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91
Saving the Polar Bears -A big Idea From Inuit Folklore to WW2
There is a legend from the Inuviatuit (Inuit) of the high Arctic about How Tulugak,The Raven Stole the Sun.
It starts with Raven finding himself alone on an island with a good food supply. Raven was lonely and restless and decided to dig a hole. He wondered if he was the only Raven.
The hole was so big he could fly down until he could no longer see the opening. Raven kept flying but he was now over a vast expanse of water.He flew until it was tired, a voice told him to land and rest, "we know you are searching for land, but you must leave in the morning." In the morning,Raven flew off what he thought were islands but turned back to see he was on a school of  beluga whales that had been sleeping near the surface. Raven kept flying not seeing land and getting very tired. Again a voice would invite him to stay the night,again it was a sleeping whale, this time the convenient island was a school of bowhead whales. This imaginative story goes on but it is far enough for the point of the story.

There is a very funny story from WW2 that starts off with an meeting between Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt at the Quadrant Conference in Quebec (1943) to talk about the cross channel invasion of Normandy. It was no secret the Brits and the Yanks did not see eye to eye regarding priorities. During the acrimonious meeting between the British and the American joint chiefs of staff, gunshots were heard. One member on the outside exclaimed,”Good heavens their shooting at each other.”
General Mountbatten had the idea to use a “secret new product,” made from ice and wood pulp. He wanted to build a floating airstrip for fighters to land and takeoff from during the invasion. During his presentation at this high level conference he began shooting into the product. One of the bullets went through the Pykrete,ricocheting around the room of the admirals and generals nicking the top American Admiral King's leg. The none were hurt seriously and  idea was dropped, the invasion on the other hand, would be history making.

What is the point of these two disconnected stories. One is a problem,the other may be a solution.

So, I ask the the question, can polar bears in the Hudson Bay region be saved from the effect of climate change through the melting of sea ice. Is the problem really melting ice. The idea is to see the ice, not as frozen sea water but as a vehicle and a place to rest in the vast expanse of Hudson's Bay.

So we have to think in terms of the theoretical first, take Leonardo da Vinci, Skunk Works Kelly Johnson, Howard Hughes and Elon Musk, think till it hurts, if you can think it you can do it, approach your in the right space. If you are in the No,Never,Can't Party  then stop reading now.

The town of Churchill Manitoba has a unique feature, sea ice passes by the community, the bears walk through the community and  hop on the ice flows. The bears and ice ride the currents of Hudson's Bay, hunting seals. At the end of the season  the current returns them back to Churchill where they walk back through the community and head off into the tundra.

The ice is a vehicle and a resting spot for the journey. Can an artificial ice flow be created? Howard Hughes built concrete ships at the end of WW2, some of them form the break-wall in Powell River BC today. Floating islands could be created to assist the bears on their voyage around Hudson Bay. They could actually be self propelled as drone like technology exists for shipping. They could be free floating with buoy like navigation technology or they could be anchored in an archipelago for island hopping.
Replace the ice with floating concrete or some new material.

The  other factor is the seals, the bears have to eat a certain number of seals, currently the ice disappears before that number is reached. The weight of the bear determines if it can mate. Currently many of the bears are just under weight so by creating these floating islands they can stay out longer and get the 3-5 extra seals needed. Recent studies show that the polar bears are adapting to climate change, but the change is coming faster and faster.

CRAZY, huh. My wife and I set the ball rolling for the rescue of polar bears (some from taken illegally from Churchill) from the Suarez Brothers Circus traveling through Central and South America. When the story we brought back spread across North America of the existence of these bears, PETA began to track them. Eventually they were rescued and sent to US zoo's for rehabilitation. Talk about crazy ideas, there was a president of a major US airline who got involved early on , he sent an cargo jet and guys with guns to seize (steal back)  two of the bears. Since there are no permits to transport polar bears they were (in true Inuit fashion) transformed into lions (there are permits for lions)for the flight. The story is in Else Poulsen's  book Barle's Story, Greystone Press.

