GrizzlyBur

joined 2 years ago
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[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

Personally, I do actually prefer the Brie Larson vocal version. I can see why is has the most listens, although much of that is probably boosted from the movie itself and the new highly popular Scott Pilgrim Takes Off netflix anime which also features the song.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I really like their song "The Old Apartment". I'm about to move back to my hometown soon and I'm gonna be commuting past a few places I used to live in or grew up around, and it really encapsulates the surreal feeling of seeing people living in a place that used to be yours, changing it, and that weird unreasonable sense of feeling like you should still have ownership over it.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Just heard the news about Brian Wilson, really sad but what a life well lived. RIP.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 weeks ago

Looks great! The dovetails look really clean too. I'd probably line the inside with a nice red felt to dampen any noise when placing items, probably jewelry, into the box. And just for a extra bit of pizzazz. A wood burned makers mark or tidy initials somewhere would be a nice touch too, emphasize that "hey, a skilled person made this, this wasn't shot out of a mass factory"

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Stuff like that makes me a little worrisome about my ambitions to one day move to Quebec/Montreal. I despise fearmongering and blind hatred, but you find that everywhere nowadays.

To quote a bit of Gandalf, I hope to be a person who gifts many small acts of kindness and love to keep the darkness at bay. Wherever I find myself. It is one of my biggest motivators to work on my French, so I can connect better with more people of Canada. The jump in pay and jobs exclusive for bilingual folks helps too though!

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (6 children)

I've got mixed feelings about this. On one hand I mostly like the idea of the Quebec social contract, the whole "democracy, the French language, gender equality, and secularism" bit.

But how would this be fairly enforced? What would make a person gender equality-y enough? Or pro-democratic enough? I think the secularism is the most egregious. I'm secular myself, but I don't think its morally right to try to take that away from other people, so long as their beliefs don't hurt others.

It really does read as targeting a particular religous/cultural ethnic group :(

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 weeks ago

It is, I just updated the body text to give context! The entire album is covers of famous songs but in Inuktitut, one of the more common Inuit languages of Canada.

I think the translation work and singing is outstanding, and its a little surreal hearing music that is so familiar to me being sung in a completely different & non-romanic origin language.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

Wow this guy is really good. Listening to some of his other songs and he really knows how to make a catchy beat.

As a person trying to learn more French, his songs are actually much easier to listen to due to his singing style. Other French Canadians songs I've listened to really blur the words together. Les Colocs for example, I just cannot understand what they are saying even when I'm following along with the lyrics.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 weeks ago

Same! I think the only song/album I don't like is his You Want It Darker (2016), but I feel like such a jerk for not liking it because that is his last album before he died in the same year.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Oh I had no idea something like album.link or song.link existed. I'm going to update the sidebar to recommend this as the ideal way to share songs/albums.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

Awesome soundtrack, awesome game.

 

The Three Dead Trolls in a Baggie were a Albertan band active from 1987-2005 and feature comedy songs parodying historical events and Canadian culture in general. One of the most famous songs is "The Toronto Song", in which their Albertan roots show through in a playful banter about the rest of the country (particularly Toronto though).

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

The owner of those two communities deleted his account. They passed moderation of maplemusic to me and one other person, but givergaming got deleted with their account.

I've created [email protected] to refill the void. Out of the two, a canadian gaming community was the one I was hoping to take off the most since I'm more of a gamer person than a music person. I've got some plans for fostering a community on there. I'll post about it in !communitypromo once I've got it set up a bit nicer, it is sorta barebones at the moment.

Strange how I didn't want to mod any communities on here but ended up moderating 3!

 

Song Created in 1993-2000, released in 2000 under the Tangents Album. The Tea Party was formed in Windsor, Ontario. Active in the 90s, and since reformed in the 2010s, they are still active and releasing music.


Last song I'm posting for the night! I planned on stopping sooner but got excited when I realized The Tea Party is actually from my home city of Windsor! I had no idea. Would explain why I recognize all of their songs, I must've heard them a couple hundred times over the radio.

