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A Publicity War

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The past two weeks have been turbulent times for the Alberta Health Care system. The canning of Sherman from the Provincial Legislature and the firing of Duckett after his Cooke Walk both sparked much controversy in the media. Sherman was criticized for his adamant opposition to the current health care system and his forceful berating of both the premier and the health minister for the pathetic state of the Alberta health system. Although rude, I must admit that I am inclined to agree. Over the weekend, a small Conservative bloc within the legislature has gone as far as to demand Sherman’s dismissal. To exacerbate the situation, rumors exist now of a deliberate vindicative attempt from the Alberta government to strip Sherman of his medical license. Duckett, of course, strode his famous walk with a cookie while screeching at the press at the urgency of eating. More than anything, the seemingly lack of accountability to the public should be punished. Nevertheless, a rude comment does not necessarily warrant a ceremonious firing. It certainly doesn’t demand the personal condemnation from the Premier and a direct recommendation to relieve Duckett of his post. Of course, to follow along this media circus, several members of the health board later quit in protest. Surely, the amount of publicity and controversy surrounding the health care system is overwhelming to say the least.

The fire and smoke of the past couple of weeks are nothing more than smokescreen for more pressing demands of the health care system. Based on the evaluation of a private firm and also from the provincial health care system itself, on average only 35 per cent of people visiting the emergency room in Alberta are treated within eight hours.  That wait time is by far the longest in Canada. The average is pulled up by several hospitals such as the Alberta Children’s Hospital. In some hospitals like the Rockyview, the percentage of people admitted within eight hours is less than 24 per cent.  Expanding on this idea, the ER is the most urgent area of the hospital. Delays within other wards may cause exacerbation of the condition but delays in ER really cost lives. If any part of the hospital should be fast, it should be the ER. In fact, at least five deaths were recorded last year just from the delay at the ER waiting room alone. The ultimate goal of the Alberta Health Services is for 90 per cent of patients in ER to be admitted within eight hours. However, compared to European standards, such speeds are still unacceptable for the ER.

These health care problems stems directly from government policy. The Conservative Government of Alberta allots the lowest amount of money per capita to health care in Canada. If anyone can recall the welfare checks of Klein’s era, the stringency is certainly not from a lack of money. With the exception of the last couple of years, the province experienced the greatest surplus in Canada. The policy was partially pursued to encourage private health care in Alberta, especially to reduce taxes for those that can afford it. The government needs to change its policies. More taxes will have to be gathered from sources like gas royalties and redirection of funds needs to be done.

The biggest blockade to change is an ignorant public. The premier fires Duckett as a scapegoat and the legislature silences the dissidence of Sherman. Instead of realizing and understanding the real problems of the health care system, it is not rude politicians or rude businessmen, the problem is attention diverted into such petty matters. Check out the video. At least Duckett is working towards solving the problem. I wonder how fast ER wait times will be reduced after firing him and having several members resign.

The Big Bang Theory Makes a Explosion on Television!

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Courtesy of Times World NowThere are only three words to describe this amazing show: humorous, witty, and entertaining. Who knew a group of four nerds could entertain the masses? The clever jokes told on the television series provide delight for nerds across the world, from jokes that allude to Star Trek or various Marvel Comics, there is a joke waiting everyone.

For those who haven’t watched yet, the story takes place in Pasadena, California where a group of four guys work at Caltech University as various researchers, plus interact with their attractive female next-door neighbour. The comedy explores the interests of the four friends and their pathetic attempts to fit into a society that is so indifferent. The television series thus far has four seasons and has won many awards such as Favorite TV Comedy at the 36th People’s Choice Award. A full list can be viewed at IMDB.

The Big Bang Theory plays Thursday night on CBS. I recommend anyone that is unfamiliar to the show and has an inner-dork to watch this show, you won’t regret it.

My Bucket List

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In the film A Walk To Remember, the main character had a list of 100 things she wanted to do before she died. That inspired me to make a list of things I wanted to do before I die. Plus, the season finale of the Buried Life is on tonight, a show where a group of Canadian boys travel around the United States, crossing off things on their own bucket list and helping people do things on theirs.

