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April 11, 2024

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28 mars 2024


 

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Upcoming events


THE OTTAWA SCHOOL OF THEATRE presents an all ages production of Treasure Island in the Richcraft Theatre at the Shenkman Arts Centre. Showtimes Thursday, April 18 and Friday, April 19 at 6:30 p.m. and Saturday, April 20 and Sunday, April 21 at 1:30 p.m. Tickets $20 for adults. Students and youth 25 and under $10. To purchase visit /www.tickettailor.com/events/ ottawaschooloftheatre?

TAPROOM 260 presents Michael Ben-Shalom live from 8-11 p.m. at 260 Centrum Blvd. For more information visit https://taproom260.com/events/.

TAPROOM 260 presents The Underground live from 8-11 p.m. at 260 Centrum Blvd. For more information visit https://taproom260.com/events/.

CLASSIC PIANO RECITAL – Orléans pianist Emily Hou will be performing works by Chopin, Mozart, Rachmaninov and Liszt at Kanata United Church as part os the Beaverbrook Community Concert Series. The recital will start promptly at 3 p.m. Kanata United Church is located at 33 Leacock Dr. in Kanata. For more information visit beaverbrookccs.ca/ 2024/03/24/april-21-emily-hou.

THE ORLÉANS BREWING CO. Trivia Night from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Call (613) 834-9005 to reserve your spot. The Orléans Brewing Co. is located at 4380 Innes Rd. near the Innes Road McDonalds.

GRANDMAS AIDING GRANDMAS 10th Annual Card Party from 12:30p.m. to 4 p.m. at St. Helen’s Church, 1234 Prestone Dr. Tickets $35 includes lunch, door prizes, raffle and market. Call Barbara at 613-824-3524 or Sue at 613-834-4706.

 

 


EDITORIAL: Swedish pile on

By Fred Sherwin
Sept. 17, 2020

One of the more interesting aspects of covering the COVID-19 global pandemic has been reading the media’s reaction to how Sweden has handled the crisis, especially the media in North America and the American media south of the border in particular – much of which has been picked up and amplified by the great unwashed, ill-informed and willfully ignorant members of North America’s social media community.

Anything written and published on this side of the pond regarding how Sweden has handled the pandemic usually includes the words “disastrous”, “misguided”, “horrible”, “horrific”, “nuts”, “crazy”... well you get the picture.

In actual fact, the Swedish model is no better or worse than many other countries in the world.

One popular fallacy is that Sweden has one of the highest death rates on the planet. The fact is that Sweden has the 13th highest death rate in the world and the seventh highest death rate in Europe behind Spain, Italy, Belgium, Andorra, San Marino and the UK.

Another popular point that is often made by detractors of the Swedish model is that the country’s death rate is much higher than neighbouring countries Denmark, Finland and Norway, which is true, but so is Canada’s death rate which is currently 24.86 per 100,000 pop.: Denmark’s is 10.85; Finland’s is 6.11 and Norway’s is 4.99. By comparison, Sweden’s death rate is 57.41 per 100,000 pop. The difference is that Denmark, Finland and Sweden all had strict lockdowns with mandatory face mask requirements.

Which brings me to another fallacy – that Sweden failed to introduce any COVID-19 precautions. Again, not true. Sweden limited gatherings to no more than 50 people from the outset. Restaurants, bars and cafés have to enforce a one-metre physical distancing requirement with zero tolerance for over-crowding. In general, Swedish residents must maintain a two-metre physical distancing requirement. The biggest difference between Sweden and most other countries in the world is that face masks were never made mandatory.

According to the statistics for the month of August, Sweden had twice as many new COVID-19 cases as Canada, but the death rates were statistically identical. But here’s the kicker: according to a survey conducted by the World Health Organization, Sweden’s compliance rate for face masks is just six per cent, while Canada’s compliance rate is 76 per cent. So how is it possible that our death rates are nearly identical? Could it have possibly have anything to do with the fact that physical distancing plays a much greater role in limiting the transmission of the novel coronavirus than face masks?

Of course, that type of radical thinking runs contrary to the conventional wisdom being promoted by health officials and in the media here in North America which may account for all the Sweden bashing going on. Just sayin’.

 

Entertainment

  Sports


Orléans native wins Juno Comedy Album of the Year

The musical alter ego of local city councillor Matt Luloff

Music recital showcases amazing young talent


13-year-old gymnast wins first international medal

Orléans own Rachel Homan captures World Championship gold

Orléans youngster a budding tennis prodigy

 

Commons Corner


 

Queen's Park Corner


 

Local business

  Opinion

 


DYNAMIC FOOT CARE CLINIC: The first step to pain free feet

 

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BLACKBURN SHOPPES DENTAL CENTRE: Committed to providing a positive dental experience

 

 

 


VIEWPOINT: Homegrown talent continues to make waves

 


Vanxiety_life #13: VanLife couple arrive at Rocky Mountain foothills

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