So big ideas still exist. China created artificial islands in the South China Sea,they call them unsinkable aircraft carriers. Island hopping won the  WW2 Pacific war, creating islands is possible, floating islands ,why not? 

So the question is there someone in the scientific community with technology that can be adapted to create a feasible solution to prevent the extinction of  the polar bears. Opinion by Ken Gigliotti
92
General Discussion / Re: Photos or it isn't real
« Last post by Warren Toda on December 04, 2020, 11:16 PM »
This Pandemic Must Be Seen. An article in Wired.
93
The Death of Empathy and Archie Bunker's Million Miles of Rough Road. Break them UP!

 President Theodore Roosevelt's Square Deal revolved around the three C's, conservation, controlling corporations and consumer protection “when I say I am for a square deal, I mean that I stand for fair play under the present rules , but I stand for having those rules changed so as to work for more substantial equality of opportunity and reward for equally good service.” He also said,”the representatives of predatory wealth,” are guilty “of all inequity from the oppression of  wage workers to unfair and unwholesome methods of crushing competition and to defrauding the public by stock jobbing and the manipulation of securities. (1908) Teddy didn't know tech companies nor analytics nor the how agile corporations would get in  1980's to the 2020's. The corporate raw deal seems to be always in play.
He definitely knew inclusive, as all people and companies are forever linked.
Capitalism is based on individual competition. People form companies that innovate but corporations buy up innovation not produce it.
Scott Galloway (book the Post Corona:From Crisis to Opportunity) said on Smerconish CNN that the Covid-19 pandemic is causing the acceleration of trends both upward and downward. Things that were going up are going up with greater force and the the things going down are going down with equally great force. Today there is an “idolatry”of the innovator  ( I would say the tech genius is more accurate) over people and companies are “weaponizing,”elections, destroying jobs, avoiding taxes, causing depression of our teens.”

The answer, break them up.

Galloway says “Capitalism doesn't survive if it is not farmed on a bed of empathy.” We are “harsh with people, and generous and loving with corporations.” There is a real need to protect people and not companies. Breaking up the big tech companies will cause them to thrive as they are better equipped to innovate in small spaces than big ones. American Anti Trust history proves breaking up big companies creates more innovation and more jobs.

Ride and food delivery services create an “underclass” and companies that avoid minimum wage laws.
Covid-19 may cause the race to the bottom to finally arrive.

Does empathy bring people together or pull them apart? Is the lack of empathy fostered by corporate thinking and leaking down stream to the general public harnessing it's distrust and creating false trust in politics gone corporate,taking down news media and science in it's wake?

In this age empathy is missing,that did not start with Donald Trump, greed has been good since Milton Friedman said it fifty years ago. “It's just business” a common refrain by every cost cutter. Now the  influence of the multi national company has worked it's way into society with the average person's struggles and begins to treat others the way they have been treated by corporations.

People begin to adopt the terminology of corporations into their everyday live. We got  to“downsize” and that “Sh/T travels down hill.” “It's just business.” The struggling and descending middle class begins to downsize itself. It sees from the grass roots that inequity can be achieved in the descent  just as much as ascent. The anger builds as political parties ignore the casualties of globalism and embrace a not really emergence of the digital space, technology and science. The damage to everyday life has been done and the past can never return and the future is making no promise with climate change and more strife in the world moving large migrations to safer places. The media villainizes this base of working class ,non college educated , who has seen nothing but decline for decades and now sees it crashing on their children. Children who are now college educated,under employed and still living at home. The university system is being undercut by selective job based immigration. By taking the smartest people from developing countries is causing a brain drain there were it is most needed. There is a big mining company advertising on the business channel a map of Africa where investment opportunities are present, ironic is these locations are the areas of the most strife on the BBC news channel.

Re-enter 1970's Archie Bunker a TV character who was a WW2 veteran, loading dock worker and part time cab driver for extra money faces the uncertainty of high inflation, high gas prices,downsizing de-industrialization, multi national corporate control, and unable to even understand what is happening to him. His view is macro, down looking up at elites who say he is a casualty of progress. Trumps army of “deplorable s” (a modern liberal term) turns out to be big enough to elect him once  and very nearly twice with record voter turnout for both the right and the left.
There is a big problem here. It is numbers, it is the science of these numbers too soon to dismiss.

