tunetardis

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 hours ago

My choirmaster years ago taught us that raising your eyebrows actually does help you reach the top of your vocal range, so that might actually be technique? Though I'm not a professional singer by any stretch, so who am I to say.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 hours ago

For me, I think it's whatever face I make when I'm in the zone. I'm not really aware of what I look like or contrive to look a certain way. But if I crack a smile, that's a pretty good tell that I goofed up somewhere.

One time I was playing a Robbie Burns event where we were all encouraged to wear kilts. I made the mistake of putting my phone in the sporran (a kind of purse that hangs right over your crotch) and it started vibrating incessantly. I can't even imagine the faces I was making that night!

[–] [email protected] 28 points 4 days ago (2 children)

About a year ago, there was a boycott on the Loblaws supermarket chain in protest of their boasting record profits at a time when grocery inflation was out of control. It lasted about a month before kind of fizzling out.

But I think by comparison, this buy Canadian movement has legs. It's a major nationwide shift in people's spending habits. And the key word here may be habits. Let's say for argument's sake that after 4 years of Trump, a new administration comes in and repeals all the tariffs. By that time, people will have settled into alternate brands across a wide range of consumer goods, and it may be difficult to convince them to switch back again. There's a certain inertia in human behaviour. So the effects of this could potentially go on quite a bit longer than the tariff war.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago

I suppose if some sort of critical mass is reached, it could push the world from x86-64 to arm? Every modern OS supports it at this point and emulators have come a long way for older software that needs them.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 week ago (1 children)

As much as I hate Doug Ford, every time he does something that pisses me off, Danielle Smith is right there like "hold my Kentucky Bourbon…"

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

Curious. The archived version seems a bit abridged compared to the original? For example, I can't find any mention of his plans to cut foreign aid (which I think is a terrible idea—can't we take the high road for once?).

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (4 children)

How do you get an archived link?

[–] [email protected] 26 points 1 week ago (8 children)

When asked about Smith's comments about him, Poilievre himself began to discuss his conservative counterpart, but pulled himself back."Well sh…," he began, stopping before a "she" could cross his lips. "People are free to make their own comments. I speak for myself."

Fine, so what is Poilievre actually saying? From a National Post article:

Poilievre has promised to pay for it by cutting “waste,” eliminating bureaucracy and contracts with consultants and bringing in a rule that any new spending needs to be offset by spending cuts of the same size. He has also vowed to cut foreign aid and stop what he called “handouts to insiders.”

Sounds kind of DOGE-y to me?

 

Original reporting by the Globe & Mail is behind a paywall. In any case, it's not a good look for Poilievre that India boosted his candidacy and then he wouldn't get security clearance to be informed of this fact.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago

That's a tricky one. I guess it sort of means "it is that" if you take it super literally? "It is that I want to try on the suit." But in practice, it just adds a level of politeness and formality to the sentence.

You will hear a lot of masu (ます) and desu (です) tossed in there all over the place when people are trying to be courteous.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

They had that protest in every state did they not? But when I couldn't find much on it in the Canadian media, I went searching CNN and other American sites and found very little also, which was surprising to me. Here on lemmy, there were all sorts photos being posted from various cities, and it looked like a pretty big deal?

[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 weeks ago (16 children)

We somehow have more than 2 parties in Canada even with FPTP. And yeah, it sucks. The left's vote, in particular, gets carved up into tiny pieces and the conservatives take advantage of that all the time. We desperately need voting reform and it occasionally gets dangled in front of us, only to be shot down. Kind of like high speed rail, which is being dangled again of late.

 

Big changes are coming. To summarize the main points:

  • The city is switching to standardized bins for garbage and compost that can be lifted and dumped onto trucks mechanically.
  • This will be phased in over the next several years starting in the suburbs.
  • 120L bins will be standard issue: one for garbage and one for compost.
  • You can upgrade to a 240L bin if you need one, but it costs $120 initially + $196/year. The initial fee will be waived if you switch to the bigger bin within the first 3 months, however.
  • The city is outsourcing blue and grey box collection to a company called Emterra Environmental. Whether they choose to go with bins also is uncertain, but that wouldn't change before 2026.
  • You can still bring stuff to the residential drop-off at KARC for the time being.
 

Section relevant to Kingston:

DONNA FORSTER and her husband, Joe Fardella, experienced the retrenchment of local journalism first hand on Thursday, July 18, 2024, when they settled in to watch the 6 p.m. local news in Kingston, Ontario. They expected to see Bill Hutchins, the affable news anchor on CKWS Global News Kingston, deliver the better part of an hour of local news and interviews from the station’s downtown broadcast centre, just as he’d done for twenty-seven years. Instead, their TV screen was blank.

“We just had no idea what had happened,” Forster says. The next day, they learned that the Kingston station had fallen victim to spending cuts by its troubled parent company, Corus Entertainment. When the revamped supper hour newscast appeared four days later, it was unrecognizable. About two dozen on-air personalities, reporters, and support staff at CKWS and the two local Corus-owned radio stations lost their jobs. Hutchins, then president of the broadcast centre’s Unifor local, says that as recently as 2023, the station had seven full- and part-time videographers covering Kingston and its environs. Following the July purge, there were three. What was a locally produced sixty-minute show that included local weather, sports, entertainment, and news about everything from city politics to community food drives now starts at 5:30 p.m. and lasts a half hour. The truncated newscast, anchored out of Peterborough, is recorded and shown again at 6:30 p.m. Producers in Toronto determine the story lineup.