I guess I kind of have a thing for every variation of rock music, huh?

 

Created in 1985 by Scottish-Canadian Lawrence Gowan. Gowan was born in Scotland, but immigrated to Scarborough Ontario when he was younger. Gowan's career is mostly entirely contained within Canada, with most popular being in Toronto, the epicenter of his career. As of this post, 1/10 of Gowan's 101k monthly listeners are from Toronto.

 

Made in 2003 in the Truthfully Truthfully album. Joel Plaskett is from Halifax, Nova Scotia, and his music often makes references to his home city.


Joel Plaskett has a strong history of celebrating Canadian music. His music itself is great, but look into his strong advocacy of Canadian Musicians, and his criticisms of bands that go on to play more in other countries than Canada itself.

 

Made in 1993. Band is based from Toronto. Still releasing music to this day albeit with different band members.


"Sometimes it's wise To know which way the gun is pointing Before you yell, "I see the whites of their eyes"

Aside from being quite catchy and pleasant to listen to, the lyrics are quite heartfelt and clever. Big fan of this band's pieces.

 

Released July 2000, still relevant.

 

I'm returning back to Canada in 2 months and you bet your ass this will be blasting during the drive up. I don't plan on living anywhere else for the rest of my life.

 

I'm really worried about Windsor. Essex county is my home in Canada. Of all of the Canadian cities, we're probably the ones to be most hurt the most from this. I hope we can all come together and help each other overcome this as a community.

PS: Amherstburg has some 1812 cannons that could be put back into working order, but keep it on the down-low so the Yanks don't know. They've been pointed towards the American side for 200 years now, but I think it may soon be time to let them sing again.

 

This is pulled from the r/windsorontario subreddit, by user u/coyotefew6535 . I do not claim credit for this post. Am reposting here for visibility and discussion, and appreciation of a high quality post.

NEW REPORT HIGHLIGHTS GROWING INCOME INEQUALITY AND HOUSING CRISIS IN WINDSOR-ESSEX COUNTY

Windsor-Essex, ON – With a provincial election under way, a newly released report, Income Inequality and the Housing Crisis in Windsor-Essex County, reveals alarming trends in income disparity and housing affordability in the region. The report, a collaboration between five community organizations, underscores the urgent need for policy interventions to address rising economic inequality and its impact on housing accessibility.

Developed as a collaborative project between Assisted Living Southwestern Ontario (ALSO), Family Services Windsor-Essex (FSWE), Habitat for Humanity Windsor-Essex, South Essex Community Council (SECC), and the Welcome Centre Shelter for Women and Families, with research undertaken by Community Policy Solutions the report provides an in-depth analysis of income distribution and housing affordability challenges in Windsor-Essex.

Key Findings:

Windsor-Essex Among Canada’s Most Unequal Regions: The region ranks fifth in Canada for income inequality, trailing only Toronto, Calgary, Vancouver, and Hamilton.
Soaring Housing Costs: Since 2006, housing prices have surged by 150%, while median incomes have declined by 10% when adjusted for inflation.
Disproportionate Impact on Vulnerable Groups: Persons with disabilities, single mothers, newcomers, and low-income households face significant barriers to securing stable housing.
Investor-Owned Properties Increasing: 64% of condos and 12% of single-family homes in Windsor-Essex are owned by investors, driving up rental costs and exacerbating affordability and inequality issues.
Housing Affordability in Decline: Between 2015 and 2020, 149 neighbourhoods (Census Dissemination Areas) in Windsor-Essex became unaffordable to middle-income earners to purchase a new home.

https://preview.redd.it/96kor1bs84ke1.png?width=842&format=png&auto=webp&s=9bcf181850ad4d7b3aa83b0b7b48a9e02c6d619a

https://preview.redd.it/qazya2bs84ke1.png?width=852&format=png&auto=webp&s=17d5088f22df2723dc5c2d401cd4e28034abf182

A Call for Action

The report emphasizes the need for a multi-faceted approach to address these challenges, including:

Zoning and Planning Reforms to allow for more diverse and affordable housing options to be built at lower costs.
Innovative housing solutions like Community Land Trusts to keep land and housing permanently affordable.
Improved Social Assistance Rates to ensure the most vulnerable are able to afford housing in our community.
Adopt broader community wealth building strategies across our region by buying local, ensuring fair wages are being paid, access to public transportation services in all municipalities, and considering tangible community benefits when municipal or regional projects are advance.

