Saturday, February 7, 2009

I came across this piece through Terry Glavin. There is no case for any culture or religion to infringe on an individual's human rights, the culture or religion has to give way.

Fundamentally what is going in Afghanistan is different than when the Brits went in there or the Russians, the troops are their in defense of human rights, a fundamental shift. The defeat of troops in Afghanistan is a defeat for human rights in this world.

Globally there is a war on between those that value human rights and an open civil society versus those that seek tyranny. For some bizarre reason, the left in many parts of the world has chosen to champion the wrong side and fight against the average people on the ground.

By Lauryn Oates, The Ottawa CitizenJanuary 28, 2009

In November, when a group of unveiled girls was attacked by men on motorcycles who sprayed acid in their faces as they were walking to morning classes in Kandahar, Canadians were shocked.

They shouldn’t have been.

Every year, all over South Asia, hundreds of women have acid sprayed in their faces for committing the offence of going to school, or for going to work, or for merely walking down a street without covering their faces. In Bangladesh alone, an average of 228 women are subjected to such acid attacks every year.

But there is an important and very specific lesson to be learned from the Kandahar incident.

More than a dozen of the young Kandahari women were seriously injured, two of them blinded, and the victims have all defiantly returned to their classes at the Mirwais Mena school. One of the girls who suffered severe eye injuries is 17-year-old Shamsia: “I will go to my school even if they kill me,” Shamsia said. “My message for the enemies is that if they do this 100 times, I am still going to continue my studies.”

The lesson here is that millions of brave Afghan schoolgirls are dedicated to pursuing their studies, in sometimes perilous and hostile circumstances, and their devotion is heartfelt, homegrown and hardy. It has not been “imposed” upon them by the “West.”

As Canadians, we should be proud and honoured that history has afforded our country a specific opportunity to help young Afghan women assert their fundamental right to education. Our focus should be on how we can do more, and better. Instead, a bizarre kind of cultural relativism has come to infect national debates about the Afghan mission, clouding our judgment and entirely obscuring the very meaning of universal human rights.

I first noticed it when I was in high school, in 1996, when I was circulating a petition to protest the Taliban’s brutal oppression of women. One of my teachers refused to sign the petition, saying, well, that’s their culture, and we have no right to interfere.

Two years ago I spoke on a panel organized by Carleton University’s Students Coalition Against War, in Ottawa. I was accused of exaggerating the suffering of Afghan women, but even if I had a point, it was an “internal cultural matter,” and certainly none of my business.

Human rights are culturally relative, the thinking goes, and the universality of human rights is some sort of western imperialist construction. It is as though girls have no right to read if their “culture” forbids it. It is a rarely scrutinized assumption, but it is ubiquitous in Canadian universities, and it reaches its most toxic concentrations in “anti-war” debates.

The result is that the once great cause of fulfilling the promise of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is rendered merely a “Eurocentric” enterprise, and necessarily something shabby.

Years from now, when our own children look back on us, what will they make of how Canada, one of the richest countries of the world, lived up to the promise of universal human rights? In Afghanistan, where those rights are only now being extended to the people, and are still just nominally available to the women of that country, did we uphold our commitment?

Did we not see in the Afghan people our shared humanity? Did we recognize death-cult misogyny for what it really is? Did we have the courage to call fascism by its proper name, or did we excuse ourselves and retreat into the comfortable, false virtues of pacifist isolationism and cultural relativism?

Afghanistan is not just a theatre of war in the conventional meaning of the term. It is also a battleground of values. But it is not a clash between “western” and “eastern” cultures. The Afghan people want their girls to go to school. The Afghan people do not want the Taliban. But in Canada, it has nonetheless become necessary to point this out, over and over, and also to point out what it is that the Taliban actually do want.

“They want what they had before 2001: an extremist, eccentric Islamic state where the sports stadium is used for public executions of dissenters, homosexuals and women accused of adultery,” Cheryl Benard of the Rand Corporation recently reminded us here in the “West.” What the Taliban want is a place apart from humanity, where “religious police roam the streets with sticks to beat anyone whose beard or chador is too short; and all education for girls is eliminated.”

