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The Informer

Political Whoas

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Are Giorgio Mammoliti’s incendiary outbursts helping or hurting the Rob Ford regime?

(Image: Toronto.ca)

Last week was a busy one for Giorgio Mammoliti. The right-wing councillor and prominent member of Rob Ford’s inner circle spent much of the week making a buffoon of himself, first barring communists from his Facebook page, then accusing sitting city hall politicians of seeking to seize all private property before finally arguing in favour of banning panhandling from Toronto’s streets and moving the practice exclusively onto Queen’s Park’s front lawns. All his bluster and bravado has quickly made him one of the faces of the Ford administration—basically, he’s a shiny thing Ford’s people can wave in front of the press and public to distract them from other things—but we have to wonder (apparently like some of his closest colleagues) if his outspoken opinions and extreme behavior are actually starting to work against the mayor.

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The Informer

Quibbling Rivalries

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Real commies threaten to file a human rights complaint against former commie Giorgio Mammoliti 

Giorgio Mammoliti took his red-baiting rhetoric to the next level last week when he told the media that he would ban all “communists” from his Facebook group—apparently, he has a keen sense of smell that can sniff out abstract ideologies on the Internet—before alleging (without evidence) that six or seven sitting city hall councillors are dyed-in-the-wool commies seeking to seize all private property and control the minds of Toronto residents. Then, the head of the Communist Party of Canada, Elizabeth Rowley, fired back in kind with an equally ridiculous allegation, threatening to file a human rights complaint against the councillor and comparing him to former U.S. senator Joseph McCarthy and his House of Un-American Activities Committee. Good grief. Read the entire story [Toronto Star] »

The Informer

The Harrowing Future

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Could the London riots happen in Toronto? The Star’s Christopher Hume says yes

The aftermath of the London riots (Image: George Rex)

Aside from the obvious, it’s difficult to know what, exactly, to say about the riots in London. But it’s on the top of people’s minds around the world, and inevitably everybody will ask if a similar outbreak of spontaneous violence could happen in their own city. In the pages of the Toronto Star today, noted urbanophile and outspoken Rob Ford critic Christopher Hume asks just that, and he also returns an answer: that while Toronto isn’t on the brink of breaking out in street violence anytime soon, it’s afflicted by some of the same conditions that gave rise to the kind of disorder that erupted across the pond on Sunday.

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The Informer

Political Whoas

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Giorgio Mammoliti wants panhandling banned from Toronto’s streets—but encouraged at Queen’s Park

(Image: Toronto.ca)

Taking a break from sniffing out wayward communists on Facebook, Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti has joined forces with fellow councillor Doug Holyday and others in an attempt to get the province to change the city’s panhandling laws. But unlike Holyday, Mammoliti actually has a plan—although we’re not saying it’s a good one—to force the issue if Queen’s Park refuses to act.

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The Informer

Quoted

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Reformed commie Giorgio Mammoliti can smell communism, and he doesn’t want its sour scent on his Facebook page

(Image: Toronto.ca)

“I will be monitoring their comments and if I get a smell of communism, they’re off the page.” — Giorgio Mammoliti

That was the city councillor in an interview with the Toronto Star after the good folks at Torontoist broke the news that Mammoliti had created a Facebook page called “Save the City… Support the Ford Administration” to consult with the Toronto public regarding what should and shouldn’t receive city funds.

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The Informer

Gravy Train Wreck

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Things Margaret Atwood likes: libraries, book clubs, strong language; things Margaret Atwood does not like: Doug and Rob Ford

(Image: Marco Secchi/ Getty Images Entertainment/ Getty Images)

We’re guessing by now the Brothers Ford know exactly who Margaret Atwood is. After Doug Ford caused a bit of a brouhaha amongst the city’s class of left-leaning latte sippers by claiming he wouldn’t recognize Atwood if she passed him on the street—and that she should run for office if she wants to weigh in on matters of public interest (like, say, library closures)—Atwood decided to go on the offensive. First, the CanLit icon sparked something of a social media maelstrom, including our favourite, an “Atwood for Mayor” campaign on Facebook, before taking another swipe at the powers that be at city hall by cheekily offering to meet with book clubs at their local Tim Hortons as part of her campaign to spare Toronto’s libraries from the Rob Ford budget knife. But the author’s latest salvo in the lopsided war of words between her and the Fords is arguably her strongest: an interview with the Toronto Star in which she offers a cutting condemnation of the mayor, his brother and the current political climate in the city.

