I really believe in, “when they go low, we go high.”
A big@ fan of “turn the other cheek.”
But that’s personal.
When those I love & those I serve are being mislead or harmed due to the irresponsible actions of others, that’s another story.
Then it’s time to fight like hell.
Get pumped & fired up, friends!
Laugh out loud.
There’s a pretty rocky road ahead, but damn if I don’t see sunshine, too.
They’ll lie, cheat, steal, and leave chaos in their wake.
They’ll show us who they are and just how small and hateful they can be.
And then we’ll win.
And we’ll win not by playing their game, but by rejecting it.
The thing they mock most is what they fear most:
Hope.
Faith in each other.
Love.
As if these were qualities that make someone weak when they are the foundations of strong, resilient, thriving communities.
There’s a bright future for Edmonton. It’s just at the edge of sight.
To get there will take work, but that good kind of work that feels like creation.
We get to create our tomorrows together.
And we start by deciding that today. Everyday.
And that’s how I roll, folks.
🖖
Hope you choose to roll with me.
Almost forgot to mention the secret sauce: when we win, everyone wins, because that’s the big difference. We want to serve everyone as well as possible, no matter who they are or where they come from or what they believe or don’t believe.
Because we believe in family.
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“The child who is not embraced by the village will burn it down to feel its warmth"
I’ve been asked to comment on the issues of the past few days. I’m still thinking about that. Maybe my voice doesn’t need to be heard.
Or maybe we all need to speak.
Truth is, we need change.
I have multiple personal stories of being on the receiving end of racism and profiling, as have many Indigenous, Métis, Black, Asian, or persons of colour. My father is Cree, my mother’s side is from Norway. So I have ALSO experienced the side that DOESN’T fear on a daily basis.
In my younger years I was routinely carded, detained, questioned, and one time severely beaten - presumably for existing while Indigenous. As I aged and physically became increasingly white-passing, these things stopped.
I am not looking for any sympathy. These are just facts.
The worst things that ever happened to politics is the adoption of the Left/Centre/Right framework. It’s limiting & flawed and does not accurately represent people’s reality or thinking.
All it does is create false narratives, divisions, & opportunities to game the system.
There’s a better way.
Ppl are exhausted by shouting at each other, & the inevitable result is greater extremes of folks who won’t open their ears or their thinking.
A better model is a circle w/ connective lines bridging the distances.
My grandfather was a soldier in World War II. My family has a history of military service.
The normalization of racial supremacy, the encouragement of it by some political leaders as a path to power, isn’t just abhorrent, it is a threat to our peace & to our communities.
As we mark the 25th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide let me say:
- how easy it is to stoke economic fear and pair it with racial fear. We have history to prove it. We know that road.
- Canada is not immune. We must always be on guard for the small wedge that opens the door.
Atrocity may explode like a powder keg, but it’s never the big event that is the cause, that’s just the effect.
Like the frog in the pot of increasingly heating water, it’s the prejudices, hate & fear that are allowed to spread & given platforms that lead to the boiling point.