the required funds — but sent his June 2 statement of support for Lewis. In it, he praises Lewis’s principles, passion and vision for the country, adding she “amplifies” that the Conservative Party is a “modern political movement that embraces immigrants, people of colour and women.”

The two B.C. MPs who endorse Charest are Frank Caputo and Ed Fast. In a statement posted to Facebook on March 18, Fast wrote that Charest is the “mature and experienced leader” needed to unite the party and country.

Green MP Elizabeth May declined to comment until after the results of the leadership race are announced.

Natasha Bulowski, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Canada's National Observer


Lisa LaFlamme scooped up by Rogers to cover Queen Elizabeth's funeral in London

Courtney Greenberg - Yesterday 

Lisa LaFlamme poses with her Canadian Screen Award for Best National News Anchor, in Toronto on Aug. 17, 2022. Bell Media has said its ouster of the esteemed journalist was due to a desire to go “in a different direction.”© Provided by National Post

Lisa LaFlamme will be back on Canadian television screens as a special correspondent for Rogers’ CityNews after the controversy surrounding her untimely exit as CTV News anchor. CTV is owned by Bell Media.

The veteran reporter is set to cover Queen Elizabeth’s funeral and the transition to King Charles III from London, England, it was revealed on Friday.

“The Queen is the only monarch most of us have ever known. We grew up with Her Majesty and mourn the passing of this remarkable and inspiring woman,” said LaFlamme in a statement to Rogers Sports and Media. “As this second Elizabethan era comes to an end, I can only say how truly honoured I am to help tell the story of her life and the legacy she leaves.”

President of Rogers Sports and Media Colette Watson said LaFlamme’s “incredible talent and wealth of experience are befitting of an event of this magnitude,” in a statement.

This move comes after LaFlamme’s 35-year career as chief news anchor at CTV National News came to an end. In a social media post on August 15, she shared that she had been fired from her position. She said she was told that her exit was due to a “business decision” made by Bell Media.

“I was blindsided, and I’m still shocked and saddened by Bell Media’s decision,” she said, adding that she was grateful for her loyal viewers.

It appeared to the public that ageism and sexism played a part in her firing.

“Lisa Laflamme is the beloved Canadian news anchor who let her hair go grey during the pandemic. It got her fired,” one Twitter user wrote .

Vice-president of news Michael Melling apparently questioned who “let Lisa’s hair go grey,” it was later reported by The Globe and Mail. The comment led to public outcry and a push for LaFlamme to be reinstated, with a Change.org petition garnering thousands of signatures.

At the end of August, Melling took leave from the company, according to an internal Bell Media memo.

The decision to fire LaFlamme was not due to her “age, gender or grey hair”, president and CEO of BCE Inc. & Bell Canada Mirko Bibic clarified in a LinkedIn post last week.

Companies like fast-food chain Wendy’s joined in to show their support, changing their logo from red-haired to grey. Dove launched a campaign to celebrate aging, using the hashtag #KeepTheGrey.

LaFlamme will be doing daily reporting for all newscasts on television and radio, CityNews said. She will also appear regularly on Breakfast Television.


Queen Elizabeth II died on Sept. 8, 2022 at 96 years old. She was Britain’s longest-reigning monarch.
Albertans Are Roasting Jason Kenney For A Fact-Checking Fail In His Tribute To The Queen

Canada Edition (EN) - Yesterday - Narcity

Since the death of Queen Elizabeth II on September 8, there have been hundreds of statements and messages of condolences from leaders around the world, including Alberta Premier Jason Kenney.




However, Redditors have started roasting the premier after his tribute contained some wrong information on one famous Alberta landmark.

In a statement paying tribute to the late queen, Kenney said her name would live on with schools, roadways and mountains in Alberta, including Mount Queen Elizabeth on the Alberta and B.C. border.



But after the statement was shared, Redditors were quick to point out that the mountain wasn't named after the monarch at all and it was actually named after Queen Consort Elisabeth of Belgium almost a decade before Queen Elizabeth II was born, according to Peakfinder.

Redditors took to the site to mock Kenney's mistake including one person who said they "proof their Reddit posts more than [Kenney proofed his statement.]"

Another took us back to earlier this year when there was an infamous clip of Kenney struggling to fill his car at a gas station.


People also wondered if his communications team had any input on the statement.


However, some Redditors did give Kenney the benefit of the doubt and said they didn't know Mount Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Elizabeth Ranges weren't actually linked.