The Taliban and their fellow travellers have not given up on this vision, and to achieve it they are happy to blow up civilians and their own in suicide bombings (an act condemned in Islam and in Afghan traditions, for any “yes, but” cultural relativists reading this). They kidnap journalists, hijack food-aid convoys, decapitate teachers, and slaughter unarmed women working for foreign aid organizations — the fate that recently befell the Canadian humanitarian workers Shirley Case and Jackie Kirk.

Yet to hear from some of the more prominent “troops out” voices in Canada, the Taliban are merely “dissidents” or “the resistance.” To listen to these voices, you could be forgiven for thinking that the Taliban were some quaint tribe, engaged in a noble fight against the power-hungry, capitalist West.

Once you strip away the misleading “explanations” offered up by the cultural relativists, all that remains is disgraceful excuse-making for an ideology that requires its adherents to pull women’s fingernails out for the crime of wearing nail polish. It is an ideology engaged in an open revolt against humanity, against the values shared by Afghans and Canadians alike, and against an entire international order founded in the aftermath of the Holocaust.

With a new year under way in our engagement in Afghanistan, let us do a better job of honouring the legacy on which the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is based — in Afghanistan, and everywhere.

Lauryn Oates is a founding member of the Canada Afghanistan Solidarity Committee and project director of Canadian Women for Women in Afghanistan’s Excel-erate Teacher Training Program. She has advocated for the rights of Afghan women and girls since the Taliban invasion in 1996 and travels frequently to Afghanistan.

Truth in Pricing, A Regulation I Would Favour

In general I dislike government regulation if there is no really good reason for it, but I would love to see government come in and regulate pricing. I would like to have the price on a product to include all costs I will have to pay. Put the GST into the prices. Put all fees into the prices.

I would also like to see a regulation of prices that makes for round numbers, no $9.99 but $10.

I know there is no need for this, I would just like it.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Port Mann Bridge

The new bridge was announced on Wednesday Feb 4th. It is more than just the bridge, it is also changes to 37 km of Highway #1.

The plans look very detailed and complete - there is a lot of thought that went into it.

It looks like the Highway will be four lane through Burnaby all the way out to 200th Street in Surrey, up from the three at the moment. The Cape Horn Interchange is being completely redone.

I am also happy that is being done as a P3, this will protect us long term from the sort of massive cost overruns that this sort of transportation capital project normally incurs. Realistically if this were being built by the government, the odds are that it will not be completed on time and is likely to cost an extra $1 000 000 000 to $1 800 000 000. The P3 should give us certainty.

There is a plan to have rapid bus on the bridge running from Langley to Burnaby. It looks like this is the initial planning for an new SkyTrain line through to Langley from Burnaby. The bridge will be built with the capacity to have rail run over it in the future. This is a very smart and forward thinking thing to do as the cost of building a new rail transit crossing of the river would be very expensive.

There will also be dramatic improvements for cyclist that wish to use the Port Mann.

I like the idea that the bridge will be tolled, I am fan of this because it will bring home to people driving the real costs of the bridge. It also makes the marginal cost of driving alone higher and therefore makes car pooling and transit more attractive
Let us say the federal government sold all of the following, would it not make a big dent in the deficit? This is not an all inclusive list, just a first pass on a lot of what I think could be sold to the private sector.

Bye, Bye Conservative Pie


I took this from Paul Holmes' blog Conservatism

This is where I am at........

CONSERVATIVE PIE
by Anonymous

A long, long time ago…
I can still remember
How that man used to make me smile.
And I knew he had his chance
Preston could make those people dance
And, maybe, they’d be happy for a while.

But February made me shiver
With every Macleans I’d deliver
Bad news on the doorstep;
I couldn’t take one more step.

I can’t remember if the tears were mine
When I read about, Budget 09’
But something touched me deep inside
The day, conservatism, died.

So bye-bye, right-wing guy.
Drove the platform to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And libertarians were drinkin’
Whiskey and rye
Singin’, this’ll be the day it all died.
This’ll be the day it all died.

Did you write the book on gov
And do you have faith in the market above,
If Friedman tells you so?
Do you believe in capital-ism,
Can you talk about it ad-nauseum,
And can you teach me how to spend real slow?

Well, I know that your in love with him
‘cause I heard you singin’ Trudeau’s hymn.
You both kicked off your shoes.
Man, Keynes can give me the blues!

