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Five subtle recession indicators you NEED to know

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a photo of a television set with the island from Lost on it. The words “Lost” are on the screen.
ILLUSTRATION: Stella Laurino / The Peak

By: Petra Chase, Peak Associate

Recession indicators are all the rage. We took a Buzzfeed “What recession indicator are you?” quiz, and apparently, we’re Lady Gaga (ra-ra-ra-rad!). Lipstick sales, Mariah Carey going grocery shopping, and flash mobs are also on the list

The Peak contacted an SFU economics professor to speak on this phenomenon, to which they responded, “You can request a statement through Cameo for $10. I also do birthdays. You can pre-book me for Christmas carols,” — to which we responded, “Recession indicator!” 

Here are five more gentle reminders our economy is nearing collapse.

Decline in oat beverage sales
Milk Statistics Canada reported that oat “myllke” sales are in decline. Sorry, for legal reasons, we can’t use the word “milk” (AKA the dairy industry will sue). Even bisexuals are ordering it less (yeah, Milk Statistics Canada is thorough about demographic data). Do you know what it means when bisexuals are sacrificing their daily oat m**k lattes during Pride month? Things are BAD.

Labubus
With their mischievous grins and versatile eyes (open, closed, and winking), Labubus are the collectible plushies everyone wants hung from their Stanley cup. An article called “Labubu Dolls, Economy Falls: A Symbiotic Analysis” in the Journal of Radical Marxism explains that collecting dolls and trinkets during tough times signifies a longing to return to childhood. Also, in season five episode 83 of the workplace sitcom The Office, business-minded assistant to the regional manager Dwight Schrute bought the town’s stock of Princess Unicorn dolls and sold them to desperate parents to make a profit. 15 years later, Schrute’s resourcefulness continues to inspire side-hustling Marketplace Labubu resellers who are making bank. And who can blame them in this economy?

Increase in three kids stacked on top of each other in trench coats
Investigative journalists at The Peak have concluded there’s been an increase in parents stacking three small children on top of each other, draping them in a trench coat, and plopping them into corporate jobs so they can get an early pension. Many of these kids have gone undetected, even in leadership roles, due to the rise of anti-intellectualism and the smartest kid being strategically placed on top. While it’s unclear how many are currently disguised as grifters, we’re also investigating under one Jordan Peterson’s trenchcoat after the personality was flummoxed during a Jubilee debate. He asked his opponent to clarify what conjunctions and interrogative words mean, leading some experts to propose he is actually a six-year-old on another six-year-old’s shoulders. 

Hobbyhorsing is a thing
Remember when horseback riding was affordable? JK, it’s always been a rich people sport, BUT you know things are bad when even upper-income equitarian enthusiasts (AKA horse girls) from Philadelphia are resorting to galloping through obstacle courses on wooden toy horses. Apparently the sport originated when a child asked their mom for horseback lessons and was told, “We have horses at home.” Though hobbyhorsing has been around since the early 2000s, said Philadelphians organized the first school competition last month, showing that it’s gaining popularity.

Everyone’s watching or rewatching Lost
Aren’t we all a little bit lost during an economic recession? Comparing egg prices in the supermarket, tattooing our toenails. It’s no wonder we’d want to get lost in six seasons of Lost, the hauntological action mystery that revolutionized the early 2000s. The show explores questions of destiny versus free will through the morally complicated survivors of a plane crash as they unlock the mysteries of an island and a curious number sequence. During an economic recession, the fluctuating prices are also confusing numbers that make us question faith and science, so we can relate.

Brighter Side: When a song finds you

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A photo of a person holding a phone with a music app playing “Sally, When the Wine Runs Out” by ROLE MODEL
PHOTO: Emily Le / The Peak

By: Rusham Verma, SFU Student

Imagine you’re on a road trip wi your playlist on shuffle. Then, that song comes on. Yes, the one that seems like it was made for this exact moment on the road. The windows are down, the wind’s flowing in your hair, and it’s just you and the open road. The day suddenly feels brighter. More promising. 

Now imagine a different scene: you’ve just been through a breakup and are sulking in bed. A generic playlist plays on shuffle. Your eyes are puffy, and your chest feels heavy; you’re not quite sure how to process such pain. Then, “You’re Losing Me” by Taylor Swift starts playing. Listening to the lyrics, you realize how deeply they echo your feelings. A small smile tugs at your lips. At least someone gets it, you think. 