Is  the Archie Bunker character rising again in the Trump base. Norman Lear created Archie Bunker to be a “lovable bigot,” and to look , “unhip,” a person , “bewildered by the new rules of political correctness,” but many in the TV audience of the time “didn't get the joke.” (quotes from How Archie Bunker Forever Changed the American Sitcom by Sascha Cohen for SmithsonianMag.com March 21 2018.

My take is Bunker was searching for certainty in uncertain times. The things he was brought up to believe were slowing and surely crumbling. Racism is kind of interesting,he is a bigot, but lives near the Jefferson's. George Jefferson also a bigot. They dislike each other in a benign standoff. A kind of New York turf war, mostly noise and little fury. Both families are very tolerant of each other as their kids are college educated and part of the demographic  change in thinking from the the 1960's simultaneous and head spinning  ,Civil Rights, and Feminist, Anti War , music,  movements.
Bunkers desperately grabs at personal certainty not facts nor science. A smart person recently said, “in the face of facts,it is  emotionally necessary to disagree.” It is the use of “un-logic.”

Today the liberal and media view is to jump to extreme polarization because corporately it is good for rating and good for revenue, even though it is bad for the country. This is a description of corporate media and also corporate thinking that goes back to Teddy Roosevelt's warning  at the turn of the 20th century echoed many during technological upheaval and there have been a few. The digital age is just the latest. All needed harnessing by government.
What happens when the president comes from the corporate sphere and the desperation of a near majority has noting to lose. Add, other frenemy countries interference,cyber attacks and an out of control social media space. Time for a square deal. Opinion by Ken Gigliotti
94
Contest Information / September Clip Results 2020
« Last post by Chad Hipolito on December 04, 2020, 12:15 PM »
Judges

David Kawai | Freelance Photojournalist | University Instructor
Sarah Dea | Parliamentary Photographer | Senate of Canada
Sean Kilpatrick | National Photographer | The Canadian Press



Photographers-19
Feature-48
News-32
Sports-14
Spot News-15
Portrait-36
Multi-Photo 6 entries/63 photos



FEATURE

1. Evan Buhler/Freelance

Wilson, a black Labrador shakes off after swimming in the Bow River in Banff, Alta. on Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020.

2. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Ben Davis wears a face mask to curb the spread of COVID-19 as he uses a sword to slice through a pumpkin while demonstrating historical European martial arts at a small outdoor birthday party, in Vancouver, on Sunday, September 20, 2020.

3. Bernard Brault/La Presse

A  monk walks in a dirt road surrounded by colored trees during an autumn day close to the St-Benoit du Lac abbey.



NEWS

1. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau is silhouetted by an LED light as she responds to questions during a campaign stop in Squamish, B.C., on Tuesday, September 29, 2020. A provincial election will be held in British Columbia on October 24.

2. Ben Nelms/CBC News

Activist Chrissy Brett is arrested during a safe housing for all protest near Strathcona Park in Vancouver, British Columbia on Monday, September 28, 2020.

3. Blair Gable/Freelance

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks to media following a Cabinet retreat in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada September 16, 2020. The double image is through a TV cameras eye-piece.

H.M. Ben Nelms/CBC News

A person stands outside of a tent at the Strathcona park homeless camp prior to a rally in the neighbourhood in Vancouver, British Columbia on Monday, September 28, 2020.



SPORTS

1. Dave Holland/Freelance

Development team freestyle skier Lucas Butland gets set to launch during an offseason airbag training session at Winsport in Calgary, AB on September 26, 2020.

2. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Vancouver Whitecaps' Ryan Raposo, left, is taken down by Toronto FC's Auro Jr. during the second half of an MLS soccer game in Vancouver, on Saturday, September 5, 2020.

3. Bernard Brault/La Presse

Two golfers stands on the tee off of the 9 th hole as the sun sets in the background. The smoke caused by the fire in California made the sky orange.



