Archive for March, 2022

Jordan Peterson: I Got The Damn Vaccine And The Government …

During an interview this week with Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report," Canadian psychology professor and Jungian evangelist Jordan Peterson said he regrets taking the Covid-19 vaccine.

"You know, Canadians who arent vaccinated now cannot leave the country," he reported. "What the hell? Why is that?"

"Look, I got vaccinated, and people took me to task for that. And I thought, 'All right, Ill get the damn vaccine.' Heres the deal, guys: Ill get the vaccine, you f***ing leave me alone. And did that work? No. So, stupid me," he said.

"Thats how I feel about it. So, like, well, I have to get tested for COVID when I come back into Canada. I have to get tested before I leave Canada."

"That might be an issue with the Americans... but the restrictions to get back into Canada are even more stringent... Why did I get the vaccine then, if youre not going to leave me alone?"

"And I don't think the argument that vaccinated people are less contagious is very compelling. So why are the unvaccinated all of a sudden a danger? And i certainly don't get the push to get children vaccinated."

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Jordan Peterson: I Got The Damn Vaccine And The Government ...

Joe Rogan guest Jordan Peterson says being trans is a …

Canadian clinical psychologist Jordan Peterson has claimed on Joe Rogans podcast that being transgender is a result of a contagion and similar to satanic ritual abuse.

The controversial host appeared to endorse Petersons theory when he suggested that acceptance of the trans community is a sign of civilizations collapsing during the Jan. 25 episode of Spotifys The Joe Rogan Experience.

Critics once again are calling out the podcast host for having peddled harmful anti-trans rhetoric.

Rogan, 54, implored the controversial pundit and author to share his thoughts on what made an individual trans.

Peterson, 59, described it as a sociological contagion, comparing it to the satanic ritual abuse accusations that emerged in day cares in the 1980s.

The former University of Toronto psychology professor also used his time on Rogans popular platform to oppose Canadian federal Bill C-16, which amended the countrys human rights protections to cover trans and nonbinary citizens. Instead, the former academic made the unsubstantiated claim that opening the boundaries of sex categories would fatally confuse thousands of young girls.

Rogan then referred back to his conversation with British columnist Douglas Murray of the Spectator in September, in which the writer said that trans issues will be seen to be a late-empire, a bad sign of things falling apart.

He had an amazing point about civilizations collapsing, and that when they start collapsing, they become obsessed with gender. And he was saying that you could trace it back to the ancient Romans, the Greeks, said Rogan.

He continued, I think probably its not so much an obsession with gender, its a disintegration of categories as a precursor like so its a marker for if categories just dissolve, especially fundamental ones, the culture is dissolving because the culture is a structure of category.

Rogan concluded by drawing connections to Christian scripture. So, in fact, culture is a structure of category that we all share, so we see things the same way not exactly the same way, because then we would have nothing to talk about, but roughly speaking, we have a bedrock of agreement. Thats the Bible, by the way.

Watchdog group Media Matters has since spoken out about Rogans recent broadcast.

Spotifys Joe Rogan once again peddled harmful anti-trans rhetoric, Media Matters proclaimed Wednesday on its blog, suggesting that social acceptance of trans people is a sign of civilizations collapsing.

This bizarre theory has been an ongoing fixation for Rogan, Media Matters continued, and listed four additional episodes in which the host raised the subject.

Such views have landed Rogan in hot water with his host, Spotify, which took arrows in support of the entertainers freedom of speech as its own staff railed over his transphobic comments.

While Rogan has espoused controversial ideologies regarding the LGBTQIA+ community for years, his controversy du jour has been his COVID-19 denial. Rogan was recently referred to as a menace to public health by one doctor, who co-signed an open letter alongside hundreds of other health care experts decrying the dangerous podcaster last week. Rogan, they pointed out, enjoys an audience of some 11 million listeners.

Mass-misinformation events of this scale have extraordinarily dangerous ramifications, they wrote in their letter.

