2020-12-24

Christmas, 2020

Nadolig Llawen!    Merry Christmas!    Buon Natale!

 Christmas 2020.

From our home to yours, dear Family and Friends,

Again it is our pleasure to share a little bit of our lives over this past, most unusual, year at this very special time.  May you enjoy a full and restful Christmas/New Year season.  2020 certainly brought very different life experiences.

Tina continues to enjoy complete retirement from nursing. With the new year,Tina resumed playing her cello with the Camerata Strings adult ensemble in the VSO School of Music. She continued to enjoy the cello music, new to her, while playing as part of an ensemble, Then COVID-19 shut group practices down for the rest of the season. Tina missed getting together for rehearsals but practiced at home to contribute to a video assembled performance. Ted video recorded both Tina’s part and David’s part and each submitted the recordings for inclusion. Tina does anticipate returning to Camarata with her cello whenever in person rehearsals resume.

Tina’s health remains a challenge as she suffers increasing back pain that limits her general activity. Medical tests identified Bertolotti's syndrome, a condition with which she must have been born but is only manifesting itself now as Tina ages. So far, medical referrals, re-referrals, and limited treatments have not yet helped. To add to the difficulty, the most important specialist doctor involved with Tina’s condition contracted COVID-19 in the spring taking her off practice for six weeks and, after a brief return to practice, requiring extended leave-of-absence to deal with after effects of the disease. Tina waits on her next treatment opportunity in January.

In the spring, we were delighted to find and reconnect with Tina’s cousin, Pasquale Fappiano in Italy, with whom we had long lost contact. He gave us a wonderful welcome when we visited back in 1985. Through Pasquale, we can now share ourselves with others of Tina’s Italian relatives. Occasional messages serve us well.

With exercise and prescribed medication, Ted's health continues stable, actually feeling very well indeed, although he did experience another bout of atrial fibrillation in the spring, Again, his heart doctors decided he needed cardioversion to correct it, again using external stimulation instead of making Ted’s ICD jolt his heart. Otherwise, he is bothered only by occasional colds but did have a bit of bad/good health news that currently does not bother Ted at all. He has developed prostate cancer but of a kind that is very slow to grow, so slow that, at Ted’s current age, he will very likely have died from something else before this cancer impacts his wellbeing. Ted continues to use long walks with Angela's dog as his primary mode of exercise, walking Adam daily, every day of the week.  These long walks allow Ted readily to exceed the recommended minimum 10,000 steps per day.

With COVID-19, Angela and her friends in the Dusty Babes Collective had to markedly reduce work in their ceramic art studio in south Surrey near White Rock. She brought supplies home but to work here is just not the same as at the studio.  Angela continues her part time position as the lead ceramics studio technician for the Semiahmoo Arts Society in the South Surrey Recreation Centre, now working Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, and teaching ceramics classes on Wednesday evenings. From time to time she also gave classes on Saturday mornings. Angela teaches mainly adult classes which vary from those for absolute beginners to classes in more advanced ceramics skills and enjoys many returning pupils. All this came to an abrupt halt when the South Surrey Recreation Centre had to close under COVID-19 restrictions. Fortunately, Angela qualified for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit until the centre reopened in the summer and she could resume her work. 

The Dusty Babes did not show their works this year. In the Spring, Angela was to show on her own at Surrey’s Darts Hill Garden Park again but that show was cancelled by COVID-19. Angela remains an active member of the Potters Guild of BC.

Outside of her art, Angela continues her interest in sophisticated board games and computer gaming which she shares with Christy, but much more online than in person. Adam delights in their companionship when they can get together.

David changed private study on his viola, now with Thomas Beckman through the spring and this fall, working online for most of the year. He continues as a violist with the New Westminster Symphony Orchestra, really enjoying rehearsing and performing under conductor, Jack (Jin) Zhang until disrupted by COVID-19 mid spring. The orchestra assembled an online performance of Mozart’s Impresario Overture this fall. David continues to watch for opportunities in other orchestras, in particular for professional opportunities to arise, although these do not exist with the current situation.

David continues to enjoy writing fiction, with which he extends his imagination. Early in the year, he completed and published his major rewrite of The Stolen Treasure, a novel he had originally developed as a young teen.  His novel, The Sheltered Life of Betsy Parker, published five years ago as a digital copy, continues to draw ongoing interest and responses on the GoodReads literary sharing site. David keeps the second edition available both digitally and as hardcopy on Amazon. Next as a literary project, David has written a collection of short stories now under rewrite.

