Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Covered Bridges of Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine -- A Vintage Postcard Folder

I have long had a fascination with covered bridges since I saw one as a child in New Brunswick. The North American wooden covered bridge first started being built in the early 1800s and, according to Wikipedia there were 12,000 of them at their height, though by 1950 that had declined to only 1,500. Now there are far fewer.

The wooden covered bridge was designed precisely to extend the lifespan of wooden bridges in the harsh weather of places like Canada or New England.

Though they were practical and utilitarian they are also truly beautiful, especially as they are most often found in spectacular natural and rural settings.

This folder style packet of connected postcards is of the same type we have featured before in posts like Greetings from Hoover Dam - A 1950s Vintage Trip and Vintage Vegas 1958 - A Colour Postcard Folder of the Classic Hotels. These were primarily produced in the 1940s and 1950s, with this one coming from the latter decade.

Here we have a selection of some of the bridges that were left in Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine at the time.

And they are amazing!

(Click on images to enlarge) 















Sunday, February 4, 2018

The Courage to Leap comes far too late to matter

Have you heard the news?

A "revolution" is coming to Ottawa!

I know, it is exciting and unexpected right?

And, unless you suddenly think that revolution has become a meaningless word it is also not happening at all.

The "revolution" is the celebrity tour show of the do-nothing Leap Manifesto crowd combined with some nebulous new "left alternative" within the NDP apparently called "Courage". They call themselves this despite never having had the courage to take stands within the NDP when it might have mattered.

In other words, when there were actual candidates running in an actual leadership race one of whom, Niki Ashton, clearly aligned with their alleged politics far more than any other they did nothing.

But getting behind an actual candidate is a diversion from the celebrity nonsense, so, needless to say neither of the courage or leap types had the courage to take a leap and support a candidate.

Now, four months after the NDP leadership race has ended these press conference dilettantes have decided the time is right to do more of nothing by holding a meaningless meeting in conjunction with an irrelevant NDP "policy convention".

We all know how important policy conventions have been in framing NDP electoral agendas in the past. We all know how unimportant this vanity exercise by Leap folks will be on impacting anything the NDP does.

But they got some good press.

Here are the facts.

Leap was launched as a celebrity appeal to power vanity exercise.

The Leap and Courage folks abandoned the field when it might have mattered during the leadership contest.

They have shown a total incapacity to understand how basic organizing works and if they want to compare themselves to Bernie Sanders or Momentum in the UK they have entirely missed the point. They should be ashamed to even mention these groupings as they have done nothing remotely analogous to what they did.

In fact, they have done nothing at all outside of planning all star moments. They have placed themselves completely outside of even the relevant struggles in Canada like the fights for affordable housing or the $15 Now fight.

When, exactly, did Leap or Courage take on the centrist leadership of the NDP in any way remotely comparable to what happened in the US with Sanders let alone the UK with Corbyn?

The answer, of course, is never.

Now these courageous folks are taking the leap of holding a meeting that you can buy tickets to right before an NDP convention that will not have anything at all to do with their alleged agenda.

They will pontificate with no possibility of accomplishing anything, which was likely at least subconsciously the desired result

If you have ever wanted a snapshot of why the left in Canada is a joke, here it is.

Police Violence and Misconduct, Colten Boushie, the Presumption of Innocence & more -- The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List January 28-February 4

This week's list of articles, news items and opinion pieces that I see as must reads if you are looking for a roundup that should be of interest to The Left Chapter readers.

This list covers the week of  January 28 - February 4. It is generally in order of the date of the article's release.


This installment has three entries from before the period. They have been integrated into the post.

1) This Student Newspaper Let A Nazi Sympathizer Write For Them

Ishmael N. Daro, BuzzFeed

A student newspaper in New Brunswick published a largely uncritical interview with a Nazi sympathizer in which he praised Adolf Hitler's book Mein Kampf, downplayed the horrors of residential schools, and claimed white supremacy was a myth invented by Jews. The paper also published a separate opinion piece by him in which he spread a slew of anti-Indigenous and anti-Semitic tropes.

Read the full article.

2) Feminism in the Coalfields: What Appalachians of the 1970s Can Teach Today’s Feminists

Jessica Wilkerson, Rewire

Appalachian feminism, which is to say feminism of working-class white and Black women who lived in a place long dominated by corporate officials, has volumes to teach us about meaningful efforts to reach gender equality, but more importantly, justice.

