Catriona Le May Doan, the Dutch, and Speedskating

I learned what the difference between figure, hockey and speed skates were very young. My father was a hockey referee, my mother had speed skates, those old ones with leather boots and long steel blades.

For years I wanted to put on those speed skates by the length of the blades scared me. One day, I finally did put them on, and cruised over a frozen lake. After years of using figure skates, I loved the way the speed skates let me move. Stopping was a different story and I found out how much ice can bruise my butt more than a few times until I was reminded to “snow plow”, a skill I had learned on downhill skis.

Skating on speed skates is great! It takes far less energy to get going, and the blades don’t rock so I could take long, easy strokes and enjoy the ride! I found out just how under-coordinated I was though, when I tries to turn. Amazing how much snow and ice you can plow when you slide sideways on a frozen lake.

But, after an hour of practice, I did manage to complete several circles without fear of spearing my butt, someone else, or making huge divots on the ice.

I have tried several times to find a place to buy some speed skates, but, unlike Holland or other places, the skates are hard to find.

I have watched speed skating competitions for many years, and when Catriona was advancing up the ranks, I was amazed at her skill, the huge length of each stroke, and above all, her incredible strength. Taking corners on skates, as I have found out, requires a real awareness of your entire body, especially your feet. Catriona seemed unstoppable at times, even to the point of my thinking she was not skating but floating over the ice while using some kind of magic to be seen as skating.

Now, on to this Olympics. I have friends in Holland and speed skating is their national passion. Sandra said the Dutchies go “gek”, and her translation was gek=crazy! So, while the speed skating competitions are on, Sandra and I follow the races, cheering on the Dutch if there are no Canadians within medal contention, and cheering our own competitors if there are.

What really makes this fun is listening to Catriona comment on the races, the technique, the skill, and definitely the strength each of the competitors have or are missing. This really makes watching a lot more informative, a lot more fun, and at the end of the racing, very satisfying.

Canadians who like to know the speed skating news heard about Catriona’s daughter being born, but in a passing small bit of news, while the Dutch papers covered that event with large items. Hmmm maybe Greta will become either a rancher like her dad or another strong woman with skates on like her mom. Maybe Greta will find a way to combine the two.. . . .. .

I do cheer on the Dutch skaters, but I want our own skaters to do very well on the day. That is the huge difference with the Olympic games, you are allowed to cheer on skaters from all over the world without being seen as “unpatriotic” and it makes the whole thing a lot more fun.

Thank you Catriona, Jeremy, Clara, and all the skaters for giving us a lot to cheer for. There are new skaters who need Canadian support, and perhaps the best place to show that support is by selling speed skates in the sporting stores. I would love to teach someone young how to just glide over another frozen lake and go for a nice, long ride on those blades.

Competing for Gold When YOU are the Spectator

There have been so many things to see in Vancouver, but they are usually unavailable to anyone with families and earning less than $60,00 it is ridiculous! To see the medals awarded will cost you money, to eat at any of the competitions, it will cost you money, and to even get into some of the places hosted by countries you have to pay.

Adding insult to this are the multiplicity of goof-ups. If you know that the entire area may be faced with warm weather, would it not be prudent to start making preparations long before the venues are going to be used? If you expect the world to come and visit, would you plan to have some way to get very good, or at least, passable, photographs of the symbols of these Olympics?

Move it back a ways and one of the worst goof-ups with the planning was done for the construction of the athlete’s village. When you are planning to have a building put up, would it not make a huge amount of common sense to get a builder that has an excellent INTERNATIONAL reputation for building on time, on budget, and without having a huge financial problem?

The same company that RUNS Whistler-Blackcomb has had financial problems for the last few years, yet someone in VANOC chose that company to build. Running a resort is NOT building, and that company should have been thoroughly examined for financial stability.

There is no reason to put all your Olympic eggs into ONE basket, and now the company that runs Whistler-Blackcomb is facing foreclosure and an auction of the property. That company was in such deep financial trouble that the building of the athlete’s village HAD to be taken over by the City of Vancouver, with the same sub-contractors. Now, during the Olympics, the athletes have found out you can hear very well through those very expensive walls, in fact, a little too well.

Now to the Spectator and people who want to enjoy the “Olympic Experience”. I went down to the area where the Olympic “cauldron” is, and when I got there, I found a huge chain link fence. Imagine trying to take a once-in-a-lifetime photo with a child and you cannot do it because there is a fence that is 12 feet high between you, the child and the cauldron. BAD planning again!