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Joe Rogan guest Jordan Peterson says being trans is a ...

11 Concerts You Can Look Forward To In Vancouver For 2022 – 604 Now

The days of dancing being illegal are behind us and concerts are back. There are still some issues regarding travel and COVID-19 restrictions, with local legend Tommy Genesis cancelling all of her North American tour dates including her show at Fortune Sound Club.

But there are plentiful events to look forward to in the weeks and months to come. Heres a list of some of the hottest concerts in Vancouver scheduled in 2022.

RELATED:Surrey Is Hosting a Life Size Robotic Dinosaurs Festival This Spring

@billieeilish / Instagram

Thursday, March 24, 2022 at Rogers Arena. The one who oscillates between Nickelodeon Rugrat, and Marilyn Monroe vibes, Billie Eilish, will stop in Vancouver this spring. This will be her only Canadian stop on her world tour.

Photo: unrealaltj / Instagram

Wednesday, March 30 at the Pacific Coliseum. Chilled out, emotionally psychedelic rock band alt-j will returns to mellow Vancouver skateboarders and those that hang out with them.

Photo: Captured! By Robots / Facebook

Wednesday, April 6 at the Fox. A highly anticipated event for robot enthusiasts as it is the only touring robot band coming to Vancouver this year. Supported by local acts BOG and Ape War.

Photo: Snotty Nose Rez Kids / Facebook

Friday, May 6 at the Commodore Ballroom. SNRK will play the Commodore this year, in lieu of their postponed show last December. These darlings of local hip hop put on a really good show. Both men hail from Kitimat Village.

Photo: @dualipa / Instagram

Friday, April 1 at Rogers Arena. Dua Lipa announces her long awaited Future Nostalgia Tour in celebration of her platinum-certified sophomore album Future Nostalgia Ticket link

@feliciathegoat / Instagram

Thursday, April 7 at Pacific Coliseum. Tyler the Creator, fans of the skateboarding artist and style icon already know.

Photo: Slipknot / Instagram

Sunday, April 17 at Rogers Arena. Enormously popular over the course of many years, they play metal and resemble the cast of every horror movie ever made. They scare me.

Photo: @davechappelle / Instagram

Friday and Saturday, April 22 & 23 at Rogers Arena. Dave Chapelle is very funny and knows when to quit.

Photo: @jordan.b.peterson / Instagram

Monday, May 2 at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre. He cannot sing, he cannot dance and he thinks women should all have babies, but Jordan Peterson will no doubt be speaking to packed house. Question is will he bring the lobster?

Photo: Motley Crew / Facebook

Friday, September 2 at B.C. Place. When you rock that hard, its probably hard to go back and do a normal job which may explain why these artists still tour. They will be supported by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts and Poison.

Photo: @rupaulsdragrace / Instagram

Sunday, September 4 at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre. Four months after Jordan Peterson plays should be plenty of time to clean and decorate the theatre for the likes of RuPaul and her queens. Question is, will Vancouver queens bring sufficient pageantry and sass?

Photo: @chrisrock / Instagram

Friday, October 21 at the Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre. He played UBC the last time he was here, and he will again. Rocks Ego Death World Tour is his first world tour in five years.

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11 Concerts You Can Look Forward To In Vancouver For 2022 - 604 Now

Waitsfield voters elect Gonda and Curtis to the select board – The Valley Reporter

After holding a pre-Town Meeting informational meeting earlier this week, Waitsfield voters headed to the polls and elected Jordan Gonda to the select board along with Chach Curtis.

Gonda and Jennifer Stella ran for a three-year seat on the board with Gonda receiving 307 votes to Stellas 101 votes. Curtis ran unopposed for a two-year seat on the board and received 395 votes.

Waitsfield voters passed a $2.4 million budget 364 to 90 and also voted 297 to 160 to permit cannabis retailers and integrated licenses. Voters approved spending an additional $10,000 for the Mad River Valley Recreation District 337 to 119. Waitsfield voters cast 343 yes votes and 109 no votes on adding an additional $10,000 appropriation to the Waitsfield Conservation Commissions Restroom/Recreation/Conservation reserve fund.