PORTRAIT

1. Darryl Dyck/The Globe and Mail

Barry Marchi poses for a photograph in Delta, B.C. When Mr. Marchi's non-Hodgkin lymphoma returned, doctors told him there wasn’t anything they could do for him. “I was pretty much in panic mode," he says. (Held for September publication.)

2. Dave Holland/Freelance

With an uncertain sliding season ahead, bobsleigh brakeman Stefanie Schoenberger sits among dust-covered and idle bobsleighs at the Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton sled shop at Winsport in Calgary, AB, on September 30, 2020.

3. Ben Nelms/CBC News

Joan Williams, 71, who be provided with medical assistance in dying this Saturday after a long battle with a neurologic condition is in Vancouver, British Columbia on Wednesday, September 23, 2020.



SPOT NEWS

1. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Officials look over the scene where a train carrying potash derailed near Hope, B.C,, on Monday, September 14, 2020. CN Rail says at least 20 rail cars carrying potash derailed today near Hope, B.C.The company says no injuries, fires or dangerous goods are involved.

2. Ben Nelms/CBC News

A man is arrested after reports of a man breaking into a commercial property in the Downtown Eastside in Vancouver, British Columbia on Thursday, September 17, 2020.

3. Jack Simpson/Freelance

As paramedics attend  an overdose on a Sunday (Sept 12th) evening in downtown XXX, a passerby continues to performs CPR.




MULTI-PHOTO

1. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Tyler Wied wears a face mask to curb the spread of COVID-19 as he warms up before participating in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020. Twenty-five people stepped up to the plate at Nat Bailey Stadium Thursday evening. They donned batting helmets, chose bats from a selection on a rack that were sanitized and stood in the on-deck circle and took practice swings before entering the batter’s box to face pitches from a pitching machine. Many wore jerseys of their favourite teams and players but they aren’t minor league players chasing a dream of playing in the big league. They’re fans and casual players, young and old who paid $50 each for the opportunity to take 30 swings during batting practice on a professional baseball field in front of nearly 6,500 empty seats and also receive two ticket vouchers for a 2021 season game. The Vancouver Canadians, the Class A Short Season Northwest league affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays is able to host the events due to the cancellation of their season because of COVID-19. It’s the first time since 1977 that a season of Canadians baseball hasn’t taken place at the stadium. The team was also forced to furlough one third of their staff. “We hear all the time about people wanting to hit and get out on the field and it’s an opportunity for them to do that,” Canadians General Manager Allan Bailey said.
“‘I wish I could get out there, I wish I could hit a home run, I could do what they’re doing.’ Now’s their opportunity. We’re seeing tons of people that play a lot of baseball, play softball, and people that have never swung a bat.” Bailey added. Participants had their temperature checked, were given a health questionnaire and entered the stadium in their groups of five. Hand sanitizer stations were placed throughout the facility, including just steps off the first base line. Provincial health guidelines limiting public gatherings to 50 people or less were adhered to.
Mr. Bailey hopes it will open up the team to new fans that might not have experienced a game or visited the stadium before and is “blown away” by the success of the sessions. “The main reasons behind it is keeping our place in the community and keeping our name out there and being a part of the community.” Bailey said.


Harrison Hrynew, 14, connects with a pitch during a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020. Participants paid $50 for a 30-pitch session and also receive two ticket vouchers for a 2021 season game. The team is able to host the sessions, which adhere to provincial health guidelines limiting public gatherings to 50 people, due to the cancelation of their season because of COVID-19. The Canadians are the Class A Short Season Northwest League affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays.


Bill Gerry takes photos and records video of his grandson Tyrell Tull participating in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Sanitized baseball bats are seen before a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Al Vyner, centre, and his sons Duncan, left, and Colin, right, wait to participate in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Youth baseball players who were hired to chase down balls are silhouetted as they warm up before a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Al Vyner waits to participate in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Participants waiting for their time slot watch as others take part in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Participants wait to step up to the plate during a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Al Vyner steps away from the plate after participating in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Michael Dharni wears a face mask to curb the spread of COVID-19 as he waits to participate in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


Megan Kostrzycki, left, and her mom Melissa Kostrzycki wear face masks to curb the spread of COVID-19 as they watch people participate in a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.


