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Clan prepares for NCAA Nationals in three sports

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WEB-wrestling-Mark Burnham

SFU aims for success on the mat, in the pool, and on the track

By Jade Richardson
Photos by Mark Burnham

In December of 2012 the Clan men’s soccer team made history as the first International school to compete for a National Collegiate Athletic Association title. They would make the final four, ultimately falling short of the championship game, but solidifying themselves as a powerhouse within the association.

Now, SFU is preparing to send their next round of national contenders to Birmingham, Alabama, where men’s wrestling, women’s swimming and women’s indoor track and field athletes compete simultaneously in an NCAA championships weekend.

This will be another historic weekend for Simon Fraser as the five runners and six swimmers will represent the first women from an International institution to compete in an NCAA championship, much like the soccer team before them.

All of the Clan teams have an excellent chance of performing well in Alabama, as SFU boasts some top seeds for each sport.

In the pool, swimmers Carmen Nam, Jordyn Konrad, Mariya Chekanovych, Kristine Lawson, Alexandria Schofield and Nicole Cossey will be representing the Clan in 15 individual events and two relays.

Freshman standout Chekonovych boasts the top ranking in both the 100-yard and 200-yard breaststroke events, while Nam is ranked eighth in the 400-yard I’m and ninth in the 200-yard butterfly.

As a team the Clan also hold the second fastest time in the 400-yard medley relay heading into the championships, and as of Feb. 18, the team is ranked 10th nationally.

The women’s track and field team is expected to succeed at their championships as well, as the five-woman team of Helen Crofts, Michaela Kane, Sarah Sawatzky, Lindsey Butterworth and Chantel Desch prepares to make the trek to Alabama to represent Canada and Simon Fraser.

Crofts has posted the fastest seed time in the 800-metres, and has led the field since her very first race of the season, while teammates Butterworth, Kane, and Sawatzky are ranked ninth, 10th, and 11th in that same event. Crofts is a two-time NAIA champion in the 800-metres from 2010 and 2011, and will be looking for her first national title in the NCAA.

“I have been looking forward to racing in an NCAA championship ever since the transition process first began,” explained Crofts. “Now we are here, and although it won’t be easy, I feel like it is absolutely possible for our team to come out with a win in the 800-metres and the distance medley relay.”
The Clan hold the second-fastest time in the aforementioned DMR, trailing only the University of Mary as they head into the competition, and the women are hoping to make a race of it as they take on the national leaders head-to-head.

Men’s wrestling will be sending their smallest and largest two athletes to their championships as 125-pound Skylor Davis and 285-pound Sunny Dhinsa prepare for their first NCAA wrestling competition.

Dhinsa placed second at the West regional qualifiers, while Davis placed fourth, punching their tickets to Birmingham. His defeat in the finals marked Dhinsa’s only loss in his 20-match season, so he will be looking for redemption against his first competitor in the national tournament. Davis boasts an impressive 20–4 record this season.

A win in any event would mark the first NCAA victory by an athlete from an international institution, a fact not lost on the 13 SFU athletes heading to Alabama.

“Coming into any event ranked first puts pressure on you knowing that everyone is out to beat you,” continued Crofts. “But the possibility of having an opportunity to give SFU their first NCAA national champion just adds to the excitement!”
The three championships run from March 6–9, and results will be available at athletics.sfu.ca at the end of each day.

Reducing salt could save lives: study

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By Christina Charania
Photo by Vaikunthe Banerjee