Another person added that most Albertans probably couldn't have told you who the mountain was actually named after.
  1. u/Plynwitfire

    First reasonable comment I've seen on this matter. Honestly if you polled most Albertans who the mountain was named after they would have gotten it wrong. Lots of valid reasons to be upset with Jason Kenney and the ucps leadership, this is not one of them.


Either way, Kenney's mistake serves as a good reminder to politicians to fact-check their work or face the wrath of Reddit.
Braid: Poll shows a tight UCP leadership race, not a Danielle Smith runaway

'This really suggests that the race is a lot tighter than people were expecting. Among the top three, it's anybody's to win.'


Author of the article: Don Braid • Calgary Herald

Brian Jean, premier of Alberta?

That’s the startling result from the first detailed poll of the leadership race, compiled for the Calgary Herald and Postmedia by Leger.


The pollster says that among UCP supporters surveyed, former Wildrose leader Jean wins on the sixth ballot, beating fellow finalist Travis Toews by 53 per cent to 47 per cent.

By that time, Danielle Smith has been knocked out of the race. She scores no higher than 31 per cent in any round (on Ballot 5) after starting out at just 27 per cent on the first ballot.

The mock vote run by Leger includes only people who identify as UCP supporters if an election were held today. It was not confined to those who hold party memberships, the only people allowed to mail in a leadership ballot.

Nobody claims this poll of 316 supporters actually predicts the result to be announced Oct 6. Leger executive vice-president Ian Large says it suggests “a statistical dead heat” among Jean, former treasurer Toews and Smith.

But what it does show, as Large adds, is that Smith’s campaign “is getting lots of the oxygen but not necessarily the support.”

That will be welcome news to Jean and Toews, who have been labouring under the widespread impression that Smith is running away with the contest.

But there’s no good news for the other four candidates: former cabinet ministers Rebecca Schulz, Leela Aheer and Rajan Sawhney, as well as Independent MLA Todd Loewen.

None would get more than four per cent on the first ballot, according to Leger. They’d all be knocked out of the running by the fourth ballot.


RECOMMENDED FROM EDITORIAL

Large says he was surprised that the mock vote ran to six ballots as secondary choices were distributed.

“I was expecting that maybe three ballots would have got somebody to 50 per cent plus one. This really suggests that the race is a lot tighter than people were expecting. Among the top three, it’s anybody’s to win.”

The survey was conducted over the Labour Day weekend, before a barrage of attacks on Smith’s Sovereignty Act from Premier Jason Kenney and Smith’s opponents.

On Thursday, Toews, Sawhney, Jean and Aheer held a joint news conference to attack Smith’s plan. This was a most unusual group event for candidates during a leadership campaign.

Jean called Smith’s strategy a “fairy tale.” Sawhney said the act would be “worthless virtue signalling.” Toews added: “It’s political bluster and won’t deliver.” All four, including Aheer, said they would vote against the act if Smith introduced it as premier.

UCP members have been able to vote since their ballots started arriving in the mail this week. Many thousands surely haven’t mailed their ballots yet, so the continuing opposition to Smith’s campaign could cut into her support (although some in other campaigns say it could further motivate her ardent and angry backers).

That candidates’ news conference was partly motivated by Kenney’s fierce attack on Smith’s ideas. Candidates were angry at him for starting a personal feud with Smith and taking attention away from them.

Airdrie-Cochrane MLA Peter Guthrie, who backs Smith, was furious too. On Facebook, he said Kenney promised he wouldn’t get involved in the campaign. “His conduct most certainly broke the pledge he gave to caucus,” Guthrie wrote.

He also alleged that Kenney’s conduct damages the UCP itself. “He is becoming a walking billboard advertiser for the NDP.”

At this point, the overall news for the UCP is promising. The Leger poll shows that even with leadership up in the air, the UCP has moved ahead of the NDP in popular support, leading by 44 per cent to 41 per cent.

The NDP continues to have majority support in Edmonton (52 per cent). But the UCP holds 44 per cent in Calgary and 53 per cent in the rest of the province.

Whether this UCP support goes up or down after the new leader is announced is a question impossible to answer. But we can be pretty sure that at this point, it’s no runaway for Danielle Smith.

Don Braid’s column appears regularly in the Calgary Herald.
Twitter: @DonBraid
With the Pickering plant set to close in 2025 nuclear power needs a way forward

Yesterday 

As the world’s population sits at the brink of eight-billion human souls—doubling in just 47 years—there is an insatiable demand for more energy.