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The Informer

Ford Focus

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Rob Ford allegedly flips a mother and daughter the finger; the Star confirms that, yes, it is an allegation

Rob Ford flipping the finger (puppet) (Image: Shaun Merritt)

Here’s one for the journalism classes in this city: a Facebook post alleges that, while driving in Toronto, a woman and her child saw Mayor Rob Ford talking on his cellphone. When they gave him the thumbs-down for violating regulations of the Ontario Highway Act, the mayor allegedly responded in a way that wasn’t appropriate for a man styled “His Worship.” And then the Toronto Star ran an article about it.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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In the ’60s, Marshall McLuhan was Toronto’s most famous intellectual; now, the world has finally caught up with him

In the ’60s,  McLuhan was hobnobbing with celebrities, advising politicians and forever changing how we think about mass media. A hundred years after his birth, the world has finally caught up with his theories

Marshall McLuhan

Marshall McLuhan. (Image: Robert Lansdale Photography/University of Toronto Archives)

Nineteen sixty-five was the turning point of Marshall McLuhan’s career—the Annus McLuhanis, the Year of Marshall Law, the heady, vertiginous breakout of McLuhan-mania. It was the year the irreverent journalist Tom Wolfe published a star-making profile of the Canadian media guru in the New York Herald Tribune that repeatedly asked, in Wolfe’s typically antic, hyperbolic way: what if he is right? “Suppose he is what he sounds like,” Wolfe wrote, “the most important thinker since Newton, Darwin, Freud, Einstein and Pavlov, studs of the intelligentsia game—suppose he is the oracle of the modern times?”

In the 40-odd years since Wolfe first posed this question, many others have asked it again and again. McLuhan was right about so many things. Browse his books, dip into any of the interviews he gave, and almost every probing, aphoristic utterance feels preternaturally prescient. Decades before doomsayers decried the Internet’s negative rewiring of the brain, he dramatically outlined the psychic, physical and social consequences: “One of the effects of living with electric information is that we live habitually in a state of information overload. There’s always more than you can cope with.” He predicted the slow death of magazines and newspapers: “The monarchy of print has ended and an oligarchy of new media has usurped most of the power of that 500-year-old monarchy.” And he foresaw the rise of crowd-sourced news: “If we pay careful attention to the fact that the press is a mosaic, participant kind of organization and a do-it-yourself kind of world, we can see why it is so necessary to democratic government.” McLuhan anticipated reality TV long before it was a glimmer in the Survivor producer Mark Burnett’s eye: “I used to talk about the global village; I now speak of it more properly as the global theatre. Every kid is now concerned with acting. Doing his thing outside and raising a ruckus in a quest for identity.” When, in his bestselling book The Medium is the Massage, he wrote, “Wars, revolutions, civil uprisings are interfaces within the new environments created by electric informational media,” he could have been writing about how Twitter and Facebook shaped the Arab Spring. The world that McLuhan conjured is a world that now looks an awful lot like ours.

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The Informer

The Harrowing Present

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Giorgio Mammoliti’s failed gotcha mission—showing up at the Dyke March with a video camera

(Image: Luke Hollins)

No, the man with the hand-held video camera pointed at Saturday’s Dyke March was not a creepy voyeur—it was just city councillor Giorgio Mammoliti. A few months back, Mammoliti led a campaign to revoke city funding if Pride Toronto organizers allowed the Queers Against Israeli Apartheid to participate in its annual parade. The folks at PrideQuAIA accommodated city hall’s concerns and pulled QuAIAthemselves from the event—but evidently Mammoliti wasn’t satisfied. When the group Dykes and Trans People for Palestine promised on their Facebook page to show up at the Dyke March in support of QuAIA, Mammoliti immediately sprung to action, threatening to bring a camera to the march and film any “in your face” challenge of council’s decision to outlaw such groups—which is exactly what he did.