A study organized by researchers at Simon Fraser University, Harvard Medical School, and the University of California San Francisco quantifies the benefit of a reduced sodium diet. The research found that America-wide sodium cuts could prevent a significant portion of the population from dying prematurely.
“We had been invited by the US Center for Disease Control to examine one model that they could use to draft policies related to sodium intake and the risks of cardiovascular diseases,” said SFU health sciences professor and co-author Michel Joffres. “Reducing this diet component that is not major or difficult to change could have a monumental effect on our healthcare systems.”
Published in Hypertension in February 2013, the group’s research looked at two approaches to implementing a lower sodium lifestyle — the first method suddenly reduced the average American’s sodium consumption of 3,600 mg/day to the 1,500 mg/day necessary for bodily function. The second lowered total ingestion by four or five per cent each year for a decade to reach an eventual 2,200 mg/day.
The researchers used three models to evaluate these reductions: one assessed the direct impact of decreased sodium on the prevalence of cardiovascular disease, while the other two — including Joffres’ model — examined the effect of reduced sodium on blood pressure.
“We know that when we decrease blood pressure, we’re going to decrease cardiovascular disease,” explained Joffres. “The number one risk factor for mortality in the world is hypertension, and reducing sodium is a very easy way [to lessen this risk].”
Each model was analyzed at a different university and put a value on the number of American lives that can be saved — or, as Joffres explains, “postponed” through sodium reduction — and each reached the same conclusion. With a gradual reduction in the United States, the models show that 280,000 to 500,000 deaths can be prevented after 10 years, or nearly a million years of life saved. An immediate sodium cut would save an even larger amount of lives: nearly 1.2 million in the same time span.
When Joffres applied these models to the Canadians, he discovered that 26,000 lives could be saved through the same sodium diminishment in the U.S. study.
“26,000 isn’t a small number, and people don’t talk about it because [sodium-related] deaths aren’t immediate,” said Joffres. “If you put 26,000 people in a plane and they’re killed, or a bomb hits a village and it’s gone, those things would make people worry. Sodium is slow and kills slowly, but surely.”
The most feasible way to achieve these reductions is removing processed foods from the diet, as these products contain roughly 80 per cent of consumed sodium. Decreasing fast foods, frozen products, breads, and canned commodities by half would produce the cut that Joffres’ study simulates in small, annual reductions.
“Of course, people need to adjust their sodium consumption alongside weight loss and diets with higher potassium, vegetables, and fruits [for an optimal effect on lifespan],” he noted.
This is easier said than done: once individuals have adjusted to salty diet, foods taste bad when sodium is removed from their meals. Noticeable change in health demographics will require a concerted effort from North American citizens, the government, and food manufacturers. Currently, the government does not hold manufacturers accountable and opts to provide them with non-mandatory guides on reducing sodium in the foods they make.
“These diets need to change in younger people,” Joffres concludes. “If younger people become used to lower sodium intake, their blood pressure will remain lower and blood pressure won’t increase with age. They won’t have the accumulation of damage to their arteries since young adulthood. People don’t realize that, and that’s a dilemma.”

Check your privilege

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Actions done and words spoken with good intentions can still perpetuate discrimination

By Joseph Leivdal

This is a response to the column published Feb. 25 titled “Godwin’s law, meet Onderwater’s law”. Eric Onderwater, from one white guy to another: you need to check your privilege. I’m going to try to walk you through this real slow.

I’d like to introduce you to a concept called “intention” and the difference between intention and practice. The facts are, Eric, that Aboriginal peoples in Canada have been subjected to systemic discrimination and violence at the hands of our colonial government, and this by no means ended with the shutting down of residential schools. We can see this systemic violence in action today with the Highway of Tears, the Missing Women Commission and the undermining of Aboriginal rights by the Harper government in its greedy grab for resources, to state only a few of many examples.

If I say that the government has no responsibility to Aboriginal communities, while my so called “intentions” may not be explicitly racist, these colonial ideologies put into practice are racist. The government, and we as citizens, have a responsibility to root out and combat this systemic discrimination, and taking away Aboriginal “hand-outs” as you call them would be a form of colonialism and violence against Aboriginal peoples — so yes Eric, that would be racist, and while the people acting out this violence and discrimination may truly be appalled at being called racist, their lack of awareness of how their words and actions affect others becomes a subtle form of racism.

Also, “Idle No More” is about Aboriginal rights and autonomy, and to oppose “Idle No More” is to oppose a fight against the ongoing colonization and violence perpetrated against Aboriginal peoples. I’m not saying that people need to attend every rally to somehow avoid being racist, but just because I’m not throwing around racist slurs does not mean my “intent,” put into practice, is not, ultimately, racist. Do you get that now?

By comparing someone who is calling out racism to someone who inappropriately compares an issue with the rise of Hitler, you are in fact using the very same “cheap rhetorical” tool that you claim to critique. Please do your homework before making a rhetorical analysis.