I was a lonely teenage, ideologue
With a pinko teacher and a pickup truck,
But I knew I was out of luck
The day, conservatism died.

I started singin’
“Bye-bye right-wing guy.”
Drove my platform to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And so-cons were drinkin’
Whiskey and rye
Singin’, this’ll be the day it all died.
This’ll be the day it all died.

Now for 3 years we’ve been on our own
And pork grows fat on a rollin’ stone,
But that’s not how it was supposed to be.
When the jester sang for the king and queen,
In a coat he borrowed from Flaherty,
And a voice that came from you and me,

Oh, and while the king was looking down,
Dion tried to steal his thorny crown.
Parliament was adjourned;
No confidence was returned!
And while Layton read a book on Marx,
The Bloc practiced in the park,
And we sang dirges in the dark,
The day, conservatism, died.

We were singing
“Bye-bye right-wing guy.”
Drove my ideas to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And Reagan was drinkin’
Whiskey and rye
Singin’, this’ll be the day it all died.
This’ll be the day it all died.

Helter skelter in an Ottawa swelter.
Martin’s ships sailed from a tax shelter,
From Barbados and steamin’ fast.
It landed foul in an AG report,
The CPC tried in QP and court,
With Orchard on the sidelines in a,
pillow fort.

Now the convention air was sweet perfume
While the grassroots played a victory tune.
We all got up to dance,
Oh, but we never got the chance!
‘cause the Coalition tried to take the field;
The Government refused to yield.
Do you recall what was revealed.
The day, conservatism died?

We started singing,
“Bye-bye right-wing guy.”
Drove my dreams to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And Klein was drinkin’ (lots) of
Whiskey and rye
Singin’, this’ll be the day it all died.
This’ll be the day it all died.

Oh, and there we were in one place,
A generation of conservatives lost in space
With no time left to Reform again.
So come on: Jack be nimble,
Layton be quick!
Duceppe say on a candlestick
Cause the NDP is the Bloc’s only friend.

Oh, and as I watched in the House
My hands were cusped over my mouth.
No capitalist born in hell
Could break that socialist spell!
And as the red ink spilt over the Budget
I got the feelin’ we’d fudged it.
I saw Rae laughing with delight
The day, conservatism, died.

He was singing
“Bye-bye right-wing guy.”
Saw your plans at the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And Mike Harris was drinkin’
Whiskey and rye
Singin’, this’ll be the day it all died.
This’ll be the day it all died.

I knew a think-tank that spoke of Blue
And I asked it for some happy news,
But Fraser Institute just turned away.
I went to a Calgary store
Where I heard Preston speak years before,
But the MP there said with voters,
it wouldn’t play

And on payday: the taxpayers screamed,
The blues cried, and libertarians dreamed.
But not a word was spoken;
The movement now was broken.
And the three men I admire most;
Harris, Preston and Reagan’s ghost,
They caught the last train for the coast
The day, conservatism, died.

And they were singing,
“Bye-bye right-wing guy.”
Drove my vision to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And the Great Ones were drinkin’
Whiskey and rye
Singin’, this’ll be the day it all died.
This’ll be the day it all died.

And they were singing,
“Bye-bye right-wing guy.”
Drove my dreams to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And grassroots were drinkin’
Whiskey and rye
Singin’, this’ll be the day it all died.

Battleground ridings

Sacha Peter of the BC Election 2009 blog has done a map of the battleground ridings in the lower mainland - thank you for doing that as I am not much of graphic image person.

You can really see on the map how heavily the battlegrounds are concentrated in one area more than anywhere. A smart local mayor in Burnaby - Tri Cities - North of the Fraser area should be able to really get some election promise goodies from both parties.

Sacha Peter's blog is a good source of information about the upcoming provincial election, the best I have seen out there. He and I differ on our estimations of the outcome of the election, both of us in favour of the party we personally favour.

Bernie Simpson among former NDP MLAs now backing Liberals

Bernie Simpson was an MLA from 1991 to 1996 for the NDP. He is now backing the Liberals, specifically Kash Heed.

This not good for the health of the NDP to have former MLAs no longer on board with the party. It speaks to the need for a strong re-think by the NDP of why it is in existence, what it wants to achieve as an agenda, and how to make itself more relevant today.