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The Informer

Summit Survivor

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G20 Aftermath: one of the largest mass arrests in Canadian history nets only a handful of charges

An arrest is made at last year’s G20 summit (Image: Chris Huggins)

This Sunday marks the first anniversary of the G20 summit in Toronto, and instead of a celebratory kettle of local citizens—you know, for old times’ sake—it’s possible that the Toronto police will take a moment to reflect on why they arrested so many people (more than 1,000 detainees) in the first place. Or not. According to new numbers that are causing something of a stir today, in the year since those arrests, only 317 have been charged, and most of those charges have been dropped or dismissed entirely. This means that, really, something in the neighborhood of 900 people spent some time in police custody for no good reason, as far as we can tell.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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50 Reasons to Love Toronto: No. 25, Bike-riding pinkos have a sense of humour

No. 25, Our pinkos have a sense of humour

Last December, when Don Cherry stepped up to the mike at Rob Ford’s mayoral investiture dressed in a signature mobster-meets-Florida-snowbird floral print blazer, he delivered his now notorious rant about “pinkos out there that ride bicycles and everything.” Faster than Cherry could spit out “Put that in your pipe you left-wing kooks,” Twitter and Facebook exploded with condemnation. But not everyone reacted with rage. The staff of Spacing, the urban landscape magazine run by a collective of journalists and social activists—precisely the kind of arts-loving, bike-riding lefties who annoy Cherry to no end—saw an opportunity to spoof him by producing pink buttons with the now ubiquitous slogans “Bike Riding Pinko” and “Left Wing Pinko.” They’ve sold 16,000, at $3 each. And downtowners weren’t the only people pinning them on: 2,500 sold in the suburbs. The magazine cheekily donated $1,000 from the button revenues to the Darling Home for Kids, a child hospice originally named Rose Cherry’s Home for Kids in honour of Cherry’s late wife.

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The Informer

Battleground Toronto

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Toronto Star is last paper on earth to discover that anglophones aren’t keen on the BQ. Maybe there should there be a Bloc Torontois?

How can there still be reporters who are surprised to discover that English Canada hasn’t warmed to the Bloc Québécois being in parliament? This piece from the Toronto Star reports that “the current election campaign appears to be opening up a deep vein of anger in English Canada toward the Bloc Québécois,” but what struck us is how little evidence is given to support the theory. There’s a bit about negative reactions to Gilles Duceppe during the leaders debate, but for academic heft, the Star gives us this:

Setting up a fake identity as “Gord Tory” on Facebook, Johannes Wheeldon and some academic associates from Canada posted increasingly incendiary remarks about the BQ on the Facebook page to see how many friends “Gord” could attract.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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Q&A with Ezra Levant, professional loudmouth and TV host on the spanking new Sun News Network

Portrait of Ezra Levant

(Image: Adam Rankin)

Do you find it ironic that you had to move from Calgary to Toronto to host a conservative-friendly TV news show?
No, for the obvious reason that Toronto is the media capital of Canada. But from a philosophical point of view, there is a tremendous number of conservatives in this city, starting with the mayor, almost half the MPs in the province and institutions like the National Post and Toronto Sun. Toronto is more liberal than Calgary, but so is every other place in Canada. I think it’s the opposite of ironic. I think it’s exciting.

You were known at one point for driving a Hummer. Do you still drive one?
No, I’m close enough to walk to the Sun’s studio on King Street East.

What’s your take on Rob Ford? Is he doing a good job so far?
I was encouraged by his election, and like everyone else, I’m trying to figure out if it signifies a larger trend. I think it does. It felt like a Tea Party rejection of the status quo. It felt like a rejection of elites, and I like that, because that’s one of the themes that Sun News will surely reflect.

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The Informer

The New Normal

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Ontario teachers told not to friend students on Facebook

We assumed it went without saying, but apparently it doesn’t. The Ontario College of Teachers has put out an advisory on the proper, professional use of social media, including the YouTube clip above (way to get social, teachers!). The message for Ontario’s army of classroom wardens? When it comes to social media, just say no. Or, if it’s impossible to avoid any kind of electronic media contact with students, then be aware that there are all kinds of risks—and not just the risk of people creeping you. 

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The Informer

March of Crimes

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“Cancer faker” story comes to an appropriately weird close

Screen shot from a Facebook group page for Demanding Ashley Anne Kirilow Be Held Accountable (Image: Facebook)

Last year, Toronto’s press was all over the bizarre story of Ashley Anne Kirilow, the young woman from Burlington who shaved her head and eyebrows to fake the appearance of someone undergoing intense chemotherapy, and who managed to bilk around $12,000 from well-wishers. That story came to a close yesterday as Kirilow pleaded guilty to the last counts against her in court. The conditions of her sentence are, appropriately enough, as “interesting” as the crime itself.

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