“There’s far, far less information about Kingston now—they usually have one Kingston story, one Brockville story, and one Belleville story,” says Forster, a sixty-two-year-old social worker. By her reckoning, news about Kingston and the surrounding area now lasts about four minutes. As someone who eschews social media, Forster increasingly thinks of that blank television screen she saw back in July as a metaphor for feeling less connected and aware of what’s going on in her community.

She is not alone. “There’s not a day goes by that I don’t run into someone who wants to know what happened, why it happened,” Hutchins says. “When you take a seventy-year-old station with deep community roots, and I mean deep, and you just rip them out of the ground one day, people feel hurt, they feel abandoned, they feel lost.” CKWS, he says, specialized in “a little bit of everything that reflected the community,” and people tell him they are struggling to make sense of the remaining local news offerings.

Christine Sypnowich, a Queen’s University philosophy professor and chair of the Coalition of Kingston Communities, says the loss of a strong local television newscast creates “a really bad situation.” The coalition, which brings together nineteen neighbourhood groups, counted on CKWS to cover local issues that it then pursued further in its report cards on openness and transparency at city hall. The station also helped the coalition share its concerns with the public: a CKWS reporter typically sought an interview within hours of receiving a coalition press release. Nowadays, Sypnowich says, attracting media attention is more “hit and miss.”

The CKWS cuts are the latest symptom of decline in Kingston’s once-rich local media environment. The storied Kingston Whig Standard newspaper, winner of two prestigious Michener Awards for public service journalism and a host of other honours, is “less and less relevant,” Sypnowich says. The Postmedia Network–owned newspaper publishes daily only four times a week and is so diminished it sometimes runs Sypnowich’s press releases verbatim. There are just five unionized staff left in its newsroom, down from sixty-nine in 1992.

Kingstonist.com, a digital news outlet, is working hard to fill the gaps, Sypnowich says. But it is a relatively small operation, with just three full-time journalists, a manager who occasionally helps out with news coverage, and a budget for freelancers. Forster and Fardella recently stepped up to support the publication, but their willingness to pay for digital news makes them a rarity. While almost three quarters of Canadians (72 percent) access news online, a majority still believe journalism is best served up free, with 57 percent indicating they won’t pay anything at all for it. Nationwide, only 15 percent of us opened our wallets to support digital news, according to data published in 2024. Just over half of those subscriptions (54 percent) were discounted.

IMO the Kingstonist is awesome! Definitely worth supporting them with a subscription if you have the means. If not, visit them anyway and stay informed.

 

The app is called Maple Scan. Just downloaded it but have yet to give it a whirl.

 

I wish I could find another source to confirm this, but if true, that's basically the nuclear option to kick out all American companies and halt all mineral exports to the US.

 

If I'm not mistaken, this means Netanyahu would be arrested on the spot if he set foot on Canadian soil. Trudeau has indicated as much. For its part, The US does not recognize the ICC's authority.

 

Every year in September, the city where I live holds a ribs and craft beer festival on the fairgrounds. This year, the band I play with landed a gig there.

Everything was going well until, partway through a set, I noticed one guy who looked a little out of place at such a venue. He was dressed in a 3 piece suit, brandishing a large briefcase, and walking around purposefully. He looked like a lawyer. And wouldn't you know it, he's striding right up towards the stage. Uh-oh…

What happened next stopped the show and left us all with jaws dropped. I'll leave it at that for now.

 

I seem to recall an incident the day my daughter was born that saw 3 large axe-wielding men bursting open doors in the maternity ward as alarms blazed across the hospital. And yes, it was my fault.

 

Posts would describe bizarre situations people have found themselves in, and commenters would take a stab at what put them there.

 

I have no idea how true this is? It is just a random shower thought.

It may be more true where I am in Canada than in the US? Here, senators are essentially appointed for life. I understand US senators are elected but have longer terms and generally more stable careers than their counterparts? In either case, there seems to be a lot of prestige that comes with the position.

 

Of relevance to Kingston:

For the last 10 years, Amélie Brack’s property-management company had no trouble renting out both halves of a duplex near St. Lawrence College in Kingston, one of Canada’s most notable student-dominated cities renowned for its high proportion of out-of-town students, with both St. Lawrence and Queen’s University in the area. This year, it’s still not rented out as the fall school term is about to start – a first for her. It’s not the only unit going empty, after demand for student housing in Kingston drastically fell in the past few months. “Up until last year, we would get 25 to 50 inquiries per week in August. This year, it’s been crickets. It’s quite a surprise,” said Ms. Brack, leasing manager for Limestone Property Management.

It’s a phenomenon that hasn’t shown up yet in any official statistical reports. But it’s one that many at ground level are observing, a noticeable U-turn from the last few years where there were often frantic bidding wars for student housing in the months leading up to the start of the fall term. They point to the cap on international students as a significant factor behind the drop. “The international student reduction has definitely affected us,” said Ms. Brack, who said that large, multibedroom houses in what’s called the student ghetto in Kingston are also going unrented and owners are finding themselves having to list them for rents closer to what a family could afford, rather than what five desperate students (or their parents) might be willing to pay: $2,700 a month for a four-bedroom, rather than the previous $4,000.

The cap for 2024 was set at 360,000 study permits for the country, a 35-per-cent reduction from the previous year.

In Ontario, internet searches for student housing near universities in Waterloo, Hamilton, and Kingston are down 46 per cent to 55 per cent, Ms. Yiu said.

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