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Premier Doug Ford pledges to protect against tariffs ahead of revealing who will play key roles in his cabinet; the city has revealed an action plan after a rash of coyote attacks in Fort York and Liberty Village; and, a Brampton, Ont. landlord says he’s tried three times over four years to have tenants who refuse to pay rent evicted, but each time they’ve appealed and now owe him $25,000.
On this episode we're joined by Lee Crook, Davidson County zoning administrator. Lee shares an extensive history of Fort York, one of North Carolina's lesser-known but most significant historical sites, and explains why it's important to protect and preserve historic areas.Support the Show.Connected to the Land, Committed to Conservation. TRLT.org
Fort York was built to defend Toronto from our dastardly neighbours to the south. It would participate in two major battles throughout its history. It lost the first one when the Americans captured York during the War of 1812, but it won the second battle, which was a decades-long fight against the developers and city planners who wanted to demolish it. Learn more about the guardian of Toronto Bay on Muddy York, Toronto's #1 history podcast. You can follow Muddy York on Twitter: Toronto_History and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/muddyyorkhistory/ Music: Soothsayer - John Patitucci Nature Nurture - Quincas Moreira World's Sunrise - Jimena Contreras The Dover - The Westerlies
Alex Pierson speaks with Jim Jessop, Deputy Fire Chief for Toronto Fire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Be version 2.0 of yourself – Personal development and self-help tips
Heal your brain from porn in 30 days with my Free Porn Detox Course: https://romanmironov.com/free I know how bad you feel after watching p**n. It makes you feel weak, depressed, lonely, and worthless. Most people try to cure it by playing video games or watching TV but it just makes you more bored and leads to watching more porn. Wake up❗STOP the vicious cycle now. Take my Free Porn Detox Course to heal from porn and feel motivated for success now. ►►► GET THE COURSE NOW: https://romanmironov.com/free Join me on a walk in Downtown Toronto. I will show you Liberty Village, CN Tower, Fort York, Exhibition Place, Lake Ontario, and Union Station. There are three levels of dealing with porn addiction. The first level is escaping your feelings with porn. I used to be unhappy and I wanted to escape it with porn right there and then. I had a symptom and I was using a Band-Aid for it. It worked for my symptom. But it was a coping mechanism for escaping the symptom = the feeling. Porn is that Band-Aid that lets you escape the feeling that you have. But it's only that. It only covers up the symptom in the short term. But it doesn't do anything to improve the situation. The second level is improved addiction. It's "medication." That "medication" is replacing porn with a healthier addiction such as an intimate relationship. It's better but not sustainable. Made me feel amazing a lot of the time. But deep inside, I was still unhappy. What if your partner breaks up with you? That's what my ex-wife did. Band-Aids and medications don't work. What is the ultimate solution ❔ The third level is getting free from ALL addictions. You've got to strike at the root cause of unhappiness rather than the symptom. The root cause is your inability to enjoy life when you're doing… nothing. Stop maximizing pleasure. Like just being. Teach yourself to disconnect from the thinking mind and connect to being. The mind wants to feel comfortable. When you indulge in addictions, you feel comfortable but it means you are satisfying your lower self (monkey mind). No fulfillment there. Embrace pain as something you grow from. Read The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle. Stop seeking stimulations. Enjoy meditation. Appreciate every little experience. Do that and you finally strike at the root cause rather than the symptom I already feel good and if I sit down to meditate, I will feel even better. ---------------------------------------------- OTHER VIDEOS YOU MIGHT LIKE:
The riding of Spadina-Fort York currently has 12 people running for a seat and one of them is Ausma Malik. She is currently running to be elected to the riding and says that it's unacceptable the way families are being squeezed out of Toronto because of the cost of living. Guest host, Rubina Ahmed-Haq, chatted with her about this and about the election in general, what she plans on bringing to the table.
In Episode 48 I headed to Toronto's beloved music and arts festival Field Trip to chat with some festival goers about fever dreams, the best and worst of Radiohead and inappropriate Christmas shows. Follow Field Trip onhttps://www.fieldtriplife.com/https://www.instagram.com/fieldtriplife/https://www.facebook.com/fieldtriplifehttps://twitter.com/fieldtripFollow One More Tune onhttps://www.instagram.com/onemoretunepodcasthttps://twitter.com/onemoretunepodFollow The One More Tune Artist Playlisthttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/1ibJ3ZzmuZGqLW4FB6ZAdD?si=8b41c4aad7804c28Podcast Music by Slim GoodyPodcast Artwork by Peter DoyleProduced by Ian Byrne Support the show
After nearly 20 months, Canadians can now cross the land border into the U.S.; Current and former TTC employee data may have been compromised in a ransomware attack; and, a massive art installation at Fort York by Indigenous artist Jay Soule is paying tribute to Indigenous veterans.
