Advocacy, BCPoli, Media Release, Politics, Victoria BC

BC Electoral Reform Committee: 93% support for proportional representation in public consultation – Fair Vote Canada

93% of those who participated in the public consultation of the BC Electoral Reform Committee with an opinion on the voting system recommended proportional representation.
— Read on www.fairvote.ca/06/10/2025/bc-electoral-reform-committee-93-support-for-proportional-representation-in-public-consultation/

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Article

The Magic of the Washboard

The Magic of the Washboard

https://www.theepochtimes.com/opinion/the-magic-of-the-washboard-5905654

8/25/2025

The Magic of the Washboard

Commentary

A tragedy of the digital age is how we’ve lost curiosity for how things work. No more taking apart a car and putting it back together again, as my brother and I did with a 1963 Volkswagen Beetle. No more fixing the transistor radio. No more homemade wiring. No more fidgeting with things.

We just buy and consume and throw away and buy more things. We spend $1,200 on a smartphone that we know for sure will be replaced in 3 years. Closets are packed with electronics and chords that we know for sure that we will never use. A refrigerator breaks and we have no clue what to do.

Meanwhile, when I encounter even the most simple things and see how they work, or at least try to, I find myself mystified.

Sometime in the last few years, I got so frustrated with washing machines—they have one job and are not doing it—that I started doing it myself in the tub. That set me on an adventure of discovering the best detergents, temperatures, soaking time, bluing, pre-treatments, and so on, all in an effort to discover precisely how clothing gets clean.

Somehow we are several generations deep in which people have absolutely no idea how clothes get clean. We stick them in a box and take them out and put them in another box. We are so unthinking about this, and so confident in our machines, we happen not to notice that our clothes are not getting clean.

Meanwhile, the blasting hot dryer is a disaster for clothing. The “lint” in the catcher is your clothing falling apart, so that you will buy more.

In the course of figuring out laundry from the bottom up, I got frustrated with rubbing clothing against other clothing and thought there must be a better way. Then I remembered: the washboard. Not the musical instrument; the actual tool for washing clothing.

I bought a cheap one.

I’m telling you, the washboard is pure magic. You grab the fabric and rub it on there. The stains and dirt disappear without wearing down the fabric. Soaking is essential but not the path of final cleanliness. That requires agitation. No “agitator” in the machine can compare to the precision and thoroughness of the washboard.

Human hands with the human mind plus mental focus: there is no machine that has ever managed to improve on that. Despite all the promises, conveniences, and habits of consumption for many generations, the best way is still the old way.

Who invented this great thing? And why is it so damn effective? Honestly, I find this tool thrilling in a way that the iPhone is not.

It turns out that the history of the washboard is fairly modern, tracing to the late 18th century and early 19th century, with American ingenuity at the heart of it. It seems simple. You have a frame of wood and a metal grate with a corrugated surface. It creates friction and agitation that dislodges dirt, grime, and stains from fabrics. No amount of rubbing clothes together substitutes.

Grok says: “Soap reduces the surface tension of water, allowing it to penetrate fabric fibers, while the washboard’s ridges help work the soapy water into the material, flushing out dirt.”

Maybe so. Maybe that’s the whole secret. I don’t know. I just know that they work extremely well.

These became really popular consumer items at the birth of the modern world, at a time when people started focusing on cleanliness and hygiene. They had money to buy things and clothing was becoming more democratized. All classes of people, not just the rich, started caring what they looked like and how they smelled.

The washboard was the key to brighter and cleaner clothes. Patents were being issued for new designs. They had nice handles and came in different sizes for different purposes.

Even now, I find myself fascinated by how well they work. I suppose I would not have thought so. It must have taken quite some experience and imagination to come up with the idea. It certainly is an improvement over a rock, which damages clothing, or a simple stick. It takes care of delicate fabrics and scrubs jeans really well too.

When the washing machine was invented, replicating the effectiveness of the washboard was the great challenge. It was never really overcome for one simple reason. The machine has to treat every piece of clothing, and every part of the clothing, the same way, with the same motion. This is pure waste, on the one hand, and also insufficient for some parts, on the other hand.

For example, when I do shirts, I obviously apply extra pressure and time on the cuffs and collars, while the major part of the shirt gets only a quick treatment unless there is a stain. You cannot do this in a machine. This is why we now pre-treat clothing but even that is not a worthy substitute for the action of a washboard.

