[Ken Gray] The G7; meeting is a wrap and a yawn. Kananaskis in Albertaโs land of oil and gas returns to whatever normal is these days. Top of the agenda was global trade relationships, escalating warfare in the Middle East, but definitely not consideration of the effects of global climate change on both economy and... Continue Reading →
The Real Hoax: Why Climate Denial Persistsโand Who Profits from the Delay
How Climate Denial Fuels Profit, Power, and the Politics of Collapse James B. Greenberg May 06, 2025 Trumpโs climate denial isnโt a lapse in judgment. Itโs a calculated defense of an industry that knows exactly what itโs doing. His โdrill baby drillโ mantra, his war on renewables, his rollbacks of environmental safeguardsโthey all serve one... Continue Reading →
Canadian religious leaders and Earth Day โ Remembering Pope Francis
Canadian religious leaders are finding their voice on climate justice issues. In a joint statement in advance of Earth Day Lutheran bishop Susan Johnson, Interim Anglican Primate (senior bishop) Anne Germond, and Indigenous Anglican Bishop Chris Harper have issued a strong statement connecting faith with the climate crisis as a matter of importance for members... Continue Reading →
Searching for K-9 โ a canine inquiry
Anther dog-blog by Juno, who lives with her humans in Summerland B.C., Canada. This five-and-a-half-year-old Labradoodle is an internationally celebrated dog blogger. Today she turns her attention to the intriguing world of Astro-physics. โItโs not every day that astronomers detect a possible Signature of Life on a distant planet.โ Writing in the New York Times... Continue Reading →
Crisis in the cubicle โ Technology meets necessity
Another in our Life in our little town of Summerland seriesย -- Extracted from The corporate quest to make better toilet paper โ The Washington Post April 10, 2025 โ Author Rachel Kurzius Last Friday, prior to my therapeutic swim class I made a visit to my favourite cubicle in the menโs washroom. My necessary duties... Continue Reading →
Jane helped build this house โ Alternatives to Anger 001
This blog is the first of a series suggesting how we can all do good things during this crazy time in our communities. Watch this space. My new friend, Jane, helped build a house, an โEarthshipโ in Zuni, New Mexico by connecting with Earthship Biotecture, an agency she discovered in 2015. Earthship is a sustainable... Continue Reading →
My dunking duck
Allow me to introduce you to my dunking duck. Amongst other gifts I received this Christmasโa Tushie bidet, a bar of still unopened 70% chocolate, a pair of comfy maroon socks, a writerโs style guide, and the ubiquitous bottom-of-the-stocking orange, I received something I have wanted for a very long time, a youthful memento, a... Continue Reading →
God the Creator?
Jesse Zink is Principal of Montreal Diocesan Theological College and canon theologian in the Diocese of Montreal. His recent book Faithful, Hopeful, Creative: Fifteen Theses for Christians in a Crisis-Shapedย World is now widely available. The following post by Jesse Zink was first published on Substack.com [Jesse Zink] A high-profile international gathering in Assisi earlier this... Continue Reading →
Blue Skies for Blue Sky? So far, so good
Blue skies smiling at meNothing but blue skies do I seeBlue birds singing a songNothing but blue skies from now on The invitation came right out of the blue. It was totally unexpected, even shocking. It was frankly, unwanted, and eventually refused. Who would have expected a request from such a person, on BlueSky Social... Continue Reading →
AI Preaching โ Never say never
OK, I admit it; I fell asleep during a recent Canadian Council of Churches online seminar titled: โTheology and Artificial Intelligence: Systematic and Denominational Perspectivesโ which occurred Tuesday, Oct 1, 2024. No worries however, as there will likely be a recording available. If not, AI will come to my rescue. Researching via Perplexity (an NYT... Continue Reading →