StopTouchingYourPhone

joined 6 months ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 hours ago

This was decades ago.

Not even an hour on the job. I was early 20ish, new to a city, answered an ad for an art gallery receptionist. Had the interview at the gallery, guy seemed straight-forward, I got the gig, was told I'd start in a week. That night, around 2am he started leaving phone messages, saying we needed to have a meeting immediately. I needed to be at his house by 6am. Went from inappropriately sweet to hoarse with yelling down the phone at me within a day. Call after call at all hours for a week. Told me at 8pm on a Saturday I needed to bring him donuts at his house by 9. That I needed to go shopping with him for a new skirt that would suit the office better. That I needed to respond immediately whenever he called. Literally did the "Don't you know who I am?" "I can destroy you with a snap of my fingers," "Don't you understand what an opportunity this is for you?" whole shtick.

Didn't even make it to the first day of the supposed job. Changed my phone number. Moved again.

The other was half a day, but not making it past the training phase of a call centre job probably doesn't count.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 22 hours ago

Globe & Mail seeding slogans for the Conservative/Reform Party. "It's about Hope and Change, amirite fellow under 35 y/o guys? Don't forget to vote for Hope and Change!"

 

snips from the article:

Patricia Celan said she decided last June to file a request to determine whether anyone had accessed her records after seeing news reports about privacy breaches in the health-care system.

The result showed that a fellow Dalhousie University medical school resident had inappropriately accessed Celan's records multiple times in March of 2023. She had not been previously notified of the privacy breach.

[...] When she took her findings to Nova Scotia's health authority, Celan said officials confirmed the breach and that there was no reason for the person in question to have looked at her records.

But Celan said she was also told there was little that could be done because by that point the resident who had snooped in her records had completed his training and was working as a doctor in another province.

She said officials at Dalhousie told her something similar.

[...] "And that is concerning because doing something like this is a reflection of someone's ethical values and now that person is practising as an independent physician and facing no consequences for this."

https://web.archive.org/web/20250425160757/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/medical-records-privacy-breach-dalhousie-university-health-1.7517812

 

Remember the Catholic school board that spent 190K on a trip for board members to Italy? They bought a bunch of Vatican art for their schools, had some fancy lunches, etc. on our dime. Another board spent 40K on themselves for a "staff retreat" to the Sky Dome. This story's about the province "stepping in."
Boards in question are:
Brant Haldimand Norfolk Catholic District School Board - the Italy trip
& Thames Valley District School Board in London - sky dome visit

They've appointed a supervisor for Thames Valley (the "takes control" part of the headline), and simply asked Norfolk to pay back most of the money afaik. Here's the bit that I think bears watching:

The province is also launching investigations at the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board, the Toronto Catholic District School Board and the Toronto District School Board over ongoing financial deficits and spending concerns.

Calandra said all three have failed to address ongoing, years-long deficits with no plan to return the books to the black.

"Not to sound like a big tough guy, but to be very clear, the resources that we provide, we're providing record level of funding. We expect that to be made available to teachers so that they can give our students the ultimate ability to succeed."

[...] The province is leaving the door open to taking control of all three boards, depending on what the probes reveal.

https://web.archive.org/web/20250424145609/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-school-board-investigation-1.7516584

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 days ago

Nadeem Mahmoud, the spokesperson for Ahmed's campaign, said multiple people reached out to their office, saying a woman wearing an Elections Canada badge was approaching people lined up to vote at the Teston Village Public School in Vaughan, and encouraging them to vote Conservative in the federal election.

The woman was speaking to people in English but also in Urdu, Mahmoud said.

"This is something which is not supposed to happen. It's a breach of protocol," he said.

Brazen breach of protocol by someone who apparently wasn't a wee bit worried about getting caught. Someone should ask Pierre Poutine what he has to say about it, but conservatives are in the "we're not letting him talk anymore" stage of the campaign.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago

This is the best thing I've read today. I'm so glad you went anyway. Poll prediction sites don't predict upsets and voting can absolutely change things.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 5 days ago

It's very that. So much so that the person who wrote the headline obviously knew exactly what they were doing.

