Redeye

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 190:24:30
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Sinopse

A progressive take on current events. Produced by an independent media collective at Vancouver Cooperative Radio.

Episódios

  • OneBC's documentary Making A Killing fuels residential school denialism

    21/12/2025 Duração: 19min

    On December 2, the OneBC party released its documentary Making a Killing: Reconciliation, genocide and plunder in Canada. Since then, the writer and producer of the film Tim Thielmann, has been fired along with two other senior staff.  MLA Dallas Brodie has herself been removed as interim party leader.  But the documentary lives on, with Dallas Brodie voicing Thielmann’s script and interviewing all the guests. We talk about the film with Sean Carleton, professor of history and Indigenous studies at the University of Manitoba.

  • Court rules in favour of First Nations challenge of BC mining regime

    19/12/2025 Duração: 19min

    The Gitxaała & Ehattesaht First Nations have launched a court challenge to BC's free-entry mining regime. In a precedent-setting decision released last week, the BC Court of Appeal has affirmed that BC’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act creates legally enforceable obligations on the province to reform the mining permit process. We talk with Jamie Kneen of MiningWatch.

  • Dec 11 Solar panels on farm lands can increase crop yields

    11/12/2025 Duração: 15min

    Solar farm projects in Alberta have stalled because of new provincial regulations. Yet some Canadian researchers are saying photovoltaic systems now produce the lowest-cost electricity in history and using them in agriculture increases crop yields. We speak with Joshua Pearce, co-author of a new study on agrivoltaics.

  • Legal and historical risks of new pipeline to the Northwest coast

    09/12/2025 Duração: 14min

    As hundreds of First Nations leaders gathered last week in Ottawa for their annual December meeting, the federal-provincial memorandum of understanding for a new pipeline to Asian markets was high on the agenda. The Assembly of First Nations chiefs voted unanimously on Tuesday to demand the withdrawal of the deal and expressed full support for First Nations on the British Columbia coast strongly opposing the initiative. Anna Johnston is a lawyer with West Coast Environmental Law and author of a brief on the legal and historical risk of a Northwest coast pipeline. management. We speak with her about the MOU and the risks of pursuing a new pipeline from Alberta to the BC coast.

  • City Beat: Controversy over Mayor Sim's Filipino Cultural Centre proposal

    07/12/2025 Duração: 16min

    Next week Vancouver City Council will consider Mayor Ken Sim’s controversial proposal to fast-track a new Filipino Cultural Centre without community consultation. Also on the agenda, Vancouver’s Social Housing Initiative, plans to radically change the current plan for the Downtown Eastside and much more. We speak with Redeye’s Ian Mass.

  • Canada needs a generational investment in non-market and public housing

    05/12/2025 Duração: 17min

    Forty progressive economists and policy experts gathered in Ottawa in September for an economic summit called Elbows Up: A Practical Program for Canadian Sovereignty. Marc Lee is a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and he was both a presenter and participant in the Summit. We speak with Marc about his takeaways from the summit and the need for Canada to make a generational investment in non-market and public housing.

  • Calls for grizzly hunt in wake of attack based on poor science

    04/12/2025 Duração: 20min

    In the wake of a serious grizzly bear attack on schoolchildren near Bella Coola, there are calls from some quarters for the province to revisit its ban on the grizzly bear hunt. The BC Wildlife Federation has called for a new trophy hunt on grizzlies.  Tandeep Sidhu is assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminology at the University of Manitoba. We speak with him about the human dimensions of wildlife conflict and management.

  • Resisting Danielle Smith's attack on trans youth in Alberta

    02/12/2025 Duração: 15min

    Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has introduced Bill 9 - a piece of legislation that aims to infringe on the rights of trans people. Smith has used the notwithstanding clause four times in the last three weeks. This time to shield three anti-transgender bills from legal challenges and to bypass Charter protected rights.  In response, queer activists are scaling up the campaign to defend these rights and protect queer and trans people. We speak with Fae Johnstone, executive director of Queer Momentum.

  • Indigenous identity policies a dangerous case of institutional overreach

    30/11/2025 Duração: 19min

    The practice of people self-identifying as Indigenous has come into sharp focus after a number of high-profile cases of “pretendians” claiming to be Indigenous without evidence. However, far less attention has been given to Indigenous people being wrongly labelled as pretendians.  In a recent article for Policy Options, Debbie Martin argues that the rush for Indigenous identity policies at universities has led to people with legitimate claims to Indigeneity being swept up in policies that will cause lasting harm.  Debbie Martin is Inuk and a member of Nunatukavut. She is a professor in the school of health and human performance at Dalhousie University and the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Peoples’ health and well-being.

  • British Columbia charging industry bargain basement rates for water

    28/11/2025 Duração: 13min

    British Columbia has one of the lowest industrial water rates in Canada. Meanwhile, water advocates say communities across the province are struggling to fund efforts to fight increasing droughts, floods, and wildfires. A new report says we need to modernize industrial water rates to protect our water sources, safeguard communities and secure long-term prosperity. The report was created by the BC Watershed Security Coalition. We speak with Kyle Visvanathan, co-author of the report.