Non-renewable dirty fossil fuels have radically altered the Earth’s atmosphere while ocean levels are rising dangerously (Florida alone is expected to lose $66 billion in real estate value over the next 75 years due to lost coastal lands). As our climate continues to warm toward a tipping point, we are in the middle of an accelerated plan to replace our 250-year dependence on carbon, since coal was first broadly used to fuel the industrial age.

Nuclear power has, at times, been at the centre of this plan.

Since the 1950s, it has gained popularity and during the ‘60s and ‘70s seemed destined to be our answer to carbon. High profile nuclear disasters such as Three Mile Island in the U.S. (1979), Chernobyl in Russia (1986) and Fukushima in Japan (2011) dealt a massive blow to the viability of nuclear power.

Most nuclear plants that generate electricity use thermal reactors with enriched uranium to extract power through a process called nuclear fission—a reaction caused by the splitting of the nucleus of an atom into two or more nuclei.

The devastation from nuclear radiation when reactors meltdown, rendering entire landscapes unrecognizable, has drawn more attention to forms of renewable energy, which pose very little risk.

Currently nuclear power is responsible for meeting approximately 60 percent of Ontario’s energy needs. But debate continues over the technology’s safety, cost and capabilities.

The long-term use of nuclear energy is an issue very much up in the air.

While some activists say nuclear is the way forward—bridging the gap between dirty fossil fuels and renewable energies such as hydro, wind and solar—notable environmental organizations like Greenpeace call it a “distraction”.

“It's a distraction from us investing seriously in the solutions that we need to address climate change,” said Shawn-Patrick Stensil, Program Director at Greenpeace.

He hints at the transition to renewable energy sources. Nuclear energy is not renewable. There is a finite amount of uranium and plutonium on Earth.

But many scientists are not concerned since uranium and plutonium are energy dense, meaning a lot of potential power for electricity production can be extracted from a small amount of raw material.

One of the major problems with renewable energy sources is they are not available on-demand. Solar energy can only be captured when the sun is shining. Similarly, wind power can only be harnessed when winds reach a certain speed.

Nuclear, on the other hand, can be harnessed around the clock and is available to our electricity grid on demand.

“In terms of viable replacement for fossil fuels, you need to do something that's as good or better, and nuclear fits that model,” said Chris Keefer, president of Canadians for Nuclear Energy.

Canada is failing badly in its commitment to reduce emissions. We have endorsed nine national plans since 1990 to meet carbon reduction goals; we have failed on all of them. Currently, Canada ranks 31st among the 38 Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries for carbon intensity (carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP). We also rank 24th for ability to reduce carbon intensity over a decade.

“We’ve really just been treading water,” said Keefer.

Nuclear power provides the opportunity to create emissions-free power that can be supplied on an on-demand basis; it provided 90 percent of the energy needed to phase out coal in Ontario after the early 2000s.

Surprising to some, nuclear power is the cleanest of all energy technologies. Since uranium and plutonium are energy dense, very little mining needs to be done to extract the raw materials. In addition, the only substance emitted from nuclear plants is water vapour.

“I'm a physician, I work at a hospital, I had a baby who was in an incubator for five weeks. We need to have really reliable electricity,” Keefer said. “And nuclear provides that with the lowest emissions, lifecycle emissions of any power generating technology.”

But some environmental organizations, such as Greenpeace, still staunchly oppose nuclear power.

One of the major concerns is nuclear waste.

Proponents argue pop culture has done a disservice to the nuclear movement.

The animated show The Simpsons, which is in its 33rd season, running since 1989, routinely lampoons the fictional Springfield nuclear plant.

It is notorious for safety violations that include leaky pipes, unsafe storage and spent nuclear fuel being dumped into surrounding waters.

Such depictions, and the lingering effect of the Cold War, when the nuclear-arms race loomed large over multiple generations, have shaped people’s perceptions about nuclear power as a fuel source.

“You have a number of communities who are unwilling to host nuclear repositories. And there's some deep concern, especially given where Ontario is located and where existing nuclear facilities are located, near the Great Lakes where you could see a possible contamination of our drinking water,” says Mike Schreiner, leader of the Green Party of Ontario.

The Party has a stated position on nuclear power, included on its website: “Don’t build new uranium mines or nuclear plants that add to our huge pile of dangerous nuclear waste that has already been in ‘temporary’ storage for 50 years.”