Us, Together in the Spring
Apart from his music and his writing, David continues to enjoy his Monday and Thursday part-time employment with Meridian Farm Markets at their store in Tsawwassen. He also accepted a call to work a brief term at the Purdys Chocolatier store in the Tsawwassen Mills Mall. As a grocery store worker, David is among “essential” workers and experiences no loss of work as a consequence of COVID-19.

David’s ASD specialist psychiatrist and the local support counsellor at Alongside You, together, continue to give David wonderful support. Tina and Ted remain deeply thankful for such readily at-hand support. 

With the current situation, we did not take a get-away this year

Beyond the immediate family, we continue to enjoy our extended family, although only virtually for now. Email and Skype keep us in touch with with Norman and Barbara and with John and Liz.

Looking beyond ourselves, one substantial local issue grasped our whole family’s attention this year, this with the local hospice. Several years ago the Supreme Court of Canada recognized the plight of the few Canadians who were definitively dying slow and tortuous deaths and ordered Parliament to change the law to compassionately permit a more dignified passing for these people. With considerable controversy, Parliament made the change to permit due respect for those Canadians carefully considered and self-initiated choice to opt for medical assistance in dying (MAiD). Public medical facilities are now required to respect that choice. A t the Delta Hospice Society’s Annual General Meeting, late in 2019, after the Board of Directors of the Delta Hospice Society acknowledged that requirement, a group who opposed MAiD, through membership stacking from outside of our local community, ousted the existing Hoard of Directors and elected a new board that promptly reversed society policy and refused to permit the option of MAiD in the Delta Hospice.

David felt concerned to save the Delta Hospice Society and participated in his first ever protest march.
The controversy came to a head when it became known that this new board was refusing society membership applications from local citizens while accepting applications by outsiders. Even our highly respected retired immediate past MLA had her application refused. Next, this board sought to hold a Special General Meeting to change the DHS constitution and bylaws and transform it from a secular local community society into a parochial “Christian” society, eliciting outrage throughout the Delta community. The community rose in protest, buying memberships (that remained not accepted – all four of us bought memberships as well) and marching in peaceful protest on  June 13th. That same day, it received news that the Supreme Court of British Columbia had ordered the society to cancel the scheduled Special General Meeting and to accept all submitted membership applications.

By appeal to the Appeal Court of British Columbia, the new board gained a freeze on membership and delayed implementing that order until the appeal failed. Even then they refused to accept local members until the court refused their requested stay pending further appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. Local membership applications have finally received acceptance late in November. In the mean time, this board has continued to recruit outside membership, reaching all across Canada and even into the United States. The controversy remains far from resolved as we approach the new year.

We gave close attention through the British Columbia provincial election last October. Ted feels concern that a strong majority government replaced the effective minority government in Victoria and remains troubled by elements of the direction Canada’s federal government in Ottawa continues to take.

Adam, Angela’s red haired Standard Poodle, continues to endear himself to us all.  He no longer sees his  “friends” often but he loves to greet and offer in play whenever he meets other dogs. Adam did make a few new puppy friends to whom he serves as a role model. Adam keeps Ladner well mapped and his chosen walking routes when we walk are many and varied. Twice daily walks, preferably long, are compulsory with this dog; supper is optional. Adam guarantees that Ted and Angela exercise.

Tina and Friends (Red Winged Blackbirds)
As winter returned to us, we enjoyed south Delta’s annual return of vast flocks of Snow Geese, many now continued on to the Skagit River delta and/or California’s Sacramento Valley. Trumpeter Swans are back on various farm fields. Resident Bald Eagles have now returned to renovate their nests. Very soon, trees along Highway 10 will burst into our annual crop of transient Bald Eagles. At home, our bird feeder remains frequented by Chickadees, House Finches, Juncos, Song Sparrows, White Crowned Sparrows, Spotted Towhees, the occasional Nuthatch, Downy Woodpeckers, and Northern Flickers while Anna’s Hummingbirds use their feeder as frequently ever and Steller’s Jays enjoy our steady supply of in-shell peanuts. The Jays know Ted and have him well trained to keep the peanuts coming. We continue to enjoy the George C Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary although COVID-19 has limited our visits.