This is a huge problem. A machine is not intelligent like human hands. We can use our brains and brawn to apply extra attention based on visuals. A machine programmed to regard every part of every fabric the same cannot do this.

The biggest downside to the machine: It acculturated many generations to forget or never learn how clothes come to be clean. It’s amazing, people truly have no idea.

It’s not just this. It’s pretty much everything. Old 78 records had a physical operation. You could almost see the sound on the surface, and the needle scratching on there was just a marvel that enticed the imagination. Who even knows how streaming music works? We are surrounded by things that are utterly mysterious.

Maybe that is okay, and I don’t really want to go back in time, except and to the extent that our age has enabled us to lose curiosity. Our ancestors were different. They cared intensely about tools and their operations.

The first Smithsonian museum was devoted to the history of the industrial arts. Today we call that “technology” but back then they knew it was really art. And everyone was super curious about it all, how it came to be, how things work, while celebrating the inventors and achievers and the companies that brought tools to the masses of people.

Are we still curious? I’m not sure. That old museum was closed years ago and all its content stuffed in some basement somewhere. Young kids are no longer taught about the history of American invention and are thus tempted to believe everything is now as it always has been, with no intellectual or physical effort required to make it happen.

Aside from typing and scrolling, there is not much a young generation does with its hands. Musical training is fading and shop classes in high school are rare. There is some effort these days to bring back real apprenticeships in actual skills but there is a long way to go.

To be sure, it is a glorious thing how YouTube has boosted the do-it-yourself industry, and cheers to the huge hardware stores that encourage people to make things and improve their homes with painting, gardening, deck building, plumbing, and so much more.

We should all do this more in our lives, not simply because it is fun but because it keeps our imagination alive in times that seem to be conspiring to blunt and kill them. It also feels great to bear personal responsibility for how something works.

Is there really no way to escape digital armageddon in which no one pays attention to anything but the magic box in our pockets? Is there any hope for regaining control of our world from the titans who have stolen our time, brains, communities, and relationships?

Sometimes the best way to start is with something seemingly simple. Like the washboard.

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BCPoli, CanPoli, Health, Independence, Informed Consent, pandemic, Personal Responsibility, Politics

Vindication for the Unvaccinated?

BY DAVID MARKS   JUNE 22, 2025   At a recent family gathering, I sat at the dinner table with a group of loved ones for the first time since the …

Vindication for the Unvaccinated?
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Article, BCPoli, CanPoli

Image Block. Row 3. Tight BC Election Race Signals a Changing Political Climate.

Tight BC Election Race Signals a Changing Political Climate

OCTOBER 29, 2024

A couple takes in the view from the seawall in Vancouver on March 29, 2023. 

The Canadian Press/Darryl Dyck

Tight BC Election Race Signals a Changing Political Climate

By Conrad Black

The extremely closely contested provincial election in British Columbia illustrates both the rise of conservatism and the peculiar tenacity of the leftist New Democratic Party in B.C.

The trend to the responsible right is general in the Western world and is the appropriate response to the wokeness, fiscal irresponsibility, muddled view of the collective, and individual national interest of the Western nations. It denotes an entirely understandable rising boredom with the platitudes of supposedly post-national human brotherhood, as well as the exaggerated claims and extremist techniques of environmental extremism.

But B.C.’s imperishable susceptibility to the call of a leftist party has a source that is a little harder to identify. Because it is such a beautiful place, and Vancouver and some other cities are wedged picturesquely between the ocean and the mountains—a majestic situation reminiscent of Naples, Sydney, San Francisco, Rio de Janeiro, and other magnificent port cities—there is perhaps a larger than-is-justified weakness for taking seriously overzealous claims about what it takes to protect the province’s natural beauty. It may have something to do with the fact that the post-Cold War militancy of the environmental movement is traceable to its effective takeover from authentic conservationists by the militant international left, defeated in the Cold War but tactically regrouped with great skill of improvisation to attack capitalism from the new angle of ecology in the name of defending the planet.

Because British Columbia is also primarily an economy of resource extraction, chiefly base metals and forest products, the labour movement is, by Canadian standards, unusually strong, and has no trouble making common cause with the academic and theoretical preoccupation with the environment—as long as the unionized mining and forestry industry workers can translate their environmental concern into more pay for less work. In this conception, less work is less spoliation of the environment, and B.C. makes a unique laboratory for the competition between enlightened capitalism and the unstable alliance between militant environmentalism and a labour movement claiming a right to be paid more while helping to preserve the environment by doing less.