Nuclear waste is much easier to track than emissions from fossil fuels. We know exactly where nuclear waste is stored unlike fossil fuel waste which is sent out and dispersed invisibly into the atmosphere.

Estimates are that coal used to kill 1,000 people in Ontario every year; by replacing it with nuclear, we have essentially saved a thousand lives annually.

Supporters of the energy source point to the relatively small footprint created by nuclear power and push back against those who believe the waste by-products are too dangerous a risk to tolerate.

The World Nuclear Association estimates that, on average, the waste created by a reactor for one year of a person’s electricity needs would be the size of a brick. Only 5 grams, about a teaspoon of this would be what is considered high level waste.

There are three levels of nuclear waste. Low-level waste includes mops, rags, clothes, floor sweepings and other industrial items that contain short-lived radiation and can be handled with simple precautions. Intermediate-level waste consists of reactor core components, resins and filters which are more radioactive. High-level waste is the spent fuel. Due to the long-lived radioactivity, this waste must be carefully managed over the long term.

After high-level waste is cooled, it is stored in deep geological repositories. These repositories are designed to ensure that harmful radiation would not reach the surface even in the event of an earthquake or through the passage of time.

“There's no plausible way or mechanism for properly contained nuclear waste to get out and harm anyone,” Keefer said. “We're not talking about a civilization storing it, we're talking about geology, storing it in geology, with the correct geology that has been stable for hundreds of millions of years, and can really effectively contain the waste. The way for it to get out of the geologic repository is that it has to dissolve in water and move outwards through the rock to get to a water table or get to the surface where it can potentially harm people.”

Another problem for proponents of nuclear power is the association with the technology’s use as a weapon.

“People are afraid of nuclear because they are afraid of the nuclear bomb. And they've made that kind of that leap in their head that a nuclear plant can explode like a nuclear bomb [but] the physics just don’t allow that,” Keefer says.

Two nuclear meltdowns in particular have shaped the attitudes of many Canadians: Chernobyl and Fukushima.

Chernobyl was the only nuclear meltdown to cause direct deaths as a result of radiation exposure. It was an old nuclear site in the Ukraine that wasn’t being managed properly and when the meltdown occurred, 31 people died directly from the disaster.

Global regulations and safety standards are much more strict now.

“I was at a nuclear waste facility, where they were changing the lighting from fluorescent to LED, and they'd had a seven-month study, just to make sure that rewiring the lighting system would have no impact on the running of this area that was just stored nuclear fuel casks,” Keefer explains. “Everything is so overdone in terms of the engineering and the planning and that's a good thing. It's really admirable, this culture of excellence.”

The Fukushima nuclear accident happened as a result of the most powerful earthquake to ever hit Japan and a tsunami that hit the coast in 2011.

There were no deaths as a direct result of radiation exposure during the disaster but there were deaths from the government’s mismanaged evacuation plan.

Stensil fears a similar disastrous emergency management plan could put Toronto at risk if a meltdown were to occur at the Pickering nuclear plant.

“Having a nuclear station in the middle of a city is not a smart thing, in the event that you do have an accident. [It] was an issue that we raised a lot after the Fukushima disaster,” Stensil says. “I don't believe the government has adequate evacuation plans for the Greater Toronto [Area]. I just don't believe that.”

The plant, which has been in operation since 1971, is one of the largest in the world, supplying 14 percent of Ontario’s electricity.

Pickering has been at the centre of the debate around nuclear energy in Ontario as the plant is set to officially close in 2025, with two of its remaining six reactors shuttering in 2024.

Since it is over 50 years old, it would need upgrades to be kept in operation. Instead, the Ontario government has decided to shut it down.

Schreiner says the Green Party of Ontario believes nuclear will be a part of our electricity supply for a long time, but he believes there are benefits to the closing of Pickering and does not support the construction of more nuclear plants in the future, largely due to the risks.

“We're strong supporters of closing Pickering. It's past its best before date.”

Pickering originally had eight reactors but two were shut down in the early 2000s. Stensil sees this as proof that the nuclear plant is no longer needed.

“We don't need those reactors,” he said. “And because of falling electricity demand and other alternatives that have been put online, we're not using the full capacity of the nuclear station.”

