Archive forMay 14, 2008

Mean Streets

  Having moved from Victoria, B.C. eight months ago, I am finding living in Winnipeg quite an adjustment. No, I am not talking about the weather, I am talking about the insane amount of crime. There aren’t really any places in Victoria where I can’t walk down the street alone, even at night! Winnipeg, on the other hand, is a completely different story. There are places here that I have never been for fear that I might get beaten up and mugged. Thousands of dollars worth of belongings have been stolen from my house, and I have even been assaulted. At one point I didn’t leave my house for over a month because I didn’t know what would happen to me next. But do you know what the saddest part is? I live in a nice little part of town called Riverview, which just goes to show that nowhere is really safe. I think that the policy should pay more attention to places like Riverview because not all the crime is happening in the north end; it’s EVERYWHERE!

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We have to start somewhere

 Mayor Sam Katz proclaimed Friday June 20 “Bike To Work Day”.  He would like more Winnipeggers to go green and leave their cars at home. With the price of gas steadily rising I think it’s a great idea.�
” Bike To Work Day” may inspire a lot of people to cycle more often and create less pollution.  It might even start in other cities and maybe even other countries.
Lately I notice a lot of these kinds of green ideas.  Like with the re-usable bags you can buy now for a dollar.  A couple of months ago I also heard of a day where people turned their lights off for an hour around the world.
These are great ideas; we might start small but we have to start somewhere.  Roseann M.

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Euthanasia, When is it Right?

  Recently a French woman was denied euthanasia. Chantal Sebiré suffered from a rare incurable tumor that left her disfigured, blind, and in agony. She was denied euthanasia because it didn’t “fall” into the requirements to receive the treatment. She argued she didn’t want to endure further pain, but wasn’t treated despite her efforts. Though I didn’t see or meet Chantal, I feel her pain. Why did she have to endure the pain that could have been prevented? Euthanasia should be permitted through certain circumstances.

Those who are against euthanasia would argue “What kind of people are we if we kill those who are weak and frail”? Euthanasia doesn’t have to be used if there is a way to turn things around. Euthanasia has to be used as a last resort. Any person who has owned a dog that is old, frail, and in pain knows that we don’t want this animal to suffer anymore pain. We then euthanize this creature to save it from all its pain it will endure. If one can’t get a proper euthanasia to end their life, they will die in pain, or possibly by suicide.

Chantel Sebiré overdosed on barbiturates and was pronounced dead March 19, 2008. Her reason was simple, She couldn’t endure the pain anymore and ended her life by her own hand.

Euthanasia has a stigma attached to it. It becomes an endless war of debate when different opinions collide. However, We can’t think of ourselves all the time. We are not enduring this endless pain that denied euthanasia patients have. They have to put up with their diseases by themselves because no one else is there to help them. They find their resolve somewhere in the timeline of their life. Most people have a story ending that goes “We grow old and die”. To Chantel Sebiré, hers was “To die young and in pain”. We shouldn’t be fighting pain alone, we should fight pain together.Ricardo D.�

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