  • Doug Gordon and Sarah Goodyear bring War on Cars podcast to Vancouver

    26/11/2025 Duração: 40min

    On November 8, Doug Gordon and Sarah Goodyear of The War on Cars podcast were in Vancouver as guests of Vision Zero Vancouver to talk about their new book and to meet with local activists. There wasn’t a seat left in the house at the Djavad Mowafaghian theatre at SFU Woodwards as Doug and Sarah introduced some of the ideas in their book, Life After Cars, and interviewed two Canadian activists in the fight for safer streets, Lucy Maloney and Tom Flood. We bring you excerpts from the evening on today’s podcast.

  • Exposing the US loophole: How Canadian arms and explosives reach Israel

    24/11/2025 Duração: 20min

    Despite the purported ceasefire in Gaza, Israeli airstrikes continue to kill Palestinians. Canada has long downplayed its role in arming Israel, claiming it only issues a limited number of export permits and that those permits have now been suspended. But this week, a new report was released that exposes a massive ongoing flow of Canadian explosives and F-35 parts to Israel via the United States. We speak with Rachel Small, Canada lead for World Beyond War, a member of the Arms Embargo Now Coalition.

  • City Beat: Vancouver mayor Ken Sim's "zero-means-zero" budget

    23/11/2025 Duração: 13min

    In today’s episode, Ian Mass with City Beat for Nov 22. Vancouver City Council has just gone through a gruelling 4-day public process focused on the 2026 city budget. On Tuesday Nov 25, we’ll see if any of the comments have made a difference to this controversial zero-means-zero budget. Council will also consider a proposal for a Filipino cultural centre, BC Housing’s decision to move 300 low-income tenants out of a single-room-occupancy hotel on Granville Street and lots more.

  • Closer to the brink: The state of BC forests in 2025

    19/11/2025 Duração: 18min

    Five years after provincial government commitments to protect old growth, the new report commissioned by Sierra Club BC concludes that the ecological integrity of our forests continues to decline, threatening biodiversity, First Nations values and a diverse economy. We speak with Karen Price, an ecologist who co-authored the report.

  • Report exposes racism and genocide denial at Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs

    17/11/2025 Duração: 17min

    On Oct 21, the Jewish Faculty Network published The CIJA Report documenting what the six authors say is a pattern of anti-Palestinian racism and genocide denial at the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs. They wrote the report to shine a light on how the current discourse about antisemitism in Canada serves to manufacture consent for Israel’s genocide in Gaza.  We speak with Sheryl Nestel, one of the authors of the report. She is a retired sociologist and long-time member and leader of Independent Jewish Voices Canada.

  • From Paris to New Delhi, women leaders are making cities more liveable

    14/11/2025 Duração: 22min

    The deputy mayor of Tirana, Albania says she realized one day that her city had been planned with one user in mind - an adult male who needed to get to the office as quickly as possible. She says everything about Tirana’s streets, public spaces and transport systems were designed to make his life easy. Anuela Ristani is one of the women in local government that we get to meet in Women Changing Cities, a new book by Canadian authors and urban mobility advocates Melissa and Chris Bruntlett. We speak with Melissa Bruntlett in this episode.

  • Indigenous Rights in One Minute: A guide to advancing reconciliation

    13/11/2025 Duração: 16min

    Bruce McIvor has written a new book that should become essential reading for Canadians who want to advance reconciliation. Indigenous Rights in One Minute gives clear and concise answers to questions like who qualifies as Métis and what the Doctrine of Discovery is.  Bruce McIvor is the founder and senior partner at First Peoples Law and an adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia’s Allard School of Law. He is a member of the Manitoba Métis Federation.

  • Call to recognize Athabaska River Basin as a legal person

    12/11/2025 Duração: 14min

    The Jackpine Mine is an open-pit tar sands project north of Fort McMurray. Last year, the operator applied for a renewal of its licence to operate the mine for another 10 years. In response Ecojustice, the Alberta Wilderness Association, and Keepers of the Water filed a statement of concern asking the Alberta Energy Regulator to recognize the Athabasca River Basin as a “legal person” with the right to participate in decisions that affect its health.  We speak with Matt Hulse, a lawyer for Ecojustice.

  • Judy Darcy on her new book, Leading from the Heart

    10/11/2025 Duração: 19min

    Judy Darcy’s memoir, Leading From the Heart, chronicles her battles as a feminist, a union leader and a politician from the 1960’s until today. Judy joins Ian Mass to talk about those both personal and political battles.

  • Cooperative provides safe, equitable, fairly-paid work for cleaners

    08/11/2025 Duração: 11min

    When you think of a cleaning company, you probably imagine a place where employees work under a manager, decisions are made from the top down, and profits go to the business owner.  In Vancouver, a worker cooperative called The Cleaning Coop aims to disrupt this model by providing non-exploitative employment, paying a fair wage, and promoting well-being and equality among the workers. We speak with Hayley Postlethwaite, one of the founders of The Cleaning Coop.

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