Pico Iyer on Citizenship, Identity, Movement and Place

A very good, reflective TED talk, by Pico Ayer (thanks to The Franco-American Flophouse), on where one comes from and our increasingly fluid identities. For the many of us who draw our identity from a variety of different places, cultures and experiences, it captures how our notion of time and space has changed, and how we have to build our own sense of who we are, and the stillness to appreciate it.

A contrast to the citizenship ‘boxes’ that governments, for understandable reasons, have to put us into.

Is Canada doing enough to ‘de-radicalize’ convicted terrorists? | Toronto Star

Most countries with radicalization problems have some form of these programs. They are relatively low-cost and provide insights to those who have become radicalized, in addition to helping some get out of radicalization ideology.

The government decision last fall to  cancel part-time chaplain contracts, largely impacting Muslim Imams, can only be characterized as bizarre, given that radicalization, while not large-scale, is nevertheless an issue in Canada.

Penny wise but pound foolish. Given Canada’s multicultural reality, chaplains should the diversity of the prison population (72 full-time Christian chaplains compared to 2 full-time Muslim chaplains seems unbalanced to say the least).

Is Canada doing enough to ‘de-radicalize’ convicted terrorists? | Toronto Star.

This Ramadan we’ve shown Islam and Britishness are not incompatible | Sayeeda Warsi

Good piece by Baroness Warsi, Co-Chairman of the UK Conservative Party, and Minister for Faith and Communities, on integration of British Muslims in the broader community.

This Ramadan we’ve shown Islam and Britishness are not incompatible | Sayeeda Warsi | Comment is free | theguardian.com.

‘Birth tourists’ believed to be using Canada’s citizenship laws as back door into the West | National Post

More information on birth tourism in Canada following the release of Citizenship and Immigration Canada’s recent consultations with Canadians on the issue, and in the context of the government considering changes to the current policy of granting citizenship automatically to people born in Canada.

While the press account still lacks hard numbers in terms of percentage of births, the range of comments and anecdotes suggests that the numbers are largely than expected, with the practice extending to more communities.

Still find it surprising, given the sophistication of some of our provincial medicare systems, that no harder data available. After all, we know the total number of births (377,636 in 2011),  government medicare billing systems should be able to isolate those births paid by provincial plans, and provincial public servants should be able to provide some analysis behind the different categories of births not paid by medicare (e.g., births within the 3 month waiting period for provincial medicare coverage).

‘Birth tourists’ believed to be using Canada’s citizenship laws as back door into the West | National Post.

From Wrong To Right: A U.S. Apology For Japanese Internment : Code Switch : NPR

Nice story on the history of the US apology for Japanese Wartime Internment. Canada took a similar approach to its apology, also in 1988. With a nice closing statement:

“There is a saying in Japanese culture, ‘kodomo no tame ni,’ which means, ‘for the sake of the children.’ And for us running this campaign, that had much to do with it,” he (Tateishi) says. “It’s the legacy we’re handing down to them and to the nation to say that, ‘You can make this mistake, but you also have to correct it — and by correcting it, hopefully not repeat it again.’ “

From Wrong To Right: A U.S. Apology For Japanese Internment : Code Switch : NPR.

How many multiculturalism ministers does Canada need? – Inside Politics

More comment from Kady O’Malley further to the press release yesterday.

How many multiculturalism ministers does Canada need? – Inside Politics.

Statement — Minister Jason Kenney issues statement to recognize celebrations of Greek heritage

Looks like the idea of joint statements by Ministers Kenney and Alexander didn’t last long.

Statement — Minister Jason Kenney issues statement to recognize celebrations of Greek heritage.

The Franco-American Flophouse: Not Everyone Wants to Be A Citizen

In debates about citizenship, the default assumption is that all wish to become citizens of the country in which they live. A good piece on the exceptions and related reasons. As always, individual situations vary, and the degree to which someone has an accepted citizenship (i.e., not from a country where visa and other restrictions make life and travel a pain), the greater the flexibility to choose.

Part of the longer-term trend towards instrumental citizenship, rather than being fundamental to identity.

The Franco-American Flophouse: Not Everyone Wants to Be A Citizen.

Real Women attack on Baird a lesson for multicultural Canada: Brender | Toronto Star

Another demonstration of how much gay rights are part of  mainstream Canadian political discourse, with a nice counterfactual of how these play out in multicultural Canada. With the sensible reminder to let such statements – and groups – hang by themselves, highlighting just how little support they have.

Real Women attack on Baird a lesson for multicultural Canada: Brender | Toronto Star.

Charte des valeurs québécoises: le PLQ pourrait s’y opposer | Martin Ouellet | Politique québécoise

Interesting developments in the ongoing Quebec debate over the need and form of a charter of Quebec values. Main point of the critics: a dividing rather than uniting strategy for Quebec society, and that most values are already captured in the Charter, Quebec laws and regulations.

The Quebec Liberal Party taking a much stronger line that previous liberal governments, where the tendency was to blow with the wind.

Charte des valeurs québécoises: le PLQ pourrait s’y opposer | Martin Ouellet | Politique québécoise.