Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
My Blog List
-
Book of Beasts5 months ago
-
Paterson7 years ago
-
Brian Adams8 years ago
-
Trinity10 years ago
-
Handle a Dog Attack - wikiHow17 years ago
-
Born on a mixed subsistence farm in rural Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia, Canada. Moved to Ontario in 1967 to attend University at what was then Waterloo Lutheran University and moved to Oakville, Ontario in 1971. Without intending to live up to the name became a letter carrier the following January and have worked for Canada Post ever since. I retired in August of 2008.
Friday, December 31, 2010
Viral tops proposed banned words list
Michigan school gives list of overused, misused, and useless words and phrases
Last Updated: Friday, December 31, 2010 | 11:41 AM ET Comments64Recommend16
The Associated Press

The 2011 list, compiled by the university from nominations submitted from across North America throughout the year, was released Friday.
Nominators did more than vanquish "viral." They also repudiated Sarah Palin's "refudiate," flunked "fail" and weren't at all wowed by "wow factor." In all, 14 words or phrases made the cut to be, well, cut from conversation.
The call to banish viral was vociferous, garnering more nominations than any other.
"This linguistic disease of a term must be quarantined," Kuahmel Allah of Los Angeles wrote in his submission. "If one more thing goes viral, I'm buying a Hazmat suit and moving into a clean-room."
Other entries showed people's apparent aversion to simple language, hence the call to "live life to the fullest" when they could just live, promoting every foible or stumble to "fail," or super-sizing every reasonably good time to an "epic" event.
"Standards for using 'epic' are so low, even 'awesome' is embarrassed." said Mike of Kettering, Ohio, whose submission came with no last name.
List falls short of being 'epic'
Appropriately, Lake Superior State spokesman Tom Pink stopped short of describing this year's batch of submissions as "epic." Rather, he viewed it as solid and typical — based on more than 1,000 nominations, once he and his colleagues sorted out phrases previously banned in the list's 36-year history.
Still, Washington-speak made an appearance. Several American people vetoed "The American People."
But those who just want to keep on saying the words or phrases that made the annual list can take heart.
Although it does bring attention to the school in Sault St. Marie — the last stop before Michigan's northernmost border crossing with Canada — it doesn't really change the way people talk.
After all, "tweet" and "sexting" made last year's list. And other previously banished items have included "carbon footprint" (2008), "LOL" (2004) and "state of the art" (1993).
The complete list for 2010:
- Viral
- Epic
- Fail
- Wow factor
- A-ha moment
- Backstory
- BFF
- Man up
- Refudiate
- Mamma Grizzlies
- The American people
- I'm just sayin'
- Facebook or Google used as a verb
- Live life to the fullest
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Homosexuality pulled from Alberta disorders guide

Alberta Health and Wellness Minister Gene Zwozdesky ordered the section of the document removed Tuesday after a reporter brought the issue to the province's attention.
"I ordered the immediate removal of something I thought was incorrect, unacceptable, rather ancient in its thinking and otherwise demeaning," he said Wednesday.
"I've also asked for a thorough review of the entire classification categories."
The diagnostic guide helps doctors decide what to bill for the treatment of patients.
Homosexuality was listed in the guide under sexual deviations and disorders.
The American Psychiatric Association stopped considering homosexuality a disorder in 1973, followed by the Canadian Psychiatric Association in 1982.
Zwozdesky said he doesn't know why it remained so long on Alberta's list.
However, members of Edmonton's gay community said the government has long shown half-hearted support for gay rights in the province.
"People who are gay and lesbian like myself have had to fight every step of the way to make any changes at the political level," said former city councillor Michael Phair. "I wonder whether this was forgotten or ignored."
Albertans are more progressive in their attitudes about gay rights than their government, he said.
The province promised twice to remove the section over the last dozen years and failed to do so on both occasions, said Liberal MLA Laurie Blakeman.
"Frankly, it just couldn't be bothered to make the changes," she said
Monday, December 06, 2010
Playwright David French dies
Last Updated: Sunday, December 5, 2010 | 4:47 PM ET Comments11Recommend41
CBC News
David French was an officer of the Order of Canada. (David French website)Canadian playwright and actor David French died in Toronto on Saturday night after a long battle with brain cancer, CBC News has learned. He was 71.
French was born in the small Newfoundland outport of Coley's Point on Jan. 18, 1939.
He is best remembered for his tales of the fictitious Mercer family, characters inspired by his early years living in Newfoundland.
What became known simply as the Mercer plays included Leaving Home, Salt-Water Moon, Soldier's Heart, 1949 and Of the Fields, Lately.
Leaving Home is considered a landmark play in Canadian theatre. After premiering in Toronto in 1972 at the Tarragon, the play went on to be produced at almost every regional theatre in the country — the first Canadian play ever to do so.
The play, one of the most familiar and adored Canadian plays, continues to be taught in schools and universities across the country.
