Trevin Chow

Microsoft Group Program Manager and Seattle Photographer

Archive for the ‘canada’ tag

B.C. goes green

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It’s stuff like this that makes me proud to be both Canadian and from British Columbia.

The premier of British Columbia wanted to bring coal-burning plants and offshore oil rigs to this lush province, so environmental groups were ready for a fight as he prepared his government’s annual policy speech last month.

They were stunned when Premier Gordon Campbell delivered a list of green promises that surpassed their most ambitious dreams.

He would not only stop the growth in greenhouse gases in the province, he said, but also slash them by one-third. He would gut the coal-plant plans. Embrace wind power. Lease hybrid cars for the government. Squelch environmental pollution by the powerful oil and gas industry. Toughen car-emission regulations.

His plans would make British Columbia what The Globe and Mail newspaper called “the continent’s greenest spot.” Campbell also proposed an enterprising alliance with California to create a Pacific Coast bloc of states and provinces to tackle climate change without waiting for action from their federal governments.

“If you wait for a whole continent to come together, sometimes it takes too long,” Campbell said Friday in Santa Monica, Calif., where he met with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to plot joint action.

The premier’s embrace of global-warming action reflects the growing political potency of the issue and illustrates how some local governments are shunning the go-slow approach of federal administrations in Washington and Ottawa.

We were in disbelief. This seemed to come right out of the blue,” said Lisa Matthaus, a campaign director for the Sierra Club’s British Columbia chapter. Not only were Campbell’s greenhouse-gas pledges ambitious with concrete goals, she said, but “they have been made in a very public way. B.C. is leading North America right now.”

Written by Trevin

March 19th, 2007 at 8:42 pm

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Meaning of Canadian Thanksgiving

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Time to educate my American friends on the topic of Canadian Thanksgiving.  Every fall, I always get asked:

  1. Why is Canadian Thanksgiving so far in advance of the American Thanksgiving?
  2. Why relationship is there between Canada and the pilgrims that settled/invaded the US?

Canadian Thanksgiving does not celebrate the pilgrims in any way!  In fact, it’s origin is traced back to 1576, where the English Pirate Explorer Martin Frobisher failed to find a northern passage to the Orient.  Instead, he landed near Greenland and mistakingly mistook the Inuits that greeted him for Asians.  Martin Froshiber held a celebration in Newfoundland to give thanks for a safe journey and for an abundant supply of food.  This was the first Canadian Thanksgiving.  Historians argue whether the date was in 1576 or 1578, but whatever… you get the gist of it.

So you’re probably asking yourself, “Trevin, if Canadian and American thanksgiving are unrelated, why do they share the same customs?”.  The reason is that during the American Revolution, Americans who were still loyal to England fled moved to Canada.  Along with their “move”, they brought along their American thanksgiving customs and practices. Thank god, because I really like pumpkin pie!

The actual day that Thanksgiving was celebrated changed quite a bit throughout history, but it wasn’t until 1957 that Canadian Parliament officially declared that Thanksgiving was to be celebrated on the second monday in October.

This concludes today’s lesson in history with Professor Trevin Chow. Good night.

Written by Trevin

October 9th, 2005 at 1:20 am

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