1. Travel the world.

2. Become a best-selling author

3. See the Seven Wonders of the World

4. Touch a cloud

5. Get into an Ivy League or any other well-known university

6. Receive a scholarship

7. Make  a difference

8. Witness a miracle

9. Rename a star

10. Go to space

11. Be a mentor/ inspire someone

12. Travel somewhere with a large group of friends

13. Swim with dolphins

14. Learn a new language

15. Be in a movie

16. Dance in the rain

17. Send a message in a bottle

18. Ride a camel in the desert

19. Plant a tree

20. Get a piercing

21. Get a tattoo

22. Volunteer for over 1,000 hours

23. In some way, be a part of the Olympic Games

24. Go to the Waterpark in Korea

The average person, depending on which country you live in, lives for about 70 years. That’s about 25,550 days. Approximately 613,200 hours. What do you wish to achieve in this time?

Alberta Health Services CEO Stephen Duckett and his Cookie

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Alberta Health Services President and Chief Executive Officer Stephen Duckett was fired for being caught on video telling reporters he wasn’t able to answer their questions because he was “eating my cookie.” This lead to angry board members that were even threatening to sue. But was he completely wrong?

With modern day media, it seems as though they don’t have boundaries when it comes to pushing and shoving to be first to get the scoop. They are not afraid to get into your personal space or to invade your privacy. Have they gone too far? Although Duckett was completely outlandish, he did state a fact that really struck me. There was going to be a media conference in 30 minutes. So why did the media hound this man while he was trying to take a break? To be quite honest, can you really blame a man who just wants to eat, and instead hunted down? Some of you may say that doesn’t he deserve to be fired. He is a public figure, shouldn’t he know by now that he should represent Alberta Health Services with dignity? I completely agree. Although Duckett could say he was frustrated and that the media conference was less than an hour later, his behavior is just out of line with the repeated “I’m eating my cookie” plus the rude behavior of shoving the cookie in the reporters face. As a public figure shouldn’t he know better than to do so? He is over 50 and yet he acts like he is a 5 year old child. I scrolled down to the comments of the YouTube video and the reviews were mixed. Some are backing Duckett up on his acts, saying, “leave him alone, can’t a man eat in privacy? What is wrong with this world?” But another counters back, saying, “This is what we get for voting for our leaders, stupid scums who can’t get the job done, FIRE HIM.” So this leaves me wondering, was Duckett rightfully fired or do you think he was innocent? In my opinion, he is a representative of the people of Alberta and his behavior was completely out of line. Should a man like that really represent us, especially as a health representative? And the ironic thing is, HEATH OFFICER + COOKIE, does that really add up? Should a man who watches and runs our health system walk around with an UNHEALTHY cookie? You tell me.

Arts Around Calgary: Empty Bowls!

2010-2011’s Empty Bowls event has officially been launched! On Nov. 18, the first orientation meeting for the making of bowls took place at the Wild Flower Arts Centre. Volunteers and steering committee members were given the opportunity to tap into their artistic talent to make clay bowls with a creative twist. All of these bowls will be used at the Empty Bowls event by sponsors and participants.

From turtle shells and dragons to balloons and fish, you can create the bowl of your dreams. Working on your own creation while chatting with friends makes the time pass by in a flash. When your session is over, you will definitely run home to sign up for another! Empty Bowls is one of those annual projects you will not want to miss. Check out the sign-up dates online at Youth Central’s website, www.youthcentral.com.

DREAM.

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What do you dream about?

What do you dream of?

What’s the colour of your dream?

The World Needs Leaders- Facilitation Skills Training from the Canadian Red Cross!