[–] [email protected] 48 points 5 days ago (6 children)

Headline misrepresents what their acting President said. From their own article:

“After the devastation of the Korean war . . . the United States gave us aid, technology transfer, investments and security assurances,” which helped make South Korea “a very comfortable investment environment for foreigners”, Han told the Financial Times in an interview.

“Our industrial prowess and our financial development and our culture and growth and wealth are very heavily due to the help from the United States,” he added.

In light of this debt of gratitude, Seoul — one of Washington’s closest security allies and economic partners in Asia — would enter negotiations with Trump seeking to find “solutions which are more win-win for both, rather than taking their actions as the objective against which we should fight back”, Han said.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago

The CFIA says the product might have been sold in clerk-served packages or smaller packages without a label, or in a package that doesn’t bear the same brand or product name.

Hotels, hospitals, retirement homes, bakeries, etc: all places where these are served with no reference to their brand name. Heads up.

Tough year for the Sweet Cream brand.

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

TIL! ty

So Montreal's one of their studios. Good to know.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

I suspect the plastic bag/straw issue is politicians virtue signalling to the Oil and Gas lobby, like "I'll make sure you still get pennies for your nurdles, Boss!"

[edit - link's to a vox article from 2022 explaining what nurdles are]

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago

Challenge accepitebbted

[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 week ago

How everyone in Parliament doesn't have an aneurysm from having to deal with him is beyond me. Just 3 minutes of his blatant bullshit gives me an ice cream headache.

Highlight of the debate imo: Skippy says I'm "living in terror" here in Toronto, because of car theft.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 1 week ago (5 children)

Sweet mother of god, someone muzzle the attack poodle. I really want to hear everything everyone has to say tonight, but SkiPPy is working his ass off to make me turn off the radio. Everyone's losing continuity and intelligibility with the amount he's talking over and interrupting.

The Manning Centre trained him well.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/28209968

Anvi Ahuja received a text message transcript of her conversation with her roommates during their Lyft ride home on March 11.

The company confirms the incident took place, but has offered varying explanations.

After CBC Toronto contacted Lyft about this story last week, a Lyft representative called Ahuja. She says they told her the company is running a pilot program where audio is recorded from some rides and then the transcript is supposed to be sent to the ride-sharing company for reference if a security issue is reported.

In a statement to CBC, a Lyft spokesperson acknowledged that the ride-sharing company has an in-app audio recording pilot in select U.S. markets with "strict opt-in protocols" but said this incident is not related to that pilot program or any other feature being tested by Lyft.

 

Anvi Ahuja received a text message transcript of her conversation with her roommates during their Lyft ride home on March 11.

The company confirms the incident took place, but has offered varying explanations.

After CBC Toronto contacted Lyft about this story last week, a Lyft representative called Ahuja. She says they told her the company is running a pilot program where audio is recorded from some rides and then the transcript is supposed to be sent to the ride-sharing company for reference if a security issue is reported.

In a statement to CBC, a Lyft spokesperson acknowledged that the ride-sharing company has an in-app audio recording pilot in select U.S. markets with "strict opt-in protocols" but said this incident is not related to that pilot program or any other feature being tested by Lyft.

If anyone needed another reason not to use their "ride sharing" companies.

Best case scenario - this international crisis with The States pushes Canada to start enforcing PIPEDA (I know, let me dream).

 

Rumeysa Ozturk's lawyer believes she is being targeted over a school paper editorial she co-authored

snips from the article:

U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin [...] did not specify what specific activities were engaged in by Ozturk, a Fulbright Scholar and student in Tufts' doctoral program for Child Study and Human Development. Ozturk had been in the country on an F-1 visa to study.

[...]

Ozturk co-authored an opinion piece a year ago in the school's student paper, the Tufts Daily, that criticized the school's response to calls by students to divest from companies with ties to Israel and to "acknowledge the Palestinian genocide."