Read the full article.

3) Ontario PC Party president Rick Dykstra resigns after sexual assault accusation

Stephen Maher, Maclean's 

The Conservative Party was made aware of the allegation against the then federal MP, but it decided to let him run in the 2015 election.

Read the full article.

4) Poisoned toothpaste and exploding phones: Israel linked to 2,700 assassination operations in 70 years

Ethan Bronner, The National Post 

A new book also strongly suggests that Israel used radiation poisoning to kill Yasser Arafat, the longtime Palestinian leader, an act its officials have consistently denied.

Read the full article.

5) Mistreated: The legacy of segregated hospitals haunts Indigenous survivors.

Lauren Pelley, CBC News

CBC spoke to numerous hospital survivors and researchers about this segregated health-care system, as well as activists hoping to broaden the conversation about reconciliation and expose how decades of isolation and mistreatment have harmed First Nations and Inuit communities to this day.

Read the full article.

6) Judge slams Toronto police for ‘oppressive misconduct’ in man’s arrest

Jacques Gallant, The Toronto Star

In a dissenting opinion, Court of Appeal Justice Peter Lauwers found Toronto police violated a man’s charter rights during a backyard “fishing expedition” that resulted in gun and drug charges. The judge also questioned whether the same thing would have happened in a wealthier, whiter neighbourhood.

Read the full article.

7) Cleveland Indians Will Abandon Chief Wahoo Logo Next Year

David Waldstein, The New York Times

The Cleveland Indians will stop using the Chief Wahoo logo on their uniforms beginning in 2019, according to Major League Baseball, which said the popular symbol was no longer appropriate for use on the field.

Read the full article.


8) Squatters turn oligarch's empty London property into homeless shelter

Diane Taylor, The Guardian

A veteran group of squatters has occupied an empty £15m central London property purchased by a Russian oligarch in 2014 and opened it as a homeless shelter.

Read the full article.

9) Baltimore Cops Kept Toy Guns to Plant Just in Case They Shot an Unarmed Person 


Michael Harriot, The Root

In April 2016, a 13-year-old boy was shot by officers of the Baltimore Police Department. The boy ran when faced with the police, so they gave chase. During the chase, the police spotted the boy holding a gun, and when he turned, they shot the teenager. The youngster wasn’t critically injured, and it seemed like an open-and-shut case of a justifiable use of force.

Read the full article.

10) The presumption of innocence is for courtrooms, not politics

Michael Spratt, CBC News

The political reckoning was quick. In the span of less than a week, allegations of sexual harassment and sexual impropriety destroyed the political futures of four separate men in politics.

Read the full article.

11) #MeToo Journalism: The New Rules

Paul Adams, iPolitics

The allegations of sexual impropriety against Patrick Brown and his quick but reluctant resignation left some conservative columnists aghast. One of their targets was the journalism that has contributed so much to what we are now calling the #MeToo moment.

Read the full article.

12) Cornwallis statue to be removed from Halifax park after council vote

Anjuli Patil, CBC News

A controversial statue of Edward Cornwallis, the military officer who founded Halifax in 1749, will soon be temporarily removed from a park in the city's downtown.

Read the full article.

13) Halifax councillor under fire for retweeting pro-white group

 Emma Davie, CBC News

Halifax councillor Matt Whitman says he had no idea that a letter to city council that he retweeted on Thursday afternoon came from a white nationalist group.

Read the full article.

14) Vietnam remembers victory and losses 50 years after Tet Offensive

Manh Tung, Tuyet Nguyen & Tran Duy, VN Express International

Heroic memories are accompanied by pain and guilt, say veterans who lost hundreds of comrades.

Read the full article.

15) DANGEROUS TURN WITH NEW FAR RIGHT MILITIA IN PARTNERSHIP WITH UKRAINE POLICE’S

Ukraine Solidarity Campaign 

In a new dangerous turn 600 members of a new self-proclaimed National Guard (Національні Дружини ) marched through the Ukrainian capital Kyiv on 28 January.  Comprised of ex-members of the far right AZOV battalion the new National Guard declared its aim is to keep order on the streets and preserve a ‘Ukrainian Order’.

Read the full article.

16) Women in Iran remove hijabs in public to protest country’s Islamic dress code

Thomas Erdbrink, The Toronto Star

The protests, still small in number, are significant as a rare public sign that dissatisfaction with certain Islamic laws governing personal conduct may have reached a boiling point.