Ted has slowed his efforts to seek players to experiment with his invented team sports of Two Ball and Delta.  He also keeps up his web presence for the games, but has lacked activity to post to the site blog, or on Facebook.  These continue to catch occasional attention world-wide, but he still awaits word of anyone actually playing either game.  You remain invited to have a look and, perhaps, to draw the games to the attention of sport minded people you may know.

And now we look forward to 2021, to COVID-19 vaccination, and a more normal year.  Recent weeks, of course, have filled us with Christmas preparations.  We hope yours have gone well and we wish you a Merry and Blessed Christmas and all happiness in the New Year.

With our Christmas love,

Ted, Tina, David, and Angela.


P. S. That this letter arrives on Christmas Eve is entirely deliberate.


Blwyddyn Newydd Dda!    Happy New Year!    Felice Nuovo Anno!


2020-12-15

Controversy in Delta

Here where I live in Delta, British Columbia, substantial controversy rages around the local hospice. One member of the Take Back Delta Hospice Discussion group on Facebook received a deeply troubling message containing startling misinformation implying that the simple requirement for the hospice to respect patient choice is actually compulsion on the hospice to impose upon its patients. This got sent sent to this organization's members all across Canada:

.
I simply had to clear a few things up with this Mr. Gunnarson by writing him as follows:

Dear Mr. Gunnarson,
I must respectfully urge you to withdraw the letter apparently circulated by you to your members urging nonresidents of Delta to interfere in a local Delta community issue that is unequivocally none of their business by taking out memberships in the Delta Hospice Society. Please remind your members who do not reside in Delta that, unless they intend to relocate to Delta within coming months, taking membership in this local community society is completely inappropriate.
The Delta Hospice Society is a strongly supported and much loved local community society that provides hospice services to residents who are already dying, to ease and give comfort at the end of life in the manner the dying may, by their own self-initiated choice, desire. A little over ten years ago, Delta residents from all walks of life and faith persuasions gave their enthusiastic financial support to build the Irene Thomas Hospice and the Harold & Veronica Savage Centre for Supportive Care. Membership in the Delta Hospice Society was and long remained very small, with supportive Delta residents leaving the business of the society to those few members and their elected Board of Directors. This is typical of most such service societies, the actual membership is far smaller than the supportive community within which they serve. Whether holding membership or not, residents of Delta most certainly regard the Delta Hospice Society as their community society.
Unfortunately, being a small community society with a limited membership, the Delta Hospice Society was readily susceptible to membership manipulation. In 2019, a hostile element stacked the society membership with people who supported its agenda, including people resident outside of the Delta community and, to the dismay of long standing members and the community as whole, ousted the existing Board of Directors and replaced it with their own Board of Director at the society’s 2019 Annual General Meeting last November. This new Board of Directors continued to stack society membership with residents remote from Delta for whom the operations of the society are completely none of their business, even going so far as to recruit in the United States of America. Delta residents who truly cared about the society they considered to be their own found this turn of events alarming and started taking out their own society memberships only to find that their membership applications were refused and returned to them while the applications of outsiders were being accepted.
The new Board of Directors then developed a plan to completely change the Constitution and Bylaws of the Delta Hospice Society and transform it from a secular community society into a parochial self-defined “Christian” (quotation marks for so-called because there are deeply faithful Christian residents of Delta who cannot recognize their actions as truly Christian) society. They planned a Special General meeting to authorize this change for last spring.
Needless to say Delta residents, out of our love for our community society as it had existed for so many years, quickly grew alarmed, initiated a campaign to take back the Delta Hospice Society by bringing the many resident supporters of and donors to society into membership, and took the matter of the refused memberships to the Supreme Court of British Columbia. The court ruled to require all membership applications be accepted, to require membership lists be made available to the complainants, and to cancel the scheduled Special General Meeting. The new Board of Directors sought to appeal this ruling and the court ordered membership lists and applications sealed pending that appeal while keeping the cancellation on the Special Genela Meeting. The board's eventual appeal to the Appeal Court of British Columbia failed and the board was then required to accept the many resident membership applications. The board then sought a stay on the ruling while it attempted to take tho matter to the Supreme Court of Canada but the appeal court, recognizing that the Supreme Court of Canada would very likely decline to hear their case, refused the stay.
Now, under court order, the Board of Directors of the Delta Hospice Society is finally accepting the many local resident membernship applications. It would appear that this boardt is also upping its campaign to recruit outsiders to counter local residents, as evidenced by your letter. This matter is not the business of any nonresident of Delta. Please leave Delta residents to care for their community society without your interference.
Thank you for your attention,


2019-12-24

Christmas, 2019

Nadolig Llawen!  Merry Christmas!  Buon Natale!