The BC NDP is closer to being a modern social democratic party than the federal party is, but it is still too far away from what it could and should be.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Senate of Canada

If things continue as they are at the moment and Stephen Harper continues to appoint Senators, he will have a majority in the upper house in Mid May 2011 at the latest.

The Liberals will lose their majority early this fall.

If there are more retirements or deaths, the date of the switch will come sooner.

One Sided Respones to Israel

I have noticed in the media and on many blogs out there that there is clearly a one-sided thing going on in the world vis a vis Israel and Palestine. There have been numerous demonstrations and rants about the evils of Israel and demonizing the country. Israel in specific and Jews in particular have been the brunt of huge amounts of hate. What you there is not out there is any equivalent in relation to the Palestinians or even Hamas.

There has been nothing coming from the people that support Israel that is trying to incite hatred towards Palestinians or even Hamas. The neutral people or the pro Israel people are avoiding trying to inflame things with wild orgies of hatred towards Palestinians. And this is in the context of Hamas who follow a fascist ideology.

How can people on the left buy into hatred of the most oppressed people the world has seen and a hatred of the only functioning democracy in the Middle East?

What Approach Can Work in Israel?

While I abhor war of all sorts, I can understand why people take part in it. Specifically I understand why Israel responds with so much force when attacked. I wish they did not feel the need to respond.

The actions in Gaza of late were horrific and devastating, but we are not allowed to know what really happened there or why. Hamas has stopped anyone for reporting on openly reporting on what was happening in Gaza during the Israeli attacks.

So what actions are needed?

1) The Palestinians need to step and guarantee the safety of Israel.

2) The Palestinians need to have a full open media and a proper functioning civil society. Fascists like Hamas is ensuring enduring poverty, corruption, and a fear based society.

3) The Palestinians have to crack down on fascists and anti-Semites. Palestine also needs to be a secular state with no acceptance of any religion having any formal standing in civil society. Hamas has to be banned. Any group or party that can not broadly accept the UN declaration on Human Rights needs to be banned.

4) Israel needs to pull back some of the settlements on the Westbank to ensure that a Palestinian state is not unviable, though a close economic union would make this less important.

5) Israel needs to make itself a secular state and remove any standing from any religion in civil society. Israel can not be a Jewish state

6) Israel needs to proactively promote the advancement of non-Jewish citizens in Israel. When Israel elects an Arabic PM, then you will know the society is integrated.

7) Both Israel and Palestine have to abandon all right of return - if you are not choosing to live there, you should not have a right to live there because of ethnic or religious backgrounds

8) All residents of Israel and Palestine must have the right to live and work anywhere in the area - this includes owning land and operating businesses. More economic integration will

9) Palestinian and Israeli security forces need to work together, really they need to train together in the field to build a common bond as soldiers.

20) Palestinian media needs to report on the positive aspects of Israel and build a brotherhood with the Israelis.

10) Imans and Rabbis that argue for jihad or expelling all the arabs or something else that is actting against a civil society need to be dealt with via the courts.

Regionally there needs to be several things happen:

1) Saudi Arabia has to be made to recognize Israel, in fact any nation that does not accept Israel needs to be taken to task for this.

2) Egpyt, Jordan and Syria need to become functioning democracies with an open secular civil society. Free media, free elections, independent courts and not standing for religion. These countries also need to take a strong stance against any anti-Semitism.

3) There needs to be a regional economic union - ideally Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, Syria and Palestine. The closer the economic union, the less chance there will be conflict. It worked with France and Germany, it will work in the Middle East.

I know a lot of this would be very hard for the hawks on all sides, but it is broadly what would be acceptable to vast majority of people. The underlying interests of 80% of the Israelis and Palestinians are to be able to live in peace, know that your home is safe, be able to make a decent living, be able to worship as they want, and to be able to say and do what they want. Is this too much to ask?

Cool New Online Blog/New Site

City Caucus - mainly Vancouver focused at the moment, but has some very good people involved with it.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

What is Ignatieff doing?

I am trying to understand what Ignatieff is doing in letting the Newfoundland Liberals vote against the budget. What about the BC Liberals? BC is getting screwed in the budget for having done well. I would include Alberta in this, but there are no Liberals from Alberta.

