Archives for: November 2008
The CULT of THE PRINTING PRESS
By pascal on Nov 24, 2008 | In Secret Worlds of James Bay
James Bay Cultural Blog #7
- - The Cult of the Printing Press - -

fig.7 - The McLuhan is the Message.
Many Christians are no better than “printing-press enthusiasts”-- and James Bay has seen her fair share of these phonies & false religionists. It is only a very feeble brain that mistakes Official Words for Gods... or who imagines Page Numbers and Old Printed Fables are the heart of the genuine religious enterprise.
Strong words?
Constructing the BC Legislature: The Architect
By joel on Nov 17, 2008 | In History

Francis Mawson Rattenbury, the architect who built British Columbia's provincial legislature, has become an integral part of the story that Victoria tells about itself. Not even considering the influence he has had on the appearence of our city, perhaps no other person has provided nearly so much material for the pedi-cab drivers, tour bus drivers, horse carriage operators, and others who make their living interpreting Victoria's history for visitors. Where would our precious tourism industry be without Mr. Rattenbury?
NO GODS NO MASTERS
By pascal on Nov 10, 2008 | In Secret Worlds of James Bay
- - James Bay Culture Blog #6 - -
Blasphemy.
Obscene.
No other words can describe the kind of monster who attacks our sanctuaries of Faith! The churches of James Bay are under attack from vile anarchists and agents of depravity.
For example:
Do you know that adorable little Church down at the corner of Niagara & Medana street? It's called the “Saint James Mission of Christ Church Cathedral.” Very cute, historical little building that conjures up the hobbit-like ideals of Anglo-Catholicism. Although, of course, you do not have to be a member of this one particular sect in order to fully appreciate the fact that these “anglicans” are among the ancestor-tribes of our current Victoria community.
That's why I was SHOCKED to see this place desecrated by a crude smear of filth! For most of 2008 A.D. that sidewalk out front has displayed: NO GODS, NO MASTERS. And it has one of those little rebellion circles around the letter “a.”
“Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world...”
-W. B. Yeats

fig. 6 : A split-screen of feminist icon Magaret Sanger -- & the Saint James Mission.
Of course, I could be overreacting.
Just a little. Maybe.
I'm so darn passionate about the spirit of our region that I get carried away. James Bay takes possession of me -- quite literally. But I eventually calmed down and started, as usual for my peculiar temperament, to become deeply intrigued by the situation. With enough deep feeling you cannot help but become devoted to the many levels of meaning in James Bay.
My own curiosity began to grow. It started to throb with interest, and so I became slowly willing to let go of my usual opinion about public graffiti. You know, I even started to take a strange pleasure in the juxtaposition of viewpoints that was involved. Church vs. Anarchists.
In fact, I reasoned, there is no better source of vibrant cultural energy than a public-subliminal conflict of Value Systems. Such “stand-offs,” which pit perspectives against each other, have the power to open a portal to the hidden soul of a community.
Listen, “No Gods, No Masters” was the provocative motto used by a woman named Margaret Sanger. It was the slogan of a magazine that Sanger published starting in 1914, called The Woman Rebel. Her articles promoted a radical feminist-libertarian position that freaked out conservative dogmatists. Actually, the U. S. Postal Service banned these magazines. They were reactionary against Sanger's shameless advocacy for Women's Rights, the decriminalization of abortion & sex-education for children.
Perhaps... the person responsible for the graffiti was an admirer of this Sanger. Quite possibly, this pavement scribble was an act of madly drunken passion on behalf of an elderly, but virile, James Bay lady who had stumbled out into the cool night air to vent her political idealism on cement sidewalk and let “those damn punk kids” take the blame.
That's probably what happened.
In order to get to the bottom of all this business, I realized, we would have to try visualising this conflict in the form of a buxom, all-female, mud-wrestling competition and this blog is your ticket to the show!
Let's get READY TO RUMBLE:
ANNOUNCER: “In the left corner (the corner of Niagara Street & Medana), weighing in at a colossal 2000 pounds, AND sporting a hot pink “Jesus Still Cares!” bikini-top is the Virgin Mother of Western Culture: the CHRISTIAN CHURCH! Her opponent, dressed tonight in a mauve, one-piece, 1920's bathing suit is arch-Feminist crusader and staunch anti-religionist MARGARET SANGER...
This is what I was imagining. It filled the expanse of my mind as I was rounding the corner of Medana street to discover – the battle was already over! The Church made a pre-emptive strike by spray-painting over the words with industrial grey paint. Another bold aesthetic choice by the Christians! Sorry, Magaret. The war is finished. Your message, and the really fascinating “stand-off” that it represented, have been suppressed by agents of the Church. Very sinister stuff.
So now the ONLY PLACE in the world where the truth still exists -- about this ground-zero authentic cultural engagement – is the one source which had the foresight to investigate and document the situation:
This blog.
You're welcome.