For someone else, the perfect song may play when they get to know their crush’s name is Sally, and the song “Sally, When the Wine Runs Out” by ROLE MODEL starts playing in their earphones. Now, that might be too on-the-nose, sure. But for them? It feels like a sign. 

So, when the perfect song finds you at the right time, whether it’s a coincidence or cosmic timing, just take the hint. Roll the windows down, feel it, and be the main character.

From capitalism to colonialism, how do structures of power control the way we think?

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This is a photo of the four books mentioned in the article neatly laid out on a table
PHOTO: Emily Le / The Peak

By: Yildiz Subuk, Staff Writer

The Hundred Years War on Palestine by Rashid Khalidi

Rashid Khalidi’s account of the oppression faced by Palestinians is the perfect place to start for those who have limited knowledge of Palestinian history. Khalidi covers the Israeli occupation of Palestine before the Nakba (which took place in 1947 and led to the dispossession of many Palestinians). He traces the root of Zionism by analyzing the colonizers’ gaze and language when the question of Palestine was present.

Khalidi, who is also Palestinian, weaves in his own lineage, expanding on how he is deeply tied to the land he writes about. As the book progresses, the writing becomes more personal; the reality of the situation begins to set in with the reader.

Tracing three eras of the Israeli occupation, The Hundred Years War on Palestine, reminds us that the oppression Palestinians face began nearly a century before October 7th. Khalidi’s work outlines oppression, resistance, and the failures of the international community.

Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire

Freire’s work covers the relationship between power and education. He argues that for oppressed people to truly find freedom, the education they receive must focus on doing so. However, the power structures that influence the curriculum tend to uphold the status quo.

Freire’s own experiences as an educator in Brazil and his travels educating in places like Guinea Bissau are woven into the book. This personal touch shapes the thinking behind this book, as Freire is not merely investigating power and education but exposing the deeper nature of his own journey. While Pedagogy of the Oppressed is fairly short in length, the book is a dense work of philosophy with four chapters, all requiring the readers’ focus, and constant critical engagement. The heart of the book is this solution proposed by Friere, as he investigates how the latter can play a role in the liberation of the oppressed.

Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher 

Capitalism is not just an economic system, but an ideological motif that dominates the western mind. Mark Fisher argues that capitalism’s influence has become so significant it’s difficult to think of any other probable system outside of capitalism. Fisher draws on the famous quote by Fredric Jameson and Slavoj Žižek: “It is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism.”

Capitalist Realism is short and concise. Under 100 pages, Fisher manages to cover topics such as how capitalism is depicted in dystopian stories, how capitalism affects mental health, and contributes to  environmental degradation. All these issues are tied to the fact that market supremacy has made life transactional, and difficult for our psyche to break free from this mode of thinking. 

One of the key takeaways from this book is that it covers how mental illness is viewed in a capitalist mindset. It is often subjugated to be a “chemico-biological problem,” placing the blame on someone’s brain chemistry instead of considering the possibility that capitalism has had an effect on the person.

True Reconciliation by Jody Wilson-Raybould

Jody Wilson-Raybould (Kwakwaka’wakw) served as a member of parliament in the Canadian government and has written this book drawing from the cultural and diplomatic experience she had in that capacity. True Reconciliation sets the record straight about colonial history in Canada and the existing structures within government that continue to affect Indigenous People today

Wilson-Raybould explains the significance of Indigenous cultures and highlights the various perspectives that are present within the communities, then progresses the narrative towards understanding the past. The reader will be given a straightforward account of Indigenous history from a political angle, presented with oppressive accounts of Canadian policy-making, as well as thoroughly researched evidence of colonial thinking and Indigenous rebuttal. Wilson-Raybould ensures that the analysis she provides is thoroughly supported by evidence, and no corner seems unturned with her research in the book.

