Opinion

  • Still breathing but barely

    When I turned 18 I did the typical tour of Winnipeg’s cool places. The places I knew I should like, that came with high recommendations from older friends. Where you could see the best bands, get cheap beers, and finally see for yourself the places whose mythologies had become part of our city’s collective consciousness (“Did you hear they found a dead body in the walls at the Collective?”).

  • Discrimination and Sochi

    Sochi, Russia is the site of the 2014 Winter Olympic Games and, as most following the event will already know, has become a source of controversy because of that country’s repressive laws targeting its LGBT* communities.

  • Proposed changes to immigration rules make it harder to become Canadian

    On February 6, 2014 the Canadian Federal government tabled Bill C-24, a new piece of legislation that proposes changes to the Citizenship Act making it more difficult for many to become Canadian citizens.

  • Student Dispatch with Bilan Arte

    The Conservative government of Canada has decided that your vote is unwanted. Lots of people like to talk about low youth voter turnout and the importance of engaging us in the political process. No one who cares about democratic participation would claim that Canada is at risk of having too many people voting – during the last elections, 61 percent of eligible voters cast ballots across the country, and only 49 percent in Winnipeg Centre – making it that much stranger that the government tabled the Fair Elections Act on February 4.

  • The importance of representation in our world today

    Laura Jane Grace (born Thomas James Gabel) is a name you may have heard a lot in the past year. Last month, she and her band Against Me! released its sixth studio album, Transgender Dysphoria Blues, and will be playing the West End Cultural Centre on April 1. As you have probably guessed, the album mostly deals with Laura’s experiences coming out as a transgender woman. 

  • SodaStream and Israeli occupation

    Last weekend, Hollywood actress Scarlett Johansson drew the ire of pro-Palestinian groups after appearing in a commercial for Israeli company SodaStream. Though the ad was completely innocuous – SodaStream manufactures home carbonation systems – the 29 year-old was condemned for her support of the company which operates its principal manufacturing facility in Ma’ale Adumim: the third largest Israeli settlement in the West Bank considered illegal under international law. 

  • Critical Hit with Drew Nordman

    From iconic science fiction novels like H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine, to classic campy cartoons like The Jetsons, modern popular culture has been obsessed with the idea of the future for over a century.

  • Big change on the horizon for Winnipeg

    For most Winnipegers, civic elections elicit nary a blip on our collective radar as years past have produced lackluster candidates and even more unimaginative policy ideas. Those trends and patterns may have served the city in an adequate fashion as a mid-sized prairie town, but times have changed: Winnipeg is now a growing city and is only now presenting itself as a city on the upswing after years of minimal growth or even slight recession.

  • Generation Y Not?

    Recently I was at a friend’s home enjoying the typical snack of crackers and cheese as we discussed our future plans and potential careers. Our daydreaming was cut short when our conversation veered towards the potentiality of a bleak future greeting our generation, Generation Y. For those born roughly between the early 1980s to mid-1990s (other sources may say the 1970s - 2000), you are considered a member of Generation Y, also known as the Millennials.

  • Lessons of Mondragon

    It’s never delightful when a community enterprise is forced to close after 18 years in business. Nor is it pleasing to write an obituary for one of Winnipeg’s last strongholds of progressive thought and alternative dialogue for nearly two decades.

  • The Intersection with Jodie Layne

    Those iconic stripes seem to be everywhere recently, especially if you’re on Instagram. Hardly a day goes by that I don’t see someone cozied up with their point blanket or the hashtag #stripespotting under a picture featuring one of the multitude of items bearing the yellow, red, green and blue. And there is a multitude of items comprising the ‘HBC Collection’: $125 flasks, $400 purses and $7,500 canoes among them.

  • Phil Fontaine and conversation

    On January 22, Phil Fontaine, former Grand Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, was scheduled to speak at the University of Winnipeg on “First Nations issues in the past, present, and future”.

  • Looking deeper

    Commentators and leaders in the indigenous community lined up to oppose the recent disruption of a presentation by former National Chief Phil Fontaine at the University of Winnipeg. The talk was intended to provide insight into some of the shifts and changes witnessed during his time in positions of leadership. 

  • Still breathing but barely

    When I first had the idea to write a column celebrating Winnipeg, I knew a certain challenge would strike come wintertime. The time of year when it’s least possible to be a cheerleader for the Heart of the Continent.

  • Opening Cuba?

    I travelled to Cuba during Christmas holiday. From the viewpoint of a Chinese-Canadian who has had the experience of growing up in China throughout decades of economic reform under a Communist political system, I can see some similarities between Cuba and China; Cuba today is what China was like during the 1980s and ‘90s. 

  • Keep it in your pants

    You’re the first thing I see in the morning, and the last before I close my eyes at night. You keep me company all day long, and I never get sick of you. You make me happy.

  • The Blue Bass

    A few years ago someone asked me if there was an instrument I would take with me were I ever stranded on a desert island. This seemed like a ridiculous question at first – if I were ever in fact “stranded on a desert island”, surely I wouldn’t have the opportunity to prepare for the stranding beforehand.

  • Taking a Year of Music beyond 2014

    2014 will be an exceptionally exciting year for Winnipeg’s music scene. It’s Manitoba’s Year of Music and we’re hosting JUNO week, Aboriginal People’s Choice Awards, Breakout West and the Western Canadian Music Awards, all on top of all the usual great Manitoba festivals. 

  • Fort Mac firsthand

    Everybody needs oil, everybody knows it. This is why people working on pipelines and rigs are making so much money. It's so valuable, and people are willing to pay whatever they have to pay to get it done.

  • Student Dispatch with Bilan Arte and Peyton Veitch

    Low tuition fees and a high-quality post-secondary education are often framed as an either-or scenario. The argument goes that we can either have low fees and low quality, or high fees and high quality.

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