A young man follows through after connecting with a pitch during a fan batting practice session hosted by the Vancouver Canadians minor league baseball team at Nat Bailey Stadium, in Vancouver, on Thursday, September 3, 2020.

2. Ben Nelms/CBC News

Grade 9 student Shavi Gopal, 14, is pictured at LA Matheson Secondary school on the first day of school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Grade 9 student De-Shawn Haverty is pictured at LA Matheson Secondary school on the first day of school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


xGrade 8 student Sarika Chand is pictured at LA Matheson Secondary school on the first day of school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Student at LA Matheson Secondary school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Grade 9 students Ahsen Khan (left) and Harman Atwal are pictured at LA Matheson Secondary school on the first day of school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Grade 9 student Ahsen Khan is pictured at LA Matheson Secondary school on the first day of school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Student at LA Matheson Secondary school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Student at LA Matheson Secondary school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Grade 8 student Jora Phagura is pictured at LA Matheson Secondary school on the first day of school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Grade 10 student Rose Daniel is pictured at LA Matheson Secondary school on the first day of school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


Student at LA Matheson Secondary school in Surrey, British Columbia on Thursday, September 10, 2020.


3. Crystal Schick/Yukon News

Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


A miner moves his chip from "off site" to "on site" before entering the Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


Alexco mine president Brad Thrall's safety chip is moved to "on site" before entering the Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


Alexco mine president Brad Thrall, right, and a miner enter the Flame and Moth underground silver mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


Alexco mine president Brad Thrall, right, and a miner enter the Flame and Moth underground silver mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


A miner uses machinery to dig deeper into the tunnel at Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


A miner uses machinery to dig deeper into the tunnel at Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


Miners talk approximately 500 meters deep into the earth at Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


Alexco mine president Brad Thrall, left, and a miner chat inside Flame and Moth underground silver mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


Alexco mine president Brad Thrall, right, and a miner chat inside Flame and Moth underground silver mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.



Miners at Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on September 1, 2020.


Sample procurement drilling for Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Sample procurement drilling for Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Drillers pull rock samples from hundreds of meters deep for Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Drillers pull rock samples from hundreds of meters deep for Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Drillers pull rock samples from hundreds of meters deep for Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Drillers pull rock samples from hundreds of meters deep for Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Drillers pull rock samples from hundreds of meters deep for Alexco mine near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Alexco mine camp, where miners sleep, exercise, eat and do laundry, near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


Alexco mine camp, where miners sleep, exercise, eat and do laundry, near Keno, Y.T., on August 31, 2020.


2020 STANDINGS…MONTH…TOTAL

1. Darryl Dyck/Freelance…280…1200
2. Ben Nelms/CBC News…160…890
3. Cole Burston/Freelance…0…590
4. Kevin Light/Freelance…0…370
5. Evan Buhler/Freelance…50…310
6. Christopher Pike/Freelance…0…270
7. Dave Holland/Freelance…90…230
7. Jesse Winter/Freelance…0…230
8. Bernard Brault/La Presse…60…220
9. Chad Hipolito/Freelance…0…190
10. Blair Gable/Freelance…30…170
11. Chelsea Kemp/Cochrane Eagle…0…160
12. Michelle Berg/Saskatoon StarPhoenix…0…140
13. Liam Richards/Freelance…0…100
14. Jeff McIntosh/Freelance…0…90
14. Crystal Schick/Yukon News…30…90
15. Daniel Crump/Freelance…0…80
15. Marie-France Coallier/Le Devoir…0…80
15. Gavin John/Freelance…0…80
16. John Lucas/Freelance…0…60
16. Marissa Tiel/Freelance…0…60
17. Josie Desmarais/Freelance…0…40
17. Matthew Smith/Saskatoon StarPhoenix…0…40
17. Shannon VanRaes/Winnipeg Free Press…0…40
18. Jack Simpson/Freelance…30…30







95
General Discussion / Equity and Diversity Project
« Last post by Ryan McLeod on November 30, 2020, 11:44 AM »
As discussed during the AGM yesterday, here is the letter we received from Centennial College about wanting NPAC involvement in their Equity and Diversity Project.