There have been all the stories of the lack of snow on the mountain that is the host site for a lot of the events, and I am wondering how much planning was done so that snow was built up to a 9 foot base. From what I can see, none. Yes, Vancouver and the entire west coast does experience warm, wet, windy winters, often never seeing snow in the valleys at all! There is snow making equipment on that mountain, and yes, there are temperatures cold enough during the fall and winter to get the base built.

Spectators going up to that mountain have to wait in line for up to almost 2 hours to get up to the venues, then, if you want so much as a cup of coffee, it takes 1 1/2 to 2 hours just to do that! Imagine spending most of your time in line for a cup of coffee or some food! NO, food and drink is NOT allowed to be brought with you, so if you have kids, or need to keep your blood sugar level, you MUST buy food or drink.

Right now, being a spectator has become a real sport unto itself! Getting around the sights and sounds is a marathon of patience, and you need to be able to steer children past those who consider “the locals” as something of a damn nuisance.

The cauldron photos are almost impossible to get unless you sharpen your elbows and fight for the fencing, then poke the lens through the diamond-shaped holes in the fence. Forget trying to put anyone in the photo. The fencing becomes the main focus of your image, not the person or the cauldron, and trying to edit out a huge chain fence from a photo becomes another version of skill and patience.

Now, if you are an enthusiastic fan of a certain sport and wish to see your athlete get their medal, you need to PAY to see that. Guarding your wallet becomes a dual sport, once on the packed public transit where international pick-pockets are very active, and second, when you have to figure out if you can even afford to go to the various sites!

I have dealt with huge crowds all my life, and pick-pockets are something I am quite familiar with avoiding. I KNOW how to do it, but when you come from another country, probably one that does NOT speak English, signs warning of the pick-pockets in English only are wasted space.

Vancouver has so many people from all over the world who have immigrated here, translation of these warnings would be so simple, yet someone forgot to plan for that too. So, for the visitors who see these yet cannot read or understand them, you may find the Olympics cost you not only money, but identification papers and possible more.

My advice for those coming to visit during the games? Buy a waist belt that has a pocket built into it, or a pouch that zips shut, then put what you only need for that day in it, NEVER carry your complete wallet or purse, and put a bit extra in another spot, in case you do get your money taken. This will be unlikely IF you do wear the belt.

Plan on taking twice the time to get to the venue, then at least 2 hours to get into that venue, and EAT a HUGE meal before you even leave your accommodations. Bring along a book, a pocket game, something to pass a lot of time without wearing out your temper or patience.

As for me, I am just going to avoid the entire thing, which is highly unusual for me, because I have no trouble with crowds and walking in them, but the hassles with all the venues has taken the enjoyment right out of it for me. I will watch on the television, and perhaps go to my own neighbourhood places to get what I need.

I do NOT enjoy going broke paying for something that is supposed to be FOR the people, not the business sector.

My wishes for those from all over the world are these: enjoy what you can, cheer on your team and sport, walk around without spending your money on knock-off souvenirs (there are stores packed with them here) and do what you can to make this a good memory.

As for the Winter Olympics in total, as an all-around experience, this one may just be written up as probably one of the lousiest, badly organized, and saddest there has been.

Oh, one point here, I lived in Calgary when the 1988 Winter Olympics were there, and there were FREE events everywhere, including ALL  the medal presentations, and there was no problem with any of the multiplicity (yes, many of them, not just a very select few) contractors and sub-contractors who built the facilities for the events, the media, and the athletes. There were contingency plans for all possible headaches, including those famous Chinook winds and warm winter. It was, as the IOC said, “the best ever Winter Olympics”, and I can definitely see the difference between the two now.

Olympics are on, but with a dark cloud

I live where the Winter Olympics are being held and this afternoon there was one competitor that has died.

I am sending my thoughts and wishes for comfort to the Georgian team, the entire Georgian population and, above all, the family of this man.

For the rest of the competitors, I wish you the best day you can have in your competition, especially all those who have worked so very hard to make your Olympic teams!

I will be watching the competitions and cheering on all the competitors, no matter which country you come from, although I will be cheering louder for the Canadians!

To the rest of the world, I hope you all enjoy the competitions, and that each competitor, no matter whether they win the medals or not, get your support.

Hockey! Oh this is going to be good! The Russian, Swedish, American, Finnish, and Canadian teams all have players so evenly matched that the tournament is going to be totally AWESOME!!!!!

Curling! For those who have not seen the game or even know what this is, you will be surprised at the skill and tactics necessary to win even the lower level games! Players need to think and work way ahead, to the end of the game, before they even “throw” the first rock!!