Friday, December 03, 2010
Pork Barrelling on the Reserve
Mi'kmaq chief of 304 paid $243K
Tiny First Nations community in Nova Scotia pays its councillors $1.7M
Last Updated: Thursday, December 2, 2010 | 7:26 PM AT Comments94Recommend40
CBC News

The federation didn't release the name of the band, but it was widely believed to be Glooscap, because the population numbers matched.
Until the news conference Thursday, Clarke had refused to confirm that it was her band or to say what the band's salaries were.
Clarke said she works hard for her money, and that it was unfair for the Taxpayers Federation to make public the salary information. The federation obtained the numbers through access-to-information requests.
"It has singled out native communities in a way that deepen prejudice and reinforces stereotypes, and that is not fair," she said.
Clarke confirmed that one councillor, Mike Halliday, received $978,000 in 2008, but she says much of it was business-contract revenue, not salary.
Numbers the band released Thursday showed that $718,000 was business revenue related to contracting work Halliday did for the band. The contracts were awarded by the council.
"Media reports suggest he was getting hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer support," Clarke said. "In fact, that money was generated as business revenue here in our community."
Clarke said Halliday is an important entrepreneur in the community.
The chief is promising a review of current salaries in the new year, and better disclosure, including posting the figures online.
"I work hard, but I can always do better," Clarke said.
Residents had requested a meeting with band politicians after learning of their hefty salaries.
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/story/2010/12/02/ns-glooscap-salaries-taxpayers-federation.html#ixzz174RBQd8r
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
MTA offering service to Hogwarts?
MTA offering service to Hogwarts? Magical Harry Potter train line appears on subway sign
BY Lauren Johnston
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Originally Published:Monday, November 22nd 2010, 11:35 AM
Updated: Monday, November 22nd 2010, 6:30 PM

The MTA has cut service across the five boroughs, but seems to have added one exotic destination: Hogwarts.
An enchanted symbol has appeared on a 14th St. Union Square subway sign - one that any Harry Potter fan will recognize as a clever nod to the boy wizard's magical world: a maroon circle emblazoned with the mystical number 9 3/4.
For the muggles (i.e., non-magical folks), Potter and his gang of wizard pals gather at platform 9 3/4 to board a train to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, the magical academy where they learn to cast spells and mix potions.
The number is visible on the south side of 14th St., just around the corner from the Regal Cinemas Union Square 14, which shows the seventh installment of the wizard films based on author J.K. Rowling's books, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1," at least 16 times daily.
The charmed sticker is slapped in the slot that featured a "W" until June when that line went out of service. The design mimics standard Metropolitan Transportation Authority signage and at first glance could pass for a relic from the defunct No. 9 line.
It's such a close match, in fact, it might lead wizard fans to suspect an inside job. An MTA spokesperson said the agency had no ties to the subtle Potter promotion. More likely, it was the work of a design savvy fan.
"We are not part of any sort of Potter campaign, but I've seen things like that before," said spokesman Kevin Ortiz.
The fine for defacing MTA signage is $75.
Delighted wizard wannabes who spotted the sticker Sunday stopped short on the station stairs to snap photographs, and Potter chatter took over as fans explained the significance to fellow commuters.
The number was introduced in Rowling's first wizard book, "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone." Students traveling to Hogwarts are instructed to board their train at platform 9 3/4 - a destination that doesn't exist in the non-magical world.
Students first locate an enchanted brick wall, a portal to the magical platform, then charge toward it at full speed. When they burst through, they land on a bustling platform packed with cape-wearing, wand-wielding witches and wizards.
Is this subway sign just one example of subtle Harry Potter graffiti? We suspect the film's magic-loving fans may have planted more. If you spot a Potter clue, snap a photo and tweet us at @nydailynews.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2010/11/22/2010-11-22_mta_offering_service_to_hogwarts_sign_for_magical_harry_potter_train_line_appear.html#ixzz16nsDjhgM
Even Reusable Bags Carry Environmental Risk
By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM
Published: November 14, 2010
They dangle from the arms of many New Yorkers, a nearly ubiquitous emblem of empathy with the environment: synthetic, reusable grocery bags, another must-have accessory for the socially conscious.
Hiroko Masuike for The New York Times
Shelley Kempner of Queens, who was shopping at Fairway on the Upper West Side on Sunday, said she liked “the idea of not putting more plastic into the environment.”Readers' Comments
But the bags, hot items at upscale markets, may be on the verge of a glacier-size public relations problem: similar bags outside the city have been found to contain lead.
“They say plastic bags are bad; now they say these are bad. What’s worse?” asked Jen Bluestein, who was walking out of Trader Joe’s on the Upper West Side with a reusable bag under her arm on Sunday.
“Green is a trend and people go with trends,” Ms. Bluestein said. “People get them as fashion statements and they have, like, 50 of them. I don’t think people know the real facts.”
There is no evidence that these bags pose an immediate threat to the public, and none of the bags sold by New York City’s best-known grocery stores have been implicated. But reports from around the country have trickled in recently about reusable bags, mostly made in China, that contained potentially unsafe levels of lead. The offending bags were identified at several stores, including some CVS pharmacies; the Rochester-based Wegman’s grocery chain recalled thousands of its bags, made of recycled plastic, in September.