You and I are both white males living in a Western patriarchy, and because of that we have a responsibility to try to understand the world from different perspectives, which is what the author of the article published on Feb. 17 has done an exceptionally good job of doing. I am not saying that I am a perfect ally; that is something that I have to work on constantly. But I am inviting you, and all others who were fortunate enough to be born into a position of privilege, to take a closer look at your position in society and to take a closer look at the positions of others as well.

COLUMN: A man walks into a bar; three beers are on special . . .

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No joke, just a quick rundown of brew diversity in Vancouver

By Adam Dewji

So you walk into the pub, and ask your server what the specials are. They have a pale ale, a stout and a lager. But what does that actually mean?

There are two main categories that beer can be put in. Beer can be either a type of ale, or a type of lager. There are many sub-types of beer. The econo-beers that you normally buy, such as a Molson or Budweiser, are generally North American-ized lagers. They are designed to be served ice cold, and go down smooth.

Ales are generally served a bit warmer, around five degrees celsius. Some are even served warmer, but it depends on the brew. Ales generally have the most flavour, and aren’t made for chugging. Now let’s go over the most common types of beer you’ll find on menus around town.

We’ll start with types of ales. IPA or an India pale ale is a type of ale that is brewed strong with lots of hops. This type of beer will be generally more bitter and flavourful compared to your standard lager. If you see IPA on a menu, it will probably be stronger than normal. A good beginner IPA for those afraid of hopsing in with both feet is the Fat Tug from Driftwood Brewing.

Pale ales are probably the most common type of ale that you’ll get at a bar. These ales are served a bit warmer than ice cold, and generally have more flavour than a lager. They are a good stepping stone to an IPA. If you want a pale ale that will go down smooth and taste good, try the Blue Buck from Philips Brewing.

Hefeweizens, or wheat ales, are thick ales that taste very bread-y because, as their translated name indicates, they’re made with more wheat than your average ale. They are quite dense, and very flavourful. Some macro-breweries have flavoured their brews with citrus peel, like a Rickard’s White (flavoured with orange). The Granville Island Hefeweizen is a good starter.

Stouts (or stout ales) are my particular favourite. Stouts are similar to (and often called) porters. The difference between stouts and porters is still unconfirmed by beer enthusiasts today — but you can Google it.

They are bold, dark, and rich. They look scary, but they actually aren’t too bitter, but are thicker in texture than most other beers. They are generally brewed with roasted cocoa malts, and have a bit of a coffee or dark chocolate aftertaste. Everyone has heard of Guinness, so if you can, give that a try. If you want a flavoured stout or porter, go with the Longboat Chocolate Porter from Philips Brewing.

If you’re really inclined, try a St. Ambroise Oatmeal Stout (best oatmeal stout ever).

Winter ales were covered in a previous column, but for posterity’s sake: they are generally special versions of pale ales in North America; they are flavoured with Christmas spices. Try the Lion’s Winter Ale by Granville Island.

As for lagers, you’ll find general North American lagers around town. The most common are Okanagan Springs 1516, Molson Canadian, and Budweiser. If you want to step out of the mainstream, try a lager from Steamworks, Red Racer, or Mt. Begbie. You won’t go back to the regular stuff. These are the main strands of lagers you’ll find on menus around town.

Now when your server lists off specials, you can choose not just by price, but by taste.

Rainier Provisions provides

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By Hannah Bellamy
Image courtesy of Scout Magazine

When I paid my first visit to Rainier Provisions, located at the corner of Cordova and Carrall, it had only been open a week and a half. For now the restaurant exclusively serves lunch, but a notice from management on the entrance says it will soon extend its hours from breakfast to dinner. The new waitresses seem at once thrilled and unsure of procedure. The owner, Sean Heather, looks on and buses tables dutifully.

Heather has several other restaurants in the Downtown Eastside, including Irish Heather Gastropub, Salty Tongue, Judas Goat Taberna, Salt Tasting Room, Shebeen Whisk(e)y House, Everything Cafe, and Bitter. Anticipation for his most recent location in the former Rainier Hotel has teased the area for over a year: the de facto opening was almost 13 months behind its proposed January 2012 date.

It finally opened, evidently to the satisfaction of self-professed foodies from all around Vancouver, as the afternoon I went was a busy one.