Skiing! Speed, danger, risk, and snow which is in abundance on the downhill runs, so this should be a very good competition! Swiss, Austrian, American, Canadian teams all have good contenders for medals, but when I watch this, I am totally amazed at the speed! WOW!

Go for your best on the day! Try to have the best performance! That is all anyone seriously should ask for.

Going Down? War, Inflation, and American War on ……..

Yep, there is widespread unemployment, and yes, there is also the need to support two wars, as well as try to pay for the deployment and other costs of the military.

What does this cost each household per month? Well, best guess right now is around $600. Each and every household in the U.S., through taxes will pay for the costs of these wars at a rate higher than a lot of the mortgages after the housing crisis.

Where are things going? History shows that wars only do one thing, create inflation, because the costs of waging those wars must be paid, even when there is little left over in any budget for those payments.

Here is where it gets scary.

Most of the wars in history began from civil unrest, unemployment, and international or internal national stresses. The collapse of the international banking and monetary systems have created both. Resentment is already growing, and blame is being placed on the American banking system, the relaxation of the regulations on that banking system, and the lack of real resolve to restore regulation.

Who is going to pay for all the veteran’s benefits and the costs

The Bush Administration has not asked the American people to sacrifice for the war effort. In fact, the Bush Administration did not even put the costs of the war into the national budget at all.

The tax payer will be paying this bill for years, if not decades, and with the whole idea that you can wage a war on “terrorism” being a limitless war, there will be far more costs coming, and coming soon.

The departments created by the Bush Administration all add to the yearly bills, and with each incident, there are more and more paycheques created by the endless number of “possible threats”.

So, currently there is a really nasty set of circumstances that are hitting every single household in American. Jobs are no longer available in the marketplace, the wealthy are keeping every dime and asking for more money from the government (read tax payer, poor or middle class) and the inevitability of taxes being raised.

Republicans will scream, no doubt, about more taxation, but unless they manage to get their ‘pollyanna’ thinking geared more to the grim reality that the Bush Administration got the entire country into, they are NOT facing wars or reality!

Irony here is really bitter. The American society did (yes, that is past tense) have a real drive to improve their world, to invent, to create new and more efficient ways of producing items. Then the businesses realized that those same items could, and are, far cheaper to make in other countries. Jobs will NEVER return to the U.S. as they once were in the “good old days”. It will NOT happen. Why?

Simple, there is NO reason to want to move those jobs back to a location where wages are higher and costs are higher. So, unless the American worker wants to be paid less than other workers elsewhere, and still pay that $600 per month, those companies will just keep paying dirt poor wages and watch the economy those very companies depend on shrivel.

There is a second reason, the unpredictability that private health insurance puts on not only the business sector, but the working people themselves. Each company that even tries to provide basic coverage is now facing a completely unpredictable cost structure for that coverage.

Let me try to put this into a simplified story here.

Jack is working for a company that once had a very comprehensive health care package, but with the rising costs, that company (I will call it by a totally fictitious name, Kitchens and Cabinets of New Hampshire) cut back. Now Jack gets only very minimal coverage, and his co-pay has risen. KCNH now finds that the private insurers are looking to get rid of his company from their files, so they are looking at Jack for any possible pre-existing conditions in his medical past.

KCNH decides to look elsewhere for a location. The boss at KCNH finds out that he can move his entire operation to another country where his costs would be 40% lower for health care coverage and that coverage is far better than where he is now. He looks at his bottom line, the operating costs, and realizes just how better off his company would be after the move. The money he is spending on his employees would allow him to expand, rather than drain the company further. So, he chooses to move the entire operation to that country.

Jack is now faced with a real problem. His boss tells Jack that either Jack immigrates, or he will no longer have a job.

Jack goes home to his family, and is totally devastated. His daughter is already dealing with a lingering health problem and Jack and his wife have already had so many arguments over which bill to pay first, that both of them are showing signs of stress on their own bodies.

There is instability growing in the Jack family, mostly caused by the demands of the mortgage which has now become worth more than the real value of the home, and the realization that, without the basic coverage Jack did get from his employer’s health coverage, their entire family is at risk.

Jack talks with his wife, tells her what the company is going to do, and starts to look at the option of going with the company to the new location. He does some research, looks at the taxes, looks at the new location, looks at the housing costs, then, finally, looks at the health coverage the country provides.

Hmmmmmm this is looking good! All ambulance, hospital, doctor, specialist, and other services are covered! No wonder his boss is moving the company to the new location!