"Based on patterns we are seeing across the country, her exercising her free speech rights appears to have played a role in her detention," said Mahsa Khanbabai, Ozturk's lawyer. Khanbabai called the claims against Ozturk "baseless" and said people should be "horrified at the way DHS spirited away Rumeysa in broad daylight."

 

Bethan Nodwell, Christine Loughead, and another unidentified Canadian joined neo-Nazi leader Chris Pohlhaus to discuss antisemitic conspiracy theories and dehumanize South Asian and Indigenous people.

[...]

Nodwell is part of Diagolon’s white supremacist network and has worked as an organizer for far-right events in Canada. She enjoyed a measure of notoriety in the media after allegedly serving as a stage manager during the 2022 “Freedom Convoy” blockade protests in Ottawa.

Nodwell has been quoted by major media outlets about the protests and appeared on the podcast of Tammy Peterson, Jordan Peterson’s wife. Once one of three owners of Trinity Productions, she helped bring the far-right Member of the European Parliament, German AfD MEP Christine Anderson, to Canada on multiple speaking tours.

She also attempted to organize a tour for UK Islamophobic activist Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon, better known as Tommy Robinson.

[...]

Loughead, better known as CandianGirl, revels in her racism, wearing it like a badge of honour. She describes herself as an “uber racist” during the interview. Arrested by Chilliwack RCMP in August 2024 after posting a series of videos showing her harassing South Asian people, typically yelling slurs and expletives at them from a vehicle.

[...]

Appearing to be a woman around middle age, [Posty's] X account is filled with praise and reposts for far-right activists in North America, Australia, and Europe. She often reposts reports of crimes committed by people who are not white, blaming Jews for their presence in the country.

During the interview with Pohlhaus, she complained that Canada had donated $5 million to the Ukrainian war effort after US President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance’s temper tantrum in the Oval Office with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

She also added that nothing had been done to secure the Canadian border, despite the over $1 billion committed by the government to bolster border security resources, staff, and equipment.

 

Another person posted this in c/ontario

From the site:

Volunteers can be trained to perform a variety of duties, including sandbagging, debris removal, serving meals and more. Volunteers are contacted when needed to support emergency response efforts and will be assigned duties based on their skill level, interest and availability.

...

To go with, a good read from the Tyee about Civil Defense Corps

[A] second Trump presidency is emphatically not like the first. In foreign policy, as in business, Trump does not deal with weaker counterparts — he dominates them. When engaging with countries that lack the leverage to push back, he is not transactional; he is predatory. His negotiations are not about mutual benefit but about extracting maximum advantage, imposing terms that serve his interests alone.

The shift from ally to adversary could happen overnight, as a protectionist United States looks at Canada’s vast energy reserves, fresh water and strategic Arctic position and sees weakness. Canadians must recognize that the luxury of assuming our security is someone else’s responsibility is over.

We must be strong enough to push back, resilient enough to survive cyberwarfare and economic coercion — including Tuesday's arbitrary imposition of illegal tariffs. We must be prepared to defend our sovereignty — not just with military spending, but with a population that is engaged, trained and ready.

Pause for a moment and imagine the skills or time you could bring — whether it’s first aid, co-ordination and logistics, communications, engineering, IT support, counselling and caregiving or any other expertise — to contribute to our collective security and resilience if called upon.

 

B.C. unlikely to follow Ontario's lead in slapping surcharge on power exports, premier says

"We're working with other premiers and with the federal government on how we can support the Team Canada approach with no-tariff responses," he said on March 5 about the possibility of B.C. imposing its own surcharges. [...]

Eby also said he is working on "contingency planning" should things escalate.

For example, he noted the impacts of Elon Musk's DOGE — Department of Government Efficiency — on B.C.'s power partners.

B.C.'s power grid is connected to the United States through the Bonneville Power Administration, an agency within the U.S. Department of Energy that both buys from and sells to British Columbia, as needed.