Voters also approved a measure calling for establishing a reserve fund for invasive species management in the amount of $10,000. That vote was 355 to 96. Voters also approved exempting the Masonic Lodge from property taxes for five years by a vote of 280 to 164.

Other election results saw Ted Joslin elected as a lister, Jennifer Peterson elected delinquent tax collector, David Babic elected library trustee, Joslin elected as town agent, Laura Brines elected cemetery commissioner and Robert Cook elected cemetery trustee.

At the towns informational meeting on February 28, after the board fielded questions about Town Meeting and the budget, board members held a regular meeting during which they discussed the towns indoor mask requirement. The board renewed its indoor mask requirement for 30 days at its February 14 meeting with a plan to revisit the issue at this weeks meeting. Curtis said his preference was to extend the requirement for the next two weeks because Washington County is still in a high COVID risk area , as defined by the CDC.

Gonda pointed out that part of the new CDC guidelines on county by county. COVID risk levels are based on the availability of hospital beds for non-COVID patients and board member Fred Messer (who is also the towns health officer) concurred that Washington County is still high risk.

Im inclined to leave things as they are, board chair Christine Sullivan said and board member Brian Shupe agreed. Sullivan pointed out that the school district would be making a decision on whether or not to continue requiring masks in schools in the coming days as well. Schools are allowed to remove mask requirements if vaccination rates are at or above 80%. Currently, Harwood Union, Crossett Brook, Waitsfield and Fayston are over 85% vaccinated and Fayston is close to 80%, Sullivan said. Brookside Primary and Moretown are not there yet, she added.

Stella, who was present at the February 28 meeting objected to the board making the decision to keep the mask mandate in place for another two weeks.

The rest of the world is backing down on mask mandates and were going forward with a mask mandate. Masks have done nothing to quell the number of cases. Its time to let people make their own decisions, she said.

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Waitsfield voters elect Gonda and Curtis to the select board - The Valley Reporter

Don Letts: Black Lives Matter protests made me question if I’d been tap dancing for the man – The New Statesman

Don Letts knew what Jamaica sounded like before he knew what it looked like. The film director, DJ and musician was born in London to Jamaican parents in 1956 and grew up listening to reggae. We had our soundtrack, he told me over video call. But there was no visual accompaniment. When I was a child, the only thing youd ever see of Jamaica was a postcard with some dude riding a donkey on a beach in a straw hat, or somebody limbo dancing.

This lack of authentic cultural references affected how Letts understood himself. Im first-generation British-born black, a child of the Windrush generation, he said as he spoke from his studio, a shed in the garden of his home in Kensal Rise, north-west London. He wore a khaki sweatshirt, a rasta cap and a gold chain around his neck, and spoke as he does on his BBC Radio 6 Music show Culture Clash Radio with warmth and charisma. That British-born black rolls off the tongue now, but back then it was confusing. I described myself as being of a lost tribe, neither here nor there.

All that changed with the release of The Harder They Come, the Jamaican crime film directed by Perry Henzell, which Letts saw upon its release in 1972. I remember walking out of the cinema having been taken by the power of a film to inform, inspire and entertain, he said. The film offered, for the first time, a visual representation of the country he was from, and that had influenced so much of his cultural life, but which he had never seen.

It also set Letts in pursuit of what would become his profession. Returning home from the cinema, he wondered whether he could be a filmmaker too. But in the Seventies, for a young black man, that was a ridiculous idea, he said. Film was an old white boys network. Fast-forward five years and, with the explosion of punk rock and its DIY sensibility, Letts saw his opportunity. My white mates are picking up guitars, man. I wanted to pick up something too. So I picked up a Super 8 camera.

