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Page 7 of 168
The Dark Gospel
Tucker Carlson brings his message to Alberta
Tags: Alberta, Alberta government, Alberta Magazine, Alberta oil, Alberta Views, American, american culture, anti-climate, anti-trans rhetoric, anti-vaccine, Billy Graham Crusade, Bow Valley Credit Union, calgary, Calgary Sun, Canadian, canmore, child death, Christian private school, civil liberties, Conrad Black, conservatism, conspiracy, conspiracy theory, coutts four, cowboy, crime rates, danielle smith, David Parker, disinformation, division, edmonton, Erin Collins, extremism, fascism, federal government, fentanyl, Fox News, freedom of speech, futurist, God, great replacement theory, guns, hate and fear, How Fascism Works, human rights, immigration, Jason Stanley, Jeff Gailus, John Birch Society, Jordan Peterson, Justin Trudaeu, Kid Rock, Lee Richardson, Liberal government, liberate Canada, Little Black Lies, MAGA, MAID, medical Assistance in Dying, misinformation, negative rhetoric, oil and gas, parental rights, persecution, persecution complex, polarization, Prime Minister, Propaganda, radical left, radio talk show, Rally, right-wing politics, Ruben Nelson, safe injection sites, shared values, Skipping stone, Small Fringe Minority, state media, sworn enemies tour, Take Back Alberta, TBA, Terminally ill, The Dark Gospel, The National, totalitarian, Tucker Carlson, Vietnam War, Voting Power, W. Brett Wilson, white men, Woke crowd
September 1, 2024
Moving to Delilah
Winter is a place you will relearn every year
Tags: 1905, 2024 books, Alberta book review, Alberta books, Alberta Poetry, Book review, catherine owen, crabapples, Delilah, edmonton, Freehand books, Garden, history, homeowner, House, Intimate, Jasper Avenue, K.B. Thors, memories, Memory, Moving to Delilah, Neighbourhood, new books, photographs, poetry, pragmatism, Prairie home, Red Deer County, strathcona
Cities and Towns
…and their provincial overlords
Tags: affordable housing, Alberta, Alberta Cities, Alberta Views, Autonomy, calgary, canada, Canada courts, cities, Cities and Towns, climate change, communities, confederation, constitution, Covid, danielle smith, downtown vacancy, edmonton, emergency services, federal government, flood plains, floods, grant, homelessness, immigration, Indigenous, infrastructure, legislation, local councils, Local Government, Manitoba, municipal funding, municipal projects, Municipalities, natural disasters, newcomers, oil and gas, on second thought, override municipal bylaws, Paula Simons, political autonomy, Prince Edward Island, property taxes, Province, provincial gatekeeping, provincial legislatures, Provincial overlords, red deer, reservoir, Rural Municipalities, saskatchewan, shortfall, small towns, social infrastructure, Toronto, UCP, unpaid taxes, vacancy, wildfires
What to Teach Kids?
Alberta’s endless battle over social studies curriculum
Tags: 2010, 2014, 2016, 2022, academics, Adriana LaGrange, Alberta, Alberta Education, Alberta Views, Ambrose University, Amy von Heyking, Ancient Greece, bureaucracy, calgary, Campus St-jean, Cenovus, christian dominant, citizenship, civil servants, competencies, conceptual knowledge, Conseil Scolaire Centre-Nord, Craid Harding, critical thinking, curriculum redevelopment, Dave Hancock, David Scott, Demetrios Nicolaides, Deron Bilous, Draft curricula, Dwayne Donald, edmonton, Edmonton Journal, education system, essential understanding, Eurocentric, Feature, feature article, first nations, FOIP, freedom of information, grade 6, Grande Prairie, guiding questions, inquiry, Inuit, J-C Couture, Jason Kenney, Jennifer Cassidy, job skills, K-12 Education, k-3 curriculum, k-6 education, Kathryn Crawford, knowledge-based curriculum, Laurence Miall, learning outcojmes, Lindsay Gibson, lobbyists, Magna Carta, Marco Polo, Metis, Meyranie Giroux, Michel Kelly-Gagnon, minister of education, Montreal Economic Insitute, Mount Royal University, ndp, NDP government, pedagogy, pierre Rousseau, pilot curriculum, plagiarism, Premier, revised curriculum, Scholastic, school board, Skills, social studies, Social studies curriculum, specialists, Suncor, Syncrude, systemic racism, Taxation, teachers, Treaty 6 first nations, UCP, UCP government, university of alberta, university of calgary, University of Lethbridge, What to Teach Kids?, Yvonne Poitras Pratt
Briefly Noted: July/August 2024
New Alberta Books
