A friend of mine got caught using one of these sites a few years ago. Her ticket was not valid and they would not answer the phone! I keep seeing advertisements on social media regarding cheaper air fares. Beware, this is what I found:
Linda's Journal
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Third party airline cheap fares
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
The Unreliability of Social Media: Why We Need to Slow Down and Look Closer
Social media has become the world’s fastest rumour mill. A single post — sometimes thoughtful, sometimes careless, sometimes deliberately misleading — can travel farther in five minutes than a well‑researched news story might in a week. And because these platforms are woven into our daily routines, it’s easy to forget that speed and accuracy rarely travel together.
The problem isn’t that social media is all bad. It’s that it’s unreliable, and we often treat it as if it’s not.
Emotion spreads faster than truth
Platforms are designed to amplify whatever gets the strongest reaction. Outrage, fear, shock, and moral judgment outperform calm, verified information every time. A dramatic claim — even one with no evidence — can rack up thousands of shares before anyone stops to ask, “Is this actually true?”
By the time corrections appear, the emotional damage is already done.
Algorithms don’t care about accuracy
Social media feeds aren’t curated by librarians or editors. They’re shaped by algorithms that reward engagement, not truth. If a misleading post keeps people clicking, commenting, or arguing, the system pushes it harder.
This means:
Falsehoods can trend.
Conspiracies can flourish.
Harmful narratives can look “popular” even when they’re not.
And because each of us sees a personalized feed, we can end up believing that “everyone” thinks a certain way — when in reality, it’s just what the algorithm decided to show us.
Photos and videos aren’t proof anymore
We’ve reached a point where images and videos can be edited, staged, or AI‑generated so convincingly that even trained eyes struggle to tell the difference. A picture used to be evidence. Now it’s just content — and content can be manipulated.
When a video goes viral, people often react instantly, without context, without verification, and without knowing whether the clip is old, edited, or missing crucial details.
Is Mitch McConnell alive? Who knows? This picture showed online. When you put a recent picture of Mitch this one is about two years old at least.
| Then Jimmy Kimmel on vacation had to post this. |
| The photoshop comics are having a lot of fun! |
People share before they check
Most misinformation doesn’t spread because someone is trying to deceive. It spreads because someone is trying to help.
A friend sees a warning, a dramatic story, or a heartbreaking claim and shares it “just in case.” But good intentions don’t guarantee good information. In fact, well‑meaning sharing is one of the biggest accelerators of false narratives.
The cost of believing too quickly
When unreliable information spreads, real harm follows:
reputations damaged
communities divided
fear amplified
vulnerable people targeted
public trust eroded
And once trust is broken, rebuilding it is slow, difficult work.
So what can we do? Slow down. Verify. Ask questions.
Before sharing anything, it helps to pause and ask:
Who posted this, and why?
Is the source credible?
Does this claim appear anywhere reputable?
Is the language emotional or manipulative?
Does it feel designed to provoke a reaction?
A few seconds of checking can prevent hours, days, or even years of unnecessary harm.
Social media is powerful — but it’s not dependable
It’s a tool, not a truth machine. It can connect us, inform us, and entertain us. But it can also mislead us, divide us, and overwhelm us if we treat every post as fact.
The healthiest approach is simple: use social media, but don’t trust it blindly. Slow down, look closer, and remember that truth rarely arrives in a viral package.
Monday, July 13, 2026
Oolichans
- Skeena River
- Bella Coola River
- Kemano River
- Nass River
- Fraser River (hisorically, though runs have declined)
Sunday, July 12, 2026
Vancouver’s Granville Street Shines Again: A Transformation Worth Celebrating
When Vancouver first announced it would be a FIFA host city, plenty of people were sceptical. We’ve all seen big promises come and go, and for many of us, Granville Street had become a place we simply avoided. Crime, open drug use, and the heartbreaking reality of homelessness kept locals away. I hadn’t walked down Granville in years — and I wasn’t alone.
But something remarkable happened.
In preparation for welcoming the world, the City of Vancouver rolled up its sleeves and took action. Granville Street was cleaned up, reimagined, and brought back to life. And the result is nothing short of astonishing.
Walking down Granville now feels like stepping into a different city. The street is closed to traffic, opening it up to people instead — families, visitors, locals, all wandering freely. Street bars spill out with energy, music drifts through the air, and there’s a sense of celebration that feels contagious.
And yes, the police presence is noticeable — but in the best possible way. It feels safe. It feels cared for. It feels like a place you want to be.
For the first time in years, Granville Street feels vibrant, welcoming, and alive.
No wonder visitors from around the world were impressed. Vancouver showed what can happen when a city commits to reclaiming its public spaces and making them shine again. FIFA may have been the catalyst, but the transformation is something every Vancouverite can appreciate.
So here’s a genuine thank you to the City of Vancouver. You did an incredible job — and you reminded us of what Granville Street can be.
We took the Canada Line downtown and got off at Yaletown-Roadhouse. We walked up Davie Street to Granville Street.
Saturday, July 11, 2026
Corruption at it's finest
Every so often, a news story pops up that feels strangely inconsistent depending on where you hear it. That’s exactly what happened this week with reports about a piece of property the City of Surrey recently purchased. After hearing one version on TV and reading a very different take in print, I decided to look into it myself.