Adam Radwanski beat me to the punch on this with his column at the Globe.

How does Ignatieff deal with future demands to split ranks? Only praising him this morning to Sean Holman over coffee has being the leader the Liberals need while in opposition. I enjoyed Terry Glavin's column defending Iggy. I was warming up to him, but now I can not think how he can go into the caucus and not be fighting fires all day and night.

I could understand it if there was some substance to the issue, but there is none at all.

Frankly, he could have hung all of the Liberal MPs from Newfoundland out to dry and gained a lot more seats in the west and Ontario, but his actions have put every seat west of Ontario and outside of the 416 areacode into dangerous territory. Ignatieff needs several years for people forget that he allowed several of his MPs to try and pick the pockets of the rest of the nation.

Danny Williams trying to destroy Canada

As far as I can tell, Danny Williams is a bully that is interested in seeing an end to Canada as a nation. I am disappointed Michael Ignatieff has caved to him and allowed the Liberals from Newfoundland to vote against the budget.

Why should Canadians in the rest of the country be expected to pay EXTRA money to Newfoundland? Why is Danny Williams unwilling to contribute to confederation? Does not understand how fundamentally unfair the 1985 deal is to Canada?

I have read about the details of this back and forth and can not find a rational reason why anyone would back Danny Williams in this fantasy of his. The changes the federal government is making are nothing shocking and completely within their mandate to do. They are still paying every penny Newfoundland is entitled to from the 1985 Atlantic Accord.

Having an economic illiterate loud mouth that twists the facts as a premier of any province in Canada hurts national unity and hurts us internationally. This dispute with the feds only compounds the stupidity of the AbitbiBowater move by the Newfoundland government.

Is really the lot of Alberta and BC to shut up and pay for the whiners in the rest of the country forever?

The Coalition is over, now what?

There is a strong appetite on the left for a more united approach to politics, the coalition was a strong expression of this, but how does this go forward now?

As I have always known, but people on the left keep forgetting, is that the federal Liberals are a centre right political party with some left wing members. The Liberals are pro-business and skeptical of organized labour. The coalition was always going to be a hard fit for the majority of the Liberal MPs.

Meanwhile, the NDP federally is acting more and more like a fringe left wing party and not like a party that is serious about being in government. In fact I see very little from the party that indicates they really have any serious medium or long term governance agenda. The time has come for Jack Layton to leave and be replaced by someone that resonates with most Canadians about being seriously interested in governing.

With the budget coming down, will the NDP pick up some MPs in Newfoundland if the Liberals vote against the budget? Can Jack Layton really say no to them if they ask to join? The NDP policy is that you have to resign and run again as a New Democrat to be able to join the caucus. Could they sit with the NDP in a coalition of independent Liberals and the NDP?

Will Ignatieff be able to convince NDP MPs to leave the party and join the Liberals? If he could get enough of them to reduce the NDP to 11 seats, he would build his party as the only alternative to the Conservatives, but even a few floor crossers would bolster him as PM in waiting.

If the MPs from Newfoundland vote against the budget, Ignatieff is going to have to push them out of the caucus, though maybe not forever.

The Battleground Ridings - the 22 races that will decide the election

I thought I would group the ridings by regions because it is very informative where the battleground will be in BC.

Burnaby - New West - Tri-Cities:
There are a total of 11 ridings in this area and 8 of them are in play. This is more than a third of the competitive races in the province.
Burnaby Deer Lake
Burnaby Edmonds
Burnaby Lougheed
Burnaby North
Coquitlam Burke Mountain
Coquitlam Millardville
Maple Ridge Mission
Maple Ridge Pitt Meadows

Northern Interior:
Of the 10 ridings north of Kamloops in BC, three of them are battlegrounds
Cariboo Chilcotin
Cariboo North
Skeena

Vancouver Island:
The island has 14 ridings and four of them are competitive.
Comox Valley
North Island
Oak Bay Gordon Head
Saanich South

Lower Mainland South of the Fraser:
There are 15 ridings in the area and only 3 are in question, it would be two except for Vicki Huntingdon.
Delta North
Delta South - between Liberals and Vicki Huntingdon
Surrey Fleetwood

Southern Interior:
Of the 14 ridings, I only see 1 in play.
Kootenay East

Northshore:
Four ridings, one in play
North Vancouver Lonsdale

City of Vancouver:
Only two ridings and they are in the centre of the city
Vancouver False Creek
Vancouver Fairview

Note on Feb 5th, a reader on Sacha Peter's blog BC Election 2009 caught a mistake, I had Port Moody on the list and Coquitlam Burke Mountain I meant to have. Thank you JP for catching that.

