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				<title>How Much is a Dollar Really Worth?</title>
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				<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 2012 10:22:51 GMT</pubDate>
			
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					<title>Do You Want to See My mp3 Collection?</title>
					<link>http://prairiedanceclub.com/blog.cfm?feature=2599914&amp;postid=1724570</link>
					<description>How many of you are proud to show off your mp3 collection? It&apos;s probably a question no one has ever asked you before. Why? Because mp3&apos;s are nothing more than cold, digital, compressed files that have no tangibility. They are useful, but not collectable and not really worth showing off. Convenience and the ipod have made the mp3 the dominant music format. If you read the music blogger Bob Lefsetz, he will tell you that this is the future and there is no point in looking back. Only the artists that encompass the latest technology and trends will survive. This is probably true, but I am, unfortunately, nostalgic.

Every Friday afternoon throughout high school and college, myself and a group of friends would drive down the Island Highway to the A&amp;amp;B Sound in downtown Nanaimo and spend an hour or so sifting through cd&apos;s and very carefully making a purchase to add to our collections. We would then go home and listen to our purchases and comb through the liner notes, carefully organize the cd with the hundreds of others we had on our shelves. I no longer feel like I have a music collection because I have now embraced the digital format. &amp;nbsp;I have thousands of mp3&apos;s that I can access anywhere I am through my multiple devices, which is definitely great. But it does not feel like a collection and I do not feel like a music collector. Yes, I could continue buying cd&apos;s or vinyl, but the lure of owning music instantly with the click of a button is overwhelmingly tempting. It sounds weird, but I miss the days where it actually took effort to buy music. I guess it ultimately made me feel like I had more ownership of the music I purchased because I could hold it in my hands.</description>
					<content:encoded><![CDATA[How many of you are proud to show off your mp3 collection? It's probably a question no one has ever asked you before. Why? Because mp3's are nothing more than cold, digital, compressed files that have no tangibility. They are useful, but not collectable and not really worth showing off. Convenience and the ipod have made the mp3 the dominant music format. If you read the music blogger Bob Lefsetz, he will tell you that this is the future and there is no point in looking back. Only the artists that encompass the latest technology and trends will survive. This is probably true, but I am, unfortunately, nostalgic.<br />
<br />
Every Friday afternoon throughout high school and college, myself and a group of friends would drive down the Island Highway to the A&amp;B Sound in downtown Nanaimo and spend an hour or so sifting through cd's and very carefully making a purchase to add to our collections. We would then go home and listen to our purchases and comb through the liner notes, carefully organize the cd with the hundreds of others we had on our shelves. I no longer feel like I have a music collection because I have now embraced the digital format. &nbsp;I have thousands of mp3's that I can access anywhere I am through my multiple devices, which is definitely great. But it does not feel like a collection and I do not feel like a music collector. Yes, I could continue buying cd's or vinyl, but the lure of owning music instantly with the click of a button is overwhelmingly tempting. It sounds weird, but I miss the days where it actually took effort to buy music. I guess it ultimately made me feel like I had more ownership of the music I purchased because I could hold it in my hands.<br type="_moz" />]]></content:encoded>
					<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 2012 10:22:51 GMT</pubDate>
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					<title>How Much is a Dollar Really Worth?</title>
					<link>http://prairiedanceclub.com/blog.cfm?feature=2599914&amp;postid=1209421</link>
					<description>With all the economic doom and gloom in the world today, I have been thinking a lot about how our present day society and government  might respond if the type of hardships that came with the depression of 1929 were to happen again. At any given time during those years almost 30% of the work force was unemployed. Today those statistics might look different because of modern technology,  but I wonder if, at our core, we could dig as deep as thousands of first generation Canadians did 80 years ago if we had to? 

Without a social safety net in Canada during the Depression it was it was the job of private charities, churches and individuals to meet the needs of thousands who were unemployed and suffering hardship especially throughout the Canadian prairies.  One of these individuals was a visionary politician from Saskatchewan named Tommy Douglas who stood up for  the working and middle class and eventually helped pen one of Canada&apos;s earliest hospitalization and medicare plans. 

In doing some research online you can find many stories of people in whom the Depression brought out the worst. Like the stockbrokers who committed suicide when they realized they no longer had anything of value beyond their souls or men who turned to organize crime to make ends meet. They were tough times, but there are thousands more stories of individuals in whom the Depression brought out the best. Everyday people sharing resources with total strangers; men who travelled thousands of miles to find work in order to provide for their families.   