Excerpts from a blogging mom: Cancel culture cookies

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A middle-aged woman wearing a black sunhat and a oversized white dress shirt. Her nails are black and she is in a field of some sorts.
PHOTO: Yana Tsybrovska / Unsplash

By: Sheela McGummery, Peak Columnist

Hello, world! My name is Sheela McGummery
and I blog about my life as a mommy of five kiddos!
I am a proud conservative woman of the suburbs and I
bake to fill my life with the sort of sweetness
I used to find in my marriage. LOL.
For any serious baking inquiries, please email 

[email protected]

MY YUMMY CANCEL CULTURE COOKIE RECIPE

Hey momacitas! Today, we are making some delish cancel culture cookies! My favourite recipe! Let’s get on with our ingredients. :))

But first, way back in 2019, I was invited to write a guest column for The Peark about my fabulous lemon bars. Since then, I have been behind CANCELLED BARS. I was (what the communist millennials call) #Cancelled over me admitting to “accidentally” (wink wink, girlfriends) putting an insurance salesperson into a coma!!!!!!!

I used to be very polite, timid, and respectful in my blog. After spending years being CENSORED by editors, I am back, more passionate and god-fearing than ever. This is my evolution. This is the new Sheela.  

The Peark ruined my life. All of a sudden Sheela was the bad gal.

My CHURCH reassigned me to napkin duty, 

My frosted bars were BANNED from PAC meetings,

The AI robot bot self-checkout machine at Thrifty’s started beeping at me more than normal. 

The Peark and WorldWideWeb.THE-PEAKPeriodCA didn’t want good old Sheela writing for them. They say Sheela is an aggressive person  and is “funky.” Well guess what? NOPE. Not true. 

So now they gave me back my blog!!!!!

Otherwise I threatened to enroll in SFU courses and make their lives a living heck. To my haters I say: put down your oat milk and live a little. To my wonderfully loyal fan base of two readers, four of which are named Doreen, thanks for reading an empty blog for six years. 

This blog is officially once again open for business, so long as I have WiFi in my prayer pantry — where the router shares a shelf with my holy water and pic of Andrew Scheer’s abs. So tell a friend to tell a friend that (she)EEELA’s BAAAAAACK!

Now, let’s get on to the recipe. 

Cancel culture cookies hold a very close and dear place next to my heart. I guess you can say they are heart healthy! Bahahahahhahahaha! 

But speaking of cancel culture cookies reminds me of the time I got BANNED from Facenovel Marketplace for trying to trade a batch of my cancel culture cookies for a second-hand and ethically-sourced quinoa-filled boxing bag with that crook David Eby’s face on it, hand-made by that snake in the grass Rebecca (a Libertarian pagan). I said EXCUSE YOU? Who do you think you are to BAN me from Facenovel Marketplace? And for what?? I only had like 300 warnings from previous incidents. That’s like nothing!! Remember what I did to the insurance salesperson? DO YOU REMEMBER? Do you want to mess with Sheela? 

SO I got my little Johnathonoah (who just turned 10) to hack into Rebecca’s mother board and find where her router was. We had to attack her router. She probably doesn’t have her router in a prayer closet — it’s probably inside of some woke smoothie bar (omg, eyeroll). 

Johnathonoah turned to me and he said, “Mother, this lady has messed with the WRONG baked-goods religious matriarch.” Don’t mess with momma bear. Raaaawwwr.  

So I found her router, found her address in my personal yellow pages, walked up to her, and punched her with another yellow pages book (old habits don’t die), and dragged her into her backyard  where I hoped she and the router would be mauled by a passing bear. But no bears were in sight. The router and Rebecca lived (ugh). One restraining order later and another night in jail, all in the name of promoting good faith-based habits and to make our country cancel free. 

So, who’s ready to make some cancel culture cookies? 

RECIPE ON PAGE 2 >

Peak Speaks

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Chad Kroeger, lead singer of Nickelback, strumming his guitar at a concert.
PHOTO: Courtesy of Moshville Times

By: Lucaiah Smith-Miodownik, News Writer

The Peak hits Reddit to ask SFU students some serious and thought-provoking questions!

