October 23rd, 2008
September 25th, 2008
Cuban Revolutionary Posters

Let’s do our job!
In 1961, Cuban schools close for several months. Students are sent to the countryside in ‘alphabetization brigades’ to teach the population reading and writing. The exercise books are highly political: among the first words taught are ‘Organization of American States’, ‘agrarian reform’ and ‘cooperation’. According to government statistics, contested by others, illiteracy is reduced from 20-25 to 4-5 percent.

Better not to be, than not to be revolutionary
In the orthodox socialist realist fashion, a slogan like this is illustrated with giant workers and heroic soldiers. Mederos chooses a purely typographic solution, where contrasts of black and white and differences in size are to enhance the meaning of the words. Upper case and lower case letters are mixed.

Setback
The sugar harvest of 1970 is big, but the desired ten million tons are not obtained. A comforting slogan is introduced: try to turn this setback (’reves’) into a victory (’V’ for ‘victoria’).
September 25th, 2008
Content: Issues Requiring Legislation
A listing of potential topics which the final piece could address. These issues will will/may require legislation to control, and are most likely to have a direct and visible impact on the population at large.
CO2 Emissions
Higher fuel efficiency standards
Greater use of public transport
Alternative transport methods
Emissions caps for industry
Clean Energy Sources
Economic initiatives for use and development
Heavy taxation of “dirty” energy sources (coal, oil, etc)
Localized power development
Excessive Consumerism
Buying according to need rather than want
Buying locally and discouraging unnecessary importation
Regulating product safety and examining lifespan
Conservation of Resources
September 16th, 2008
The (somewhat) Big Picture: Part 2
Thank you CBC for succinctly summing up all of the party’s platforms on climate change in one place, so I don’t have to try to.
Climate Change: Where the Parties Stand
Hey! You with the laptop. Vote!
September 14th, 2008
The (somewhat) Big Picture
I just received a call from the office of the NDP candidate in my riding of Vancouver East, Libby Davies, asking if I would be willing to once again volunteer some time to helping out by canvasing over the phone to support her campaign. This raised an interesting question for me, since I had previously taken for granted that the NDP would get my vote. I usually consider a vote for the Green Party to be a vote wasted*, and the alternatives of the Liberal Party and the Conservatives rather unappealing. Given that my sole political concern this election is where the parties stand on issues of climate change reform, I realized that maybe it was time to once again take a look at the various platforms to see what I think would be the best option in line with what I consider important.
*It was recently brought to my attention that a small aspect of the Canadian Federal Election system has slipped by the notice of most people. That being that for every vote that a party receives in every riding, they receive an increase in their federal funding for the following election. This means that every vote does matter, and does help, even when the candidate in your riding is pretty much doomed to absolute failure (ie Ryan Warawa in Vancouver East, seriously, why even bother spending the money?)
This brings me back to the basic principle that guides our democratic system. One person, one vote, and every single one counts, if only just a little.
Back to the matter at hand. Since this project is intrinsically linked to climate reform, and the government policies which will direct, I’d like to present you with some quick shortcuts to the environmental platforms, or lack thereof, for each of the four Canadian federal parties worth mentioning. Since I’m also a visually minded person, each of them has the image which is most prominent on their page discussing their policies.
The New Democratic Party:

“Practical, mainstream, step-by-step plan to address environmental crisis”
The Green Party:

“AVERTING CLIMATE CATASTROPHE”
The Liberal Party:

“The Liberal green shift plan: A bold response to the climate change crisis”
The Conservative Party:

“Conservatives are taking real action on the environment to build a stronger, safer, better Canada.”
The Bloc Quebecois:
Is pretty much completely irrelevant to this debate, since they are a one-province party with no real vision outside of Quebec. Personal Note: I was born in Quebec, and I consider their arrogance and presumption, as well as their consistent desire to destabilize national unity with unrealistic chatter about issues of sovereignty pretty damn embarrassing. Also, they only offer their website in French, presumably since no one in Quebec speaks english. Someone should inform the folks living in Montreal’s English Quarter about that. That said, if you read french and want to hear what they have to say, feel free.
