Archives
“Roly”
Check this out. One of my antiques guys in Brighton saved them for me: a collection of Kennedy-related books owned by none other than the Rt. Hon. Roland (“Roly”) Michener. Love the note his bookseller friend added. What a find!

Canadian Heritage Moments: the Shawinigan handshake
Twenty-five years ago today! Can you remember where you were when this happened?
I sure do! I was listening to Team Martin spox Susan Delacourt announce on TV that this was the end of Jean Chretien.

Thanks
Took a day off from all things Internet-related. Good therapy.
Thanks to all of you for the kind notes and messages, public and private.
Back into the breach.
The truth
I can’t get past the fact Canada is currently ranked 45th in terms of vaccinations per capita, and yet Liberal partisans still keep insisting the plan is working.
I mean, the cognitive dissonance needed to make that argument is stunning. https://t.co/lLggmLeco7
— Scott Gilmore (@Scott_Gilmore) February 15, 2021
Happy birthday, Dad
Many guys will understand what I mean when I say this: your father is both a bit of light, and a bit of shadow, over your path through life.
Mine, T. Douglas Kinsella, MD, OC, would have been 89 years old today. So many years after we lost him, he remains a constant in our lives. He still illuminates some of the path. Without even being here, he still quietly persuades me to examine the choices I have made.
Me? I have made bad choices. I have been reckless and cruel with too many. I have not lived by the single rule he left us.
“Love people, and be honest,” he said to us, and I often feel I have done neither.
He saved many lives as a physician, and he won accolades, and he was a member of the Order of Canada. But for us – my brothers, my nephew he raised, my closest friends – he was the man we aspired to be. Not for the distinctions he received, but for how he was, in his heart.
He was unfailingly honest; he was kind to everyone he met. He married his high school sweetheart, and was with her every single day for 50 years, and my God how they loved each other. We would sit there at the kitchen table in Calgary or Kingston or Montreal, and we would listen to him. He’d listen to us, too, and persuade us to try and figure things out. There were some great times, around that table.
The best thing is having a father like that. The harder thing is knowing that you will never be like him.
I met a girl, once, who had lost her father, too, and never got over it. Fell completely in love with her for that. She felt what I felt. Bet she still does.
Anyway. I had a dream that he died in 9/11; I don’t know why, but I did. I woke up weeping, and remembered that I wasn’t a boy anymore, and that he has been gone for more than a decade. I don’t think he would like what his son has become. I mostly don’t.
So I put on my pants and shoes, and went out into the day, looking for what’s left of the path.
Happy birthday. I miss you.
KINSELLACAST 146: Lilley, Mraz, Adler on Trudeau’s vaccine fiasco – plus Hot Nasties and My Bloody Valentine!
This week’s Sparky: beam us up out of 50th place, someone

110,000 views
Canadians are mad.
Done. Mood.