A huge thank you to Rita for reaching out.

LETTER:

To the members of the NPAC board,

We represent the faculty, administration, and Program Advisory Committee (PAC) of the Photography program at Centennial College. We have been deeply engaged in conversations about issues around equity and inclusion in the photographic industry in Canada, and we are writing in the hopes that your organization will join us in extending this conversation on a national level.

Centennial College has a mission to educate learners for career success, preparing our diverse student body for a fulfilling career in their chosen field. As an institution committed to Global Citizenship, Activism, Equity, and Inclusion, the College also has a responsibility to advocate on behalf of equity- deserving groups – often, our graduates – in industries at large.

The photography industry professionals in our Program Advisory Committee acknowledge that women and historically marginalized communities have been traditionally underrepresented in the industry, and face unique challenges on their roads to professional success. However, more concrete data is needed if we are to fully grasp the scope of these challenges and marshal efforts to address them.

Our intention is to lead a research project collecting quantitative information about the demographics of professional photographers across Canada, as well as qualitative first-person accounts from our diverse colleagues.

We would like to work in partnership with your organization on this research. By working together, we believe we can design and distribute a comprehensive survey that will help all of us to better understand the needs of our industry and to better support the next generation of emerging professionals.

We hope to confirm your support with this initial letter of intent. If you wish to participate, please identify a point-person on behalf of your organization to advise us in the course of this project, and do not hesitate to reach out if you have any further questions. We look forward to your reply.

With thanks,

Rita Godlevskis
Publisher, PhotoED Magazine
Chair, Centennial College Photography PAC rita@photoed.ca

Joseph Marranca
Coordinator, Photography Program Centennial College jmarranca@centennialcollege.ca

Dr. Christopher Jackman
Chair, Department of Arts & Design
School of Communications, Media, Arts & Design Centennial College cjackman@centennialcollege.ca

and the Photography Program Advisory Committee:

Peter Chou, Photographer/owner for Peter Chou Photography (Vice Chair, PAC) Tracey Ujfalussy, Design Director for Anthem Worldwide
Donna Griffith, Photographer/owner for Donna Griffith Photography, Michael Fellini, Digital Artist/owner for Fellini Aerographics

Marni Goldman, Corus Entertainment, Production Executive of Original Content Tom Malone, Photographer/Digital Artist/owner for Tom Malone Photography Andrea Hutchins, Founder/Executive Producer for Ah Ha Represents
Rod Mcleod, Sales representative at B3K Digital



96
Here's the link: oin Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87617799407?pwd=Yk9LOEYyVUIyWWNWSkxxb29kNXBFUT09

Meeting ID: 876 1779 9407
Passcode: 916485

Call-ins:

        +1 438 809 7799 Canada
        +1 587 328 1099 Canada
        +1 647 374 4685 Canada
        +1 647 558 0588 Canada
        +1 778 907 2071 Canada
        +1 204 272 7920 Canada

Meeting ID: 876 1779 9407
Passcode: 916485
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kRzyEAU14
97
Hi everyone,

Just a reminder that the NPAC AGM will be held tomorrow, Sunday, November 29th at 12:00pm PST.

The link will be available approximately 15 minutes prior to the start, and huge thanks to our good friends at the Canadian Freelance Guild (CFG) whose Zoom link we have highjacked for the event. 

Please find attached the Agenda, Minutes, Financials and a request from Centennial College Photography Program and a discussion paper from the CFG.

Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions.

Thanks and (virtually) see you there!
98
General Discussion / Bashing Ontario's Flu Response- Not Cool
« Last post by Ken Gigliotti on November 25, 2020, 12:55 PM »
I woke up this morning ,turned on the TV to be greeted by the Ontario Health minister having to answer to a grim auditor general's report.
Consultants and their costs in health care have never been well received as they are most often ironic  cost cutters.
So these times soon devolve into seeing everything through the lens political partisanship.
So I will refrain from using names or parties other than to say she projected exemplary leadership skills as have most of the premiers and health officials handling the public communication of the real-time daily pandemic briefings. Sometimes context hides things lost in the shuffle or lost in the fog of fast moving events on a world scale. Nursing home deaths in Quebec would be alarming to the public and top end health officials but not the front line. Rapid spread from China  was expected but not from Europe, PPE shortages for a national emergency was definitely on anyone's radar, as was non symptomatic spread.The second wave of long term deaths is also puzzling even in provinces that did not have problems in the first wave.

