Sunday, February 1, 2026

Immigration Canada and the Criminal Code of Canada

I often wonder about our Immigration system and the Criminal Code of Canada.  Criminals keep finding ways to circumvent the system.  I heard this on the news and it infuriated me!

Global News (Dec 2025)
14 suspects identified by the B.C. Extortion Task Force claimed refugee status after CBSA began immigration investigations.
Their deportations are now on hold until the Immigration and Refugee Board rules on their claims.
Immigration lawyers note that filing a claim can delay removal for years due to IRB backlogs.

The Federal Law that has a weakness was exploited by these "visitors" to our country has been addressed by the Mayor of Surrey and the Premier of British Columbia.  They have both asked the Federal Government to fast track new legislation to fix this loophole.  Bill C-12 that will stop criminals from claiming refugee status and Bill C-14 that will tighten the Criminal Code are being voted on and will soon be law in Canada.  It can't happen fast enough.  All 14 of these thugs have shot at houses and terrorised business owners with extortion are out on bail!  

I read Jeffrey Epstein was convicted in 2008 or procuring a child for prostitution.  He was a registered level 3 sex offender in New York after 2010.  All the people who continued to visit him, must have been aware of this.  

Obviously the people at Customs and Immigration in Ottawa did their job because when he tried to come to Canada he got this letter:


It is legit as it's been reported on television.   I'm glad they did their due diligence in 2018!

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Alan Alda turned 90 on January 28th


The Last Two Nurses of the 4077th Came to See Hawkeye — And He Broke Down in Tears
January 23, 2026
His birthday was five days away.
But they couldn’t wait.
At their age, no one waits anymore.
Alan Alda was in a hospital room at Cedars-Sinai.
Nothing dramatic.
Nothing headline-worthy.
A bad flu.
Parkinson’s complications.
Dehydration.
Doctors said he’d be fine.
A few days.
IV fluids.
Rest.
Still…
He was 89 years old.
Five days from turning 90.
And he was spending it in a hospital bed.
The room was quiet.
Too quiet.
White walls.
Beeping monitors.
That antiseptic smell that makes time feel slower.
For eleven years, Alan Alda played Hawkeye Pierce —
the doctor who never stayed in bed.
Now he was the patient.
He stared at the ceiling and whispered to himself:
“Funny how life works.”
January 23rd.
Three days in.
He was feeling better.
But something was missing.
Not the medicine.
Not the doctors.
The noise.
The chaos.
The laughter.
The family.
The 4077th.
That afternoon, there was a knock.
Alan opened his eyes.
The nurse smiled — a strange smile, like she knew something.
“Mr. Alda,” she said,
“I think you’ll want to see these visitors.”
The door opened.
And for a second, Alan thought he was dreaming.
Two women walked in.
One Black woman, silver-haired, warm eyes.
One Asian woman, elegant, calm, holding a bakery box.
And they weren’t dressed like hospital visitors.
They were wearing Army nurse uniforms.
Olive green.
White aprons.
Red crosses on their caps.
Uniforms from the 4077th.
The Black woman stepped forward.
Stood at attention.
Saluted.
“Lieutenant Ginger Bayliss reporting for duty, sir.”
Alan’s breath caught.
“Ginger…?”
Odessa Cleveland.
The nurse from Season One.
From the very beginning.
Fifty-one years ago.
“You remember me?” she asked softly.
Alan tried to sit up, hands shaking — not from Parkinson’s.
From emotion.
“How could I forget?” he said.
“You were family.”
Odessa took his hand.
“I heard you were here,” she said.
“I still had the uniform. I don’t know why I kept it.”
Alan nodded.
“Because it mattered.”
Then the other woman smiled.
“And I brought cake.”
Alan looked at her.
That face.
“Soo-Lin… Soon-Lee?”
Rosalind Chao laughed.
“Two episodes,” she said.
“The last two. That counts.”
She set the box down.
Inside:
A birthday cake.
“HAPPY 90TH BIRTHDAY, HAWKEYE.”
“Your birthday’s in five days,” Rosalind said.
“But we couldn’t wait.”
Odessa added quietly:
“At our age, Alan… we don’t wait anymore.
We just show up.”
Alan’s phone buzzed.
A video call.
Jamie Farr.
On screen.
In a wheelchair.
Wearing the dress.
“HAPPY EARLY BIRTHDAY, HAWKEYE!”
Alan burst out laughing — real laughter.
“Klinger never misses roll call,” Jamie said.
“I couldn’t come, so I sent the nurses.”
They sang Happy Birthday.
Off-key.
Too loud.
Perfect.
They ate cake.
They told stories.
They laughed about the set.
About the years.
About the ones who were gone.
No speeches.
No sadness.
Just family.
Before leaving, Odessa handed Alan a small book of poetry.
“There’s one in here about MAS*H,” she said.
“About you. About what that time meant.”
Rosalind kissed his forehead.
“Happy early birthday, Hawkeye.”
When the door closed, the room was quiet again.
But it wasn’t empty.
Alan looked at the half-eaten cake.
At the uniforms now gone.
At the memory that had just walked in and refused to wait.
Five days later, Alan would turn 90.
But the celebration had already happened.
Because the last two nurses of the 4077th showed up.
Because family doesn’t wait.
And because some bonds don’t fade —
even after fifty years.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Urgent Primary Care just opened in Cloverdale