Read the full article.

17) As Australian Muslim women we don't have to be told what we can wear

Lydia Shelly, The Guardian

Australian Muslim women have done very well without being told what they can wear, “from day dot”, as Caroline Overington puts it in her opinion piece. And indeed, it is because Australian Muslim womanhood is “robust, hands-on, shoulder to the wheel”. We are resilient and savvy in negotiating political waters. Fashion has always been avant garde. When does fashion represent a far more inclusive and collaborative face of Australia than its social and political institutions? In 2018, apparently.

Read the full article.

18) 'The Rodney King of western Canada': killing of indigenous man heads to trial

Ashifa Kassam, The Guardian

The case of Colten Boushie, 22, killed after seeking help at a farm, has divided Canadians over race and policing.

Read the full article.

19) 'Deck is stacked against us,' says family of Colten Boushie after jury chosen for Gerald Stanley trial

Guy Quenneville and Jason Warick, CBC News

A relative of Colten Boushie says "the deck is stacked against us" following the selection of jurors in the trial of Gerald Stanley, the farmer accused of killing the 22-year-old Indigenous man.

Read the full article.

20) If the Grammys want to say #MeToo and #TimesUp, they have to address objectification

Meghan Murphy, Feminist Current

It’s not just representation that we need. It’s not just the naming and shaming of abusive men. It’s not just powerful performances. So long as arenas like the music industry continue to represent women as sexualized objects, our culture will never succeed in confronting issues like sexual harassment and rape. So long as we glorify strip clubs — places that men go so they don’t have to treat women as full human beings, places where they are told, “Yes, these women are here for you” — we will continue to replicate the same dynamics that led women to experience their many #MeToo moments. This imagery doesn’t just sell music, it sells misogyny. Real accountability therefore demands we move beyond individual men, and towards a cultural shift.

Read the full article.

21) In a Major Free Speech Victory, a Federal Court Strikes Down a Law that Punishes Supporters of Israel Boycott

Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept

A FEDERAL JUDGE on Tuesday ruled that a Kansas law designed to punish people who boycott Israel is an unconstitutional denial of free speech. The ruling is a significant victory for free speech rights because the global campaign to criminalize, or otherwise legally outlaw, the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement has been spreading rapidly in numerous political and academic centers in the U.S. This judicial decision definitively declares those efforts — when they manifest in the U.S. — to be a direct infringement of basic First Amendment rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution.

Read the full article.

22) What does Hollywood's reverence for child rapist Roman Polanski tell us?

Hadley Freeman, The Guardian

Polanski will turn 85 this year, and he has lived almost half his life under the shadow of what Weinstein described as “his so-called crime”. Polanski’s own attitude has remained bullish; in October last year he gave an interview in which he focused his ire on the judges who let him down. “I know what I am, what I have and haven’t done, how things really were and are,” he writes at the end of his autobiography. Thanks to the candour of Polanski, the rest of us have always known, too – including everyone in the film industry who has worked with him since.

Read the full article.

23) Trump Didn’t Bother to Say What Happened to the Biological Mother in His Cop Adoption Anecdote

Christina Cauterucci, Slate

Donald Trump’s first State of the Union address was stuffed with inspiring anecdotes, mostly about little boys, flags, military personnel, MS-13—standard State of the Union stuff. And then there was the very bizarre story that, if you happened to be only half-listening, kind of sounded like it glorified a police officer for stealing somebody’s baby.

Read the full article.

24) Alberta premier threatens economic retaliation against B.C. over bitumen restrictions

CBC News

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley has threatened to retaliate economically against what she called an "unconstitutional" move by the B.C. government to delay construction of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

Read the full article.

25) No carbon cuts or ocean protection without pipeline, Trudeau says

CBC News

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sought to bridge the divide between Alberta and British Columbia on Friday with a vow that climate change and spill protection programs won't go ahead unless the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion is built.

Read the full article.

26) Police and the privileged: Toronto force needs to redraw the line

Alok Mukherjee, The Globe and Mail

The handling by the Toronto police of the deaths of Toronto billionaire Barry Sherman and his wife, Honey, raises issues that should concern police forces across the country. The big question is this: Do Canada's police forces treat all murders equally, no matter what the victim's socio-economic, racial, ethnic or Indigenous background, or sexual orientation happens to be?