The City of Surrey purchased a parcel of land for $6.8 million. That number alone raised eyebrows — not because cities don’t buy land, but because of what came next. A former owner publicly stated that the property was worth less than $3 million.
That’s a striking gap.
When two sources differ by more than half the value, it’s worth pausing and asking a few basic questions:
Why does the City’s purchase price sit so much higher?
Was the land appraised differently for municipal purposes?
Are there zoning changes, future plans, or strategic reasons that would justify paying more?
Or is this simply a case where the public deserves clearer communication?
In a city as large and fast‑growing as Surrey, land transactions can be complicated. But transparency shouldn’t be. When numbers diverge this dramatically, residents naturally want to understand what’s behind the decision. The land is being used to increase the Surrey Lake Park, so no development or zoning changes are required.
So I went looking — not for drama, but for clarity. And sometimes, clarity begins with simply noticing when the stories don’t line up.
This is an election year! The City of Surrey Appraisal is 7.8 million. The Province of BC Assessment was 2.933 million!
It's time for an independent police force to investigate this!
Friday, July 10, 2026
Another wonderful Red Hat Lunch & The World
We didn't go downtown when FIFA was on in Vancouver because of the crowds. Yesterday, Pat arranged our Red Hat lunch. It was at the Tap and Barrel Shipyards in North Vancouver. It's a nice trip across on the Sea Bus. We didn't have a lot of sisters as many are travelling. Pat's sister Kathleen is visiting from the UK and her daughter Sandra also joined us.
FIFA was showing the France - Morroco game on the big screen. Lots of people at the pub watching the game:![]() |
| The World Cruise Ship |
It's the planet's largest private residential yacht at 644 feet/196 meters - the only ship of its kind currently in operation sailing a continuous itineray across every ocean and continent. Aboard this truly luxury ship are amenities that exceed even the highest standards of luxury travel.
Here is the itinerary for this year:
A New Year in the Southern Hemisphere
The adventure begins where summer is in full bloom: Australia and New Zealand. These lands feel like nature’s open‑air museum — kangaroos bounding across sun‑washed plains, fjords carved by ancient glaciers, and cities that hum with coastal energy. It’s a gentle, generous start to a year that will soon turn wild.
A Rare Antarctic Semi‑Circumnavigation
Few travelers ever see Antarctica. Fewer still experience a semi‑circumnavigation — a sweeping, once‑in‑a‑lifetime arc along the White Continent’s remote edges. Here, silence becomes a landscape of its own. Icebergs glow blue from within, penguin colonies chatter like tiny communities, and the horizon stretches so far it feels like the edge of the world. This portion alone could define a lifetime of travel, yet on this voyage, it’s only the beginning.
South America and the Far Pacific
From Antarctica’s stark beauty, the ship rises into the color and rhythm of South America. Think tango in Buenos Aires, the roar of Iguazu Falls, and markets overflowing with tropical fruit and handmade textiles. Then comes the remote Pacific — islands that seem to float in time. French Polynesia’s lagoons shimmer like liquid turquoise, while Hawaii offers volcanic drama and the warm embrace of aloha.
The U.S. West Coast adds a familiar touch: rugged cliffs, redwood forests, and cities that have shaped modern culture.
Summer in British Columbia and Alaska
By mid‑year, the ship reaches the Pacific Northwest, where summer reveals a different kind of majesty. British Columbia’s coastline is a tapestry of islands, inlets, and wildlife — orcas slicing through calm water, eagles perched like sentinels in cedar trees. Alaska follows with its glaciers, gold‑rush towns, and endless twilight skies. It’s a season of wild beauty, the kind that reminds you how vast and alive the world still is.
An Immersive Passage Through East Asia
As autumn approaches, the voyage turns toward Asia. Japan’s temples and neon avenues, South Korea’s dynamic cities, China’s deep historical roots, and the Philippines’ warm, welcoming islands create a mosaic of culture and tradition. Each stop feels like opening a new chapter — different languages, different flavors, different ways of seeing the world.
Southeast Asia and a Festive Finale
The final stretch brings the ship into Southeast Asia, where history and spirituality meet in vibrant daily life. From the lantern‑lit streets of Vietnam to the golden temples of Thailand, every port offers something unforgettable. And then, as the year draws to a close, the journey culminates in Singapore — a city that celebrates innovation, diversity, and the joy of gathering. Ringing in the New Year here feels like stepping into the future.
I know people are going to want to know the cost so if you are curious:
What a Year on The World Really Costs
1. Residence Purchase or Lease
To live aboard The World, you must first secure a residence. Current market ranges:
Entry-level studio/one‑bedroom: USD $825,000 to $3 million
Larger multi‑bedroom residences: USD $4 million to $15+ million
Some sources cite an entry fee as high as USD $8 million for certain long‑term leases.
This is a purchase, not a fare — you’re buying into a private global community.
2. Annual Service & Operating Fees
These are mandatory and cover crew, fuel, dining, maintenance, and global operations:
USD $60,000 to $300,000 per year (depending on residence size and services)
3. Additional Annual Costs
Typical yearly expenses include:
Insurance: USD $1,000–$6,000
Amenities & perks: USD $200–$1,200
Taxes & port fees: USD $0–$5,000
Maintenance plans: USD $1,500–$4,000
Third party airline cheap fares
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