Here's a line from a CBC article about Alberta ending its practice of publicly naming outbreaks:
"But the province will not be able to report outbreaks anywhere else."
This isn't in quotes. It's attributed to Hinshaw, kind of, and the journalist doesn't challenge it.
Of course it would be able to. They can hire 20 staff at a good wage to receive reports from PHUs and employers, mandated to report. It chooses not to. It has decided not to.
I hope everyone who reads my new book Spin Doctors will start to see this kind of thing faster.
Then there is this, quoted by a CTV news story:
“This virus is sneaky, and its changes faster than a chameleon,” Colby said during Thursday’s weekly briefing.
A simple google search demonstrates that this is not an accurate metaphor lol
If you're going to quote someone saying this (Google tells me that chameleons can change colours in 20 seconds or less) at least add in a little fact. Journalists are not paid to juice the authority of CMOHs.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
My kids go back to school tomorrow like so many others. Twitter is full of all the reasons for why this is bad and we should be very worried. And lots of the reasons are fair and good.
Here's a thread about why I'm far more nuanced on whether this is good/bad.
First, here are the mitigation protections we've been promised: masks at all times, CO2 detectors in every classroom, distancing where possible, cleaning etc. The basics.
Active cases in our half of town? 899 per 100K (with all the caveats of poor testing).
That is lower than it's been in 2022 but it's still very high.
Two things are notable about these numbers: 1. the overall number of deaths was a massive increase from what we've seen in a year. The bulk of that is Quebec's reporting.
2. Very few deaths then as a percentage of residential care to report. ..
Part of that is fake: the official lines are not reported on weekends, so we sill see a bump on Monday. But part is also just how this wave is playing out: there are fewer deaths in residential care.
You can see this with the overall percentage of deaths in residential care ...
Reminder: sign up to see tomorrow's big story and the inauguration of this space. In 2022, I'm going to stop trying to shop my pieces around and instead, publish them myself. I'll still write where places welcome my words, but it'll also be here too.
And just to give you an idea, with the number of sign-ups, I'm already equal to what I'm paid for my column, to write 17 pieces. The rate is low (the pub is new and does what it can!) but having a more stable income stream will absolutely rule.
(hell -- it's already higher than the advance I was paid to write Take Back the Fight!)
A listener from unceded Coast Salish territory entered #sn2021xo with this: "My favourite episode of all is Abolish the military? Abolish the military. I've been anti-war for some time and abolishing the military makes sense (it works for Costa Rica).
Almost before defunding the police, we should abolish the military (let's do both at the same time.) All the arguments you raise are absolutely cogent ones; our armed forces do fuck all abroad and at home ...
...they're just kinda sorta ok at logistics when they're not sexually assaulting their female members. We get them to drive trucks and deliver things when we could just get Canadian organizations to do that instead ... it makes more sense...
Ok it's past 10 PM on a Saturday night. The snow is gently falling and I'm heading down to record my penultimate episode of Take Back the Fight podcast -- the final one for 2021.
This Thursday, you'll hear about how ineffective it has been to have feminists in positions of power and how this has actually weakened, confused and disoriented the feminist movement.
The one I'm recording tonight ...
Will explore how the only real feminism (that is political feminism that actually seeks to dismantle patriarchy) must be anti-capitalist, anti-racist and decolonial. And I explain the ways in which we are failing in that ...
As mentioned in the episode, it was another rough year for frustrating content but I loved the insights you both provided within the episode.
It really is incredible how much community organizing has happened over the past year or two and I’m so excited for what the future holds with community organizing. Over the past year, I started volunteering with a local reproductive justice organization...