Features

Jun 132013
 

Canadian visitor captures images of Istanbul protesters.

by Joanne Thomas Yaccato

International business consultant Joanne Thomas Yaccato has just returned from Istanbul, where her intended project was cut short by the public uprising in Taksim Square, over a government decision to allow construction on Gezi Park, one of the few remaining public parks in the city. Her hotel was close enough to Taksim Square to provide a view of the action, and a whiff of the tear gas. Repeatedly over about 18 hours, she said, riot police used water canons and tear gas to chase the public out of the square. Some of the protesters fought back with fireworks, which made loud bangs, and some threw rocks, but eventually they retreated. Then the police hung around for a couple of hours, and sometimes they left, and eventually the people returned whether they left or not. 

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In the morning, Thomas Yaccato left her hotel and visited Taksim Square, which showed signs of a horrific conflict. Oddly enough, few people people seem to have reported injuries. In fact, in these pictures, the protesters' camp looks a bit like an Occupy camp. Not only are the tents and heaps of blankets and sleeping bags familiar, but in just over a week, the (mostly) young people had organized a makeshift hospital, a central kitchen, a clothing distribution centre, and even a library — although most of the books were damaged by a water canon. 

Straight Goods is pleased to be able to present some of Joanne Thomas Yaccato's photos and comments, which offer rare insight into an event that's still unfolding. Although Thomas Yaccato reports the crowd seems infused with a cheerful determination, such protest does carry risks in Turkey, way beyond water canons and tear gas. Could these events be called the Turkish Spring? Have a look at these images and decide for yourself. If nothing else, Taksim Square will probably be remembered as the first encampment where demonstrators gathered around a baby grand piano for singalongs led by celebrated concert pianists like Germany's Davide Martello, or the Sicilian artist who performed the following night. 

 

Jun 132013
 
Andre Marin.

Ontario ombuds reports inmates, guards, cover up serious violence.

from the Ontario Ombudsman's office

Andre Marin introduces new report on violence in provincial prisons.

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Jun 102013
 
Shawn Atleo.

Soon all Canadians will know how it feels to be an Indian.

by Richard Wagamese

Five years ago, Stephen Harper stood in the House of Commons and issued the historic apology for the legacy of government and church-run residential schools. At that time, many Aboriginal people held hope that this marked the beginning of a new and empowering chapter in relations between the government and Aboriginals. Now the government has slashed funding to 43 representative Aboriginal organizations. The new chapter clearly needs severe editing.

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Jun 102013
 
NaheedNenshi

Developer's efforts to thwart Mayor Nenshi include donations to Manning Centre.

by Gillian Steward

There is no sign of drugs in a secretly recorded video that involves Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi. And it is not being shopped for $200,000 by shadowy figures.  But despite that, this video has garnered a lot of attention in Calgary because it involves money and some very powerful people: Nenshi, former Reform party leader Preston Manning and Cal Wenzel, one of the city’s most prominent and prosperous homebuilders.

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Jun 102013
 
MarjoryLeBreton

Canadian party leaders have more power than leaders in any other country.

by Duff Conacher

OTTAWA, June 10, 2013 —  Today, the national educational foundation Your Canada, Your Constitution (YCYC) released the results of the first-ever national survey of 1,007 Canadians on the question of restricting the powers of political party leaders to control politicians in their party. The results show that a large majority of Canadians (71 percent) want legal restrictions on party leader powers to give more freedom and power to politicians in each party, while only 20 percent do not want these legal restrictions (9 percent did not answer).

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Jun 092013
 
Chinese grocery.

Growing meat market bids to buy Smithfield,  world’s leading pork producer.

by Janet Larsen

Half the world’s pigs — more than 470 million of them — live in China, but even that may not be enough to satisfy the growing Chinese appetite for meat. While meat consumption in the United States has fallen more than 5 percent since peaking in 2007, Chinese meat consumption has leapt 18 percent, from 64 million to 78 million (metric) tons — twice as much as in the United States.

Pork is by far China’s favorite protein, which helps to explain the late-May announced acquisition of US meat giant Smithfield Foods Inc, the world’s leading pork producer, by the Chinese company Shuanghui International, owner of China’s largest meat processor. China already buys more than 60 percent of the world’s soybean exports to feed to its own livestock and has been a net importer of pork for the last five years. Now the move for Chinese companies is to purchase both foreign agricultural land and food-producing companies outright.

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Jun 062013
 

As Darwin actually said, cooperative human societies flourish best.

by Eric Michael Johnson

A century ago, industrialists like Andrew Carnegie believed that Darwin’s theories justified an economy of vicious competition and inequality. They left us with an ideological legacy that says the corporate economy, in which wealth concentrates in the hands of a few, produces the best for humanity. This was always a distortion of Darwin’s ideas.  His 1871 book, The Descent of Man, argued that the human species had succeeded because of traits like sharing and compassion. “Those communities,” he wrote, “which included the greatest number of the most sympathetic members would flourish best, and rear the greatest number of offspring.”
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Jun 052013
 
ChristineLagarde

IMF says global reform would lead to major gains for economic growth and the environment.

from the International Monetary Fund

 A new report from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) urged policymakers the world over to reform subsidies for products from coal to gasoline, arguing that this could translate into major gains both for economic growth and the environment. The comprehensive study, Energy Subsidy Reform — Lessons and Implications, released today, estimates that energy subsidies amount to a staggering $1.9 trillion worldwide — the equivalent of 2½ percent of global GDP, or 8 percent of government revenues.

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Jun 032013
 

Toronto Star adhered to its professional code, retains keen libel lawyer.

by John Gordon Miller

There are many tools in a journalist's drawer, and the Rob Ford drug scandal certainly justifies pulling out the sharpest ones.

Here you have the mayor of a large North American city, who was seen on a video apparently smoking crack cocaine, refusing to answer any questions from the media for more than a week and effectively calling the country's biggest newspaper a liar. "The video," he said on radio, "does not exist."

If that's his line in the sand, it's good enough for me. Let's get it on.

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