Archives July 2017

Want to be happier? Hire a housekeeper, researchers suggest. Many who have the means to buy themselves more free time don't do so.

https://www-cbc-ca.cdn.ampproject.org/c/www.cbc.ca/amp/1.4220213
https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2017/07/25/paying-someone-to-do-your-chores-could-make-you-happier-study-finds.html
OK, so not a very Mennonite/simple living idea on the surface. However, it doesn’t take much digging beneath the surface for me to find something here that does match with simple living – time vs stuff. If we have even a few dollars to spend on something that isn’t absolutely essentially, the Menno/simple living approach would be to buy time instead of stuff (especially since many of us live in fairly small houses and simply don’t have room for more stuff, even if we wanted it.) Therefore, if we are going to spend treat money, having someone else do the Saturday cleaning, for example, is a bigger treat than buying more stuff that doesn’t fit into our space, anyways. 🙂 Naturally, this can easily cross the line into spending extravagantly, the same as it can with buying stuff, but I don’t think that’s what they are talking about here.
Here’s some of the other places with coverage on this that popped up when I did a quick search:
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/business-news/yes-you-can-buy-happiness-if-you-spend-it-to-save-time/
https://news.google.com/news/story/dLhYm5we9AiMN7M84NlhcUVrej-eM?hl=en-CA&ned=ca
 

Why Canada Is Able to Do Things Better: Most of the country understands that when it comes to government, you pay for what you get.

https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/07/canada-america-taxes/533847/ Maybe this is a bit of Canadian bragging here.  🙂 Whole article is worth reading (it is fairly short) – here are a few key quotes worth highlighting…

It’s really quite simple: When Canadian governments need more money, they raise taxes. Canadians are not thrilled when this happens. But as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. put it, taxes are the price paid “for civilized society.” And one of the reasons Canada strikes many visitors as civilized is that the rules of arithmetic generally are understood and respected on both sides of the political spectrum.

And this..

Denmark, with a tax burden of 49.6 percent, stands atop the OECD index. It also happens to be a wonderful place to live, with a high standard of living funded by a diversified, high-tech, export-driven economy.

And…

Canadians tend not to talk about making their country great again. Canada never was particularly great—at least not in the sense that Trump uses the word. Unlike Americans, Canadians haven’t been conditioned to see history in epic, revolutionary terms. For them, it’s more transactional: You pay your taxes, you get your government. That might not be chanted at any political rallies or printed on any baseball hats. But it works for Canada. And it’d work for America too.

Plant-Based Recommendations in Canadian Food Guide Draft Guidelines

Just came across this http://www.onegreenplanet.org/news/canadas-food-guidelines-cut-dairy-and-meat/ so I did a quick check. Here is what I found…
Here is some info on the comsultations http://www.foodguideconsultation.ca/
Detailed summary of the Principles http://www.foodguideconsultation.ca/guiding-principles-detailed
And the quick summary http://www.foodguideconsultation.ca/guiding-principles-summary
I wasn’t able to quickly find clear evidence that the dairy category will be removed, but it does say this in the first principle:

Health Canada recommends regular intake of vegetables, fruit, whole grains and protein-rich foods, especially plant-based sources of protein…What is needed is a shift towards a high proportion of plant-based foods, without necessarily excluding animal foods altogether.

It will be interesting to see how this gets put together into the final consumer recommendations! 🙂