Christmas 2019.
From our home to yours, dear Family and Friends,
Again it is our pleasure to share a little bit of our lives over the past year at this very special time of year.  We hope you enjoy a full and restful Christmas/New Year season.  2019 saw us simply living as a family with few changes.
Tina continues to enjoy complete retirement from ward nursing. With the new year,Tina continued playing her cello with the Camerata Strings adult ensemble in the VSO School of Music. Although she enjoys the new cello music and playing as part of an ensemble, Tina’s health did make her take a break away from playing with the group midway through autumn. She suffers increasing back pain that limits her general activity. Medical specialists have sent her through several tests and we both look forward to learning the results. Tina does anticipate returning to Camarata with her cello.
With exercise and prescribed medication, Ted's health continues as stable although he did experience another bout of atrial fibrillation in the spring that persisted into summer, Again, his heart doctors decided he needed cardioversion to correct it, this time using external stimulation instead of making Ted’s ICD jolt his heart. Otherwise, he is bothered only by occasional colds. Ted continues to use long walks with Angela's dog, Adam as his primary mode of exercise now, walking Adam twice a day, most days of the week.  These long walks allow Ted routinely to exceed the recommended minimum 10,000 steps per day by a substantial margin.
Tina and Ted both remain in wonder at the beauty of Angela’s ceramic creations which range from hand crafted ceramic buttons through cups and bowls of various sizes and exquisitely delicate ceramic  sculptures to large vases. Although they all continue to produce  fine works of ceramic art, the Dusty Babes have not showed their works as actively this year as last year. In the Spring, Angela did show on her own at Surrey’s Darts Hill Garden Park. Angela remains an active member of the Potters Guild of BC.
Angela and her friends in the Dusty Babes Collective continue to work in their ceramic art studio in south Surrey near White Rock. She spends much of Tuesdays to Fridays with her own works at the studio.  Angela continues her part time position as the lead ceramics studio technician for the South Surrey Recreation Centre, working Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, and teaching ceramics classes at South Surrey on Tuesday evenings. From time to time she also teaches on Saturday mornings or Wednesday evenings. Angela teaches mainly adult classes which vary from those for absolute beginners to classes in more advanced ceramics skills.