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Danilo Moura, Shutterstock photo

The world needs leaders, in whatever area of expertise individuals choose to pursue. Attending two Canadian Red Cross workshops, intending to train internal Red Cross volunteers to become facilitators, plunged me into becoming more engaged in world affairs. I had previously spoken about this in another post.http://www.bcringette.org/admin/images/Canadian%20Red%20Cross.gif

It was quite intimidating, as I tried to become more comfortable and open with the other participants, I asked one of those general questions, “Where do you go to school?” Which instead of helping me ease myself into the situation of interacting with strangers, made me feel helplessly nervous. The question I should have asked was, “What school did you go to?” Most of the other participants in this workshop had already graduated university and had completed grad school. I had barely experienced the freedom and responsibilities of turning 18 when I was thrust into a world of adults seasoned and experienced with world affairs. However, I did revel in the fact that my fellow participants were fresh and first time volunteers with the Canadian Red Cross, blanking at the other question I had raised; “What have you done with the Red Cross?” It was a handle I proudly latched onto during the workshop, as I was able to demonstrate that, youth didn’t translate into inexperience. So I was very happy to share my involvement with the Red Cross in exchange of worldly adventures from Uganda to India.

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Image Credit: Twice25 & Rinina25, Wikimedia Commons

I wondered myself as I first burst into the workshop, what was a facilitator? A facilitator takes its roots from the French word “facile,” which means easy. A facilitator consciously assists a group to successfully achieve a goal they are working towards. Essentially, facilitators act as a guide, asking questions to explore ideas and topics, and may inform the group of a certain topic. However, the facilitator wants to maximize group participation, drawing out ideas and empowering participants  to voice their own opinions in open group discussions. Definitely conducting a different role than solely a teacher or allowing discussions to take on the atmosphere of a lecture.

SaM’s Serving of NeRd: nerdy web comics 1.0

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Web comics are awesome for a number of reasons:

1) They save paper!

2) They’re easy to find when you want to show a friend or relive a good laugh.

3) THE HAVE IPHONE APPS 😉

4) The list is endless, really, but you know, it’s nice to have archives and the most recent comic available after a couple of clicks.

Today I would like to share the first installment of a few of my favorite web comics: xkcd.

xkcd is a witty, hilarious, nerdy and sometimes a bit inappropriate for young audiences, but overall: amazing. The author/artist gives the characters a great deal of depth and personality, which is quite impressive if you consider the fact that they’re all stick people with no facial features. Be sure to read the alt text! Place your cursor over comic and enjoy a lovely side note from the creator. Or on your iPhone/iPod, just hold your finger in the comic until it pops up.

So check out www.xkcd.com and see for yourself!! 😀 OR, are you an iPhone or iPod Touch user? Download their FREE app on iTunes 🙂

Here are a few of my personal favorites:

Light a Candle

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The Holodomor Memorial Site In Calgary, Photograph by: Ted Jacob, Calgary Herald, Neighbours

Holodomor Awareness Week November 22-28

This weekend, I’m going to be remembering. Remembering millions who died of starvation.
I was raised in the Ukrainian-Canadian Community, and I’ve always known of the Ukrainian genocide by famine of 1932-33, but as I grew older, I was saddened to see how few people also knew of it. It is, as the Calgary Herald puts it, “a nearly forgotten genocide.”

In the rise of the Soviet Union, Stalin instigated this genocide to destroy the spirit of the Ukrainian nation. He imposed grain quotas on the collective farms higher than what the farms were capable of producing. The collection was enforced with death penalties: peasants were shot for trying to eat raw wheat stalks off of the ground. Named for “holod” (hunger) and “mor” (death, plague, suffering), the Holodomor was a tragedy that reduced Ukraine’s population by around 25%, killing 10 million people, if not more.

At the height of the Holodomor Ukrainian, villagers were dying at the rate of 25,000 per day or 1,000 per hour or 17 per minute.
-Holodfacts

How can you support awareness for this “nearly forgotten genocide”? This weekend is the annual time of remembrance.
You can partake in events being hosted here in Calgary:

November 21 – 28
33 black flags (for the year 1933) and large Holodomor banner is on display outside of
the CYM Ukrainian Youth Centre – Edmonton Tr and 9 Ave NE.