Its high-ceilinged, open space has been outfitted with a retail delicatessen, a take-out cafe, and 100-plus eggshell blue seats in the restaurant proper. The walls are white open-face brick, with the exception of a partial wall inserted between the kitchen and the rest of the space, which is wallpapered with vegetable sketches. Clearly, the overall look of the establishment is meant to combine a sense of rural nostalgia and urban decorum.

The retail shelves in the delicatessen are supplied with a variety of quality foods, and the refrigerated display cases are stocked with a selection of cheeses, several types of cured meat from Moccia & Urbani on East Hastings, D-Original sausages, eggs from Rabbit River Farms, and other assorted deli items. Adjacent to the deli cases is the cafe counter, which serves local Stumptown Coffee.

Without overlooking the popularity of the imported Spanish, Italian, French, and UK cheeses available, most of the products are locally sourced. Affirming this are big, embossed letters above the counter: “eat local,” a running theme with most of Heather’s establishments.

The menu varies from roast of the day — sausage stuffed roast suckling pig with Okanogan applesauce, potato Lyonnais, and orange roasted carrots — to kale Caesar salad, to fresh handmade bratwurst, to vegetarian pasta. I ordered the daily salad — chickpea and roasted cauliflower complete with artichoke, cilantro, mint, and lemon, which, like everything on the menu, was reasonably under 10 dollars. The variety of greens and added delicacies made the salad fresh and satisfying.

Of the sweets on the back of the menu, many of which involve Earnest ice cream from Commercial Drive in some form or another, I went for the Picker Shack cherry ice cream sandwich. Every one of Ernest’s concoctions is a winner, the flavours ranging from whiskey walnut to pumpkin pie, but this one is prima facie summer.

Or temporary summer, at least, as I reluctantly leave it all in due time for the wintry afternoon. Rainier is certainly a place to warm up though, in terms of food and atmosphere: the local focus and pared down interior make it uniquely Vancouver, and it seems that so far, Vancouverites agree.

Serena Ryder “Stompas” off the beaten path with Harmony

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By Rachel Braeuer
Image courtesy of Mary Rozzi

I do not envy Canadian musicians. Well, no, I do.
It’s just hard to imagine having actual talent and working as hard as they do only to achieve a small modicum of success while we, their countrywomen and men lose our shit because Ke$ha is coming to town.

This is definitely true for Serena Ryder, whose latest album, Harmony, is by far her best. Thankfully, she’s receiving more of the props she deserves for this one. While writing this, “Stompa” is sitting at #15 on iTunes top singles list, and the album itself is highlighted on the “trending now” page. If you’re interested in taking a listen, skip the overpriced latte twice and use the $9.99 you saved to just buy Harmony. You won’t be disappointed, and if you are I will literally buy you a latte, provided you can find The Peak office and personally show me a receipt.

In 2011, Ryder toured with Melissa Etheridge, and there is decidedly more Etheridge-like rasp on Harmony, maintaining a folksy undercurrent Ryder has become synonymous with. But in an un-folksy move, Harmony is an eclectic selection, ranging from bluegrass vocal harmony on “Nobody But You” to the sultry jazz ballad “For You”, and the pop-rock “Circle of the Sun.”
Ryder has a unique voice, somewhere between Janis Joplin’s rawness, Stevie Nicks’s presence and timbre, and Aretha Franklin’s range and power. The stylistic choices on this latest album are a mark of an artist who has found her sweet spot and who is demonstrating her arsenal of musical skills. Ryder is fantastic and maintains a coherent voice no matter which genre she’s singing.

If angst was the driving theme of Ryder’s earlier albums, joy certainly pervades Harmony. The songstress admits that this was “the first time that [she’d] written [while] in love.” Those hoping for the accusatory and frankness of Is It OK?’s “Little Bit of Red” might be disappointed. There’s a balance in thematic material with the lament “Please, Baby Please” and the piano ballad “Heavy Love”, but again, on previous albums these sentiments would have been set to folk-rock guitar riffs.

The variety in both genre and content makes Harmony much more personal than Ryder’s previous albums, something that more than makes up for the move away from folk-rock. Instead of trying to sing songs about love set to an edgy guitar, the freedom to sing and write the way she wanted really comes across. They were written in Ryder’s studio, a cozy space above her garage in Toronto that apparently has cedar shavings on the floor, intended to make it reminiscent of a sauna.