Tags: 2024 books, Alberta books, alberta grasses, alberta native plants, Alberta Views, An Anthology of Ecological Experiences, Angel Mota Berriozabal, anthology, Beyond the Park, Bilingual, Books in Translation, briefly noted, dispora, garden inspiration, gardening, gardening guide, Go-to Guide, Grasses, illustrated books, immigrants, Janet Melrose, Jenna Butler, Kelly Kaur, Laberinto Press, landscapes, landscaping, Memory, native grasses, native plants, prairie ecology, prairie gardening, Sheryl Normandeau, Singapore, The Prairie Gardener's Go-To for Grasses, Touchwood Editions
July 1, 2024
Whistle at Night and They Will Come
Indigenous Horror Stories, Vol. 2
Tags: 2023 books, Alberta books, Alberta Views, Alex Soop, blackfoot, Book review, Cary Thomas Cody, Durvile & Uproute Books, elders, Eugene Brave Rock, Fairy-tale, francine cunningham, god isn't here today, horror stories, Indigenous books, Indigenous Horror Stories, indigenous storytelling, Kainai Nation, Kokum, legend, Midnight Storm, Moonless Sky, Moshum, Myth, new books, New Canadian books, rez, Skinwalker, Soop, spirits, storytelling, supernatural, taboo, Whistle at Night, Whistle at Night and They Will Come, why is whistling taboo, wisdom
The Compassionate Imagination
How the arts are central to a functioning democracy
Tags: 2023 books, Alberta books, arts and culture, arts budget, arts critic, arts education, arts funding, Bach, board member, book reviews, Canada Council, Canadian artists, Canadian arts and culture, Canadian Commission for UNESCO, Canadian Copyright Act, Canadian Culture Contract, Canadian Foundation of Culture, Canadian publishing, Carissa Halton, CBC, Cormorant books, cultural institutions, culture, culture credits, federal cabinet, funding, Library and Archives, little yellow house, local bookstore, Max Wyman, Ministry of Canadian Heritage, Music, opera, Philosophy, Quebec Artists, rebar framework, STEAM, STEM, the arts, the Canada Council for the Arts, The Compassionate Imagination, UNESCO, Vancouver Sun, Vancouver theatre, Yo-Yo Ma
Rudy Wiebe
Essays on His Works
Tags: 2023 books, Alberta author, Alberta books, Alberta Views, Angie Abdou, aritha van herk, Athabasca University, Bianca Lakoseljac, book reviews, Canadian Classic, Canadian Literature, CanLit, chauvinism, Comic, cross-cultural representation, Cultureal appropriation, essays, famous author, feminism, festschrift, First Peoples, George Melnyk, Guernica Editions, Indigenous, Indigenous relations, interviews, Katherine Govier, Margaret Atwood, Mennonite writer, Miriam Toews, multi-genre, Myrna Kostash, new books, Olga Stein, poetry, prairie writer, Reprint, Rudy Wiebe, Rudy Wiebe Essays, Rudy Wiebe Review, Rudy Wiebe: Essays on His Works, scholarly work, teacher, The Tehmtations of Big Bear, university of alberta
Bringing Back the Alberta Bouquet
Growing interest in slow flowers
Tags: Adrienne Mason, agriculture, Alberta, Alberta Bouquet, alberta business, alberta farmers, Alberta farms, alberta flowers, Alberta Supernaturals, Alberta Views, Andean Trade Preference Act, Becky Feasby, Blackfalds, Boreal Blooms, Bouquet, bouquet subscription, Buck Godwin, calgary, Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement, Canadian Growers, Cardston, carnations, Central Alberta, Central Alberta Greenhouses, CFN, chrysanthemums, Clara Qualizza, cold climates, Cold Lake, cold-climate growers, compost, Cooperative Flower Network, Debra Prinzing, edmonton, eithical flowers, Eurosa Farms, family owned business, farmers market, farming, feature article, floaral design, floral design, floral industry, floriculture, flower farmer, flower industry, flower subscription, Flowers, fresh flowers, globalization, Greenhouse, greenhouse cultivation, Hakai Magazine, Harvard University, Heather Henson, Highland cattle, horticulture, Imported flowers, Jill Langille, Kim Wickwire, Kristen Primrose, lisianthus, local business, local florist, local flowers, local growers, local market, locally grown flowers, Love and Fantasy Flowers, Meadow, Meadow and Thicket Farm Flowers, Moira Mackinnon, Myrtle Good, natural flowers, olds college, Pacific Coast Floral Wholesale, Positive stories, Prairie Girl Flowers, Primrose Lane Farm, red deer, Rosalie Wesenberg, roses, rural business, saskatchewan, seasonal flowers, self-taught, Shiloh Primrose, shop local, slow flowers, Slow Flowers Society, Slow Flowers Summit, Slow Flowers Summit Banff, South America, sustainability, sustainable floristry, Sustainable Flowers, Sustainable Flowers Workshop, The Sustainable Flowers Podcast, tree planting, U-pick, Uplifting stories, urban farming, valentines day, Walter Ramsay, Waterton Lakes, Waterton Lakes National Park, Wedding industry, Whales to the Rescue, Wildwood, woman owned business
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