Tuesday, Oct. 24: We don’t need polarization here in Canada, says one reader. You can write to us too, at [email protected]
Published Oct 24, 2023 • Last updated 4 hours ago • 2 minute read
A picture taken from Israel’s southern city of Sderot shows smoke billowing during a Israeli strike on Gaza on Oct, 23 amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas. Photo by JACK GUEZ /AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Resist calls that would polarize us
If Israel responds to calls for a ceasefire, the theory goes that Hamas will have won. If Israelis and Palestinians hate each other for years and decades to come, Hamas has also won.
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Canadians can only stand on the sidelines and grieve for what is happening. But if, in our daily lives, we are asked or expected by Israeli or Palestinian friends or colleagues to take sides, perhaps we should try to tell them that we share their pain and understand their outrage, but that it appears to be the intention of Hamas to divide and sow hatred and the desire for revenge among ordinary people. If we succumb, Hamas will have achieved its objective.
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The smog of war’s aftermath is even more deadly than the fog of war itself.
Annette Bellamy, Ottawa
Use federal guidelines for Lansdowne 2.0
Re: Ottawa can get millions in federal housing money if it accepts the rules, Oct. 19.
Mohammed Adam’s column speaks of NIMBYism: Not in my backyard. I live in the Glebe and say YIMBY: Yes, in my backyard.
Many accuse us of NIMBYism when it comes to opposing the Landsdowne 2.0 plan to build two very large luxury rental towers. I would welcome affordable housing being built there. How about two smaller, but more livable towers (say, 10 stories each)?
There is a reason why the Glebe is such a desirable neighbourhood: walkable, good schools, local shopping, well organized community organizations, parks, etc. This is a perfect place for such housing.
Obviously, developers focus on profitable housing. It is the city that must “accept the rules,” and with this “new” money, commit to building truly affordable housing. I say YES to such housing at Lansdowne.
Bessa Whitmore, Ottawa
Canadian doctors should get priority
Re: International medical grads could help fix Canada’s doctor shortage, Oct. 20.
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To provide post-graduate, as well as basic physician training, a core number of patients is required as well as an experienced, well-educated basic science and clinical teaching staff. We can train physicians within that basic number of patients, provided we have the staff. To provide medical training for foreign counties while Canada experiences a severe physician shortage is unconscionable.
Bring home our Canadian citizens from Irish and other reputable medical schools. They have paid their own tuition and will provide Canada with quickest and most economical “fix” to our severe physician shortage, and furthermore they will require no cultural acclimatization.
D. C. McCaffrey, MD, Ottawa
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