Angela’s imaginative ceramic sculptures in the Dart’s Hill Garden
Tina and Ted both remain in wonder at the beauty of Angela’s ceramic creations which range from hand crafted ceramic buttons through cups and bowls of various sizes and exquisitely delicate ceramic sculptures to large vases. Although they all continue to produce  fine works of ceramic art, the Dusty Babes have not showed  their works as actively this year as last year. In the Spring, Angela did show on her own at Surrey’s Darts Hill Garden Park. Angela remains an active member of the Potters Guild of BC.
Outside of her art, Angela continues her interest in sophisticated board games and computer gaming which she shares with Christy, enjoying relaxing time to play and be together each Sunday afternoon and evening. They both enjoy Adam’s company as he delights in their companionship.
David continued private study on his viola with Robert Hirschhorn Rozek through the spring but did not return with the Fall. He continues as a violist with the New Westminster Symphony Orchestra, really enjoying rehearsing and performing under conductor, Jack (Jin) Zhang and a guest conductor. During the summer, David completed Level Two of the Orff Music Instructor training program. Late in the Fall, he found an opportunity to volunteer  with the elementary school Music program with Mr. Lee at Ladner’s Hawthorne Elementary School. David continues to watch for opportunities in other orchestras, in particular for professional opportunities to arise.
David continues to enjoy writing fiction, with which he extends his imagination. Through the year, he continued his major rewrite of The Stolen Treasure, a novel he had originally developed as a young teen.  His novel, The Sheltered Life of Betsy Parker, published four years ago as a digital copy, continues to draw ongoing interest and responses on the GoodReads literary sharing site. David keeps the second edition available both digitally and as hardcopy on Amazon. Apart from his music and his writing, David continues to enjoy his part-time employment with Meridian Farm Markets at their store in Tsawwassen.
David’s ASD specialist psychiatrist and our minister at Ladner United Church (up until his retirement last June, the United Church of Canada requires retired ministers to completely severe connerction with their final congregations for a full year after retirement), together, continue to give David wonderful support. Tina and Ted feel deeply thankful for such readily at-hand support. He also accepted local support with a counsellor at Alongside You, here in Ladner.
Relaxing lunch at Cusheon Lake with Dick and Lynn
Our only get-away this year was, again, a return to Cusheon Lake Resort on Salt Spring Island for the Canada Day weekend.  This brought us our familiar  enjoyments of the lake, Beddis Beach, Ruckle Park, Ganges, and Salt Spring Island Gelato at Harlan’s as well as the, remarkable for a small community, Canada Day fireworks. During this stay, we were pleased to host Ted’s former schoolmates, Dick and Lynn Zandee, for a fine afternoon get tether.
Beyond the immediate family, we continue to enjoy our extended family. With Ted’s brother Norman, wife Barbara, and son Evan living nearby, we share visits regularly. Evan and his business partner remain very busy with their construction contracting business, Form to Finish Construction. We  had the good fortune to engage Evan and crew to renovate our back deck early in the Summer. Evan’s brother, Gareth enjoys his Assistant Professorship position at Western Oregon University and the responsibility to create a new environmental research laboratory. While well settled in at Monmouth, Oregon, Gareth, his wife Zoë, and baby daughter Rosy take brief opportunities to visit home with Norman and Barbara when we also share in their company. We look forward to seeing them again over Christmas. At Thanksgiving, Norman and Barbara with Evan and his girlfriend, Nicki, joined us before Norman and Barbara left for their Middle Eastern travel adventure that included the wonders of ancient Egypt.
Looking beyond ourselves, we gave close attention through the Canadian federal election last October. Ted remains troubled by the direction Canada’s federal government continues to take. Tina is impressed by the government’s new legislation in support of people with disabilities.
We also remain at unease with the actions of the current President of our neighbours to the south and his insistence on denying anthropogenic climate change. We share with many the shock at learning that President Trump called upon the governments of other nations to interfere in his country’s electoral process by digging up unspecified alleged dirt for him on a potential political opponent. As a consequence, recent efforts to impeach this President impress us as entirely reasonable.
We continue to share many Canadian’s concern for the plight of the many refugees from those horrible civil wars in Syria and Yemen and see in that suffering the first sign of the societal disruption that can result from anthropogenic climate change. Similarly, we recognize that increasingly variable weather into extremes are part and parcel with the changing world climate, giving cause to the substantial wildfires in California and now the even greater fire disasters in Australia.  Our whole family follows Greta Thunberg and her efforts to spur governments into acting on the established science to avoid worldwide climate disaster.
Adam, Angela’s red haired standard poodle, continues to endear himself to us all.  He does not get to see his “friends” as often but he loves to greet and engage in play when he does get together with any one of them. To Adam’s dismay, many of his “friends” still give up on his chase-me game as he runs too fast for them. Adam keeps Ladner well mapped in his head and his chosen routes when we walk are many and varied.
Tina and friends (young male Red Winged Blackbirds at Reifel
As winter returned to us, we are enjoying south Delta’s annual return of Trumpeter Swans and the vast flocks of Snow Geese. Resident Bald Eagles are now renovating their nests but, very soon, trees along Highway 10 will burst into our annual crop of transient Bald Eagles. At home, our bird feeder remains frequented by Chickadees, House Finches, Juncos, Song Sparrows, White Crowed  Sparrows, Spotted Towees, the occasional Nuthatch, Downy Woodpeckers, and Flickers while Anna’s Hummingbirds use their feeder more frequently and Steller’s Jays enjoy our steady supply of peanuts. We continue to enjoy visits to the George C Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary
Ted has slowed his efforts to seek players to experiment with his invented team sports of Two Ball and Delta.  Lacking sufficient contact of his own among sports minded youth, he tried to approach schools since their Physical Education and intramural sport programs likely offer the best chance of drawing sufficiently large groups of players together.  Ted feels disappointed that no schools have yet taken up either game.  Ted also keeps up his web presence for the games, but has lacked activity to post to the site blog, or on Facebook.  These continue to catch occasional attention world-wide, but he still awaits word of anyone actually playing either game.  You remain invited to have a look and, perhaps, to draw the games to the attention of sport minded people you may know.
And now we look forward to 2020.  Recent weeks, of course, have filled us with Christmas preparations.  We hope yours have gone well and we wish you a Merry and Blessed Christmas and all happiness in the New Year.
With our Christmas love,
Ted, Tina, David, and Angela.
P. S. That this letter arrives on Christmas Eve is entirely deliberate.  
Blwyddyn Newydd Dda!  Happy New Year!  Felice Nuovo Anno!