Many of us have very personal ties to this hard stretch of North American history because of what our grandparents and great grandparents would have experienced first hand. One day last year I was visiting with my parents in the Okanagan and I began asking my father some questions about my own family&apos;s experience with the Great Depression. My great grandparents immigrated from Liverpool in the early 1920&apos;s to Saskatchewan. Like thousands of others, my great Grandfather lost his job and could not find work after the Depression hit. Times were so tough that my Grandfather could not even afford to feed his two boys and had to send them to a local church to be fed on a daily basis until he was able to land a job as a janitor at a local school. 

As a father of two I cannot even comprehend not being able to feed my kids. In the back of my mind I think, &amp;quot;Well, I would just use my credit card if I didn&apos;t have any money.&amp;quot;  But what if there were no credit cards and the government&apos;s social assistance programs were no longer running? It really makes you think about the value of a dollar, doesn&apos;t it? Would people today still respond as selflessly as so many during the Depression; would I respond as selflessly? One thing is certain. No matter how hard things get, I think love and compassion will be the only currency that will matter in the end - they get beaten down time and again but their resiliency is unnatural. They are full of surprises and can change destinies in an instant. Sounds idealistic and a little cliche I know, but it doesn&apos;t make it any less untrue. 

This topic was the inspiration behind our song &amp;quot;Until They Put Me In the Ground&amp;quot;.
You can download it for free here:  www.prairiedanceclub.bandcamp.com

Jason</description>
					<content:encoded><![CDATA[With all the economic doom and gloom in the world today, I have been thinking a lot about how our present day society and government  might respond if the type of hardships that came with the depression of 1929 were to happen again. At any given time during those years almost 30% of the work force was unemployed. Today those statistics might look different because of modern technology,  but I wonder if, at our core, we could dig as deep as thousands of first generation Canadians did 80 years ago if we had to? <br />
<br />
Without a social safety net in Canada during the Depression it was it was the job of private charities, churches and individuals to meet the needs of thousands who were unemployed and suffering hardship especially throughout the Canadian prairies.  One of these individuals was a visionary politician from Saskatchewan named Tommy Douglas who stood up for  the working and middle class and eventually helped pen one of Canada's earliest hospitalization and medicare plans. <br />
<br />
In doing some research online you can find many stories of people in whom the Depression brought out the worst. Like the stockbrokers who committed suicide when they realized they no longer had anything of value beyond their souls or men who turned to organize crime to make ends meet. They were tough times, but there are thousands more stories of individuals in whom the Depression brought out the best. Everyday people sharing resources with total strangers; men who travelled thousands of miles to find work in order to provide for their families.   <br />
<br />
Many of us have very personal ties to this hard stretch of North American history because of what our grandparents and great grandparents would have experienced first hand. One day last year I was visiting with my parents in the Okanagan and I began asking my father some questions about my own family's experience with the Great Depression. My great grandparents immigrated from Liverpool in the early 1920's to Saskatchewan. Like thousands of others, my great Grandfather lost his job and could not find work after the Depression hit. Times were so tough that my Grandfather could not even afford to feed his two boys and had to send them to a local church to be fed on a daily basis until he was able to land a job as a janitor at a local school. <br />
<br />
As a father of two I cannot even comprehend not being able to feed my kids. In the back of my mind I think, &quot;Well, I would just use my credit card if I didn't have any money.&quot;  But what if there were no credit cards and the government's social assistance programs were no longer running? It really makes you think about the value of a dollar, doesn't it? Would people today still respond as selflessly as so many during the Depression; would I respond as selflessly? One thing is certain. No matter how hard things get, I think love and compassion will be the only currency that will matter in the end - they get beaten down time and again but their resiliency is unnatural. They are full of surprises and can change destinies in an instant. Sounds idealistic and a little cliche I know, but it doesn't make it any less untrue. <br />
<br />
This topic was the inspiration behind our song &quot;Until They Put Me In the Ground&quot;.<br />
You can download it for free here:  www.prairiedanceclub.bandcamp.com<br />
<br />
Jason<br />]]></content:encoded>
					<pubDate>Fri, 19 Aug 2011 22:00:22 GMT</pubDate>
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