November 23 – 26 (during business hours)
Holodomor Exhibit at the Calgary City Hall Atrium

November 25 UCPBA Dinner Meeting
Danish Canadian Club (727 11 Ave SW)
Showing of Stone Mill with English subtitles
Hosted by the Ukrainian Canadian Proffessional and Business Association

November 26 at 7 p.m.
Candlelight Vigil at the Holodomor Memorial site (Pictured above)
Langevin Bridge (across from Starbucks)
Memorial Drive and Edmonton Trail

November 27 at 11 a.m.
Memorial Service and Commemoration of the Holodomor 1932-1933 at St. Vladimir’s Cultural Centre – 404 Meridith Rd NE.
Holodomor Posters from Ukraine Poster Contest

November 27 at 1932h (7:32 p.m.)
Church bell tolling at Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Ukrainian
Catholic Parish
Minute of Silence

Even if you are not at any of the scheduled events, take a moment to honour the lives of the lost and to envision a world of peace where such atrocities will never happen again. On Saturday, November 27 at 19:32 (7:32 p.m.), light a candle in your window to raise awarness for the Holodomor.

Music: Leo Ornstein

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Being one of my passions in life, I think music is an important factor in the lives of men. As a listener of an extremely wide range of music, I am sometimes distressed to see that many people don’t explore music outside of their comfort zone. I listen to a lot of jazz, rock, electronic and orchestral music. But sometimes, even the most beautiful or moving of songs can get a bit boring. That is why I was quite delighted when I discovered the works of Leo Ornstein about a year ago, and have listened to them on occasion even till now.

Ornstein composed for piano, which upon mentioning that particular instrument names such as Bach, Beethoven and Mozart are invoked. Yet Ornstein completely breaks these preconceived notions of piano music and instead creates a sound that is uniquely his own.

Leo Ornstein was born in Ukraine in 1893. Growing up in a musical family, he was deemed to be a prodigy very early on in his life and by age 10, he was already accepted into the Moscow Conservatory of Music. By age 11 he was earning money by playing accompaniment for singers. In 1906, at the age of 13, he emigrated to the US, where he was quickly accepted into what is known today as Julliard School of Music. By 1914, he started to develop his own unique sounds.

To most people, Ornstein’s compositions seem chaotic, destructive, random, and unsettling. Some people say, jokingly, that he was just a man who banged on a piano to create random sounds, then slapped on his name and sold it for a quick profit. But being one of the most important Avant-garde composers in history, Ornstein’s style and compositions truly transcends the realm of conservative music and into a new world that has been left quite untouched. As an example, here is one of my favorite songs by Ornstein: Suicide in an Airplane.

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With a song like this the title is important in invoking imagery with the aid of music, and there is no better title than Suicide in an Airplane in my opinion. It doesn’t sound “nice” by conventional means, yet within the chaotic nature of this song there is a progression that fits with the idea of committing suicide in an airplane. With a soft atonic rumble from the beginning, the music starts to unfold as a line is developed apart from the rumbling, as if the psychological tension of a man is beginning to permeate him. As the song intensifies with a climbing action emotions run high until the climax, when the deed is finally committed. And after that, a return to the soft rumbling, as if nothing has happened.

Without a doubt, Leo Ornstein’s music is extremely difficult to play, as there is no safe fall-back style to rely upon. Every right note can easily sound like as if it was wrong. And within this chaotic jumble of notes, there is something that when coupled with the title, can evoke vivid imagery in our minds. And shouldn’t all art do that?

For further listening, check out his Danse sauvage, Op 13 No 2.

Scary Movie Review #3: A Nightmare on Elm Street

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A Nightmare on Elm Street PosterI recently got the opportunity to watch A Nightmare on Elm Street. I wanted to see the new one, but I ended up watching one from 1996. A cool fact about this movie is that it introduced Johnny Depp into the acting world. I thought this movie was very good.

It is about a man named Freddy Crouger who lives in peoples dreams and pretty much whatever happens to you in your dream happens to you in real life. So Freddy goes into teenagers dreams and kills them. The weird thing is that anyone around the one in the nightmare cannot see Freddy, so all they see is the person freaking out and fighting against an invisible object.