2019-09-11

In this Election, Will I Give My vote to My Current Member of Parliament?

Our federal Parliament has now dissolved and the 2019 election has been called. Every eligible voter, all of us, must decide to whom among the candidates in our own federal constituencies we will give our vote. Will I vote for my current Member of Parliament (MP) the return to the next Parliament as my representative? No, I will not.
Why not? Partly for the same reason that I could not vote for her during the last election. At the time I found much about her candidacy that attracted my vote. Yet, to me, the sovereignty-deleting ISDS provision in so-called free trade agreements then under negotiation or pending negotiation had to be a major national issue (see my post from that time). I questioned each of our then candidates on this matter. My then MP, a senior Cabinet Minister in the previous government, easily supported her government’s ready abrogation of our national sovereignty through ISDS and its inherent characteristic of raising international corporations from being subjects of their home nations and welcome guests within other nations to be, in effect, non-territorial sovereign entities (I called them non-territorial kingdoms) equal in stature with sovereign nations. As a candidate, my current MP never answered my question or commented on the issue and that turned my vote away from her. After the 2015 election, I learned why she did not answer or address the issue as, instead of the “Real Change” promised during the election, the new government, of which she became a part as a Cabinet Minister, proceeded to perpetuate the previous government’s support for ISDS. Dismayed at this let-down, I later wrote an open letter to my new MP, made a submission to the House of Commons Standing Committee on International Trade, and an open letter to our Prime Minister with my concerns, all to no avail. Sadly and to Canada’s shame, that the renegotiation of NAFTA into the USMCA removed ISDS had nothing to do with Canada’s negotiating position but resulted entirely from American effort. TiSA, still under negotiation with Canada’s participation continues to include possible “backdoor” access to sovereignty-deleting ISDS. As a Cabinet Minister in our current government, my current MP continues to support subsuming our sovereign right to govern ourselves as a free and independent nation to ISDS.
As a more immediate reason why I cannot give my vote to my current MP, I look at the SNC Lavalin scandal. My MP supports our Prime Minister in spite of his interference in the judicial process, an unethical and, likely, unconstitutional action that, in times past, would have either brought on the resignation of a truly honourable Minister of the Crown or generated a cabinet or even caucus revolt to force such a resignation. Not only that, but my MP then accepted, however temporarily, the appointment to replace Jane Philpott at her Cabinet Ministry when Dr. Philpott took the highly honourable step of resigning in support of former Attorney General Jody Wilson-Reybould’s concerns over attempted Prime Ministerial interference with her authority concerning the judicial case involving SNC Lavalin.
So, to whom will I give my vote? Right now, I simply do not know.
When I vote, I vote the person; I do not vote the party. I will listen to whatever all our other candidates have to say on various issues. In particular, I will listen for strong affirmation of judicial independence from political interference and for strong acknowledgement and support for Canada’s independence as a free, self-governing, and sovereign nation not subject to corporate overrule via ISDS. I will look for commitments to support and/or enhance Canada’s existing health care system. I will also want to listen to candidates thoughts on local issues of a federal nature.
Above all though, and even more importantly in consequence of the growing environmental crisis, I will look for substantial intention to contribute to bringing Canada into a strong role in precluding the impending world-wide anthropogenic climate disaster and ending the currently proceeding anthropogenic mass extinction of living species. I will anticipate learning of intended action to transfer subsidies away from carbon dioxide and methane releasing industries and personal activity, turning those subsidies over to industries and personal activities that involve no carbon dioxide or methane release. I hope to learn of support for an industrial activity that isolates carbon for non-carbon dioxide releasing purposes or sequesters it.
Delta candidates, I await all that you have to say. Please say it with grace and intelligence.