Value's Test: Do James Bay's Churches still reflect James Bay's Ideals?
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Rental Crunch – feles non grata
By reed on Nov 3, 2008 | In Community Affairs
Link: http://victoria.tc.ca/~reed
The fact that a rental crunch exists in Victoria is not news. At a vacancy rate of approximately 0.3% we have earned the dubious distinction of having the tightest rental market in Canada. According to CMHC, and excluding vacancies in secondary suites, the CRD’s rental stock as of April 2008 stands at 23,367 units. In the Saturday, October 25, 2008 edition of the Times Colonist, there were 66 unfurnished apartment vacancies advertised (0.28%): of these, 45 (68%) specifically prohibited pets; 7 (11%) would consider a small pet; 14 (21%) did not specify whether or not pets were accepted. It is an unfortunate reality that in a virtually stagnant rental market, apartment seekers who happen to be pet guardians are differentially impacted.
According to the BCSPCA, 450 cats and dogs arrive annually at the Victoria SPCA shelter as a direct result of “no pets” clauses incorporated into standard leases. In BC, “more than 2,500 companion pets have, to date, been surrendered as a result of their guardians being unable to find housing that allows pets.”
A poll conducted for the BCSPCA by McIntyre and Mustel Research in 2002 found that 79% of BC residents are in favour of legislation that allows pet guardians the right to keep companion animals. Legislated approaches have been implemented in Ontario and New York City, where blanket “no pets” policies have been quashed. However, Individual landlords in Ontario still retain the right to restrict tenancy on the basis of pets. Of the 800,000 annual landlord-tenant disputes in Ontario after the “Fluffy Law” was passed in 1990, for example, only 1% of them were pet related.
Prior to 2004, the Residential Tenancy Act in BC (RTA) was much more flexible, allowing landlords the option to specify pet-related terms in their leases. However, when the RTA was amended in 2004 to allow pet deposits as a means to encourage more landlords to accept pets, it also, and perhaps inadvertently, clarified a landlord’s right to deny pets in rental units.
A number of non-legislated approaches have been successful, including the San Francisco SPCA Open Door program which educates landlords and tenants, provides mediation, and guarantees up to $5,000 against pet damage caused by a pet adopted from the SPCA. During the program’s many years of operation, no landlord has made a claim against the fund, and the percentage of “pet friendly” apartments has increased to 57% from 11%.
Pet insurance is also an option. In addition to the pet damage deposit of up to 50% of the monthly rent, additional third party property damage insurance is available, usually providing an additional $700 of coverage for $14.95 per month. It may also be possible to establish a third party escrow account. Pet resumes are a must.
The benefits of sharing one’s home with a companion pet are numerous and well documented. These benefits include reduced anxiety and depression among seniors, assisting children with the development of language skills, responsibility and self-esteem, and reduced health care costs. And according to the BCSPCA, tenants in pet-friendly units stay longer, averaging 46 months compared to 18 months for those in units that don’t allow pets.
Balancing the wants of responsible pet guardians seeking rental accommodation with the rights of property owners, those suffering from allergies, and those who for any other reason do not want to live in an apartment that accepts pets, is an extremely difficult task.
Property owners have a number of very legitimate concerns that include excrement management, destruction of property, noise, policing and enforcement, odours, aggressive behaviour, fleas and allergens. The issue of allergens, proteins that can trigger an allergic reaction that stimulates the production of histamine, is particularly difficult to address, since containing allergens to a specific suite in a multi-unit residential dwelling is impossible due to cross-migration associated with the ventilation of suites and common areas. Cat dander, which is typically 0.1 microns in size, can remain in the air, on furniture and in carpets for up to six months after the cat is removed. The only effective way to combat this is by using an air purification system that has an ionizer and HEPA filter combined.
Some of the blame for our current rental housing crisis can be directed at the federal government, who has been reluctant to amend changes to the Income Tax Act (1972) which effectively capped construction of new rental stock by categorizing apartment buildings as “passive” businesses, as they usually have fewer than five employees. By doing so, Revenue Canada has removed any incentive to reinvest in new projects, as property owners are required to take an immediate tax hit on the appreciation of their property value when they sell, while condominium and hotel developers, on the other hand, can rollover capital gains. There are a host of other factors that stifle construction such as no GST rebate for builders, inflated labour and construction costs, rent controls, and lack of “tax holidays” for apartment builders: The bottom line is that until it becomes economically feasible to build a rental apartment, it won’t happen any time soon.
In the James Bay and local area, pet-friendly apartments are located at:
121 Menzies Street
417 Superior Street
1233 Fairfield Road
Swiftsure Apartments, Rithet Street
101, 103, 105 Menzies Street
References
BCSPCA: http://www.spca.bc.ca
Pet Care Insurance: http://www.petcareinsurance.com
CMHC: http://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/
The Tyee: http://www.thetyee.ca
Youmens, Jason. Nowhere to Go http://mondaymag.com/articles/entry/nowhere-to-go/
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