I don’t know if it was the pseudo-steamy change in writing location, Ryder and Harmony are hot. The honesty and emotion is palpable in an appealing way, and it’s nice to see a Canadian songstress flex her musical muscles and step away from the folk-fest stage for once.

Poetic city spaces

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By Daryn Wright
Photo courtesy of Vancouver Public Library

What does it mean to be excluded or included in a city’s history? What relationships emerge between the self and the social space of a city’s east side or west side? How can poets remove the layers of history and geography in order to uncover “the self”? These are some of the questions that the Poets and the Social Self: Vancouver discussion will be addressing on March 7.

Wayde Compton, Joanne Arnott, Michael Turner and Renee Sarojini Saklikar will be handling these concepts and reading from their work, with the hopes of addressing the role of the poet and the development of identity through spatial relationships.

Compton, co-founder of the Hogan’s Alley Memorial Project, is also the author of two books of poetry, 49th Parallel Psalm (1999) and Performance Bond (2004). His work with Hogan’s Alley is a prime example of how an individual’s identity is often informed by a city’s priorities and histories. The Peak sat down with Compton and talked about Hogan’s Alley, social awareness, and how poets translate these problems into language.

 

The Peak: Can you tell me about Hogan’s Alley and the pushing out of the black community during this time? How does this relate to the discussion of the social self, and how is this important in the identity of a city-dweller?

Compton: The urban renewal trend of the mid-20th century was continent-wide. It began in New York, but the strategy spread to many cities in North American from the 1950s to the 1960s. In short, it was a new urban planning emphasis on the car, and connecting suburbs to cities via freeways — the creation of the commuter culture we have today — and away from the old model of cities in which people lived near their workplace. The problem was where to put these freeways when cities were full of residents. Invariably, the answer was solved by institutionalized racism: they put the freeways through the communities that were easiest to bully, and that meant, almost always, black neighbourhoods or Chinatowns.

In Vancouver it was both: Hogan’s Alley and our Chinatown were chosen, unsurprisingly, as the place they would put their freeway. This was justified by modernist experiments in urbanism that favoured large tower block housing — in the US, they were those terrifying “projects” that worsened black urban life everywhere they were created. Jane Jacobs was an early critic of this ethos, who pointed out how inhuman and disastrous it was for communities to have their neighbourhoods razed and changed so drastically, without their input.

All this happened in Vancouver too, and it happened to the black community in the east end, at Hogan’s Alley. They even built projects intended to house us — the McLean Park Project — but it didn’t work, as the black community chose that moment to integrate all over the city.

It changed a lot for our community, in that it scattered us, and destroyed our networks of communication, shattered many of our businesses, eventually led to the decline of our community-based church, broke old social relationships of mutual aid and self-help, and created a sense in this city that there is no black community because of the loss of a civic neighbourhood that was known as a black area.

 

How is one excluded or included from a city’s history? How does this relate to the black community of Hogan’s Alley, or even indigenous groups, or even as a European immigrant?

C: For me, the lesson of Hogan’s Alley is that neighbourhoods need more power in deciding what happens to them. And by “neighbourhoods” I mean the people who live in an area, and not just homeowners or businesses — everyone who lives there, in equal measures, should have the power to determine what happens to their neighbourhood. In the long view of history, I think the Hogan’s Alley residents, who did not want their neighbourhood wrecked and rewritten as a freeway, would have given us a better Vancouver.

 

How can language bridge these gaps?

C: To a certain extent, witnessing and telling the tales of injustice can help to repair racism and colonialism, but I believe it will take more than that. Concrete acts of inclusion must be taken.

 

How do we include ourselves in a city’s history, and what do those acts look like?

C: At least one progressive city councillor in the 1930s, Helena Gutteridge, interviewed residents, and their ideas were to improve the streets and buildings that were already there rather than to clear the slum. I think they were correct all along, and history shows that the people who live in an area are more likely to understand its needs, not least of which because it is they who will live with the consequences of any sort of planning. This is far better than letting developers, who are primarily motivated by short-term profit, lead us in making decisions about what our city will look like, who it will serve, and how it will change.

 

Do you tie your own identity to a specific city space? How is this explored not only through poetry, but through other art as well?

