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Guest: Ken Greenberg, urban designer and co-founder of Elbows Up Toronto
“This is not a trade war,” Charlie Angus said to a packed crowd at a church this week, “it’s an attack on who we are as people.” A lot of Canadians have been feeling that recently, as U.S. President Donald Trump not only imposes tariffs on us, but talks about taking our country over. The response in the public is like something few of us have seen, a swelling patriotism. But a lot of us have also been feeling a sense that while we want to do something, we aren’t sure how, beyond buying Canadian at the grocery store.
Ken Greenberg, who originally came to Toronto as a Vietnam war resistor before a career in public life as a planner and designer, is co-founder of a group called ‘Elbows Up Toronto’ aiming to organize people to turn those feelings into grassroots action. Their Monday night meetings are part rally, part brainstorming session, and serve as what Greenberg calls a “clearing house” where people can trade information and strategy and coordinate for further action. It is, he says, a chance to realize what Canadian culture really means (and can mean), and to emerge a better, stronger country for it.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
This episode was produced by Julia De Laurentiis Johnston, Ed Keenan and Paulo Marques.
Edward Keenan is a Toronto-based city columnist for the Star.
Reach him via email: [email protected]
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