So my thing, is to try to find examples of clear thinking approaches. Clear thinking seems to have left the building only a few years ago with politics then spreading to media. The government/scientific approach I thought was pretty good from the start.The systems that failed were weak links waiting to crash.

Generally,I have to look back for clear thinking approaches and maybe that is why there is this fascination with WW2.

I immediately felt bad for those like the health minister who have been fighting a war they didn't start with an agile enemy that seemed to evolve to counter anything any other flu had ever done.  The battles has taken many lives and the second wave is just getting started and now the criticism. It must be very disheartening. A real punch in the gut. One of Manitoba's top health care officials doing the daily newsers  has also been working weekends in a long term care facility. 

In my Nov. 12 Coronavirus – Stale Messaging and Five Star Admirals and a Secret Weapon- I was trying to find a historical equivalent to try to ground the chaotic reporting from the US and in contrast the dry, “trust the science,” medical messaging from across Canada.

So this pandemic  flu  is comparable to a Pearl Harbor event, the never before virus struck in China, lingered in secrecy for a short while,then spread rapidly.

Things that had never been done before in modern history like halting air travel to and from China began. Some say too late. Travel to China is a  recent phenomenon and involved big numbers and had commercial considerations. Everyone moved too slow because it was impossible to move too fast. Incomprehensibly in fact.

Even the response to Pearl Harbor was too slow. Admiral Nimitz decided to  take the train to San Francisco rather than fly. He needed to sleep and think. He was also moved by the landscape and breathe of the country , industry and the people. He began to grasp the importance of his mission and how hard that would be. America as worth saving.

The first thing was drawing upon the diversity of  top admirals all graduates from the newly formed Annapolis Naval college prior to WW1 who recognized the importance of the new concepts of  fast attack aircraft carriers, naval air power, submarines and PBY long distance sea planes. Later code breaking.

Nimitz ran his first ship aground as a young commander and faced court martial. Instead of going to jail or being kicked out of the navy he was given a second chance. He  always remembered the idea of a second chance an used it wisely. He was punished by being assigned to the fledgling submarines service. This is after WW1, he saw the sub as a strategic rather than defensive service. He saw that there was a need to rethink engines as they had gasoline engines. The diesel engine had recently been invented and he ordered the subs to be refitted with that type of engine that are still in service today. He became an expert in the submarine service laying the thought process and ground work for  the modern navy of today. He also changed the navy tactic for battleships traveling in a line to a circular defense for the carrier service. War ships traveled in lines from the days of sails.

The first issue after the pearl Harbor attack was the issue of overall command structure needed to be what they called “unity of command,” from Washington to Pearl Harbor, to each battle group. The President was a navy man and was on board all the way. This was an issue in the newer in Ontario.

The admirals had to decide strategy from every level and had to find those admirals who would fight as well as preserve the surviving meager carrier force and navy still in the Pacific. It meant who would take the initiative when it was presented or would they leave the battle and disappear into the vast grayness of the ocean. Preservation capital was the issue.

The pandemic response was be like that with unity of command from the PM to the premiers to the front lines.The in Canada  the battle space like the ocean, it is vast area.

Pr-existing problems with pandemic response would create the conditions of spread. Lack off locally available or sourced PPE would drive the mask wearing response and controversy  from the start.

The systematic strangulation of health care over many decades would created high death tolls at the bottom of that ladder in care for the elderly in highly populated areas of Quebec,the GTA and BC. Less populated provinces would cope better in the first phase.BC would move the fastest in the long term area.

Quebec would be Canada's Pearl Harbor with an early spring break that would set the stage for high  first and highest flu spread and death.