Q: Would you rather get a dollar for every raccoon you see on campus but you can only listen to Nickelback for the rest of your life, or $1 million if the gondola ever gets built but you can never eat at Tim’s again? Why?

u/ManyMilesLongAway:: “$1 million but no Tim’s. Once its grilled cheese died, my love for Tim’s followed.”

u/powerclipper780:: “Nickelback is sick. You’re telling me I could be wealthy and musically fulfilled? Sign me up.”

u/rebeccarightnow:: “The gondola being built is more likely than me ever not regretting Tim’s. So sure, I’ll take a chance on getting paid for it instead of condemning myself to a life of misery with the first option.”

u/manOmanytendies42:“$1 million if the gondola ever gets built. Nickelback is a fate worse than death.”

u/FierceCat5020: “$1 million, and start my own coffee shop right away.”

u/stopruining: “$1 million and free my guts from the tyranny of the farmers wrap & iced cap combo? Sign me up.”

u/masterugway: “I don’t think Nickelback themselves would pick the first option.”

Your cashier is not your therapist

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An illustration that depicts a grocery store associate, talking to a customer during checkout
ILLUSTRATION: Cliff Ebora / The Peak

By: Yulissa Huamani, Peak Associate and Zainab Salam, Opinions Editor

The checkout line at the local grocery store might seem like a pleasant opportunity for a friendly conversation. Chatting with the cashier at the register while going grocery shopping can be a great moment of connection. However, this is only true if both parties feel comfortable. Being kind to customers is part of the job for the person behind the register. Though essential to the customer experience, these conversations are a labour that remain invisible. As customers, we need to extend kindness to workers by understanding the inherent power dynamics that are present in these interactions. 

A common, yet overlooked, display of unequal power dynamics is when a customer finishes paying but continues to engage the cashier in conversation — even as the next person is waiting to be attended to. Not only is it important to be respectful and considerate of other customers, some grocery stores time their cashiers to monitor their efficiency. 

There’s also an emotional toll to being forced to be friendly with people frequently. Being a regular is not the same as being friends with service workers. Venting to your cashier can create a very uncomfortable situation. In a 2019 article published on Medium, Cassidy Scanlon expressed that customers oversharing with her as a barista caused her to wonder: “What is my role in these situations? Am I a counselor? Or a friend? Am I a shoulder to cry on? Why does this dynamic even exist?

“For the person behind the register, it’s not just another interaction, it’s work”

The phrase “the customer is always right,” is another well-known way this uncomfortable dynamic manifests itself. In instances when dissatisfaction is expressed by customers, the manager might side with the customer, even if the worker is right. This can extend to situations when customers are being demeaning, and supervisors would sweep the impact of that disrespectful behaviour under the rug. 

That being said, the power dynamic can get inverted. This happens when a person is a customer in one store and a worker in another. In many ways, this reflects that we should treat others the same way we want to be treated, without expecting something in return. 

Emotional labour isn’t just warm feelings — it’s mental and emotional energy that cashiers contribute daily. Recognizing this added labour is a step towards more equitable treatment of those in the customer service industry. Those who share unprompted details about their family issues, relationships, political beliefs, and personal finances place an unexpected emotional burden on the worker and could increase burnout. There are some serious consequences to listening to other people’s problems, which can include higher levels of anxiety and depression. What it really boils down to is that it is inappropriate to have an invasive conversation with someone who is only getting paid to bag your groceries. Being respectful towards others is a fundamental value that many people have forgotten to implement. So, let’s be kind individuals; we have to be more caring and understand that some environments are more conducive to long conversations than others.

A celebration of Indigenous cultures at SFU Burnaby

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Photo of Big City Bannock Food Truck
PHOTO: Courtesy of @museumofvan / Instagram

By: Noeka Nimmervoll, Staff Writer

On Tuesday June 17, SFU’s Town and Gown Square will be filled with a bustling Indigenous Market. From 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., the square will be lined with 25 vendors showcasing their Indigenous goods and art. Hosted in the middle of National Indigenous History Month, the market is organized by SFU Campus Services and the Indigenous Student Centre (ISC). The market is set to be a vibrant display of the cultures of various Indigenous Nations, and a wonderful opportunity for all community members to engage in the local Indigenous goods and art scene. 

A top vendor for the market is Big City Bannock Food Truck, which is both Indigenous and family-owned. Their menu includes elk bannock tacos and bannock burgers. This menu centers its culinary delights around bannock, which “has a smoky, almost nutty flavour blended with a buttery taste,” according to Spectacular Northwest Territories. It will be served at the market as a deep fried delight as both traditional bannock and as the more modern staple, bannock tacos. In a statement to The Peak, the vendor, Raymond said, “We love to showcase a piece of Indigenous culture and bring people together with every dish we serve.”