Read the full article.

27) Senate passes bill to make O Canada lyrics gender neutral

John Paul Tasker, CBC News

The Senate passed a bill that renders the national anthem gender neutral Wednesday despite the entrenched opposition of some Conservative senators.

Read the full article.

28) Assembly Of Manitoba Chiefs Calls Out Globe And Mail For 'Victim-Blaming Headline'

Emma Paling, The Huffington Post

The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs called out The Globe and Mail on Wednesday for what it called a "sensationalistic headline" about slain teenager Tina Fontaine.

Read the full article.

29) After being beaten and marched naked through RCMP detachment, Siksika man sues Mounties

Meghan Grant, CBC News

A man from a southern Alberta First Nation who says he was badly beaten by RCMP officers and marched naked through the local detachment is suing the police force for nearly $2 million.

Read the full article.

30) French leftist Melenchon calls for SYRIZA's dismissal from Party of European Left

Ekathimerini

French leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon has called for SYRIZA to be thrown out of the Party of the European Left, accusing the Greek party of enforcing neoliberal policies and maintaining submitting to the orders of the European Commission.

Read the full article.

31) The 100-year-old protest posters that show women's outrage

BBC News

Recently rediscovered 100-year-old posters showing the struggle for votes for women are going on show for the first time. They pull no punches in their depiction of the strength of feeling among the women who fought for equal rights.

Read the full article.


32) The shocking reality of "abortion reversal" procedures in the US

Kat Lister, The Pool

It’s been labelled as “scary” and "bogus” – so why is the Trump administration endorsing anti-abortion treatments that put vulnerable women at risk?

Read the full article.

33) Sex dolls won’t stop rape and assault – that’s not how sex and abuse works

Rachel Hewitt, The Pool

If it feels like common sense to think of male sexual desire as an unstoppable tide, that’s largely because the English language encourages it. It is very hard to describe emotion, energy or desire without employing words like “erupting” or “outbursts”, passion needs to be "channelled" and not "bottled up". But there is no medical or psychiatric evidence to support claims that sexual desire works according to the laws of hydraulics, that men’s repression of harmful sexual desires is dangerous or that the deflection of those desires to an alternative outlet works like a safety valve. Instead, sociological research points to the opposite: that the consumption of media in which women are objectified and the display of misogynistic behaviour with sex dolls and prostitutes reinforces men’s misogynistic behaviour elsewhere, increasing men’s propensity to rape. When we discount the deeply entrenched idea that men’s libido works hydraulically, sex dolls and robots no longer seem like safety valves for harmful and misogynistic sexual practices but, instead, more chillingly, as opportunities for rehearsal.

Read the full article.

34) NDP Retains Former Fraser Institute Director as Top Civil Servant

 Andrew MacLeod, The Tyee

One of the top civil servants in the NDP government worked for the right-wing Fraser Institute and the Vancouver Sun, shooting down mainstream ideas like the need for environmental assessments, the right to organize unions and the requirement that employers pay a minimum wage.

Read the full article.

35) Tillerson Invokes Possibility of Pinochet-Style Coup in Venezuela

Telesur

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Thursday raised the prospect of a military coup against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, and seemingly praised past military dictatorships as "agents of change."

Read the full article.

36) Israeli lawmaker tells BBC he’d put Ahed Tamimi ‘in the hospital’ by kicking her face

 Jonathan Ofir, Mondoweiss

Israeli lawmaker Oren Hazan of the Likud Party was interviewed by the BBC on Wednesday, in a news report about Ahed Tamimi  titled “Is a slap an act of terror?”. Hazan opined that “a slap is terrorism” and described his response:

Read the full article.

37) Toronto’s female elected officials face sexual harassment, threats on job

Samantha Beattie, The Toronto Star

The Star sent a survey to female councillors and school board trustees asking if they’d experienced sexual harassment on the job. Fifteen shared their stories of harassment, discrimination.

Read the full article.

38) Cheap White Whine: Racism, Affirmative Action, and the Myth of White Victimhood

Tim Wise, Medium

But what about us? It’s a question of which white folks never seem to tire when discussing subjects like affirmative action, or other diversity initiatives intended to expand opportunity and access for people of color in higher education and the job market.

Read the full article.

39) First NDP premier of B.C., Dave Barrett, dead at 87

Tiffany Crawford, The Vancouver Sun

Dave Barrett, a wisecracking and flamboyant left-wing populist from east Vancouver who became B.C.’s first NDP premier, died this morning after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease.