Why is Stephen Harper so hated by so many Canadians?

People may not agree with his politics, but so many of the attacks are completely and utterly personal and focusing on how much people hate him. Why Stephen Harper?

He is not a typical glad handing false fronted politician, he is an introvert by nature. I suspect that this is a core reason people hate him, he is not spending a lot of effort in making himself 'likeable'.

I also think that much of it comes from the simply fact that politically he is putting forward an agenda that generally broadly supported in Canada and has no serious obvious disconnects with the body politic of Canada. All there is left is to hate him and call him a bully.

There are many politicians I disagree with, some of the massively, but there are none I can think of that I hate, not even Benjamin Netanyhu in Israel. I understand that in a democracy politicians are there because they honestly believe that they are making the world a better place. People should honour the service Stephen Harper is giving to Canada in trying to make it a better place.

Monday, February 2, 2009

The Lay of the Land for the May 2009 Election

There are 85 seats up for grabs this time. The Liberals are sitting on 32 safe seats, the NDP are sitting on 17. There are a total of about 34 ridings potentially in play, though many of them are very long odds. Realistically 21 seats have the potential of changing hands in the election, about 1/4 of the ridings.

For most of us there will be no urgency to vote for an MLA because we are not in an area where there will be much competition. In my case I know that on May 13th Rob Flemming will continue to be my MLA.

At this point we can be certain of 42 Liberals and 21 New Democrats being elected. This means Giordon Campbell has won a third term already, the election is simply about how big a majority.

Of the 22 battleground ridings, 12 are held by the NDP and 10 by the Liberals.

Here are the battleground ridings:
  1. Burnaby Deer Lake
  2. Burnaby Edmonds
  3. Burnaby Lougheed
  4. Burnaby North
  5. Cariboo Chilcotin
  6. Cariboo North
  7. Comox Valley
  8. Coquitlam Millardville
  9. Delta North
  10. Delta South - between Liberals and Vicki Huntingdon
  11. Kootenay East
  12. Maple Ridge Mission
  13. Maple Ridge Pitt Meadows
  14. North Island
  15. North Vancouver Lonsdale
  16. Oak Bay Gordon Head
  17. Port Coquitlam
  18. Saanich South
  19. Skeena
  20. Surrey Fleetwood
  21. Vancouver False Creek
  22. Vancouver Fairview
There is a potential that Vicki Huntingdon will win in Delta South.

There is also a long shot chance of Jane Sterk, leader of the Green Party of BC, defeating Maurine Karagianis in Esquimalt Royal Roads.

At the end of the day I see the following result in the election

  • Liberals 59 +13
  • NDP 25 -8
  • Ind 1 +1

Sunday, February 1, 2009

CKNW's "Bill Good Show" - Monday, February 2nd, 9:00am - Indepedent candidacies for the BC legislature at May 12, 2009 provincial election

FYI, tomorrow morning [Monday, February 2nd] I will be appearing on CKNW's Bill Good Show, for one half hour, beginning immediately after the 9:00am news.

I will be publicly declaring my intention to seek, as an independent candidate, the West Vancouver-Capilano seat in the BC legislature, at the May 12th provincial general election.

I am to be joined on the show by Vicki Huntington, independent candidate for the Delta seat in the legislature. The subject is, of course, the potential impact on our politics of electing independent candidates to the legislature.
Vicki is a terrific individual and has a very good chance of being elected. You may recall her father, Ron, who served the North Shore extremely well as a most able, dedicated and independent-minded MP from 1974 to 1984.

I hope you can tune in. If not, the programme segment can be heard later by accessing CKNW's InterNet "audio-vault".

Please forward this e-mail to all those who you think may be interested in the topic, with the request that they do likewise.

I look forward to any comments or questions you may have about my candidacy. Please contact me at your convenience. I can be reached by return e-mail or on my mobile: 604-970-1258.
David Marley