Showing posts with label Truckers' Protest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Truckers' Protest. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

OTTAWA - Feb 1, 2022 - Anti vaccine mandate protesters and truckers protesting their fifth day in downtown Ottawa Tuesday.
"[The protest is] massive in scale, polarizing in content [and] dangerous in literally every aspect. We've done our very best. We've kept the city safe, we've kept our members safe and we will hold people to account to the best of our ability."
"There have been no injuries, no deaths, no riots in the last four days in the nation's capital, despite the fact that we have a global cause, national protest, tens of thousands of individuals for a wide variety of causes, who have gathered to actively demonstrate 24 hours a day..."
"You can take an enforcement attitude in the moment in that arrests could be made -- and, yes, that could have been a deterrent -- versus the ability to do that without being swarmed, without creating riotous behaviour without using force in a crowded area with trucks with their engines on. That's the equation."
"There are two different risk assessments that our officers have to make. I know the regular public don't necessarily appreciate or can't understand these dynamics, but that is the reality."
"If you have come here and committed a crime, if you have committed a hate crime, you will be investigated."
"We will look for you. We will charge you. And, if necessary, arrest you and we will proceed prosecutions against you."
"We have several active criminal investigations ongoing, from bribery to threats to assaults to dangerous operations of vehicles. They will continue."
Chief Peter Sloly, Ottawa Police Services
Anti-vaccine mandate protests continue in downtown Ottawa. View if Wellington Street looking west. Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022.
"I am used to protests, but this is not like other protests in this city."
"This is not what other protests are, which is marshalling people together for a clearly articulated cause, bringing attention to it, having some attention-drawing event to drive the conversation nationally for a couple of days and move the ball."
"But they're not doing that. This is an occupation and the['re clearly here to stay. They're not here to talk. They're here to disrupt and destabilize."
Tim Abray, communications consultant, resident, Golden Triangle, downtown Ottawa
Anti-vaccine mandate protests continue in downtown Ottawa. View if Wellington Street looking west. Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022.
"I know one wheelchair user who was assaulted this weekend. I've seen the TikToks, I've seen the photos. I've seen the videos of police glad-handing with the protesters, saying that they're welcome, they're great."
"I feel a lot of trust has been lost and broken, and I don't know how the Ottawa Police Service rebuilds that relationship with the community writ large after this."
"[There's a community in Centretown that has limited mobility at the best of times and is a lightning rod for abuse. We know that disabled women are disproportionately victims of abuse and there are people who are deaf, blind or have limited mobility who are essentially shut in their apartments right now, which is why I'm so-gob-smacked by the response."
Roisin West, downtown Ottawa resident, disability-rights advocate
Anti-vaccine mandate protests continue in downtown Ottawa on Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022.
"I don't have a job. And I can't get unemployment. I paid 23 years and I can't claim it."
"There is nothing left for the unvaccinated. That's why people from all over this nation have shown up." "And they're not leaving, either."
Protester Tyler Laplante, St.Catharines, Ontario
 
"People bring us food. They bring us propane, gas, everything we need."
"Those police over there? They asked us if we were parking here. 'You know you're gonna be stuck'."
"I said, 'Why would I care? I came here for that'."
Protester Dany Beauregard, Sorel-Tracy, Quebec
 
"[Incidents like the woman who danced on the tomb of the Unknown Soldier were disrespectful]. But that's not the vast majority of people that are here. They are terrible incidents."
"We all agree that's not what this is. Watching the news, I felt defeated."
"It was like they're not reporting what's actually here. This is beautiful. I haven't smiled this much in two years."
Protester Jessica Root, Warkworth, Ontario
Image
Terry Fox memorial; indignity to a Canadian symbol of courage and integrity
 
 
 

Saturday, January 29, 2022

 
It was time for us to head out again to replenish our stock of wildlife feed. Which means a drive out to the rural location of our local feed and seed emporium. Irving mused he might as well pick up some bunny pellets while he was at it. It's turned into yet another very cold day. Environment Canada has changed course, from informing us a few days ago that early February will be milder than normal, to now telling us that this extreme cold weather is set to continue.
 
So, -21C this morning, but the temperature managed to shove its way up to -16C by early afternoon. With the wind chill factor that would be adjusted to -23C. But we had a clear blue sky and the sun sat high in its throne transiting the ocean of blue and while neither wind nor sun are able to make their full appearance inside the forest interior shielded by the forest canopy, wind has a better chance than sun.
 
 
Visually, an absolutely stunningly glorious day. And driving out to Ritchie's in the eastern suburbs of the city, we wouldn't be anywhere near where security authorities tell us to avoid; the city centre, and of course highways that give ingress to the downtown of the city. Which is being swamped today and tomorrow by the presence of trucks driven by aggrieved long- and short-haul truckers from east to west of the country. Protesting against the nonsensical mandate of COVID-19 restrictions insisting that all truckers be vaccinated. 
 

An estimated 90 percent of all Canadian truckers are vaccinated against COVID. Those that prefer not to be are placed in the position of having no employment. This, at a time when the industry is looking for thousands of new truckers to move critical goods around the country. Complicated by the fact that our largest trading partner, one from whence the bulk of our fresh fruit and vegetables come from (along with Mexico), in a marketplace of rising fuel prices and haulage and maritime bottlenecks are contributing to higher prices and less food accessibility.
 

So we thought we'd tend to first things first, and that would be taking ourselves out for a brisk winter hike through the ravine. Layered under our winter jackets to the extent we feel like mummies. Hoping that this time the pervasive cold wouldn't penetrate. Irving made sure he had refreshed his cookie cache and off we went.

Jackie and Jillie are very well aware of that cache, and we're barely into the trail leading down to the ravine's forest when they begin clamouring for treats. That's the first installment; a second to follow shortly afterward. And after that, they're good to go. It's nothing short of emotional blackmail. But their lust for cookies satisfied, they turn their attention to catching up on the messages left hither and yon on any protruding low-level branches of trees we pass, or tree trunks containing the latest canine gossip.
 

These brief pauses are just fine; they're endowed with four legs to our two, and by the time we catch up to them, they're back in motion again. This time, on the lookout for the presence of any injudicious members of the wider community who may have ventured into the forest without seeking proper permission from the two little guardians of the forest.

It's usually Jillie who sets off in full voice, scolding and imperious: do  you know who we are? Nature has entrusted them with the well-being of the forest and it is their prerogative to allow others to roam freely, or hold them to account for gross impertinence. Fortunately, most people find this amusing, as we apologetically explain it's a breed-specific behaviour that no amount of chastising on our end can cure.
 

And the dogs accompanying these people usually realize that the two little pipsqueaks' ranting while annoying, is harmless. Nothing that a good sniffing session at unmentionable parts cannot satisfy. Eventually, we made our way back home again. When it was time to reward our companions for their exemplary behaviour, with their daily afternoon fresh vegetable salad.
 

Once done, their anxiety over our taking obvious steps to leave the house again was assuaged when they were invited to accompany us. And so we drove out to Ritchie's Feed & Seed. The parking lot wasn't as full as it often is for which we were grateful. Irving put on  his N-95, and rubberized gloves, and soon returned with two fifty-pound bags of peanuts, and a five-pound bag of bunny pellets. As a trial, to see whether the rabbit would eat it along with the carrots Irving puts out for him.