Approximately 8 percent of Ontario’s electricity still comes from natural gas, and once Pickering closes, the Ontario government plans to replace it with more natural gas, which releases harmful methane into the atmosphere. Methane is considered a far more potent greenhouse gas than CO2. If natural gas replaces the energy produced at the Pickering plant, Canada’s all-sector national GHG emissions will increase by one percent.

“Unfortunately, due to a lack of vision, we are heading in the wrong direction,” Keefer said. “We need to be adding and building more carbon free electricity generation. But in fact, we're doing the opposite by letting this plant shut down.”

Stensil and Schreiner are hoping Ontario can come up with a plan to replace Pickering with renewable energy.

“We think Pickering should be replaced with a wind, solar, water-power, combined with storage capacity,” Schreiner said, noting that solar has become the cheapest form of clean electricity generation.

While solar may be the lowest cost option, it requires an outsourcing of solar panels.

There are economic benefits to using nuclear power.

“We have our own reactor technology, and we control the entire fuel cycle for our nuclear fleet, which gives us unparalleled energy security in a world where there's more and more geopolitical issues, which are affecting energy prices,” Keefer said.

“If we're talking about replacing fossil fuels and spending the hundreds of billions that are necessary so that we have options, we can either spend that in country where people make great salaries, as you know, skilled trades people and operators throughout this whole sector, which is all in Canada, or we send that money to China and import solar panels and wind turbines that unfortunately can't can't replace fossil fuel services.”

While Stensil is against nuclear energy and Schreiner wants it phased out, many environmentalists support the use of nuclear power; the co-founder of Greenpeace, Patrick Moore, left the organization in 1986 to support nuclear energy generation.

In a historic shift, the Green Party of Finland voted to adopt a pro-nuclear stance earlier this year with the party manifesto backing nuclear as a “sustainable energy”.

It is the first Green Party across the globe to ditch the anti-nuclear stance.

Keefer sees this as a positive step toward a more global acceptance of nuclear power.

“I think as the threat of climate change looms larger and larger, nuclear is really the obvious solution.”


Rachel Morgan, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Pointer
Honk For Jesus. Save Your Soul Is Divisive — That’s The Point

Ineye Komonibo - Thursday

Since the beginning of time, organized religion has played a fundamental role in most, if not all, societies. From a top-down level, many cultures have propped up faith and the communal expression of it as a pillar of their social structure — and to mixed results. In the new film Honk For Jesus. Save Your Soul, a project from Daniel Kaluuya’s production company 59%, the nuances of Black church culture are put under a microscope, following the spirited efforts of a pair of Black pastors to redeem their good standing after falling from grace. A group Zoom interview with stars Sterling K. Brown and Regina Hall, and filmmaking duo Adamma and Adanne Ebo highlighted the radical intention of the story. Though the narrative is told through a comedic lens, the subject at hand is no laughing matter: the church might need saving from itself.


4200_D019_00328_RC Regina Hall and Sterling K. Brown star as Trinitie and Lee-Curtis Childs in HONK FOR JESUS. SAVE YOUR SOUL., a Focus Features release. Credit: Steve Swisher / © 2021 Pinky Promise LLC© Provided by Refinery29

“We’re trying to encourage people to ask questions of this specific institution, the institution of church and religion, but also of all larger institutions that we let govern our lives because we don’t ask questions,” Adanne offers in the interview. “When there’s no transparency, then that’s how you get unchecked power. And that runs rampant in our culture today.”

Honk For Jesus, a creative partnership between the Nigerian-American filmmakers (and identical twins), introduces us to the whispers plaguing Pastor Lee Curtis Childs (a simultaneously smarmy yet charming Brown) and his devoted wife Trinitie (Hall in her best form), the leaders of the dwindling Atlanta megachurch Wander to Greater Paths Baptist Church. When we meet the First Couple of this house of God, there’s a hunger emanating from them. Not for the Word, but for restoration — to status, to fame, and to glory.

Lee-Curtis and Trinitie are planning a big comeback for themselves and for their church, anxious to regain their status after a scandal that knocked them off the pulpit. The controversy, which is never explicitly explained but is instead relayed in pieces through enthusiastic gossip throughout the city, hints that Lee-Curtis’ counseling of several young men in his community was less helpful than it was predatory; word on the street is that he befriended young men and showered them with gifts and a concerning level of affection because of a closeted same-sex attraction, an obvious no-no in the church. The pastor’s “mentorship” comes back to haunt him in the form of a multi-million dollar lawsuit alleging that he preyed on the young men seeking his guidance at church. Lee-Curtis and Trinitie, of course, deny the allegations vehemently. (But they’re still coughing up the money for settlements — y’know, just to smooth things over.)

