It has arrived

After a false start last weekend, moving day has arrived.  Today my new roommate is showing up with her parent’s truck to help shift everything over there.  Fortunately for me, its only about 10 or 15 min driving down the road.  It is raining… should I be surprised after the week of rain we’ve had?  No, not really, but I was hoping.

Please Vote

I resonate with so much of what the following says.  Our Bishop sent this letter out to all of the parishes in our diocese this week.  It really bothers me when people say that they can’t be bothered to vote or they don’t care enough about politics to vote.  I want to shake them and ask them if they have any idea how many people would literally kill for the privilege which they so apathetically shrug off.  The opportunity to have a say in the people that govern your country is an amazing privilege.  Please do not dismiss it lightly.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
To live in a democratic Constitutional Monarchy as we do is a great privilege.  We enjoy rights and freedoms as subjects and citizens (individually as well as corporately) which are unavailable to many people which make up the world’s population.  Freedoms of speech, association, worship, and mobility are but a few of the freedoms which we enjoy in Canada.  Our rights as citizens are enumerated in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1982), and are influenced by English Common Law as well as the French Civil Code.
With these rights and freedoms comes great responsibility.  Foremost among our responsibilities is the requirement that we work to ensure the ongoing nature of the rights and freedoms which we enjoy, and that these rights and freedoms are extended to all members of Canadian society.  Networks for the promotion of issues of social justice exist and others are able to be developed as these questions are worked out among us as a society, and individuals and communities (including communities of Faith) are able to participated in the decision-making processes which bear upon and shape the issues of our day.  Involvement in these as well as in other areas of our common life as Canadians and as Christians within Canadian society is political activity.  To be human, and a member of a human community is to be political, and as people who believe in the Incarnation of the Son of God, we who are called to enter into the daily life of the world in which we live are called to political involvement and action.  Many men and women offer themselves for public service in the political processes which form government at all levels of our society.  I am thankful for their sense of call to public service and I encourage you to pray for all those who offer themselves as candidates in the upcoming elections.  Many of us are involved in movements which strive for freedom and justice.  Some among us are candidates for public service and office.  For all of us, however, the most basic political action is the exercise of our right to vote.
A Federal Election is called for October 14, 2008.
Municipal Elections [in BC] are called for November 15, 2008.
I am not particularly interested in “party politics,” nor do I have either the right or desire to direct your vote; however, I do say that each of us has responsibility to exercise our right to vote.  In March of this year, following the election in the province of Alberta, and the federal by-elections which were held, the print media was full of editorials and political cartoons expressing dismay over low voter turnout.  For the maintenance and the continuing development of our system of government we have a responsibility to vote.  For the men, women, and children of those areas of the world where people are disenfranchised or where their vote is regulated and directed, we have a responsibility to vote.
The rights, freedoms, and the responsibilities which we enjoy in this country have been fought for, have been defended, and have been hard won through the years.  Men and women from this country continue that fight on our behalf in other arenas of the world in an attempt to affirm, develop, and further the rights and freedoms of individuals and nations.  One way that we can ensure that the sacrifices of so many is not in vain is to exercise our right to vote.
Please do so, and encourage members of your family, friends, and acquaintances to do so as well.
Sincerely,
James
Bishop, Diocese of British Columbia.

Also found on the diocese website.

Worlds Away

I may be only about ten years older than the majority of high school students right now, but I feel generations apart.  Has being a teenager changed that dramatically in the last decade or am I just an exceptional person who was immune to many of the things that teenagers do?  I feel like it is the former.  I hope that this is not a product of some vain sense of superiority on my part, but I don’t think so.

Most of the young people I’ve been interacting with over the last few months seem to be from an elite privileged group.  I even notice it on the bus to and from downtown; they talk loudly on their cell phones and to each other as they listen to iPods and flaunt the latest in designer fashion.  They talk about how they “like just have to” get the newest this or that or how so-and-so is “like so” this or that…  They seem to think they know everything about this celebrity or that band but are clueless as to the more important things in life.  Like how to boil water. Seriously, I’ve been asked.  Some have been everywhere at mommy or daddy’s expense but haven’t experienced anything other than the shopping and five star hotels in those places.  Others haven’t been outside of their city but are equally clueless about life.  The world we live in today is such a global village that to be uninformed about life outside of your small bubble seems a crime.  We live in a period when we have the unique ability to go anywhere and do anything.  Why squander it with ignorance?
One of the most frequent things I hear on the boat is “this is the best food I’ve ever eaten” or “you are an amazing cook,” and sometimes “will you come home with me and cook all the time, I never eat like this at home.”  Again, ego would suggest otherwise, but I really don’t think I am that incredible or the food I make is that wonderfully unique.  I just make things like what I grew up on: random bits of pork cooked with a glaze, potatoes, spaghetti, pasta casseroles, rice dishes…  Part of it is the outdoor environment.  Everyone is hungrier when they spend all day outside and when you are hungry, anything tastes good.  I have another theory about why everyone thinks boat food is so good.  I think it has to do with the food they are accustomed to eating.  (This also goes back to the “How do you boil water?” comment.)  Many of them come from busy working families where parents just don’t have the time to cook a real meal.  This generation has grown up on instant.  Not only do they want everything now, they are not used to anything that cannot be microwaved in less than ten minutes.  No wonder boat food tastes good!  When you are used to over-processed, reheated food, anything made with real fresh ingredients tastes good.  It is saddening to think of what people are missing.
None of this is meant as a broad-brush generalization, painting in all of the young people in our society.  I just feel that it is an overwhelming majority of those with whom I have observed in recent months since returning home from Offshore.  I hope it is just a case of the squeaky wheel being the one taken note of.
Does a rant like this officially classify me as “old fart”?

RSS

It is so disheartening to come back after a week at see and have over 1000 unread items on my RSS feed.  Most of those are political/newsy in nature, things that, had I been around during the week, I would have read with eager anticipation.  Now it just seems like a chore to have to read them all on two days off.  I want to make an educated decision on my vote for the election but it is way to hard to keep up with everything in just a weekend (and a weekend when I feel like doing other things than sit, glued to my computer screen).  I’ve already pretty much decided where the vote is going to go, but I really like to give them an opportunity to change my mind and make me think about the issues.  I like to be engaged in the campaign, but now I feel like it isn’t really real and nothing is going on.  I don’t like to rely on the blogs of random strangers and the few news articles I can read as sources of information for something like the future of my country.

Sorry, I’m in election mode

I enjoyed this quote:

“Whereas the left wing tends to attract bleeding hearts, the right-wing tends to attract jerks.  Of course there are all sorts of fancy intellectual reasons why one might want to shrink government, reduce taxes, and curtail entitlement programs. But a lot of people support these policies because they don’t care about anybody but themselves. They are, in other words, self-interested jerks.”

Joseph Heath, Policy Options
Thanks to Andrew Potter.
In other news, ouch!

Um, so I’m moving again on the weekend. New address email went out tonight, but, once again, if I’ve missed you, let me know and I’ll send you an email.