WikiFriday posts appear when I take the time to pursue my curiousities, often on Wikipedia. They started when I live in Morocco and I spent Fridays processing the thoughts and questions from the week.
Cindy Blackstock
David keeps mentioning her – “force of nature” – so it was time to learn. She is a Gitxsan woman, an activist for child welfare, and the executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada. She was born in Burns Lake, British Columbia, which lies along Highway 16 between Prince George and Smithers and apparently has a population of about 2,000. She was involved in a landmark decision in 2016 in which the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruled that the federal government has been discriminating against 163,000 First Nations children with chronic underfunding and the failure to ensure access to services. She has a bachelor from UBC (me, too!), two Master degrees, and a PhD. “Force of nature.”
Ok, I was going to stop there, but then I read more about the federal government spying on her, cutting her funding, and blocking her from meetings with chiefs. And then I read this Globe and Mail article on how she does ‘self care’, and have to share a few lines:
"I don't give power to negative forces. I've never been someone who dwells on barriers. I only keep focused on what we need, which is these children having a positive childhood.”
"I just need days by myself; I call them 'days of infinite possibilities.” Yes.
Murray Sinclair
The Honourable Murray Sinclair. Likewise, a search prompted by many mentions by David.
Senator, lawyer, and Chair of Canada’s Indian Residential Schools Truth and Reconciliation Commission from 2009-2015, he was born outside of Winnipeg. He dropped some truth during the TRC work: “Reconciliation is not an Indigenous problem. It is a Canadian one.” After the TRC completed its Final Report in 2015, he stated his intention to retire from public life, but with encouragement from Manitoba’s Indigenous community, agreed to a nomination for senate-ship. He has been a senator since 2016.
Senate of Canada
Ok, so then I had to look up the Senate of Canada, because, like most Canadians, I know nothing. And, like most Canadians, I respond to my senate education with, “Wait, what?”
Wait, what?
First, that it’s based on a “House of Lords.” That’s just funny.
Second, that there are 105 (105!) seats, and that their distribution is based on four “regions” – Ontario, Quebec, the Maritimes, and the West. I see what you did there, Ontario and Quebec.
Third, senator “entitlements”.
Based on this Ottawa Citizen report in 2015, each senator gets a yearly salary of $142,400 before any extras for committee work, and $150,000 for research and office expenses. Yes, I multiplied that by 105 out of curiousity.
Senators also travel free on the VIA Rail.
And:
“Senators who travel to countries where tap water may endanger their health are entitled to claim for bottled water (with receipts).” Ha.
"Senators are reimbursed for membership of Air Canada’s exclusive Maple Leaf club ($665 for worldwide membership)."
That last one is my favourite. How quaint.
fertility
I’m in my 30s. This comes up.
“a woman's fertility peaks in the early and mid-20s, after which it starts to decline slowly. While many sources suggest a more dramatic drop at around 35,[1] this is unclear since studies are still cited from the nineteenth century and earlier.” [Bold my own]
“One 2004 study of European women found fertility of the 27-34 and the 35–39 groups had only a four-percent difference.” [Bold my own]
And, because apparently I didn’t retain anything from sex ed (I’m not actually sure I had any sex ed): the fertile window is basically the five days leading up to ovulation, and ovulation day, which will come between day 10 and 17 (start counting with Day 1 being Day 1 of your period). Thanks, internet. Please, no one read anything into this.
That’s all I have time for. Next week I plan to be back, possibly with something around the Yemeni Crisis and the distribution of schools and teachers in B.C.
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