Read the full article.

See also: Patrick Brown, Holocaust Revisionism, the Arctic and more -- The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List January 21 - 28

See also: Martin Luther King Jr., Unifor, #MeToo and more -- The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List January 14-21

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Shuktugan -- A Soviet children's fable about vigilance and responsibility

Published in the USSR in English in 1979, Shuktugan is a beautifully illustrated children's fable that is meant to emphasize the importance of responsibility and vigilance. The story is written by J. Tarjemanov and is accompanied by striking watercolours by A. Keleinikov.

The fable revolves around the young woodpecker Shuktugan and his grandfather Tuk-Tuk-Babai. Shuktugan spends his days playing while his grandfather protects the woods in which they live from beetles and caterpillars.

Tuk-Tuk-Babai tries to teach the young woodpecker the importance of this task and how he has to take it up as well. But Shuktugan finds the labour of vigilance both arduous and boring and instead of helping his grandfather flies off to see if he can discover some shortcuts around the hard work of keeping their home safe.

After failing in this he returns to find the woodlands in a desperate situation. The invading beetles and caterpillars have overwhelmed his grandfather and nearly destroyed all the trees. A forlorn hedgehog asks "Shuktugan, why weren't you helping them?".

The young woodpecker realizes the error of his ways just as his grandfather arrives leading a whole vast flock of various birds who drive out the invaders and restore the forest.

For a society that had endured the ravages of the Nazi invasion during the Second World War the metaphors and points here are very clear.

(Click on images to enlarge)






















Friday, February 2, 2018

Poached White Fish in a Spicy Tomato Pepper Sauce - Simple and Delicious

Today we are going to take a look at a technique for making fish fillets that is simple, delicious and perfect for the busy or beginner home cook.

This method works for any white fish like cod, tilapia, etc, though we used basa. You have to use skinless fillets. Basa, which we have featured before several times, is especially good as it absorbs flavors very well.

Here we poach the fish fillets over a tomato based, spicy sauce that you then serve with the fish when it is done. There is no searing, frying or flipping involved but timed right it will come out perfectly cooked.

You can even make this using frozen fillets though, of course, you have to increase the cooking time.

First you prepare the base poaching sauce.

Ingredients:

1 white onion chopped
1 medium red onion chopped
4 cloves of garlic minced
1 yellow hot pepper chopped
1-2 teaspoons red pepper flakes
1 large can diced tomatoes
1 cup dry white wine
salt and black pepper to taste


First, add some olive oil to a large saucepan and heat to medium high. Add the onions, garlic and yellow pepper and saute for 4-6 minutes.


Then add the full can of tomatoes, the red pepper flakes (to taste), the white wine and the salt and pepper. Bring to boil, then reduce the heat and simmer gently for around 10 minutes.

While you are simmering the poaching sauce, take out your fish fillets and season them. You can use a lemon-herb seasoning, Herbes de Provence or any number of variations. Or you can simply use salt, pepper and paprika. I used Cool Running Caribbean Spice and Garlic Seasoning with a few dashes of cayenne pepper.

Once you have seasoned the fish take your seasoned fillets and lay them down atop the sauce.


Turn up the heat and bring the sauce to a boil, then reduce heat, cover the saucepan (this is essential) and simmer for around 10 minutes for a fresh fillet or around 20 minutes for frozen.

When cooked, plate with rice and lemon wedges. Spoon the sauce over top of the fish and rice.


It is really that easy!

Enjoy.

See also: Basa Fish Seasoned, Pan-Fried and in a White Wine Shallot Sauce

See also: Fiery Veracruz Style Basa Fish

Thursday, February 1, 2018

The Ideals Junior Chef Cookbook w. Tuna Sports Cars, Texas Dean, a Football Party & more -- Vintage Cookbook TBT

Vintage Cookbook: The Ideals Junior Chef Cookbook, Sophie Kay

Publication Details: Ideals Publishing, 1977

We have looked at an Ideals Publishing cookbook before when we featured The Farmhouse Cookbook w. Raised Doughnuts, Puzzle Cake, Beef Stroganoff & more a few months ago.

