Two people died as a result of fires in encampments over the weekend, the Edmonton Police Service has confirmed.
Democracy’s Missing Pieces: Questions for You
Democracy’s Missing Pieces: Questions for You
For years, I’ve argued that democracy around the world, including in Canada, suffers from at least two major challenges. For one, we have limited participatory self-government, preferring to farm out political decision-making to professional politicians who are all too happy to hoard that power. The structure of liberal democracy asks and expects little from us, which creates a thin relationship between individuals and political life, disempowering them and letting the powerful get away with all kinds of decisions that work against self-rule and social and economic justice.
We have also chosen to ignore – or obscure – the fact that you can’t talk about democracy without talking about class and economics. For instance, if someone has a series of democratic rights — the right to vote, the right to protest, the right to hold office, etc. — but can’t exercise those rights because they’ve been structurally marginalized by economic policies and working conditions, then do they really have those rights? I argue no, they don’t. I have been in so many rooms where well-meaning people jibber jabber about democracy and neither class nor economics ever even comes up.
There are things you know. Things you don’t know. And things you don’t know that you don’t know. I try my best to do well at managing that third category: the things I’m not even aware I’m missing. This week, I’m using this space to ask you about what isn’t covered in our political discourse, or what’s covered poorly. What’s missing, particularly from coverage about democracy? It could be a theory, an issue, a perspective, some bit of democratic history, or something else altogether. |Read more https://open.substack.com/pub/davidmoscrop/p/democracys-missing-pieces-questions?r=9kvzk&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email| open.substack.com/pub/davidmos…
Doug Ford tells Trudeau not to help the homeless in Ontario.
Doug Ford tells Trudeau not to help the homeless in Ontario.
‘Jurisdictional creep’: Doug Ford slams feds for directly giving municipalities funding for housing
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is calling on the federal government to end a program that offers municipalities funding to boost their housing supply, suggesting that Ottawa is overstepping its jurisdiction.
“You can’t have a federal government going into a certain town or certain city and dumping funding and not even discussing it with the province,” Ford said in Halifax at a meeting of Canada’s premiers on Monday.
“That’s unacceptable. We call it jurisdictional creep.”
The program in question is the Housing Accelerator Fund, a $4-billion pledge meant to incentivize municipalities to update their zoning and permit systems to allow for faster construction of housing.
Multiple Ontario municipalities have already signed agreements with the federal government, including London ($74 million) and Vaughan ($59 million).
The City of Mississauga has been working with the federal government to secure $120 million in funding. The money was revoked after Mississauga city council voted to prevent four-unit homes, otherwise known as fourplexes, from being built within city limits.
Mayor Bonnie Crombie reversed the decision using strong mayor powers in hopes of getting the federal government to reconsider the funding. |Read more https://www.cp24.com/news/jurisdictional-creep-doug-ford-slams-feds-for-directly-giving-municipalities-funding-for-housing-1.6633391| cp24.com/news/jurisdictional-c…
#onpoli #Ford #crombie #homeless #winter #housing #reject #funding
What does the professor say? Let’s lower their education…
What does the professor say? Let’s lower their education…
A segment from a lecture by a professor on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/reel/CwiArAvNnaS/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link sounds like the #UCP strategy for the province.