Lee-Curtis’ not-so-private efforts to reconcile his sexuality to his faith are exactly what drew Brown to the character after reading the script. “One of the primary things that attracted me to the role was an opportunity to challenge the church’s very specific views on anyone who is not cisgendered and heteronormative,” reveals Brown of his role as the tortured lead pastor. “I think that’s worthy of examination because your relationship with God is personal, and just because it doesn’t look like everybody else thinks it should look, doesn’t negate its existence.”

As a result of the shocking accusations, it’s been years since the couple has been able to fill up the pews of their sanctuary. To make sure that the news of Childs’ return to the church circuit makes a splash, they’ve teamed up with a talented documentarian who will capture the behind-the-scenes footage of their preparations. But what the cameras actually capture is a crumbling foundation being hastily rebuilt by a couple in crisis. Lee-Curtis and Trinitie are not divine beings but regular-degular humans, deeply flawed, calculated, and on the verge of a breakdown. Preaching the Gospel isn’t really their main objective right now. Saving souls is important or whatever, but first, they have to get back on the map.

Watching Honk for Jesus, Save Your Soul, I felt a sense of disquiet wash over me scene by scene — not because the film wasn’t good, but because as someone born and raised in the church, it was real. Too real. Jesus Himself may have been poor, but the business of Jesus is a very lucrative one, and I’ve come across many pastors more focused on increasing their platform (and lining their pockets) than spreading God’s Word. To make things even more troubling, just like in the movie, the morals of these real life clergy are just as questionable. Rampant sexual abuse. Poorly hidden tax fraud. Repeated infidelity. Exploitation of parishioners. There’s no shortage of horror stories about pastors preaching heaven while living like hell behind closed doors.

Those contradictions, and the way that they’ve become normalized within church culture, are exactly what the Ebo sisters are trying to speak to with their film. The project is meant to pull back the curtain of church hypocrisy, forcing congregations of past and present to wrestle with the darkness that often corrupts what should be one of our safest spaces.




“I’ve always been the one who’s been like, Oh, y’all going to church this Halloween? I will be dressing up and going to get candy,” Adamma tells Unbothered. “I’ve always been sort of one foot in, one foot out when I felt like church wasn’t resonating with me or wasn’t serving me well or bringing me joy and happiness. So I’m very accustomed to critiquing it.”

“I think it helps that all four of us had our own personal relationship with faith and the church, and are still sort of figuring things out,” adds Adanne. “Because of that, we were able to understand the full spectrum of this culture, and that helped the overall balance 

Honk For Jesus is a satirical story, and its dark comedy, mockumentary approach emphasizes the comically cringy double-mindedness of its protagonists (who are, ironically, also its antagonists). Through the behind-the-scenes vantage point of the Curtis’ journey, we’re able to see the glaring discrepancy between who they’re pretending to be and who they really are, despite their best efforts, and the breaking of that fourth wall feels uncomfortable because it hits too close to home. It’s funny, but it’s also not funny; one scene will have you cackling, doubled over in sheer delight, and the next, it’s more like a wait, did the Ebos go to my home church? nervous chuckle. (“Black folks in general balance comedy with the hardest stuff all the time,” Adanne reminds me. “It’s our coping mechanism.”)

In the week since the film’s release, it’s already drummed up a host of mixed reactions ranging from genuine delight to pearl-clutching indignation. Old school churchgoers across the country are tuning in to the film in theaters or streaming it on Peacock expecting a celebration of the Black church only to find the dirty little secrets of church culture being exposed for the world to see. Some dissatisfied viewers claim that Honk For Jesus is “making fun” of the church and of Christianity through its storytelling, but its message doesn’t intend to be a takedown of the faith by any means. Though the characters and their church are fictional, their desperation to maintain the status quo by any means necessary (even if it means playing into the same problematic cycle that traumatized them) and the ripple effects those attempts have on their congregation are informed by real church events and real church people. The Ebos and their talented cast didn’t have to search too far for inspiration; cautionary tales of pastors failing to separate their vastly contradictory double lives can pretty much be found everywhere. (Honk For Jesus is rumored to be a fictionalized take on the controversial life of the late Bishop Eddie Long.)