SFU Campus Services and the ISC have organized this event to engage the SFU community at large to explore and enjoy the market. Ayumi Orgar, of SFU Campus Services, said, “People can browse a diverse selection of handcrafted goods, jewelry, artwork, beadwork, textiles, traditional foods, and more — all created by 25 talented Indigenous artists and makers from local communities. This event is a meaningful opportunity to support Indigenous businesses, learn about cultural practices, and connect with community members in a vibrant, welcoming space.” Anyone who wishes to attend the market is invited. The market will be full of these hand-selected vendors with a large diversity of artwork and meticulously hand-crafted items. There will be items for all to explore and enjoy. Orgar adds that the event “is being held in the Town and Gown Square to better include the wider SFU community.” So come one, come all!

All month long, there are ways to support and research Indigenous history and culture. SFU’s Campus Services and ISC are committed to the honouring of this month beyond hosting the market. There are several ways to share your support, as listed on the ISC page: Donate to local Indigenous community initiatives, read the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada: Calls to Action report, and engage with and share Indigenous content online. According to the ISC, a key way to show up this month is to support Indigenous artists, by buying their pieces and learning about the item. What better way to do this than to show up to the market and ask the artists themselves?

So now that you know what you’re doing on Tuesday June 17, make sure to come early enough to grab some delicious bannock and have the first pick of beautifully crafted items! Come out and bring your friends to support Indigenous artists, eat delicious food, and have fun!

Shafira Vidyamaharani’s intuitive path to design

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This is a picture showing some of Vidyamaharani’s artistic work on a wall of white wallpaper
PHOTO: Donnell Garcia

By: Ashima Shukla, Staff Writer

A graphic designer, photographer, videographer, painter, writer, and textile artist, Shafira Vidyamaharani’s practice resists definition — and that’s the point. Now a graduate student in SFU’s communication program, they are building a career that merges intuition with intellect, art with community, and personal memories with collective futures. 

Even as a child, art was the language Vidyamaharani best understood. Their mother enrolled them in art competitions, and their father used drawing to explain complex ideas. “[Art] has always been in me, and passed down through me,” they told The Peak, smiling under the summer sun on Burnaby campus. 

Vidyamaharani was never formally trained in graphic design. They remember first making One Direction graphics on Tumblr, which evolved into designing for their school and the district student council. In fact, they never expected to build a creative career in Vancouver, which “forces out talented creatives” due to high rent, few opportunities, and a difficult grant system

Still, their practice grew through connections. Volunteering to design for a friend’s show led to more paid work, word-of-mouth recognition, and a steady presence within the DIY music and cultural production scene. In this, social media became their de facto agent, their portfolio, and their stage. 

Understanding graphic design as also a service, they find themselves frequently negotiating between their artistic vision and the client’s needs. At this point in their practice, they reflect, they are able to be more selective with the work they take on. “Even just two years ago, this isn’t something I would be able to do,” they shared. Yet, they remain mindful of what it means to commodify something so personal. 

“The ethics of representation, of an idea, of a concept, of a spirit, and how it can be expressed through the graphic form” fascinates Shafira Vidyamaharani

“My mum had a point. You should leave your art as your hobby because it is something that can be sacred,” they reflected. “I am really glad I don’t solely depend on art to survive, that I have other skills that I can sell my labour with.” Still, their eyes lit up as they realized, “it feels so good knowing I was able to navigate my difficult relationship with commodifying my graphic practice.” 

Preferring not to follow trends, Vidyamaharani instead finds inspiration from nature and the everyday. Living by the water, running, biking, and photographing landscapes all help them reset. “I take a lot of retreats into nature to gain inspiration,” Vidyamaharani said, pointing to the asymmetries and quantitative reasoning in nature that guides their designs. Collaging, for instance, allows them to lean into the unknown, where the value lies not in the final product but in the interaction with materials, in the process itself. In this way, they find graphic design to be deeply intuitive.

Placing themselves in their work has been at the heart of Vidyamaharani’s practice. “So much of the graphic design literature that is taught to us is so eurocentric,” they reflected, pointing to the absence of designers like W.E.B. Du Bois or Emory Douglas in the canon. In contrast, their own visual world was shaped by Islamic calligraphic art — a sacred form of typography rooted in nature and design principles like the golden ratio and modularity around Islamic architecture. “I love typography so much, I make sure I am focusing on it,” they said.