Historically, the third party in Canada, originally the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, which became the New Democratic Party in 1961, was an alliance between Prairie agricultural dissent from the governing Canadian economic system and Eastern labour dissent from the managerial capitalism of Ontario and Quebec. These forces were represented by the first leaders of the NDP: Tommy Douglas, the moderate premier of Saskatchewan, and David Lewis, the moderate Toronto labour lawyer. Initially, B.C.’s environmentalists gradually became an exotic addition to this core of Canada‘s overtly socialist party, but they have since become a full-fledged member of a triad of support and have substantially replaced the old Prairie agricultural populism, which has become more conservative with increasing prosperity.

The Oct. 20 election in B.C. is apt to remain of uncertain outcome for up to two weeks. At least, as is usual in Canada, there is no suggestion of election irregularities or illicit activities. It is an authentically very close contest. This indicates the war for the hearts and minds of British Columbians, which for a long time depended on the Bennetts’ Social Credit Party, which was essentially a Liberal-Conservative coalition, forcing the NDP to split the vote with an underfed provincial Liberal Party. W.A.C. Bennett was premier from 1952 to 1972, and his son, Bill Bennett, was premier from 1975 to 1986. When Social Credit expired as the anachronism it was (no one, including the Bennetts, paid any attention to the founding doctrine of Major Douglas about spreading money around amongst disadvantaged people), the provincial Liberal Party became effectively a Conservative-Liberal coalition, which is what the provincial Conservative party is now.

What is mystifying is that British Columbians would seriously consider re-electing political parties so self-punitively to the left as the incumbents. This government surreptitiously attempted to hand over co-ownership of over 90 percent of the province’s territory to a comparative handful of indigenous people, and to disguise this fact from the public. It was an astounding combination of confiscatory legislation with official deviousness and pusillanimity in disguising the extent of the proposed deception.

The combination of finding every conceivable environmental reason for delaying the extraction and export of B.C.’s resources and frustrating the whole province in guilt-ridden deference to the indigenous peoples, and thus obstructing almost every development project based on more sophisticated land use, has consistently retarded the economic progress of the province. That and other policy nostrums have made B.C. a notorious and failed laboratory for woke and politically correct behaviour. The experiment with unfettered marijuana distribution has been a disaster. The attempt to treat hard drug addicts by a system of voluntary gradualism has also been a disaster. Only the fact that it is such a naturally splendid place could possibly explain the extent of public indulgence in stupid and destructive policies.

From the perspective of the federal Conservative Party, however this provincial election turns out, the news is relatively good: it means that the Conservatives should be well ahead of the Liberals in federal MPs from B.C. in the next election, and whatever the NDP can preserve in that election should accelerate the Conservatives on their way to being the governing party in the succeeding Parliament.

Additionally, whether the NDP ends up having won this election or not, with or without the collaboration of the two Green MP’s who have been elected, the party has suffered a serious setback from its previous position, and the emerging trend incites and justifies some optimism that British Columbia is at least proceeding towards a return to its political senses.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

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BCPoli, CanPoli, Climate Change, Independence, Resource

High Tech Electricity Necessity Opens Old Nuclear Plants Even US , Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island Site !

Who would have believed it? No one! But Nuclear is alright now —the High Tech Gods say so ! Constellation Energy has  just signed a 20 year …

High Tech Electricity Necessity Opens Old Nuclear Plants Even US , Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island Site !
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Article, BCPoli, CanPoli, Informed Consent, pandemic, Personal Responsibility

Political Authority and the Duties of Conscience. Lecture by Bishop Athanasius Schneider, given at Cambridge Nov. 24, 2023.

What an interesting lecture, that may point to many of our Churches having failed humanity starting in 2020, and perhaps much earlier.

open.substack.com/pub/bailiwicknews/p/political-authority-and-the-duties

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Advocacy, Article, Health, Informed Consent, pandemic, Personal Responsibility

American mRNA fanatics and health bureaucrats just made their worst decision yet

The Centers for Disease Control is about to push a new round of Covid boosters on healthy teenagers and adults, even as the rest of the world admits …

American mRNA fanatics and health bureaucrats just made their worst decision yet
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