For Hall, bringing Trinitie Childs to life wasn’t challenging because she, too, grew up in the church. To prepare for the role of the tightly wound co-captain of Wander to Greater Paths, the leading lady tells Unbothered that she personally reached out to several church First Ladies — no, she’s not naming any names — and those candid conversations shed light on the daily pressures of supporting their husbands and keeping the church afloat, even to their own downfall.

“You know what our culture says about us as Black women needing to be ‘ride or die’,” says Hall. “When you add in the gravity of the covenant of marriage before God and before the community, before the congregation, you really feel the weight of that conflict. I wanted to show the full humanity of this woman who is so invested in these institutions that have been around a long time that everyone loves but could stand, in certain areas, for evolution to occur.”

Her co-star Brown did a bit of research on his own, finding inspiration for his character Lee-Curtis in the messy tension that exists between what sociologist Erving Goffman would describe as our “front stage” and “backstage” behaviors — or the characters we play in front of people and who we are when we think we’re all alone. On the pulpit, Lee-Curtis is a handsome (I know y’all saw that shirtless scene), charismatic, and obscenely rich pastor who has been hand-selected by God Himself to share the Gospel. When he’s not standing in front of his congregation, however, we see a man who is struggling to come to terms with his identity and harming others in the process.

“I have family members who are LGBTQIA and have a deep affinity for God and wanted to have what they would term a ‘regular’ life,” Brown says. “And I’ve seen them, as individuals and as a collective, sort of twist themselves to fit into a square peg, even though they’re sort of rectangular. That was painful for me as someone who just loved an individual, regardless of how they identified, and knowing that light lives inside of them. But because things had to look a very particular way in order to be accepted by everyone else in this space, they’re having to dim that light or try to force it into a space that it was never really intended to be.”

Church people, myself included, can be quite touchy about any criticism of their faith, so the Ebo sisters and their stars already know that Honk For Jesus won’t be everyone’s cup of tea. In fact, they’re expecting it to shake the table and to spark heated conversations as more people tune in. Throughout the centuries that organized religion has existed all over the world, we haven’t gotten anywhere by covering up scandals in the church, shaming victims, and pretending like modern day Christianity is exactly as God intended it to be. Starting an honest, nuanced discourse about the toxic aspects of church culture and the way that it has spawned trauma in many people’s lives is the first step to healing — one step closer to creating the heaven on earth that we deserve. All they’re asking is for people to have a willingness to see where and how the church can evolve. So if you’re mad about the movie…well, you’re just going to have to stay mad. The cast and crew of Honk For Jesus. Save Your Soul said what they said.



4200_D011_00773_R Sterling K. Brown stars as Lee-Curtis Childs in HONK FOR JESUS. SAVE YOUR SOUL., a Focus Features release. Credit: Steve Swisher / © 2021 Pinky Promise LLC© Provided by Refinery29

“At the premiere, somebody came up to me and said, ‘You know, you’re probably going to lose a lot of fans. But you’ll probably gain a lot of fans, too. And the ones that you lose, you probably didn’t want them to begin with’,” recalls Brown.

“Exactly. I mean, we set out to make people uncomfortable with this film,” nods Adamma. “And it’s like our grandmother always said: hit dogs will holler.”
US VS THEM
Man speaks out on what he calls ‘utter brutality’ from Halifax police

Karla Renić - Yesterday 


Aman who chaired a Neighbourhood Watch group in the Halifax area for 15 years says he's fed up with alleged "utter brutality" from city police after four people were arrested at a protest against a development in Dartmouth, N.S.


Bill Zebedee says he left his role with the Neighbourhood Watch over alleged brutality from Halifax Regional Police
.© Submitted/Bill Zebedee

Bill Zebedee wrote an open letter to Halifax Regional Police chief Dan Kinsella this week, saying he is stepping down from the Watch with a heavy heart.

"I have remained silent ... but no more," he wrote in the letter.

"I can no longer sit by and watch this Chief Kinsella. I know many, many good officers, many of whom will no longer speak with me, but it is time to speak."

Police chief Kinsella was unavailable for comment upon a request from Global News.

Zebedee joined the Neighbourhood Watch back in 2005, saying he has “always been a community minded person.”

Those who are on the watch get a special number to contact local police when they suspect a crime is happening in their community, and they can do so anonymously. Zebedee was in the Lynn Drive area in Dartmouth.

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He was an active member of the Watch for two years before he became the chair.

“Whenever I would see a crime happening, a drug deal happening at the base of my driveway, whenever I heard gunshots or any manner of crime, I would be the first one on the phone with the police,” Zebedee said.

