March 2008

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UTNE Magazine, in many ways the godfather of the American alternative press, recently profiled our latest gender issue in their online “From the Stacks” feature:

Briarpatch magazine sheds its Canadian cocoon to burst into borderless territory—“life beyond the sexual binary”—in its gender-themed March-April issue. Becky Ellis casts off home-schooling stereotypes in a discussion of feminist home-schooling, describing the progressive “community-based” learning style she’s adopted and exploring approaches favored by other progressive home-schoolers. Calvin Sandborn’s essay bombards the reader with a long list of harms traditional masculinity wreaks upon men, provocatively illustrated by Daryl Vocat’s series of found and manipulated Boy Scout drawings. And Chanelle Gallant, founder of the Feminist Porn Awards, sasses about feminism, anti-racism, and porn in a quick Q&A. “I can’t believe that feminism wasted a whole decade fighting about porn instead of fighting about things like child care and reproductive justice,” she says. “I mean, really?”

The attention is nice, and much appreciated, though we can’t help but roll our eyes at the irony of an American magazine — any American magazine — saying a Canadian magazine has been in a “Canadian cocoon.”

I’m curious: by that do they mean we don’t spend enough time writing about Obama vs. Hillary?

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On Mar. 26, when he confirmed that the Saskatchewan Party government would not honour a previous funding commitment made by the former NDP government of $8 million for the Station 20 West mixed-use development in Saskatoon, Finance Minster Rod Gantefoer said when his new government took a look at the project, “there were a number of problems.”

He managed to cite only one, though, and it turned out to be completely wrong.

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via Making the Links Radio

 

A small claims court today heard that Percy Schmeiser and Monsanto had reached a settlement on Percy Schmeiser’s claim.

 

The terms of the settlement were  a major victory for Percy, and farmers fighting the power of large agri-business interests.

 

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NOTICE: CANADA AND QUEBEC ARE ORCHESTRATING A COUP USING THE SQ TO REPLACE OUR CUSTOMARY CHIEF AND COUNCIL WITH A DISSIDENT GROUP IN ORDER TO GET OUT OF SIGNED AGREEMENTS WITH OUR FIRST NATIONUrgent Request-March 13, 2008

CALL FOR SUPPORT

We are known as the Algonquins of Barriere Lake (also known by our Algonquin name, “Mitchikanibikok Inik”) we are a First Nation community of approximately 500 people, situated in the province of Quebec, 3 hours drive north of Ottawa, Canada.

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Briarpatch Magazine invites contributions on any topic for our unthemed August 2008 issue. We are looking for feature articles, provocative essays, investigative reportage, interviews, profiles, news briefs, reviews, poetry, humour, and artwork that explores issues of interest to progressive Canadians.

Possible topics could include just about anything. Surprise us.

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The B-List is your monthly media supplement of 7 recommended readings from beyond the Briarpatch.


1. The Next Slum: Suburbia?

By Christopher B. Leinberger
Atlantic Monthly
March 2008

“A structural change is under way in the housing market—a major shift in the way many Americans want to live and work. It has shaped the current downturn, steering some of the worst problems away from the cities and toward the suburban fringes. And its effects will be felt more strongly, and more broadly, as the years pass. Its ultimate impact on the suburbs, and the cities, will be profound.”

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200803/subprime

2. Going Underground: Paul Stamets On The Vast, Intelligent Network Beneath Our Feet

By Derrick Jensen
Sun Magazine
February 2008

“We evolved from fungi. We took an overground route. The fungi took the route of producing these underground networks that are highly resilient and extremely adaptive: if you disturb a mycelial network, it just regrows. It might even benefit from the disturbance. I have long proposed that mycelia are the earth’s ‘natural Internet.’”

http://www.thesunmagazine.org/issues/386/going_underground?page=1

3. The Violence of Capital: A Review of The Shock Doctrine

By Michael Hardt
New Left Review
November/December 2007

“Is disaster capitalism only an aberration, a moment of excess that has distorted a more virtuous form of capital or is it, in fact, the core of contemporary capital itself? Klein insists at several points in the book that it is the former, but her theoretical argument points more strongly toward the latter.”

http://auto_sol.tao.ca/node/2976

4. Rethinking political parties: Rethinking leadership, knowledge, & power

By Hilary Wainwright
Red Pepper (UK)
February-March 2008

The membership and influence of political parties is declining throughout the western world, and most quickly in Britain. Hilary Wainwright examines the role of the party in transformative politics and asks how the left might reimagine this crucial instrument of political change.

http://www.redpepper.org.uk/article1017.html

5. NAFTA and Canada’s Energy Security

By Richard Heinberg
Energy Bulletin
February 7, 2008

“Canada’s energy security and global climate security are both held hostage by a provision within a trade agreement—a provision that is unique in all of the world’s treaties. Canada has every reason to repudiate the proportionality clause, and to do so unilaterally and immediately.”

http://www.energybulletin.net/40035.html

6. In Defence of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto (Excerpt)

By Michael Pollan
Penguin, 2008

“Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants. That, more or less, is the short answer to the supposedly incredibly complicated and confusing question of what we humans should eat in order to be maximally healthy.”

http://www.michaelpollan.com/in_defense_excerpt.pdf

Plus two chilling stories on the global impact of rising food and energy prices:

Feed the world? We are fighting a losing battle, UN admits (The Guardian)

Why the price of peak oil is famine (The Telegraph)

7. And now for something completely different: Marxist sock puppets!

Monochrom
Boing Boing TV
February 15, 2008

“Web 2.0 meets Marxist (Foucaultian?) economic theory in the latest video hijinks from Austrian subversive art collective monochrom. Meet an online porn monster (“iPhone? noooom nom nom nom”) and learn how Google-y eyed neo-liberalism screws over the proletariat in ‘Kiki, Bubu, and the Shift.’”

http://www.boingboing.net/2008/02/15/boing-boing-tv-monoc-1.html


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This month’s B-List compiled by Dave Oswald MitchellPlease support the B-List by subscribing to Briarpatch Magazine.

Illustration by Candace Sepulis

In this issue, Briarpatch embarks on a decidedly anti-essentialist exploration of gender politics, covering everything from feminist homeschooling to feminist porn to partiarchy’s harmful effects on men’s health. Grounding our analysis in a revolutionary feminist approach that seeks to involve people from across the gender spectrum in this discussion, this issue challenges all our readers to take responsibility for their gender politics.

To subscribe or order a copy of this issue, call 1-866-431-5777 or visit our secure online shop.

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By Dave Oswald Mitchell
Briarpatch Magazine
March/April 2008

Planning and producing the gender issue each year has to be one of the most challenging and most enjoyable parts of my job. Of course, Briarpatch always seeks to connect theory and practice in its coverage, but in my experience, there is no issue that is at once so theoretical and so practical, so simultaneously personal and political, as gender. Grappling with that complexity is what I find so challenging and so enjoyable.

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Feminist home-schoolers are creating new ways of living and learning

 

By Becky Ellis
Briarpatch Magazine
March/April 2008

Illustration by Sylvia Nickerson

I am a feminist. In fact, most people who know me would say that feminism informs practically everything I do: what I read, how I relate to people, what forms of political action I undertake-everything, some might say, except my decision to home-school my children.

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By Barbara Barker & Tyler McCreary
Briarpatch Magazine
March/April 2008

 

In June 2007, following generations of non-recognition, and 16 years of intensely personal battles with bureaucrats, governments, and the justice system, Sharon McIvor, a member of the Lower Nicola First Nation, successfully challenged sex discrimination in the Indian Act in British Columbia’s Supreme Court.

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