 

Fraser Health opened another Urgent Primary Care Center close to where I live.  I've visited the one by the Surrey Hospital with a family member a couple of years ago and was pleased at how fast and efficient they were.

My daughter slipped on the ice in the Costco parking lot last Thursday.  She had a lot of pain in her ankle and it was swollen.  She waited until the next morning and it was still sore so she called "811" (our Nurse Line in BC).  She talked to a nurse who took all the information and told her to go to Urgent Care.  The nurse tasked how long it would take her to get there.  It was about a 25 minute drive and when she arrived, they were waiting for her!  There were lots of people sitting on chairs, but she was taken as a "priority"!   

They put her in an office, took her blood pressure, temperature and told her to go to the X-ray facility in the next building.  They were waiting for her!  She went right in.  She went right back to Urgent Care and before she could sit in an empty chair, they told her to go directly to a room where the doctor was waiting!  Thankfully she didn't break anything, but had a bad sprain.  They told her to stay off of it, what to expect and what to do/not to do.  She was amazed by the quick efficient matter it was dealt with. She is slowly getting better.  

If anyone has a medical problem in British Columbia, call 811 first!  If you live in Cloverdale or South Surrey, a new Urgent Primary Care Center opened this week on Wednesday!

5711 176A Street
B.C.V3S 6S6
Parking and Transportation:  Parking available. Public transit nearby.

Hours of operation

Urgent care:
Open 7 days a week, including statutory holidays:
9:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.

Primary care (by appointment):
Monday to Friday: 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
For patients already connected with a family doctor or nurse practitioner.

If you need urgent care, your first step is to register as a patient.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Red Hat

I joined my Red Hat group on April 13, 2013.  I will always remember that day because it was the day of the Boston Marathon Bombing.  We heard about it on our drive home.  I've really enjoyed being a Red Hatter.  Some of our ladies can no longer attend the lunches because of their age.  One long time member, Elizabeth, gave us all her red hat regalia.  She sure had a huge selection.  Another short term member Sandy also gave us some items. Today we had our monthly lunch in the recreation room of one of the members condos in North Burnaby.  We were all told to please take something to remind us of Elizabeth and Sandy. 

Lots of lovely hats!



Lots of clothes and shoes!

Boas, beads and bows!

Drinks and desserts.  Buble in red and purple and plenty of coffee and tea

Lots of tasty lunch options!
The Red Hat Society's philosophy is centered on fostering fun, friendship, freedom, fulfillment and fitness for women as they age.  Our group doesn't stress fitness but we sure have a lot of fun.  It was founded in 1998, the organization serves as a "disorganization" or social network that encourages women to "recess" from the responsibilities of daily life to enjoy companionship and unapologetically embrace the aging process.

Here is the hat I choose.  It's over the top!  I also got a lovely purple boa.  Our dollar store only has red ones!

The hat was Sandy's and the boa was Elizabeth's!


Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Aurora Borealis explained

Aurora borealis happens when charged particles from the Sun collide with gases in Earth’s upper atmosphere, creating glowing colours—most often green—near the magnetic poles. These lights appear because Earth’s magnetic field funnels solar particles toward the Arctic, which is why places like northern Canada often see spectacular displays.