“It’s been happy and sad,” he said of his time on the Watch. “I have met some really incredible police officers who actually care about the community.”

'That sort of woke me up'


After spending years of supporting Halifax Regional Police, Zebedee got a bad taste in his mouth for the first time in 2014.

That year, Halifax Regional Police arrested Jason MacLean, then-vice-president of NSGEU, during protests over a controversial health-care labour bill.

Police said he’d be charged with assaulting an officer. But a video from the arrest showed an HRP officer pushing MacLean to the ground and handcuffing him. After seeing the video, police dropped the charges and publicly apologized to MacLean.

Zebedee said MacLean was a friend of his, and the situation surprised him.

“He was the only individual who was arrested, the only African Nova Scotian who was arrested,” Zebedee said. “I always knew that there was police violence. I never thought I'd see it in Nova Scotia, in Halifax.”

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But, he said, more recent incidents have made it clear to him.

“What happened in the public library situation just recently … that sort of woke me up.”

In August of 2021, dozens of city police officers descended on parks around the municipality to remove unhoused people staying in crisis shelters and tents.

Hundreds of people poured into the city’s downtown, by the Old Library, to protest the shelter removal. This resulted in officers deploying pepper spray into crowds of people and more than two dozen arrests.

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Then this August, environmentalist Jacob Fillmore chained himself to a piece of tree-cutting equipment to protest a development slated for the Eisner Cove Wetland in Dartmouth. The protest ended up turning dangerous as machinery was operated in close proximity to the protesters.

Zebedee said he was disappointed to see the Halifax police response that day.

“They didn't respond to what was happening with Jacob," he said. "They didn't respond to the fact that a citizen was almost run over by one of these machines.”

Zebedee said he instead witnessed police respond to a small group of protesters on Lynn Drive with several vehicles. “I began getting very frustrated with the actions of the police that day," he said.

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Protest against development on N.S. wetland turned dangerous

That’s when he began reflecting on his role. “I've been very complacent and very silent on the matter,” he said.

The final act pushing him to resign was the arrests made on Tuesday during a protest against the Eisner Cove development.

Contractors were trying to get into the site to clear cut trees, but the protesters blocked that work. Nova Scotia actor Elliot Page also attended the protest, and recorded HRP officers arresting Mi’kmaw elder and land protector Darlene Gilbert.

Another video posted to social media seems to show an officer using his bicycle to push a woman sitting on the pavement, and telling her to stand up. In another video, she can be seen standing up and turning her back to the officer, and he is seen pushing the handlebars of his bicycle into her lower back.

WATCH:
Video: Submitted video shows Halifax police interaction with protesters at Eisner Cove

“It's that type of, (what) I call ‘the Goon Squad’ activity in my letter to chief Kinsella,” Zebedee said. This was the final wake-up call, he said.

"I was sitting back helping the police get the criminals … while at the same time, I was protecting those who were getting away with doing crimes like assaulting citizens for absolutely no reason," he said.

Zebedee said he ripped his 10-year plaque from his wall on Thursday morning, which had been given to him by previous HRP police chief Jean-Michel Blais, and sent the open letter to Kinsella.

In the letter, Zebedee said there are decent officers in the city force, but they are silenced.

"The utter brutality of the officers under your command is palpable Chief, and they do it without discipline. All under the guise they do it as part of their duties as police officers. Bullsh--t Chief Kinsella. They do it because they know they will get away with it," the letter read.

HRP spokesperson John MacLeod did not address a question about Tuesday's incident. He did not answer a question about police silencing.

"If anyone has any concerns with the actions of our officers we encourage them to contact our Professional Standards Branch," MacLeod wrote in an email. That contact is available on the city's website.

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Zebedee said the open letter was the hardest letter he's had to write in the last two decades.

"I put my blood, sweat and tears into the Neighborhood Watch," he said.

"What I hope from the police is accountability. There are less violent ways to deal with protesters ... We're not allowed to protect ourselves against the violence the police are perpetrating on us."

He said he's not sure if he's expecting a response to his letter, but he has no regrets sending it.

"I just hope that the police chief and the police commissioner pay attention to it, and do something about it before more people are ... tackled and having their head smashed against the pavement."

HRP has also not responded to a follow-up request for a comment on the video from Tuesday's Eisner Cove protest. In a 3:50 p.m. tweet, however, police said they will look into the incident.