Those areas that were air transportation hubs, Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto and Montreal and also have mass rapid transit  were hit the hardest. The spread was inevitable.

The new practice for Canadians and Americans of social distancing and mask wearing would have to be accepted by the public. The lack of masks for front line workers would create sketchy messaging for the public and commerce. People would be left to their own devices, making masks at home,a true wartime reaction. Stores would rapidly put up plastic barriers on their own.
Public transit would not really be a consideration but the shutting down the economy was.

Anyway Admiral Nimitz and Canada's top doctor D. Tam created a unity of command  that was  decisive and pushed politics aside.

Just as the War in the Pacific had it's setbacks , America's ability to manufacture was the deciding factor to winning both wars, the one in Europe and the Pacific could not be over looked, the development of the secret weapon the atomic bomb, today the vaccine are the punctuation marks to an enemy that would not give up.

This second wave needs some hard thinking because, mask wearing and social distancing  was already an accepted and common practice. The second wave should be starting right now in flu season , but it really didn't end from the first wave. “Flattening the wave” was not enough.

This is my take. Flu season should have been less of a problem not more of one. Has the flu changed? There were some problems in churches, young people in bars, but is there something else? Stat holidays maybe? The lack of leadership in the US has empowered predictable illogical social behavior that possibly should have been expected. I do not know. The current problems land squarely on the public ,specifically the forever non compliant. Historic Example - There are people, mostly in rural areas of Manitoba who die because seat belt use in the rural areas is chronically lax. So this non compliance by anti establishment or the rebel segment across all society needs to be a factor in any public influence messaging and enforcement.

Canada's inability to manufacture has to be noted, it created a big problem with PPE that effected public health messaging  and now with the production and distribution of vaccine. Not having manufacturing capacity of both high skill and low skilled jobs is a major problem in Canadian society as a whole. We need to think hard and deeply about social innovation that includes jobs, taxes and how people are to cope in the future. Giving away money in the future is not sustainable, not now.

Give the Ontario government a break a with others across Canada. The US not so much. Overall systemic changes over decades need to be addressed .Let everyone do their job. These are worthwhile jobs. Unemployment isn't working. I saw that phrase years ago painted on a wall in Winnipeg's Inner City.
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Tim Hicks - Mask Wearing Anthem- Hell Yeah,That's What a Song Should Do

With respect. The dreary finger wagging messaging around mask wearing needs a change. Country artist Tim Hicks popular song What A Song Should Do could use a YouTube version  supporting mask wearing. A slight change to the lyrics would create a welcome anthem. Hell Yeah, That's What a Mask Should DO.

It makes you want to drive to, cry to
Makes you feel alive to
When you got nothing left to lose
It better get you laughing
Or break your heart in two
That's what a mask should do.

It should make you go, “Hell yeah,me too”
Yeah, that's what a mask should do
It should make you feel alright,all night
With four chords and the truth,that's what a mask should do

It should be the  track singing every moment of your life
The beat that keeps the party going till sunrise
can't help but sing along to
It should make you go,Hell yeah, me to,
That's What a mask should do.


The nearest thing to a protest song might be the chilling Eric Church song, Put That in Your Country Song.

Take me on up to Detroit city
Jails are full,the factories empty
Mamma's crying,boys are dying
Under that red white and blue still flying

Drop me of in Baltimore
Where every other window's a plywood board
Where dreams become crime and drugs
The only way out is to shoot and run

Stick that in your country song, yeah
Take that one to number one
And get the whole world singing along,yeah
Stick that in your country song
100
Life After Journalism

It's no secret that the number of places to practice journalism has been on the decline for years. Couple media concentration with copyright-grabbing contracts and not-so-suddenly journalism (full-time or freelance) is not an easy place to make a living.

But journalism skills are eminently transferable to a number of different communications fields. Join our panel of former journalists who have all gone on to new and rewarding careers as they discuss how they made the leap and how you can, too!

Although primarily writing based, there are lots of points to glean off of for your own career. 

More info and registration can be found here:

https://canadianfreelanceguild.wildapricot.org/event-4055006
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