What Causes the Aurora Borealis

Solar wind: The Sun constantly releases charged particles (electrons and ions). During solar storms, even more particles stream toward Earth.

Earth’s magnetic field: Most particles are deflected, but some are guided toward the north and south magnetic poles, where they enter the atmosphere.

Atmospheric collisions:

When these particles hit oxygen, you see green (most common) or red.

When they hit nitrogen, you get purple, blue, or pink.

Altitude effects:

Around 80–500 km above Earth, atoms get “excited” and release photons—light—when they calm down again.

Why the Lights Move and Ripple

The aurora’s famous curtains, arcs, and waves follow the shape of Earth’s magnetic field lines.

Sudden bursts of brightness, called substorms, happen when energy stored in Earth’s magnetosphere is released all at once.

 Why We See Them in the North

The magnetic field directs solar particles toward the poles, so the aurora is strongest in high‑latitude regions like northern Canada, Alaska, Norway, and Finland.

In the south, the same phenomenon is called aurora australis.

The best place to view aurora is in the north of the province.  I've done a lot of Alaska cruises but they've never been in view when we've been at sea.  We continue to see them in the lower mainland of BC.  The best place is on a mountain or in a park out of the city lights.  I generally go to the beach and look north.  The pictures have been amazing!

Monday, January 26, 2026

Where did the years go?

We were born in the 40’s, 50’s and 60’s.

We grew up in the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s.
We studied in the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s.
We were dating in the 70’s and 80’s.
We got married and discovered the world in the 70’s and 80’s.
We ventured into the 80’s and 90’s.
We stabilized in the 2000’s.
We got wiser in the 2010’s.
And we are cruising through the 2020’s.

Turns out we've lived through eight different decades, two different centuries, and two different millennia.

Here’s the part where it really picks up speed and starts to illustrate what we’ve seen and what we’ve been through, something that future generations won’t experience and probably have a tough time even imagining.

We once relied on operators for long-distance calls, lined up at phone booths, and fed coins into pay phones.  Today, we make video calls across the globe, watch YouTube instead of slides, stream music instead of playing vinyl, and send messages by email or WhatsApp instead of handwritten letters.

And if that wasn’t enough for our poor old brains to handle, it gets even more mind-blowing:

We’ve gone from live sporting events on the radio, to black and white TV, and then to HD TV. We went to Blockbuster for our video movies, and now we watch Netflix.  We got to know the first computers, punch cards, diskettes, and now we have gigabytes and megabytes.  From manual typewriters to electric, then to keyboards. Documents on paper stored in filing cabinets, to digital copies stored in something called “the cloud,” and it’s all right there in our cell phones or iPads.

Who would have thought that we’d be able to talk on our wristwatch like Dick Tracy did in the comics not so many years ago?  That was real science fiction; now it’s commonplace.  And handheld phones that not only make phone calls but take photographs and send and receive text messages, emails and personal files.

We dodged infantile paralysis, meningitis, H1N1 flu and COVID-19.

We rode roller skates, tricycles, bicycles, skateboards, mopeds, gasoline or diesel cars, and now we ride hybrids or 100% electric vehicles, cars, trucks, and even scooters.  And then witnessing men boarding a spacecraft, rocketing to the moon. and then, walking on the moon!

That yes, we’ve been through a lot but what a great life we've had!  We could describe us as “exennials”; people who were born in that world of the 50’s, who had an analog childhood and a digital adulthood.  We're kind of a “yah-seen-it-all” generation.

We have literally lived through and witnessed more than any other generation in every dimension of life.  It is our generation that has literally adapted to change.

A big round of applause to all the members of a very special generation.  And we have learned that time does not stop. In fact, it seems to accelerate.

Suddenly, it’s already six in the afternoon.  Where did the week go?  And how can it be Friday already?  Wait, it’s January?  And 2026? Blink, and 50, 60, and 70 years have passed.”

So, what can we take away from all of this?  Well, maybe it’s this: don’t stop doing something you like because of a lack of time.  That time, unfortunately, never returns…

As Kenny Chesney sang, “Don’t blink, life goes faster than you think!"

Immigration Canada and the Criminal Code of Canada

I often wonder about our Immigration system and the Criminal Code of Canada.  Criminals keep finding ways to circumvent the system.  I heard...