vol.17.22
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17 August, 2017
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/Archive
... attention must be paid* |
all the views we care to share |
Long Table Dinner to ‘Give Us a Lift’ The Garden Gala is being held on Saturday, August 26 in Cominco Gardens. The Gardens will be in full bloom and dinner guests will have the opportunity to enjoy them as they listen to live music and enjoy a gourmet meal. Proceeds will benefit the 'Give Us a Lift' campaign of the Kimberley Arts Council. “Long Table Dinners have been occurring around the country for the last few years. It is a wonderful opportunity to sit down with your old friends and meet new ones and be able to contribute to a worthy cause at the same time” said Emily Smith, Event Coordinator. Cominco Gardens is providing accessible space and a well-suited ambiance for a Gourmet Dinner, prepared by Kimberley’s own Chef Michel Kuhn, formerly of HeartBeet Bistro. Cocktails at 6:PM, dinner served at 7:PM. Tickets are $75 per person and are available through Centre 64 and on line. For menu details or additional information, please refer to Kimberley Arts Facebook page or contact: Emily Smith • • •
Beliefs Have Consequences
The polygamy trial of Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints (FLDS) leaders in Cranbrook is a reminder that women still face many social, cultural and legal challenges to achieving full equality.
Aside from its apparent illegality, there is another major problem associated with FLDS dogma. If a man has seven wives, six men have none. If that is the case, 85% of men are surplus. Over time in the small, isolated communities which are the norm for the FLDS, inbreeding becomes a problem, a serious problem.
Eight years ago, we talked with Carolyn Jessop, the first woman to successfully leave the FLDS with her children. We learned much about the FLDS, religion and power from Carolyn. You might too.
The program is available in video and in audio only.
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Some Minutes with the Mayor
Democracy is a fragile creation. The madness afoot in America and Great Britain are bad for morale and much else besides. The tone of political discourse has coarsened over much of the world. Much of the media attends more closely to money than to quality journalism. Social media is, at best, suspect. Righteous iies seem to be the order of the day.
In our latest conversation with Mayor McCormick we strayed onto the functioning of democracy in a relatively small community. The discussion about grassroots democracy seemed sufficiently relevant that we shared it with our HuffPost readers.
This is the excerpt we posted:
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This is full version of our most recent conversation with Mayor McCormick:
Mayor Don McCormick — 19 July,'17 Amidst a provincial election, unsurprisingly, governing, governance and how they affect our daily lives was central to this episode of our conversations with Mayor McCormick.
If you prefer, you can listen to this program here. Earlier editions of our conversations with Mayor McCormick are here. • • •
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There's probably someone out there who would like to suppress something we've presented here, but probably they lack the power or will or sufficient interest to meet Lord Northcliffe's definition. To us, what we publish here does not seem to be advertising, so we will argue for a place between the heaven of journalism and the hell of advertising ... call it neighborly conversation |
If your internet connection has the bandwidth, watch these video clips in High Definition. |
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Audio Bits: American author and playwrite E.L. Doctorow died in July. We talked with him in 2005 about his novel The March and about the relationship between writers and readers. These are excerpts from that conversation. |
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