Facebook has become hugely popular in Newfoundland and Labrador and, not surprisingly, some creative and enterprising fellow came up with a running joke - these days called a meme - featuring a fellow in a sou'wester.
You will find it called "newfie word of the day". The text that goes with the picture involves a joke based on some mispronunciation of a standard English word or phrase and out of that comes some sort of joke.
The one above is an example. There are dozens more. The thing is quite popular as you can tell by searching the Internet for "newfie word of the day".
Memorial University's political scientist slash sociologist Jamie Baker has discovered that the guy in the picture isn't a Newfoundlander. He's actually Czech. The picture came from a post on a Northern Peninsula blog by cabinet minister Christopher Mitchelmore. It's about a Screech-in ceremony in the Czech republic that Mitchelmore ran during a visit there on one of his numerous globe-trotting ventures.
Baker posted the link on Facebook and asked folks to give them their thoughts. Feel free to do so by sending him an email: jbaker at mun dot ca. Baker's also written about about nationalism and racism, if this interests you. He got some notoriety last week not for this "newfie" meme story but for one on a paper he wrote about young people's attitudes to the word "newfie." He interviewed 30 university students and found that among the young people, the word is either an insult or no big thing. You can find a CBC story about it, one from Radio Canada, and one from NTV.
The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
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23 May 2017
15 May 2017
The unbroken machine #nlpoli
The best little book on Canadian politics and government in a long time.
Starting with the basics, Dale Smith describes how the Canadian political system works and why things are like they are. The language is plain and that makes the idea understandable for as wide an audience as possible.
Every politician, pundit, and plumber should have a dog-eared copy of The unbroken machine close at hand and check it before speaking about any current issue in Canadian politics. Smith's focus is on the federal system but the basic ideas - responsible government, the role of the Crown and so on - apply in the provincial sphere as well.
Available in paperback, pdf, and ebook editions from your local bookseller or online from Dundurn Press.
Starting with the basics, Dale Smith describes how the Canadian political system works and why things are like they are. The language is plain and that makes the idea understandable for as wide an audience as possible.
Every politician, pundit, and plumber should have a dog-eared copy of The unbroken machine close at hand and check it before speaking about any current issue in Canadian politics. Smith's focus is on the federal system but the basic ideas - responsible government, the role of the Crown and so on - apply in the provincial sphere as well.
Available in paperback, pdf, and ebook editions from your local bookseller or online from Dundurn Press.
-srbp-
12 May 2017
Junk reporting of medical research
The Telegraph is a major conventional newspaper in the United Kingdom.
And it spreads fake news.
There's nothing surprising in that. Most conventional news organisations produce some amount of pure nonsense in the course of a year. The crap content level varies from outlet to outlet and the people who work hard in pretty well every conventional news outlet also work diligently to get stories right.
But excrement seeps through.
It's a Law of Averages thing.
Anyway...
And it spreads fake news.
There's nothing surprising in that. Most conventional news organisations produce some amount of pure nonsense in the course of a year. The crap content level varies from outlet to outlet and the people who work hard in pretty well every conventional news outlet also work diligently to get stories right.
But excrement seeps through.
It's a Law of Averages thing.
Anyway...