This one is from a sub-genre of cookbook aimed at "young chefs". Featuring fun and relatively easy dishes these are generally meant for kids and young adults, though their recipes are often good for beginner home cooks or just for those seeking the quirky or fanciful. Other examples we have looked at are Pooh's Fireside Recipes: Comfort food for kids of all ages with Potato Pancakes & Honey Cake and Mary Poppins in the Kitchen w. Dundee Cake, Welsh Rarebit, Yorkshire Pudding & more!

The Junior Chef Cookbook is loads of fun with silly, often very tasty, sometimes rather dated, recipes from the 70s. Their ingredients and techniques do reflect the era, but there is lots of classic fare, or takes on classic fare.

There is also a heavy emphasis on the playful and desserts.

Here we share a number of the recipes that reflect the overall tone. We have also, given that the Super Bowl is coming up, included the full section aimed at creating a "Football Party". I am sure the Bologna Cups will be a big hit this Sunday.

(Click on scans to enlarge)




















John Horgan, Transit Fare Fallacies, Guy Caron & more -- December and January on The Left Chapter in review

December and January saw 46 posts on The Left Chapter of various kinds. We looked at things like Lift Every Voice! The People's Song Book 1957 f. Paul Robeson, the Toronto Police and their CBC Chicken LittlesThe Rent Collection Courtyard Sculptures -- From feudal oppression to Communist revolution in China and Zippy Pickle Soup.

There was also our annual countdown, The 20 Best Songs of 2017 ft. Hurray For The Riff Raff, Arcade Fire, Jay-Z, Jessie Reyez and more!

Thanks very much to all our readers and contributors.

If you have an article, editorial, analysis, recipe or story you would like to contribute there are details on how to do so on our Submissions page as well as at the end of this post.

Without any further ado, here are the top six posts, in terms of hits, from December and January.

1) John Horgan lets the facade drop with cynical, ugly comments after green-lighting Site C

By now the news that the British Columbia NDP government has betrayed the (sorta) promise it made to stop the building of the Site C dam is rippling like a shock wave through those New Democrats left who still take the party's pledges and claims to be a real alternative seriously.

Read more!

2) TTC fare fallacies -- Neoliberal delusions in transit costing

The start of the 2018 election season is nearing and fanciful neoliberal narratives about transit fares and the TTC are in full swing.

Read more!

3) An interview with NDP Parliamentary Leader Guy Caron

by Ammario Reza

In the federal NDP timeline, we find ourselves at the beginning of a new year in 2018, rounding up the first quarter since the federal NDP leadership race four months ago that was ultimately won by Jagmeet Singh on the first ballot.



Only in the most distorted sense of the term (as we saw with the fiasco around attempts to reform "small business" taxes) can these be seen as "small businesses". Forgive me if I am playing the world's smallest violin when these owners try to use much needed higher and fairer minimum wages as an excuse to gouge employees and customers.



By Scotty Hertz

As the somewhat freshly minted, seatless leader of the federal NDP, Jagmeet Singh is on a continuing mission to “visit communities to build momentum for the party’s brand and ideas” whilst compiling an extensive photo op folder. Singh is as photogenic as Trudeau Jr., perhaps more so, with social media forever bringing an end to the previous political style era of tragic comb overs, rumpled Eaton’s blazers and public smoking. Singh’s recent foray into the fruit and vegetable mines of southwestern Ontario was a beautifully framed masterpiece of visual symmetry; the eager well manicured rookie stands tall among the irrigation hoses, nary a leaf out of place. This image suggests at any minute he will be shedding the jacket to fill the flats behind him to the brim, ready for shipment by the skid load to warehouse shopping members nationwide. Undoubtedly on this day the ventilation system was cranked full bore before his arrival and the insecticide spraying put on hold for a while. The temporary foreign workers have been cleared off and given a brief respite from their work while their potential saviour gets the perfect shot for the growing Instagram portfolio. Was their pay docked during the stoppage?



There is a persistent myth that comes up anytime governments or activists advocate for higher minimum wages: "If we raise the minimum wage inflation will go up". The implication is that attempts to improve the lives of workers at the lowest end of the wage scale will be somehow defeated or offset by this.


The top food related post was Spanish-Style Fried Chicken Strips w. Spicy Mayo.

Do you have a left point-of-view or opinion, event or petition, a recipe or a story you want to share?

Send them to The Left Chapter via theleftchapter@outlook.com!


See also: Etobicoke Park Stairs, Niki Ashton, Jagmeet Singh & more -- 2017 on The Left Chapter in review