C: I think art and, for me, specifically literature, is a way to think differently about civic life because it is a freer kind of language. It allows us to edge away from rationalist thinking, which has its place but can also fail us, and can help us examine the web of rhetoric and cliche that we are often mired in. For example, I think a poetry or art movement might have very helpfully challenged urban renewal in the 1950s, if it had been ready to do so here.

I can very much imagine artists examining the concept of urban renewal from different angles, challenging its rhetoric and premises and social assumptions in a way that could have very helpfully undermined the certainty with which this city plunged forward into a very inhuman model. As it turns out, that didn’t happen, but it makes you wonder what’s going on now that we might look back at it 40 years in the future and think, “Why didn’t the artists challenge that?”

When I look at the writers and artists who are tackling things like gentrification, and the ideology that precedes it, or our reliance on fossil fuels and the use of BC land for big oil, or those who are challenging colonialism — I think the artists and writers who are directly trying to deal with these issues are doing the right thing. We need to be thinking about these issues now, when they are having an early impact, and not 40 years after some catastrophic oil spill on our coast, for example.

I’m proud to be part of a movement to carry witness to, and draw attention to, the memory of a past injustice, because that’s necessary, but we should also try to get ahead of these injustices.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: March 4, 2013

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Dear editor,

Over the past several decades a tragedy has quietly unfolded in our own backyard: disproportionate and disturbingly high rates of Aboriginal women and girls have gone missing or been murdered. If this happened to our non-native Canadian women at the same rate, there would be over 20,000 victims.

While indigenous women and girls account for 10 per cent of all female homicides in Canada, they make up just three per cent of our female population. About 85 per cent of all homicides are solved by police investigations, but that “clearance rate” drops to just 50 per cent when the victim is an Aboriginal woman or girl.

Our indifference towards this injustice must end. That’s why the Liberal Party has been pushing for years for a transparent National Public Inquiry to get to the bottom of these cases and their root causes. Yet each time we advanced the idea, we were rebuffed.

Finally there is a breakthrough: parliament has passed a Liberal motion with the support of all parties to create a special parliamentary committee to look into these cases and to find ways to address the root causes of this intolerable violence.

While we still firmly believe that a National Public Inquiry is needed, this is a small, but important first step. Now it is up to all MPs, including Kennedy Stewart, to ensure the committee conducts serious work without interference from the prime minister’s Office. It is high time to provide justice for the victims, healing for their families and an end the violence.

 

Yours sincerely,


Carolyn Bennett, MP

Liberal Party of Canada Aboriginal Affairs Critic

May the sexiest Liberal win

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OPS - Ed Cartoon March 4 2013 - benbuckley

Unless Garneau can transform into JFK, not even an Americanized debate can save him

By Mohamed Sheriffdeen
Photos by Ben Buckley

A smile has always been the most important weapon in a politician’s arsenal. Ever since John Kennedy charmed the pants off TV viewers at home, it is imperative that a leader be as presentable as they are capable. This brand of reductive politics has been on display during the Liberal Party’s frantic attempts to package together an attractive leader for all Canadians.

Even before he announced his candidacy for the job, Justin Trudeau towered over all comers based on his name alone, and he has parlayed his carefully managed image and youthful good looks (not to mention the pre-debate boxing stunt — hello Paul Ryan!) into an immense surge of popularity, discounting whether he actually has insightful ideas on how to repair Canada’s global standing.

This is not to say that he’s an empty vessel. Trudeau is a passionate man, and he wants every Canadian to know that — passionate about education, passionate about the middle class, passionate about protecting BC’s environment (though he doesn’t mind re-routing the proposed pipeline through the East Coast). With his seemingly unstoppable momentum, Trudeau’s heaviest criticism has been levied by his hardiest opponent: Marc Garneau, who has challenged the front-runner’s lack of substantive discussion, claiming he’s spoken in “vague generalities” throughout the campaign.

Garneau would, in any other time, appear an excellent candidate: a retired astronaut and soldier, former head of the Canadian Space Agency, an Officer of the Order of Canada and recipient of the Canadian Forces Decoration. It makes you forget Garneau’s own lack of experience or major success in politics. He was only elected in October of 2008, using his own politically irrelevant brand-name to bulldoze his way into office by over 9000 votes. Three years later, he barely scraped by NDP challenger Joanne Corbeil (prevailing by just over six hundred votes) and was passed over for Bob Rae as interim leader of the party.

