Tony Hoar shared his skills for good of all
Re: 鈥淚ndomitable spirit, inventor, Tour de France cult figure,鈥 Oct. 9.
Many street people will mourn the loss of Tony Hoar. When he offered his expertise to the Committee to End Homelessness, we realized that he was a gem.
He didn鈥檛 just invent or fix up bikes. He listened carefully to what every individual needed 鈥 just a ride or transport for all his or her possessions.
He devised ways to move folks with disabilities or created carriers that turned into beds at night.
Everything was a challenge to him, and he involved the client in the process so that both learned together. Together, they solved problems.
What a joy to know somebody who cared and shared his expertise for the good of all of us. He will be missed by hundreds.
Alison Acker
Victoria
Dual citizenship for聽politicians
Recent events have revealed Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer鈥檚 dual Canadian and American citizenship.
For a politician, this can be very problematic. Conflicting laws and policies between governments can affect allegiances and decisions.
U.S. laws, for example, require American companies to share whatever medical information the government demands, even though it might conflict with Canadian provincial and federal privacy laws.
In conflicting international situations, an American may, by law, be required to adhere to certain policies that may conflict with Canadian policies, for example in areas such as taxation, immigration, embargoes (ie. trade and travel with and to Cuba) and whistleblowing.
A Canadian parliamentarian, and especially a prime minister, must have unrestricted Canadian allegiance as a first priority.
Gil Roy
Parksville
Tree-planting cost closer to $2 each
Re. 鈥淭he cost to plant 10 billion trees,鈥 letter, Oct. 8.
As a retired tree-planting contractor I can tell you it costs nowhere near $106 per tree to plant a tree. Perhaps $2 per tree.
If I received $106 per tree, I would be living in the lap of luxury! Great idea, Elizabeth May!
David Vernon
Oak Bay
Cutting down on meat reduces methane
Re: 鈥淏laming meat-eating for so many things,鈥 letter Oct. 6.
The writer attacks Dr. David Jenkins鈥 recommendation for people to reduce their meat consumption to help confront our climate crisis as 鈥減ropaganda鈥 and not 鈥渁ctual science.鈥
But the reality is that scientists on the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have called for 鈥減eople in rich countries to consume less meat鈥 鈥 citing estimates that meat production accounts for nearly a fifth of global greenhouse-gas emissions. Indeed, cows emit methane, which is 23 times as destructive as carbon dioxide as a global-warming agent.
The fact that the government of Brazil is encouraging cattle producers to burn down the Amazon rainforest should be enough to get our attention. Enough, hopefully to spur citizens to take a meat-free day, on the road to further reductions in meat-eating.
Maybe it鈥檚 time to heed our parents鈥 advice to 鈥渆at our veggies鈥 in the spirit of dietary diversity and as an important ingredient in helping to save the planet.
Ira Shorr
Victoria
$500,000 won鈥檛 fix downtown鈥檚 problems
You can spend $500,000 on Christmas decorations, but that鈥檚 still not going to get people downtown that are fed up with the bike lanes, the lack of parking, street people and druggies, filth and traffic.
Helps and her 鈥渃ouncil鈥 circus have turned downtown into a nightmare and people have just found alternatives. Enjoy 鈥 we鈥檒l stay in Saanich.
Bob Gracie
Saanich
Stop worshipping a聽figurehead
Re: 鈥淎 royal kerfuffle in Sidney,鈥 Oct.聽5.
It sounds like Sidney has a crisis that rivals Victoria鈥檚 after the removal of the Sir John A. Macdonald statue.
Those tea-sipping, gin-swilling tweedheads have their knickers in a knot over a missing portrait of the Queen.
Maybe it鈥檚 being held in the same storage facility as the Sir John A. statue. Stranger things have happened.
Kudos to Mayor Cliff McNeil-Smith and Coun. Peter Wainwright for not swearing allegiance to the Queen in the first place.
In the words of the late, great poet Al Purdy, a one-time citizen of Sidney:
鈥渢his place is where I stand, where all my mistakes were made,
when I grew awkwardly and
and I knew what I was, that is Canadian or Canadien 鈥
but French no longer, nor are we any longer English.鈥
She is a figurehead. So stop worshipping her and the rest of the Royal Family.
Robert Dunn
Victoria
Fewer guns mean聽fewer deaths
Re: 鈥 鈥楢ssault rifles鈥 cause very few deaths,鈥 letter, Oct. 6.
The letter-writer questioned the Liberals鈥 promise to ban the AR15 assault rifle, and wrote: 鈥淭he actual number of firearms deaths after taking out suicides is 30 per cent of overall deaths.鈥
It is unreasonable to 鈥渢ake out suicides.鈥 In the past decade, there have been about 4,000 suicides a year, according to Statistics sa国际传媒. About 16 per cent were by firearm. Most of the firearms used were long guns, not handguns. The letter-writer did not mention injuries and deaths caused by accidental discharge of a firearm.
I am a medical doctor. Fortunately, I have not had to treat a gunshot victim.
In a social situation, I met a young man who had accidentally killed his brother. Their parents had an argument. The woman loaded a long gun.
Later, the two boys found the gun. One of them pointed the gun at the other, said 鈥淚鈥檓 going to shoot you鈥 and pulled the trigger.
Guns kill. Limiting the availability of guns will reduce deaths.
Robert Shepherd, MD
Saanich
Single-use plastics must be regulated
Re: 鈥淭eens want province to tackle 鈥榯hrow-away plastic economy,鈥 鈥 Oct. 8.
Thanks to students Anastasia Castro and Charlotte Brady for the great work they are doing. Now it鈥檚 up to us 鈥渙ld folks鈥 to follow their lead.
I will write to my MP to support regulation of single-use plastics. Let us not continue this 鈥渢hrow-away plastic economy鈥 that is doing so much damage to our environment. It鈥檚 a small step, but we must insist our government regulate single-use plastics.
Grethe Floyd
Victoria
Bridge closures only served to antagonize
Across sa国际传媒, demonstrators closed many bridges in many cities, protesting the so-called climate emergency.
In the end, the demonstrators were denying access to those workers who were trying to get home after a day鈥檚 work.
It resulted in thousands of cars idling, burning gas and creating pollution. Nothing constructive was achieved by this eco-bullying except to antagonize honest people who were only trying to get home.
Roger Cyr
Victoria
Bringing peace to our聽neighbourhoods
Re: 鈥淧ut down weapons that we have raised against our planet,鈥 comment, Oct. 6
This article is warmly and sensibly engaging. Were Saanich to outlaw or restrict leaf blowers, especially their own, it would bring peace to many neighbourhoods and reduce stupidity and our carbon footprint. The call of the article was to activate us all.
Perhaps the sa国际传媒 could heed the call by dedicating comment pieces and letters to the editor on Saturdays to our planet.
Michael A. Ross
Saanich
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