Forget fevers and sniffles. For working parents across the country, the most stressful flu symptom this fall may be that tense breakfast-table negotiation: Who is going to stay home with the kids? Who is going to wait in line for the vaccine? Who spends the night in emergency? And that unspoken question potentially underlying every answer: Whose job is more important?

The new flu symptom for parents: Who stays home? - The Globe and Mail

To the extent that we have any infrastructure policy at all, it is badly disjointed, dysfunctional, often doing more harm than good as it serves the interests of politicians who are crazy for pork rather than the real needs of the American public.

Op-Ed Columnist - What the Future May Hold - NYTimes.com

Inspiring story of Captain Trevor Greene http://bit.ly/4k15Ui (via @globeandmail)

Partisanship, the desire to do as much damage to the other guy as possible, the dramatically diminished focus on the public interest in favour of the party’s interest, has led to more dishonesty with voters, less time spent on trying to address the real issues and a dramatic increase in short-term decisions which actually run contrary to the public interest.

Coyle - Let’s skip stereotypes and give a guy a break

Healthcare is responsible for 8% of all CO2 emissions in the US http://instapaper.com/zGkjkf8f

The new guide to citizenship could be a very interesting read, even for Canadian citizens http://tgam.ca/D8O (via @globeandmail)

Good to see these detailed analyses of the Federal stimulus money http://tgam.ca/D5b (via @globeandmail)

More commentary on road tolls for Toronto. This warrants serious discussion. http://tgam.ca/D5x (via @globeandmail)

Toll roads are inevitable and likely a good public benefit http://instapaper.com/zmfr7d8k

“Activism disguised as science” on the BPA ban http://tgam.ca/DYf (via @globeandmail)

Canada talks boldly about free trade but does nothing to achieve it http://tgam.ca/DYg (via @globeandmail)

Appreciating the sustainability theme here at the Toronto Forum for Global Cities

RT @aradwanski: Smitherman confirms in our interview that he’s leaving cabinet, running for mayor. http://tinyurl.com/ybsnuxn

We like to think that all great events have great causes, and obviously long-term political, economic and military forces shaped the Cold War – and how it ended. But momentous events are also a sort of ambush of history, when all those long-term pressures come together in an unexpected way. The opening of the Berlin Wall, largely unintentional, was such an event, an unsettling thought for those who see history as the result of strategy and planning by pivotal leaders.

Mary Elise Sarotte – How an accident caused the Berlin Wall to come down

This is precisely how the character of a country becomes fundamentally degraded when it becomes a state in permanent war.Β  So continuous are the inhumane and brutal acts of government leaders that the citizens completely lose the capacity for moral outrage and horror.Β  The permanent claims of existential threats from an endless array of enemies means that secrecy is paramount, accountability is deemed a luxury, and National Security trumps every other consideration – even including basic liberties and the rule of law.Β Β Worst of all, theΒ President takes on the attributes of a protector-deity who can and must never be questioned lest we prevent him from keeping us safe.

A court decision that reflects what type of country the U.S. is

It rarely matters who is on your side; what matters is who is against you. Unlike Gloria Loring, you don’t need a friend and you don’t need a lover. What you need is a) one quality nemesis, and b) one archenemy. These are the two most important characters in the life of any successful human

The Importance of Being Hated - Esquire (via Instapaper)

Most Canadians probably fall into a middle group. They’re sensible people who don’t like being sick, care for each other and take reasonable precautions to protect themselves and others. They have a sense of their good fortune in living in the 21st century and a sense of proportion about their priorities. When our health is at risk, we pay attention to our doctors and take our medicines and our vaccines. Then we get on with the important things of life, which centuries of progress and dedicated public health professionals have made it possible for us to enjoy.

Fear’s old struggle with vaccination - The Globe and Mail (via Instapaper)

Now, people waiting in queues will be questioned about why they are there - their likely response being that the health authorities have for months urged them to be there and indeed initially opened clinics to all. If they don’t fall into one of the risk groups, they will be weeded out. The Public Health Agency of Canada, and other health authorities, along with their political masters, should not be surprised by the resulting public fury.

Weeding out the queue (via Instapaper)

Looking back over human history, rationality has been the anomaly. Being rational takes work, education, and a sober determination to avoid making hasty inferences, even when they appear to make perfect sense. Much like infectious diseases themselves β€” beaten back by decades of effort to vaccinate the populace β€” the irrational lingers just below the surface, waiting for us to let down our guard.

Wired: β€˜An Epidemic of Fear: How Panicked Parents Skipping Shots Endangers Us All’ (via Instapaper)

A vast majority of professionals are in β€œemergency scanning” mode. Their self-management consists of checking for and acting on the loudest immediacies – in email, in the hallways and on the phone. Everything else is shoved to the side of the desk, and to the back of their mind. Because they’re focused only on β€œpriorities”, and are paying attention only to the most intheir- face stuff, everyone else has to raise the noise level to β€œemergency” mode to get any audience at all. Sensitivity and responsiveness to input are criteria for the evolution of a species; and many an organisation has a nervous system that keeps them low on the food chain.

David Allen on setting priorities (via Instapaper)