Highlights from Toronto Today with Greg Brady for Thursday, September 23rd 2021
Highlights from Toronto Today with Greg Brady for Thursday, September 23rd 2021 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Chris Glover, NDP MPP for Spading Fort-York says that Ford's designs on Ontario Place continue to raise troubling questions
Kelly talks to the founder of Stackt market.
Adara and Kenzie visit the famously haunted Fort York National Historic site, the location of bloody battles in the war of 1812. Join us for a tour and staff ghost stories. Find more ghost stories here: http://www.torontoghosts.org/index.php/the-city-of-toronto/public-buildings/75-historic-old-fort-york-the-garrison-at-york?showall=1&start=0 Song clip used in fair dealing under the Canadian Copyright Law: Yankee Doodle performed by The Robert Shaw Chorale Original Theme Music by Ethan Reid. (Instagram @ethanareid) "Radio Static” by GowlerMusic of Freesound.org. "Long Note Three" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ "Clean Soul" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Follow us! Search for Dead Men Don’t Podcast on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.Adara: @adaralynne on Twitter & InstagramKenzie: @kenzmaclaren on Twitter & Instagram Contact us - deadmendontpodcast@gmail.comUse this email to send us your personal ghost stories! We'll be reading them out on our mini episodes every other week.
Drew Khan & Sarah Burke head to the Field Trip Music & Arts Festival at Fort York in Toronto. Emily Haines & Jimmy Shaw from Metric join Drew & Sarah to talk about revisiting their 2009 album 'Fantasies' to headline the festival while dropping some hints about their new album along the way. https://www.ilovemetric.com/ Charlie & Katie are from Dizzy out of Oshawa, and they join Bands 'n Buds to talk about finding their songwriting skills during high school and being on the same poster as the Foo Fighters for Festival D'ete during a busy summer of shows. https://www.dizzytheband.com/' Music Heard In Episode: The Passion HiFi - Untouchable - Rap Beat / Instrumental Freehiphopbeatsforyou – Free-the-passion-hifi-untouchable-boom-bap-beat-instrumental
As we have reached the 1 year anniversary of the final week of the Tragically Hip's farewell tour, Matt decides to take a stroll down memory lane and look at the 11 times he saw the band live in concert. In Pt 1, we stop at the SkyDome in June 2003, Fort York in June 2006, Zwick's Park in Belleville in June 2008, Showplace Theatre in Peterborough in June 20111 and Bobcaygeon 2 weeks later. www.tallcanaudio.com facebook.com/tallcanaudio twitter.com/tallcanaudio
My guest today is Ewan Wardle. He’s a Program Development Officer at Fort York National Historical Site, where he has served in various roles for the last 17 years. As a young person, Ewan got involved with War of 1812 re-enactments, a passion that has continued to this day. Through this, he fostered a lifelong interest in early 19th century British military history that culminated in his being awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee medal in recognition of his contributions to Fort York. More recently, his knowledge and understanding of 1812 military re-enactments have made him an important consultant to the film industry. Toronto and its surrounding area is located on an incredible watershed. As a result, and as a result of its naturally protected harbour, people have been coming here for thousands of years, for the most part because of its excellent hunting and fishing. In no way is there any intention in today’s show to sweep the displacement of Toronto’s indigenous peoples under the rug. The ill-defined treaties with the Anishnabek people that ultimately took their land from them is a tragic history that must and will be told by This is my Toronto. Today, however, Ewan will be discussing with us the establishment of the town that will one day become the City of Toronto that we know today and the Fort that was created to protect Upper Canada’s newly minted capital. Please remember to take 5 seconds to leave a rating on iTunes. Comments are welcome also. Previous episodes can be found on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, or else at our website, http://thisismytoronto.com. Thanks for listening!!
Captain Terry (Stoney) Burke joined the Royal Canadian Regiment in October 1964. He completed basic recruit training at the Regimental Depot, in Wolseley Barracks, in London, Ontario. In October 1965, he was posted to the Second Battalion of the RCR, in Fort York, West Germany, where he became a member of the Assault Pioneer Platoon. Over the next three years he completed the Junior NCO Course and was promoted Corporal in December of 1968. In November of 1969 he returned […]
Our panel discusses the former TTC chairman's free metropass; whether the city’s pennypinching ways spell goodbye to attractive infrastructure projects, like the Fort York bridge; and whether the swift resolution of the case of the stolen dog is a sign of good policework or could their time have been better spent elsewhere.