This afternoon I had the
opportunity for a metaphysical interview with Doug Ford, Toronto city
councillor and brother to the mayor, Rob Ford. You’ve probably heard of Rob Ford: his pro-taxpayer,
anti-downtown-fatcat policies have been featured in news media all over the world,
and Youtube is full of amateur videos of his impromptu political speeches.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Friday, May 16, 2014
Return to Ukraine
I’d hoped to make it back to
Ukraine for another metaphysical interview for a while now, but with my work
schedule it just hasn’t been possible. It takes time, you know, speculating
about a transatlantic flight. Finally, while doing laundry this afternoon I managed
to get back to Kramatorsk, in the self-declared sovereign state that used to be
the province of Donetsk.
Looking one way down the street,
it seemed like a normal afternoon. People strolled and chatted and shopped. A
pair of old men played chess outside a café. A grocer argued with a heavyset
woman who was waving around a beet that had apparently offended her. But just twenty
yards away, the street was cut off by a barricade of sandbags and cinderblocks.
Soldiers lolled in the sun or rested in the shade cast by an armoured personnel
carrier parked on the sidewalk. They still wore uniforms that looked oddly like
Russian ones, but they had patches freshly sewn on their shoulders that read Donetsk People’s Republic.
“Greetings, Dr. Lipak!” Pavel
Aleksandrov strode over to me, a rifle slung over his shoulder, followed by two
of his men – who I think were both named Ivan. They stopped a few feet away and
saluted me. Pavel’s eyes fell for an instant, and then he said, “Welcome back
to Kramatorsk!”
Sunday, May 4, 2014
Stephen Harper, Grade Eight
Beverley McLachlin cleared her throat. She’d been teaching junior high for thirty years, long enough that she’d started thinking of things in self-coined aphorisms. There are all sorts of troublemakers, went one of them, but the smart ones are the worst. That definitely applied here. “Stephen,” she said sharply, and tapped her foot until he turned around.
“Sorry, Ms. McLachlin,” the boy replied. “We were having a caucus meeting.”
“Sorry, Ms. McLachlin,” the boy replied. “We were having a caucus meeting.”
She managed not to sigh. Ever since little Stephen Harper had been elected class president, his ego had been swelling steadily. This was even though he’d won more out of luck than popularity. His rival Iggy had managed to staple his hand to a bulletin board while trying to put up campaign posters. And still, Stephen had only won because a number of students had actually written “Anybody but Stephen” on their ballots instead of voting.
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