Nevertheless, Garneau’s tactic for undermining his opponent is banking on his self-proclaimed experience, so much so that he invited Trudeau to a one-on-one American-style leadership debate in a move that smacked of desperation. Garneau is by no means an idiot; he sells himself with his platform, suggesting economic reforms and the improvement of Canadian student funding while Trudeau has stringently refused to discuss anything concrete, focusing on paeans to the middle class and increased post-secondary enrollment. But guess who’s winning?

In Feb. 20 The National Post Andrew Coyne hammered the Liberal Party for all but engineering Trudeau’s ascension to the throne, selling his magnetic personality in lieu of any significant political wherewithal or experience. But this is a syndrome emblematic of so much more than one party.

It’s not that Canadians don’t care about the issues. The last hundred years of global politics has perfectly illustrated that the cult of personality sells, and Canadians, just like any other peoples, gravitate towards the person who most emphasizes those qualities we desire in ourselves. The beautiful, charismatic, well-read Trudeau is the type of man we see as representative of our inner ideal — cool, young, hip and sexy. Consider it a delayed reaction to the political envy that gripped this country when Obama rose to power in 2008: we want that.

Trudeau said it best while chiding Garneau during one of the debates: “You can’t win over Canadians with a five-point plan. You have to connect with them…in the debate we have coming forward.” But what of the direction and substance of that debate? For Trudeau, a clear position is irrelevant because qualifications, morality, religion and political philosophy are window dressing to a killer smile. Garneau, Hall-Findlay and every politico and pundit knows that. Getting them to admit they’re not the prettiest candidate in the room however, is unlikely.

Peak Week – March 4, 2013

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Eats

Beaucoup Bakery opened up not too long ago on Fir St., and since then its tiny interior has been steadily filled by those seeking peanut-butter cookie sandwiches and chausson aux pommes. Their baked goods have a decidedly European flair, and they also look like pieces of art. Beaucoup has also just started offering sandwiches: try their avocado, radish, endive and watercress on a croissant for lunch, a salted caramel eclair for dessert, paired with a creamy latte. You’ll think you’ve died and gone to heaven.

Beats

Class up your Monday night with an evening straight out of a Tolstoy novel: The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra presents Romeo and Juliet on March 4 at the Centennial Theatre. If you’re a fan of the orchestra and Shakespeare’s tragic love story, this one is sure to please. Some of the best-known pieces from the Russian repertoire, as well as Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2, will be performed by Dina Yoffe on the piano. Plus, if you think this kind of class is out of your budget, think again: it’s only $15 for students, or if you’re under 30.

Theats

Consider checking out the Arts Club’s production of How Has My Love Affected You? this week. Marcus Youssef’s play considers the playwright’s difficult relationship with his mother after he discovers a storage locker filled with her journals. The play asks us to question our familial obligations: what do we owe each other, as family members? The Arts Club consistently puts on top-notch productions, and a night out at the theatre is always worthwhile, so grab some tickets and bring a friend.

Elites

Poets and the Social Self is an event happening at SFU on March 7. Wayde Compton, Joanne Arnott, Michael Turner, and Renee Sarojini Saklikar will be reading from their work and discussing the role of the poet in terms of identity in the city space. Compton is the author of two books of poetry, 49th Parallel Psalm and Performance Bond; Arnott’s essays and poetry have been published in numerous anthologies and journals; Saklikar writes thecanadaproject, a life-long poem chronicle; and Turner is an award winning author of fiction, criticism and song. Join them as they ponder what it means to be included or excluded from a city’s history.

Treats

Pay a visit to Long Table Distillery on Hornby St. this week for some quality, hand-crafted spirits. They offer a great selection of gin with a predominant juniper berry flavour, quality vodka, and their apothecary series, ranging from Whisky to Limoncello. The ingredients used are natural and organic, chosen for freshness, and are handpicked by expert wild foragers in local mountains and from fair trade farmers around the world. If you’re a fan of spirits and value quality, a visit to the distillery is a good way to spend an evening — any day of the week.