The movie revolves around one of the main girls, Nancy, and how she is trying to kill Freddy. Without giving too much away, Nancy finds out that she can take stuff out from her dream, and then she has it in real life. So she uses that to her advantage with her father as a police Lieutenant to capture Freddy.

I definetely recommend this movie, but to an older audience because there are some graphic scenes. Overall, it is a good movie worth watching!

Tuesday, November 23, 2010 – Calgary, the second coldest place on Earth?

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Recently I saw on the news that Calgary was the second coldest place on Earth at -33 degrees celcius on Tuesday, November 23, 2010, right after the South Pole at -38 degrees celcius. Brrrr!! Courtesy of the Calgary Herald

TSA: The reason I will never fly to the US

Reprinted from the Scarlett Fever.

I do not particularly like people being able to see though my clothes, nor do I enjoy being groped during a pat-down. Seeing as these are part of the United States Transport Security Administration’s standard operating procedures, I doubt you’ll find me on a plane to the States any time soon.

This past month has been a banner month for the TSA, with first hand accounts of violations of privacy, unacceptable behaviour by employees and violations of  citizen’s rights rolling in from all over the country to our south.

The main attraction is the use of the TSA’s full-body backscatter x-rays, which let operators see fliers as if they were standing naked in front of the machine. Most people would be rightly concerned about this, and the TSA knows it, so they have sworn that the people viewing the images would not be the same people interacting with the customers, and that the images would never be shown to anyone else, because they would not save them.

The only problem with this is that some TSA employees have been saving the pictures, and have been sharing them, found the tech blog Gizmodo.com as the result of an investigation. 35,000 of them, to be exact. While an investigation into these employees has already been launched, this shows how things turn out when you give powerful tools to underpaid, disgruntled employees.

Problems get worse when fliers decide to opt out of the x-ray screening and are forced to undergo an invasive patdown. This is not just a sweep with a metal detector wand, but a full-handed groping of the entire body. If customers have special needs, however, they are given special attention, such as a breast cancer survivor having to remove her prosthetic breast in public, reports WBTV 3 News, and a TSA employee breaking the connection between a bladder cancer survivor’s urostomy bag and the hole in his abdomen that drains urine out of his body, covering the man in his own urine, says MSNBC.

At least the TSA screeners have a sense of decency when screening fliers, like in the incident reported by the Amarillo Globe-News, where a TSA employee pulled down a woman’s blouse, exposing her to the crowd in the surrounding airport. The story has a happy ending though, since the employees that missed the spectacle gave a chuckle and said they would simply have to make sure to watch it later on the security footage.

All in the name of national security.

Arts Around Calgary: Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra Presents Mozart and Salieri

Mozart’s contemporary Joseph Haydn once said this about him: “posterity will not see such a talent again in 100 years.” The extent to which this prediction was right is controversial, because along came Beethoven followed by Chopin in a couple of decades. However, the fact that Mozart was an artistic genius who pushed the boundaries of classical music cannot be doubted. This season at the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra, an entire festival has been dedicated to Mozart’s dynamic and prolific compositions in celebration of his 255th birthday. From his famous operas to his lively chamber music the orchestra will bring back to life the notes which Mozart penned more than 200 years ago. Fellow blogger Lisa and I had the chance to attend one of the first performances of the season: Mozart and Salieri, a Requiem for Mozart.

Mozart’s timeless compositions are followed by the legendary mystery of his death. It is said that Mozart was murdered by his rival Antonio Salieri out of sheer jealousy for his unimaginable talent. Indeed, living as Mozart’s rival must have been an extremely stressful and forever bitter experience for poor Salieri, who always stood in the shadow of the effortless musical giant. Salieri was a serious man who devoted his entire life to his career, while Mozart (despite being one of the most prolific composers of all time) squandered his reputation and money in masquerade balls and fashionable wigs. It is said that Salieri disguised himself as a masked man who commissioned Mozart to write a requiem for Count Franz von Walsegg. This requiem was really meant for Mozart himself, whom Salieri had plotted to poison and kill. The requiem is the last composition Mozart made in his life, and he died before it was completed.