Happy Eid from Bambi to ALL her family and friends in Germany, Romania, Canada, Lebanon, and… everywhere!

The sunshine of love and peace is the best friend of the moon of spirituality and goodness!

Ramadan has been tough in Lebanon this year. However, Eid is here, even if it does not feel like a “eid” or feast. It is still a blessed and hopeful Eid.

May Eid el Fitr, which highlights the end of the Ramadan holy month, bring family and friends together. May the Eid bring love and unity among people and nations. May this Eid also rhythm with the generosity of the hearts and peace of the mind for all.

Most importantly, may everyone be safe, sound, and… merry.

To be optimally merry, one needs music. How about “La fête” [The party] by Mr. Michel Fugain and “Yalla Nifrah” [Let’s rejoice] of Mr. Hisham el Hajj? Bambi would like to offer these two songs to all those celebrating el Eid… with much love ❤️!

To what extent are our unions still relevant?

On this May 1st, the International Workers’ Day, Bambi cannot help but to wonder if, and to what extent, our unions are still relevant?

How could they still be relevant in our collectively insane times?

To begin with, let’s stop and think of the head of the elite (woke) pyramid in Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. The latter and his cabinet have sometimes good policies/programs. However, with the truck convoy, Mr. Trudeau failed not only the truckers and farmers, but also all of us. Indeed, he refused to listen to them. He even made fun of them. The icing on the cake was that he declared the unjustified Emergencies Act. In other terms, he did not prevent – or perhaps even endorsed – the arrest and/or de-funding of those peaceful demonstrators by our banks and even by an American company like GoFundMe, just because they drove from all over Canada to demonstrate in our national capital.

Was this demonstration the most optimal one with its horns sounding and parties on the streets? Many Ottawa residents Bambi spoke to reported not being bothered at all; some even supported the movement. They also denounced some restrictive, and not too efficient, public health measures. Of course, some other residents may have had migraines. Bambi feels for them. Yet others, including some of Bambi’s dear friends, acted as counter-protesters.

Related to Mr. Trudeau’s attitude, Bambi was also disappointed by the New Democratic Party of Canada (NDP). The latter has betrayed its historic mission, as a Left-wing party, that cares for and defends the rights of the working class. This party, at least under the leadership of Mr. Singh (political ally of Mr. Trudeau) is also into woke elitism. How sad.

Thus, given all the above and once again, to what extent are our unions at large still relevant? In other terms, do they still know how to defend the rights of ALL their members, including the “non-woke” ones? If we take the example of university unions, many cases of attacks on academic freedom sadly make us question the relevance of unions. A famous example is Dr. Frances Widdowson’s shocking case, briefly described in her fundraising campaign (https://fundrazr.com/wokeacademy.info?ref=em_7BCTof_ab_7jjtE7HXL957jjtE7HXL95). Best of luck to her in “her” battle (“her” means “our battle all of us”).

Last but not least, a related question, which is valid across cases of attacks on academic freedom, involves the mindset underlying woke ideologies: Why do our unions at large embrace international ideological causes that have nothing to do with the employees’ working conditions (e.g., BLM, etc.)?

To conclude this post, why do our politicians, journalists, and institutions’ administrations and unions only seem to care for the point of view of the radical left-elite that fell into the trap of woke (i.e., sectarian) ideologies? Why are we tolerating discrimination against non-woke individuals instead of accepting that they are simply part of an institution or of society, even if they were truly “a fringe minority” of it, to borrow Mr. Trudeau’s own famous words?