The agency is down hundreds of positions following mass firings by the Trump administration. [...]

Eby and Harrison both said B.C. has been hindered in the past because Alberta has its own regulatory scheme for managing power, focused around private providers, while B.C.'s grid relies on the publicly-owned B.C. Hydro.

But with increased interest in interprovincial trade, Eby said progress was being made on harmonizing standards to allow power to flow more freely across the Rockies, something Harrison applauded.

Eby also said similar conversations were happening with Yukon, where the barriers are more about geography and a lack of infrastructure rather than politics. [...]

B.C. has also announced plans to rapidly increase its own power supply both through the finalization of the Site C dam and the fast-tracking of several wind power projects across the province.

 

Keir Giles, a senior consulting fellow with the Russia and Eurasia Programme at Chatham House in London, says Putin's FSB has been casting a wide net for new agents since the invasion of Ukraine. It's all part of Moscow's push to harass and unbalance NATO nations.

"Russia will reach out and recruit anybody it can, because that is now very much cheaper and easier thanks to online access," said Giles. "The investment of time and resources in doing this is tiny compared to the potential results."

The end goal isn't necessarily to obtain secret information, or engage in sabotage, says Giles, but rather to sow fear, uncertainty and doubt. A goal that can be met even when spies are caught — or confess.

"Russia places very little value on the people that it recruits. They are disposable," he said.

Laken's family hope that he will soon return home, and have been told that quiet negotiations are underway to allow him to complete his sentence in Canada.

[A youngster was a Forces cadet and reservist, planned to join the army after his 18th birthday, and his dad's a retired master corporal. Warsaw regional court said they showed leniency due to his confession and cooperation. His mother's laywer is blaming Canada for letting the kid leave in the first place.]

 

https://archive.ph/F26VK

Mayor Olivia Chow says she plans to ban U.S. companies from bidding on contracts with the City of Toronto.

At a press conference Thursday morning to talk about the procurement of new TTC streetcars, Chow provided an update on her administration’s response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs on Canadian goods.

She confirmed that the city will award all contracts valued at less than $353,000 to Canadian companies exclusively. She also promised to present a motion to her executive committee “barring any U.S. companies from future Toronto contracts.”

alternate CTV news link here

 

Thought I'd leave some links for new gardeners, or people itching for spring who just want to come check out seeds etc.

This weekend, Saturday and Sunday at Brickworks from 9-2 (free bus just north of Broadview station) - https://www.evergreen.ca/evergreen-brick-work/events/seedy-weekend-2025

March 22, Scadding Court from 10-2 (west end of the city) - https://torontourbangrowers.org/events/scadding-court-seedy-saturday-2025

...

Other good resources for beginners:

General Planting almanac

North American Native Plant Society

 

Interviewed before he went on stage at UBC’s School of Public Policy and Global Affairs for his talk called American Identity and the Republican Party.

I found it interesting to listen to someone who self-identifies as one of the good ones and thought some here might be interested as well.

8:15ish to hear his advice to Canadians about the whole “annex your country jk but not really” thing. [spoiler alert!] It's #notallamericans with a supersize dose of paternalistic condescension about how Canadians need to grow some patriotism and push back. But just on tariffs, mind you, and not too hard because we’re still friends and Canada would suffer.

“You don’t need to be afraid of him.”
“Find a reason to continue to be proud of your country.”
Golly, thanks mister!

...

His overall take is bog standard - no surprises - hanging all the evil happening in the USA right now around DJT’s neck and mostly blaming it on Democrats not doing enough to stop him. Also used some gross new talking point repetition about the USA “flirting” (with authoritarianism, anger, division). Or it was new to me, at least.

Other than that, he speaks a bit about Ukraine fighting for sovereignty, the postWW2 order, and real elections; DJT as the Leader Of The Free World negotiating Ukraine’s future without Zelensky in the room. He hopes Europe and Canada “and others of our friends will take up the mantle if we’re gonna walk away."

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