Concerns have proliferated so much that Senator Charles E. Schumer, a New York Democrat, sent a letter on Sunday to the Food and Drug Administration, urging the agency to investigate the issue.
Reusable bags have maintained their popularity even amid charges that they become hothouses for bacteria. The recent studies, none of which were conducted by the government, found that the lead in some bags would pose a long-term risk of seeping into groundwater after disposal; over time, however, paint from the bag could flake off and come into contact with food.
Climate-change-conscious shoppers at one of Manhattan’s culinary meccas on Sunday said they were chagrined that yet another good intention had gone awry.
“Bummer! We’re still not doing the right thing,” said Shelley Kempner of Queens, who was looking over the produce at Fairway on Broadway at West 74th Street. She prefers a reusable bag, she said, because she “likes the idea of not putting more plastic into the environment.”
Told of the recent lead findings, Ms. Kempner sighed — “It’s still not good enough” — and wondered if she would have to switch to something else. “Are we going to have to start using string?” she asked.
“There’s always something wrong with everything,” said Barry Lebost, standing outside the Trader Joe’s on West 72nd Street with four reusable bags filled with groceries.
But Mr. Lebost, an alternative energy consultant, did not appear fazed by the revelations of lead. He said his home, in Gardiner, N.Y., had been outfitted with a hydroelectric plant that saved the energy equivalent of 200 plastic bags a day. “It may not be a total solution, but this is a step in the right direction,” he said of the suddenly suspect bags at his feet. “The fluorescent bulbs we have now, they’re no good because they have mercury in them. You look at it as a transition.”
But many shoppers said they would continue relying on the bags until more information came out. The bags are usable for years, they said, and any long-term effects of lead may be offset by the environmental benefits gained by not using regular plastic bags.
“I wasn’t planning on throwing it out, so that’s a positive thing,” said Catherine Paykin, standing by the meat counter at Fairway. “As long as I use it and don’t throw it away, that will be my plan.”
Mr. Schumer’s family also shops at Fairway. A spokesman for the senator said the family planned to bring the issue to the attention of the store to see if the bags there were affected.
Friday, November 12, 2010
Ruminations, November 2010
Whether or not the 16-year-old Omar Khadr was a hardened terrorist what do we think 10 years in the Hell-Hole that was Gitmo did to him?
The November 2nd Mid-Term Elections. What happened to Barak Obama? Were the expectations placed upon his presidency impossible for anyone to fulfil? Did he inherit the mantle at a time when any president was destined to fail? In focusing on the business of governance did he lose touch with his electorate? Will there ever be an appropriate economic period in which to implement the social and environmental reforms that make up the Liberal Democrat Agenda? Did the people who formed the network that got him elected fail to keep up the communication once they’d gotten him in office? Is he destined to become a one-term president or can he pull it out of the fire?
How can gasoline prices vary by 50¢ a gallon at stations a thousand feet apart? For me that’s a nearly $10 difference on a fill-up.
On the subject of gasoline it was the campground caretaker at Old MacDonalds Resort near Stettler Alberta that informed me that at an American gas pump that requires a zip code someone with a Canadian Credit Card can enter the 3 numbers of our postal code followed by two zeros—it works! And here it’s taken me 27 months of travel to finally discover that fact.
When driving in the mountains I’ve discovered it’s important to loosen the screw tops on all pump type containers, the change of air pressure outside tends to cause a mess when the contents get pressured from inside.
KOA seems to prefer to have its Kampgrounds located close to major highways as if it thinks that RV’ers won’t find them unless they can see them, a rather insulting approach to marketing and outdated given the construction of modern highways. Interstates keep limiting access to highways therefore by the time I finally saw the park I wanted to visit today it was a ten mile drive before I could finally get there. Placing campgrounds beside busy highways, next to railways tracks and airports does nothing to improve the camping experience.
I just noticed that the salsa I picked up in Cañon City was produced in Mexico. Given that it is considered unsafe to drink the water or eat raw fruits and vegetables there how are the products exported from the country safer.
Having had kamikaze cyclists demand a group of hikers I was leading through a conservation area get out of their way while they tore through a bed of rare and endangered Maiden-Hair Fern I have little sympathy for the protagonist of the movie 127 whose exploits are exhibited in the preview to the movie. The damage such eco-terrorists generate in their headlong drive for bigger and better thrills is manifold and unnecessary. At the speed they’re going they have no chance to appreciate the territory they’re crossing or any appreciation of the damage they’re causing. You’ll have to forgive me for a less than charitable thought that somehow it seems in this case the wild lands got some of their own back.
When I pulled into Abilene yesterday it was warm enough that I had the A/C running to keep the driver alert. After an abnormally warm October in the north I headed south into the mountains where a prolonged Indian Summer kept things warmer than normal but when you camp at 7000 ft one cannot be surprised at frost. However as I travel further and further south and lose altitude things are warming up but it was last night I heard the crickets chirp all night, left my windows open, took off my quilt, and put on my light nightshirt. Wouldn’t you know it a cold front today brought wind-driven squalls of rain and dank air.