“I don’t think that my practice would exist without the opportunities that community has presented to me,” they said. Working with local producers, DJs, and musicians, mediating and co-creating culture is part of how they see themselves instilling a cultural heritage in Metro Vancouver, “to build a cultural heritage that hasn’t been written about.” In this, they give a heartfelt shoutout, for example, to their friends at Made by We, who brought them into designing for a festival, and their ongoing collaborations with iDream library that continue to challenge and inspire them. 

Now in their fourth year as a freelance graphic designer, Vidyamaharani is also merging their creative practice with academic inquiry in their graduate research project. “The ethics of representation, of an idea, of a concept, of a spirit, and how it can be expressed through the graphic form” fascinates them. 

To young artists, and to their 18-year-old self, Vidyamaharani offers love and encouragement. “Don’t worry as much, everything truly does fall into place. I have fallen into some of the best parts of my life by accident.” Vidyamaharani continued, “The less stress you go through life with, the easier things get.” They concluded by reflecting, “Easier said than done, I know. Still, follow your dreams! Follow your heart. Follow your passion. Laugh more.”

Finding an oasis in the news desert with “Save Our Local News”

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This is a photo of the eight individuals involved in the campaign, lining up to smile for press photos. Four of them are wearing large sling bags that say “Save Our Local News.”
PHOTO: Lucaiah Smith-Miodownik / The Peak

By: Lucaiah Smith-Miodownik, News Writer

As media outlets across the country are forced to close, news deserts — communities with limited access to area news — have become increasingly common. The result? 2.5 million Canadians lack access to local news. In February, parent company Glacier Media announced the closure of Tri-City News, Burnaby Now, and New Westminster Record. Now, four local journalists are stepping up to fill the void with the support of their communities behind them. 

On June 4, the reporters helped announce the “Save Our Local News” campaign. The Peak attended the kickoff event and spoke to some of those involved with the initiative.

Writers Janis Cleugh and Mario Bartel (Tri-City News), Cornelia Naylor (Burnaby Now), and Theresa McManus (New Westminster Record) were joined by managing director of the Union Cooperative Initiative (UCI) Jonny Sopotiuk, as well as Unifor representatives Gavin McGarrigle, Brian Gibson, and Bill Catterall at the event.

UCI supports workers in building co-ops, which are businesses owned by members seeking to “satisfy common needs,” while Unifor is “Canada’s largest private sector union.” Unifor Local 2000, which Gibson and Catterall work for, specifically “represents more than 700 media workers throughout BC, primarily the newspaper and printing industries.”

The campaign is in its fundraising phase, with the end goal being a new publication in place of the three recently defunded papers. “This grassroots project shows the tenacity and dedication of journalists who care about their communities, and the work they produce,” said McGarrigle. “This is not just a fight against news deserts, this is a fight for democracy,” he added. 

“This grassroots project shows the tenacity and dedication of journalists who care about their communities, and the work they produce.” — Gavin McGarrigle, regional director, Unifor Western

This news outlet, which hopes to run in both print and digital, plans to be “community owned [and] worker run,” said Naylor. “We’re not going to have to worry about American owners pulling out funding and cutting local news,” added Sopotiuk. Postmedia, an American media conglomerate which operates in Canada, has been criticized for buying local papers and cutting funding in a “slash and burn” fashion. Postmedia owns over 130 publications, including the three BC publications The Vancouver Sun, The Province, and Prince George Post, as well as National Post. This practice of major companies buying and cutting, along with shifts to digital news, has largely contributed to the current news desert landscape. The Online News Act, though originally designed to help bring money back to news organizations, has resulted in additional harm due to Meta’s decision not to comply.

While the co-op initiative may be new to BC, this approach is not the first of its kind. The campaign is modelled after a news co-op in Quebec, formed in 2019 in response to six local papers losing their funding. According to J-Source, the freshly formed co-op saved six local news outlets and more than 300 jobs with support from the community and the Quebec government.

“We’ve already got two other communities, one in BC, one in Western Canada, that’s interested in the model,” Sopotiuk told The Peak. “If it’s successful here, we’re going to be looking at news deserts all across Canada, and providing a toolkit for communities to do this themselves.”

