March 2008. I had one kid and a second was on its way. 11 years living in a city with no family and the majority of my friends were grad students who - even then - couldn't afford to stay in Vancouver after graduating. #TwitterRequiem 1/11
Twitter was a way to connect with new people with similar interests. Most of them geeky, many of them outgoing introverts. Tweet ups. For whatever reason, GenX seemed to really embrace this medium. 2/11
Twitter became a way to experience events. World events. Local events. Elections. The Olympics.
It became *the place* to learn about breaking news and experience those things with a community. 4/11
And Twitter, meeting tweeps IRL, what a thing. Still many of the people I interact with most often here I've never met, and quite a number I still have no idea what their real names are. Some people I *have* met IRL I struggle to remember their names but not their handles :) 5/11
Twitter became a way to interact with media and entertainment personalities. Some were only on broadcast, but some kept it real, were genuine, and interacted like the real people they are. Despite the growing tsunami of abuse from bleachers.
Twitter changed over the past 14 years, for sure. It moved from being local and geeky to being global, dominated by loud voices, often competing to be the loudest, most outrageous. Many of the early people left, some stuck around, and new people found Twitter. 7/11
I don't think Twitter got better or worse, necessarily, until quite recently. With the rise of truthers, denialists, and - frankly - loud mouth assholes, Twitter became a noisy, irritating place even if you kept a well-curated feed. 9/11
And now an immature man with more money than brains is burning it all down. I don't know if Twitter will survive and if it does, if it will ever regain its former self. It feels like this is the end. 10/11
And if it is, I want to say thank you to everyone I've connected with, who have made me laugh, made me think, made me learn more, people I've met and not, and all who have put up with me :) You made Twitter a nice place to be. #TwitterRequiem 11/11
Reminder: When Commissioners Coupar and Barker argue there shouldn't be a temporary bike lane in one of the two travel lanes in Stanley Park due to loss of accessible parking spots, they're talking about *2* spots.
And blaming the temporary bike lane on parking revenue loss is ... grasping at straws. Parking in Stanley Park was never full when the temporary lane was in place last summer
In fact, it's been speculated that the drop in cars in the park was, in part, because those two Commissioners couldn't stop saying "Stanley Park is closed" and "there's no parking" during that time -- when it was measurably not the case.
I call on the Park Board Commissioners to reconsider the removal of the temporary protected active-transportation lane. What problem does the removal solve? What are the consequences of the removal?
Problems that it solves:
* More convenient access to Brockton Point and Third Beach for people who drive to Stanley Park
* Allowing people who drive more convenient access to/from the Causeway
Problems that it *doesn't* solve:
* Improved parking in the park (not at capacity)
* Improved access in the park (will *remove* 2 accessible spots if it reverts back to pre-COVID)