Jack talks to his wife about the changes they would face. His wife points out one thing. Predictability!

The costs of the health coverage are set, and cannot be changed without solid reasoning. The company will have total predictability too! Their employees will no longer have to work with the increased stress of trying to come up with the co-pay and find ways to pay for even one doctor visit. Yep, this definitely looks much better for all concerned.

A stable work force needs to have some predictability, if they are to remain stable. Simplicity itself, but right now, that is exactly what is NOT happening in the American economy.

Even dogs know that being stressed will make them sick, so they will, with animal wisdom, try to find a way to get rid of the stress.

Back to the big picture, now.

Wars on two fronts, the banking mess which seems to have become a business plan (build huge wealth on faulty housing insurance or multi-level mortgaging) which has now become the BANK OF AMERICAN TAX PAYER, which covers the “mistakes” or screw-ups by banks, and unemployment that has skyrocketed, and there is massive instability.  Add as the icing on the cake, the demands by private insurance more money from those same tax payer pockets, and the recipe for a collapse is baked and served.

Republicans want their cake and they want to eat it too! NO more taxes, but pay for the wars, the banks and cover all those millions of Americans without health insurance with what? Buttons?

Jack may be lucky, because at least his employer is willing to take Jack along, but how many companies are willing to do that?

War has one guaranteed effect, inflation. This has been true since the 1600’s, and remains true now. So the future of the American family is set. MORE taxes, inflation driving prices up again, and jobs that will stay outside the country.

Essentially the U.S. will soon become what Britain became after WW2. A far lesser power, with debts and the need for reconstruction that may take decades.

Ah yes, speaking of the U.K. post WW2! What most Republicans and Democrats have not even understood is this. Europe, the U.K. and WW2 faced 6 years of 9/11! Daily bombing, fires, orphans that were lost, much like Haiti now, and houses obliterated. If you compare photographs of Port Au Prince and London, Paris, Berlin, Amsterdam, Danzig (Gdansk), or any other major city in Europe with photos of Port Au Prince, you will see only small differences. The U.K. went through years of this, over and over, all the while trying to keep their own forces on the battlefront!

Most current universal health care systems were implemented in the period following the Second World War as a process of deliberate healthcare reform, intended to make health care available to all, in the spirit of Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948, signed by every country doing so. The US did not ratify the social and economic rights sections, including Article 25’s right to health.

This is the mistake that is now coming back to bite the U.S. big time!

Here is more irony, the U.K. had a debt that was at least 100% of their entire Gross Domestic Production at the end of the war. Much higher than even the current debt the U.S. has now!

The Members of Parliament were dealing with housing crises all over, the repatriation of wounded soldiers and POW’s, as well as trying to find some way to rebuild, so even considering changing the costs to the government and increasing the debt to fund a national health care program must have been highly unlikely. “We cannot afford it!” That was far more true then than the current cries from the Republicans and those who are fiscally conservative now!

What happened? The British Parliament, along with the House of Lords passed a bill that created the National Health Service in 1948, just a very few years after going through years of 9/11!

The National Health Service passed in 1948, a bill which extended health care security to all legal residents. So now I listen to the “reasons” and all the rubbish that those who are trying to block any kind of real health care reform, and wonder this. If YOU had lived through years of 9/11, had an entire country to rebuild, would you have the guts, the leadership, the foresight to change?

A country where workers KNOW what that they can get sick, in an accident, or face contagious diseases and get treatment that is not going to BANKRUPT them are far more likely to work better, be healthier, and their employers are also going to be able to expand!

The health care “system” is highly over controlled by corporate interests, and capitalism has been allowed to determine who, literally, lives or dies.

The “good old days” of America being the super power, the “leader of the free world”, the shining example of “democracy” are done, over, kaput, fini, GONE!

The rest of the world has gathered steam, is progressing, and is matching the U.S. in innovation, in production, and will continue to. The companies based in the U.S. have absolutely NO interest in bringing jobs back home. The U.S. forgot to rebuild infrastructure, forgot to make their own back yard a priority, forgot the middle class worker in favour of profitability. The U.S. financial “wizards” found a way to once again, put the onus on the tax payer for screwing the world economies, yet there was an enormous outcry of “too big to fail!”  Credit default swaps were a way to run around insurance regulation, and with all the mess created, it will take at least a decade or more to undo the damage, IF those in the Congress or Senate are even willing to take on the leadership and have the guts to make stiffer regulation a possibility.

The big picture does NOT look good, and without some real leadership on everyone’s part, the U.S. will be paying for all this neglect for years.