At the time, Letts ran Acme Attractions, a clothing shop on Kings Road, London that was a hang-out spot for members of the Clash and the Sex Pistols, and artists such as Patti Smith, Chrissie Hynde and Bob Marley, who became a good friend. His filmography began with the Clash: he shot the music videos for tracks including White Riot and London Calling. He would go on to make videos for the British Jamaican group Musical Youth whose 1982 song Pass the Dutchie was a UK number one and sold over five million copies worldwide the Pretenders, Elvis Costello and Marley, and is renowned for spearheading music-video direction for black artists in the UK.

He now finds himself in front of the camera for the first time. Rebel Dread, which will be released in cinemas on 4 March, tells Lettss story through evocative archive footage, much of it his own. It details the threat of racism and police violence that he grew up with in Brixton, and tracks his career as a videographer, band manager and musician in the group Big Audio Dynamite. He alongside his brother Desmond Coy and contemporaries Norman Jay, Jeannette Lee, John Lydon and Mick Jones appear as talking heads.

Letts is often credited with marrying Londons punk and reggae scenes in the Seventies through his resident DJ sets at the Roxy in Covent Garden, London. White people from the suburbs would come to the nightclub expecting to hear punk, he said, and in between these raucous, punk-rock guitar live things theyd hear Don Letts playing dub reggae. During the course of our call he referred to himself in the third person several times, though never with arrogance. He remains aware of, but modest about, his place in the history books.

It was Trojan Records, the British ska, reggae and dub label launched in 1968 that sowed the seeds for the UKs love affair with Jamaican music, he said. People of my generation would have been hip to that stuff before Don Letts dropped a record on the deck. The people that I turned on to reggae in 1977 were all the white people that didnt interact with black people. Id like to take it on my shoulders, folks, but I never claimed it was all me.

Still, Letts in establishing the Roxys sound was at the heart of the culture clash. Thrilling archive footage in Rebel Dread shows the filmmaker and his rasta brethren dancing alongside punks who are in heavy eyeliner and bondage wear. Shane MacGowan is there, smoking by the bar. Letts remembers the Pogues frontman asking for a beer and two spliffs, which is, he said, the perfect example of cultural exchange.

Rebel Dread was finished more than two years ago, its release delayed because of the pandemic. With all thats happened in the interim, Letts feels as though he has changed since the film was made. Black Lives Matter made me examine what Ive been doing for the 66 years Ive been on this Earth, he said. I wanted to know if Id been tap dancing for the man or doing my bit. I quickly realised, whether it be in the films I made, or music videos or songs, the argument an underlying anti-racist message has never been far away.

But Don Letts doesnt spend his life on a soapbox. There is party music too. I just keep reminding people: you cant spend your life on the dance floor. Eventually the musics gonna stop and you have to go out and face reality. And guess what? There are some great tunes for that too.

[See also: The chaotic life and bruising songs of Mark Lanegan]

The co-existence of Londons punk and rasta movements was a testament to the power of culture to bring people together, Letts said. In both subcultures he sees a celebration of individuality and freedom, which, he observed, are themes the tabloids and the politicians are still determined to destroy. In the 21st century, he added, the only counter-culture is over-the-counter culture. The advent of technology has shifted many of these movements online, where they are less visible to outsiders.

Letts, who is a father, also wondered whether the rebelliousness of his generation had made things difficult for the next. Because of music, old aint what it used to be. I certainly havent become my parents, which is problematic for young people: how do you rebel against somebody like me? You cant out-tattoo, out-hairdo, out-style my generation. Ive got young kids and theyre trying to impress their dad and thats kinda cool, but We havent left a lot of stones unturned for them.

He is speaking partly in jest, because he realises, too, that todays young people have their own difficulties. Recently a friend asked him why teenagers today look so crap? And I said, because its more important that they get their heads together than their hair-dos. Its tough. I do empathise. Its hard to be a rebel when youre living with your mum.

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Don Letts: Black Lives Matter protests made me question if I'd been tap dancing for the man - The New Statesman