“Let’s get that newspaper out to the communities where it belongs, and where it’s been in BC for so many decades before,” McGarrigle said in his closing remarks. “Let’s put an end to this [local] news desert, and let’s support local, quality journalism.”

Those interested in supporting the campaign can donate at saveourlocalnews.ca

Summer COVID-19 surge looms

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This is a photo taken somewhere in Asia in a jam-packed city area where many people are seen wearing masks.
PHOTO: Courtesy of DoNoHarmBC

By: Ashima Shukla, Staff Writer

Public health researchers warn of a potential global summer surge as a new highly transmissible COVID-19 variant spreads across Asia. NB.1.8.1 has been classified as a “variant under monitoring” by the World Health Organization and has already been detected in the United States and Canada. In BC, wastewater analysis indicates rising COVID-19 levels since March, and some forecasters anticipate a surge caused by this new variant to hit as early as July or August. 

As Kayli Jamieson, a research fellow at SFU’s faculty of health sciences, told The Peak, “NB.1.8.1 has emerged as a notable variant due to its extreme transmissibility.” Since SARS-CoV-2 circulates all year, it continues to mutate into hundreds of subvariants that are “so-far-removed from previous lineages, most people do not have ample updated vaccine protection,” she explained. 

At the same time, repeated infections over the past few years have contributed to widespread immune system disruption, making the population more susceptible to all kinds of bacterial and viral illnesses. “Our population is much sicker” now, Jamieson notes, pointing to “COVID-inducted immune dysregulation, T-cell exhaustion, immune priming, and more.”

These long-term effects remain a major concern. Data from 2023 estimates 1 in 9 Canadians already have Long COVID, while global estimates from 2024 suggest more than 400 million people worldwide are experiencing it. Despite this, the condition is not included in BC’s “clinically extremely vulnerable” criteria for priority vaccination, as Jamieson noted. 

“It is essential we limit the amount of times we are infected with SARS-CoV-2 to reduce our risk of developing Long COVID, prevent worsening of existing Long COVID, and reduce our overall risk of cardiovascular events/disorders, neurological disorders, and other harms.” — Kayli Jamieson, research fellow, SFU faculty of health science

However, Jamieson cautions against framing COVID-19 as only concerning higher-risk or vulnerable populations “when it is in fact an everyone-problem.” Having lived with Long COVID since 2021, she highlighted that “anyone can develop Long COVID after any infection, including adults and children of all ages, previous fitness levels, or vaccination status.” This is why “it is essential we limit the amount of times we are infected with SARS-CoV-2 to reduce our risk of developing Long COVID, prevent worsening of existing Long COVID, and reduce our overall risk of cardiovascular events/disorders, neurological disorders, and other harms,” she explained. 

As the BC spring COVID-19 vaccination campaign ends June 30, Jamieson urges people to get vaccinated to lessen the risk of hospitalization and death. While vaccination alone cannot prevent infection, transmission, or Long COVID, she believes it remains a critical tool given the low rates of vaccine/booster uptake in the most recent federal data from June 2024. Jamieson recommends adopting a multi-layered strategy beyond just vaccination, including improving indoor air quality with ventilation and air purifiers, wearing well-fitting respirators like KN95s, N95s, or N99s, and opting for outdoor gatherings when possible. “Many of these layers recognize that COVID is airborne,” she explains, which is why “we must move beyond a ‘vaccine-only’ to ‘vaccine-plus’ strategy.” 

Jamieson also cautioned against treating COVID-19 as “just a cold.” She added, “The common cold does not bind to our ACE2 receptors like COVID can — which is what makes COVID so effective at entering various cells.” ACE2 receptors are proteins found on the surface of many types of cells in the human body, including the lungs, heart, kidneys, intestines, and blood vessels. Unlike the common cold, SARS-CoV-2 uses these receptors to directly invade and infect multiple organ systems in the body, causing severe illness and long-term complications. 

While Long COVID is beginning to receive more attention, with projects like the Canadian Institutes of Health Research-funded network Long COVID Web, “the population at-large still do not possess detailed knowledge of how Long COVID presents or their risk,” Jamieson shared. Despite thousands of studies, there is still prevalent stigma. With the summer season approaching and new variants circulating, Jamieson urges us to remember that the pandemic never ended