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bike memorial

This morning a group of about ten cyclists held a memorial (see post below). The cyclist who was killed was a 69-year-old Chinese lady who lived with her sister near the Queensway, a divided, high speed, arterial road. Every day, the two sisters would ride across the busy street and down to the lakeshore on the other side. The older sister was slower, so she would leave about 15 minutes earlier. Last week she was struck and killed and her sister, catching up, came upon the scene.

When we arrived this morning, the sister, a gregarious little spitfire of a woman, was already there with her bicycle. There were about eight neighbours as well, everyone with flowers and tears. Normally we would take the street and block a lane of traffic for a minute of silence, but the sister was calling the shots and asked us to put all our bikes together on the sidewalk. I understand this impulse. Streets full of moving cars often seem inviolable, even when they have recently interrupted your life by taking away a loved one. It takes experience to know and remember that breaking into traffic flow is surprisingly easy, and claiming street space, even temporarily, is empowering.

We stood together on the corner with our sad banner ("a cyclist was killed here last week"), and held a minute of silence, watching the cars whizz by. Then the sister asked me if I would put my flowers on the fence, across the two lanes of speeding traffic. Of course I agreed, eager to violate that damned street. A few of us crossed and stood in the far traffic lane, tying up flowers to the fence. Once we had broken the seal, the sister and neighbours struck out into the road as well! We held up the banner to block the lane and diverted traffic around the scene. The mourners took their time, standing on the road to pin up flowers. The sister, crying openly now, put out candles and lit a little shrine. I felt very glad to be there, helping provide a little pocket of temporary safety, on this otherwise fatally fast street, so that a woman could mourn her sister on the spot where she died.

Afterwards we were all invited back to the apartment where the sisters lived nearby, and were served wheat cookies in the shape of tiny pigs that the cyclist had baked before she was killed by cars.

- sally mckay 11-05-2004 1:02 am [link] [3 comments]


memorial drawing One week following the death of a 69-year-old cyclist, Toronto cyclists will ride to the site of the fatality to pay their respects to a fellow cyclist. Flowers will be left at the site to mark the death and a period of silent reflection will be observed.

When: Thursday, November 04 at 8:00 a.m.

Where: The Queensway and Southport

Meet: Cyclists will gather at the south entrance to Trinity Bellwoods Park (Queen and Strachan) at 7:30 and ride to the site together. A second rendezvous point will be the corner of Queen and Roncesvalles at 7:50 a.m.

There will be a brief ceremony of solidarity and respect at the Queensway and Southport at 8:00 a.m.

www.respect.to

- sally mckay 11-03-2004 11:54 pm [link] [add a comment]


Excerpt from Ken Wiwa's "Look Out: There's a Flu Under Every Bush," from Saturday's Globe and Mail:
... [T]here is a school of thought that hopes Mr. Bush gets a second term, and I've already enrolled in that program.

I don't know whether it is my immune system's defensive reaction to Bush flu -- the shiver one feels at the thought of opening the papers to front-page pictures of a smiling George W. on Wednesday morning -- but I have already rationalized a Bush second term as serving my global interests. I've always subscribed to the notion that an empire is at its most vulnerable at the height of its power.

It is an immutable law of nature that condemns the powerful to overweening ambition: Think of the Roman Empire, Napoleon, Conrad Black and the New York Yankees. What with that monstrous budget deficit midwifing the economic miracle of a jobless recovery, the loud commitment to policing the world at any cost, and a seemingly implacable addiction to market forces in every public sector from education to health care -- another four years of Bush flu may be tough medicine. But it might, just might, weaken his country and make the rest of us stronger.

On the other hand, John Kerry might, just might, pull America from the brink of self-destruction -- that is, if he succeeds in balancing the budget at the same time as extending the reach of social programs. He just might succeed in getting the rest of the world to help America police the world, to continue to float America's trillion-dollar debt, to pull us all out of our irrational anti-American senses and persuade us that if America sneezes, we might all catch a cold.

Whatever the outcome, I'm going to get myself a flu jab.


- sally mckay 11-03-2004 6:00 pm [link] [add a comment]



spacecats2
- sally mckay 11-02-2004 6:36 pm [link] [14 comments]


mosh

link to Eminem's Mosh, (thanks Steve)

- sally mckay 10-29-2004 6:14 pm [link] [3 comments]


excerpt from Harold Meyerson, LA Weekly (thanks SB)

If John Kerry is elected next Tuesday, the tsunami of volunteer activity within the independent groups will be in large part responsible. Whether this tsunami can be bottled — whether this coalition will take on a permanent life of its own, become an enduring progressive presence in American politics — is a question of resources, opportunity, Zeitgeist and even law (the legal status of the 527s may be under attack if Bush wins). But the leaders of progressive organizations, Democratic elected officials, and the hundreds of thousands of phone bankers and precinct walkers, each for their own reasons, want the outpouring of 2004 to become a fixture of American politics. “Progressives have been waiting for decades for a citizen-based movement to happen,” says Ed Cyr. “One that’s independent of the party, that’s integrated, that’s effective.”

“This is it,” says Cyr. “It’s happened.”

- sally mckay 10-29-2004 6:13 pm [link] [add a comment]