“The findings are clear: Windsor-Essex can no longer rely on historically low housing costs to balance out lower income of residents. Growing inequality is pointing to the fact that many people in Windsor-Essex are now being left behind. Without immediate action, the affordability crisis will continue to push more residents into precarious housing situations,” said Frazier Fathers, report author and Lead Consultant at Community Policy Solutions.

The full report is available for download as are over a dozen maps that maps affordability and inequality at different income thresholds for the Windsor-Essex region.

Partner Perspectives: As part of the project each partner’s perspective on the topic of inequality and housing was explored deeper. Each of their perspectives provide a unique insight into this pressing issue and an important conversation about affordability and inequality. Each link below goes to a one pager focusing on this organization's perspective.

Assisted Living Southwestern Ontario

“For the people we support, we see the impacts of income inequality and housing affordability daily. Some of our clients are fortunate while others barely can keep a roof over their heads on ODSP forcing them into impossible choices. At the same time, it costs 300% more to retrofit a housing unit to make it accessible rather than build it from scratch. This forces higher prices on our clients than the average community member.”

Leigh Vachon, Executive Director, Assisted Living Southwestern Ontario.

Family Services Windsor Essex

“The housing crisis and growing income inequality in our region are complex and our community needs action. We need to have the space to innovate and try out new ideas and solutions. We need to explore ideas like Land Trusts and new strategic partnerships between organizations and government to leverage the limited resources we have available to move the needle on this crisis. We need more affordable housing.”

Ciara Holmes, Acting Executive Director, Family Services Windsor Essex

Habitat for Humanity Windsor-Essex

““This report makes it clear—income inequality is a growing issue in Windsor-Essex, and without action, more families will be shut out of homeownership and long-term financial stability. Homeownership is one of the most effective ways to break the cycle of poverty and build generational wealth, but rising costs and systemic barriers are making it increasingly out of reach. At Habitat for Humanity, we see firsthand how a stable, affordable home transforms lives. That’s why it’s critical for nonprofits to work together on research like this—to highlight the challenges, advocate for change, and push for policies that make homeownership and affordable housing a reality for more families in our region.”

South Essex Community Council

**“**As a multi-service agency operating in Essex County, we see the impacts of income inequality and housing affordability every day. These issues affect the physical and mental health of many of the people we serve. It affects their ability to search for employment. It affects a person’s ability to access healthy food. The impacts of income inequality and housing affordability are deep. In smaller communities, it is not just about housing, but the supports around housing. Are people making a living wage, can they afford groceries? Do they have reliable and affordable transportation access to find work or attend school? Without these and other supports, those that “have” will continue to prosper, while those that “have not” will continue to struggle.”

Carloyn Warkentin, Executive Director, South Essex Community Council

Welcome Centre Shelter for Women and Families

“As a shelter provider we see the direct impact of growing inequality and unaffordability in our community. Timelines for housing our clients have grown and data shows that women and families face a disproportionate impact of these crises. The need for transitional housing options continues to grow and without a spectrum of supports, keeping people with greatest needs will remain a challenge in our region.”

Lady Laforet, Executive Director, Welcome Centre Shelter for Women and Families

If you want to know more about this report or the data. Reach out to [email protected]

 

Hi all! Saw that the city I was born and raised around was not represented on the Canadian fediverse, so I thought I'd step up!

While this community is named after Windsor, all content and discussion pertaining to Essex County is welcomed here. I myself am actually from Amherstburg.

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