A open letter to Naheed, the man behind @nenshi, and to all Proud Calgarians:

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A open letter to Naheed, the man behind @nenshi, and to all Proud Calgarians: September 29, 2014 -- You could heed this advise or just say na! ...that's entirely your call. But you will read this, as will all mayor's of Canadian cities. One thing all Mayor's must learn to do, is not mess with another city's politics, especially 4 days before a local election, especially if they aspire to the Premier or Prime Minister someday. What say you, Calgarians? Do you care for your mayor enough to give him the right advice? I do! Dear Naheed, No mayor of a city should stick her/his nose into the affairs of other cities. The simple truth is all municipal politics is local. And all backroom municipal treachery, hyper local. Everyone knows this, as do you -- as well as the unintended consequences of preaching one's local success to others who have a different geography and vastly different politics. But as an idea's popularity soars and becomes currency, TEDx beckons. The thunderous opening music numbs us, the silent walk to the centre of the dark stage intoxicates, and the halo of the spotlight lulls us into believing we are the chosen one to empower the world with more bullet points and sound bites. The substantive difference between TEDTalk and TEDx fades, omnipotent arrogance takes over brittle ideologies, and turns truisms into small, consumable bites of manufactured wisdom, feverishly gobbled by the wide-eyed sleep walkers. Success of one local culture - one city, rarely does get translated to another city. The past mayor of Winnipeg attempted to graft his success onto an entire province and in the process turned himself into a salesman of truisms in Ontario. He did end up losing not only his hefty portfolio, but also his gravitas. His buddies in Hamilton still think he is cats whiskers of urbanism, but he has lost his bite. The end result, no one tags him in tweets from Hamilton anymore. Hamilton is a far more complex city than most in Canada. It has more number of liars per capita than any other city on the continent. To administer its half-million+ residents, we have a strong force of 7000 city staff - a formidable and impenetrable bureaucracy that ensures we will not be changing our ways very soon. The old boy's have ensured their legacy continues unchallenged, by placing “blank slates” in key power positions of key organizations, and who play SIMcity with realty all day. Their game keeps the sleep walkers and local media busy and engaged, least one of them wakes up and stops walking. How does it remain this way? in spite of significant immigrants bringing new cultural and economic capital every year to Hamilton? Well... I'm not telling. Because that would only make it easy for you to recycle such local pecui-realities into packaged sound bites with local context, and sell us more brittle ideologies of compact walkable cities, glorious bike lanes, and warm cross-cultural hugs with the mandatory, crescendo aspiring Kumbaya. Real cities as distinct from the imaginary cities of Dutch planners, presently running amuck across Canada, have individual geographies and individual issues which are local and hyper local, and non- replicable. If you are not of the kind who aspires to homogenize the rugged individuality of all Canadian cities into one single hipster look & feel--As seen on TV, the so called Dutchification of Canadian cities, then you will appreciate that what is good for Calgary is not necessarily good for Hamilton or Sudbury. 1

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You could heed this advise or just say na! ...that's entirely your call. But you will read this, as will all mayor's of Canadian cities.From: @HamOntReporter | Mahesh P. ButaniSeptember 29, 2014

Transcript of A open letter to Naheed, the man behind @nenshi, and to all Proud Calgarians:

Page 1: A open letter to Naheed, the man behind @nenshi, and to all Proud Calgarians:

A open letter to Naheed, the man behind @nenshi, and to all Proud Calgarians:

September 29, 2014 -- You could heed this advise or just say na! ...that's entirely your call. But youwill read this, as will all mayor's of Canadian cities. One thing all Mayor's must learn to do, is not messwith another city's politics, especially 4 days before a local election, especially if they aspire to thePremier or Prime Minister someday.

What say you, Calgarians? Do you care for your mayor enough to give him the right advice? I do!

Dear Naheed,

No mayor of a city should stick her/his nose into the affairs of other cities. The simple truth is allmunicipal politics is local. And all backroom municipal treachery, hyper local. Everyone knows this, asdo you -- as well as the unintended consequences of preaching one's local success to others who havea different geography and vastly different politics.

But as an idea's popularity soars and becomes currency, TEDx beckons. The thunderous openingmusic numbs us, the silent walk to the centre of the dark stage intoxicates, and the halo of the spotlightlulls us into believing we are the chosen one to empower the world with more bullet points and soundbites.

The substantive difference between TEDTalk and TEDx fades, omnipotent arrogance takes over brittleideologies, and turns truisms into small, consumable bites of manufactured wisdom, feverishly gobbledby the wide-eyed sleep walkers.

Success of one local culture - one city, rarely does get translated to another city. The past mayor ofWinnipeg attempted to graft his success onto an entire province and in the process turned himself intoa salesman of truisms in Ontario. He did end up losing not only his hefty portfolio, but also his gravitas.His buddies in Hamilton still think he is cats whiskers of urbanism, but he has lost his bite. The endresult, no one tags him in tweets from Hamilton anymore.

Hamilton is a far more complex city than most in Canada. It has more number of liars per capita thanany other city on the continent. To administer its half-million+ residents, we have a strong force of 7000city staff - a formidable and impenetrable bureaucracy that ensures we will not be changing our waysvery soon. The old boy's have ensured their legacy continues unchallenged, by placing “blank slates” inkey power positions of key organizations, and who play SIMcity with realty all day. Their game keepsthe sleep walkers and local media busy and engaged, least one of them wakes up and stops walking.

How does it remain this way? in spite of significant immigrants bringing new cultural and economiccapital every year to Hamilton? Well... I'm not telling. Because that would only make it easy for you torecycle such local pecui-realities into packaged sound bites with local context, and sell us more brittleideologies of compact walkable cities, glorious bike lanes, and warm cross-cultural hugs with themandatory, crescendo aspiring Kumbaya.

Real cities as distinct from the imaginary cities of Dutch planners, presently running amuck acrossCanada, have individual geographies and individual issues which are local and hyper local, and non-replicable. If you are not of the kind who aspires to homogenize the rugged individuality of all Canadiancities into one single hipster look & feel--As seen on TV, the so called Dutchification of Canadian cities,then you will appreciate that what is good for Calgary is not necessarily good for Hamilton or Sudbury.

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Page 2: A open letter to Naheed, the man behind @nenshi, and to all Proud Calgarians:

We have our individual destinies, our separate geographies, and our peculiarly awkward and highlynuanced financial realities. This is what drives our city rebuilding, and not the lack of design ideas orlack of design sensibilities.

Jane Jacobs' made it very easy for everyone across North America, including the sleep walkersbecome city planners, designers, and even urban visionaries. Although, you do know, that was neverher intent.

In Hamilton, we have the most number of Jane Jacobs' planners, designers, and urban visionaries percapita than any other city on the continent. The invitation you have received to Hamilton for a visit onlydays before the municipal election, is from this fringe group that does not represent the true diversity ofa half-milion+ residents, and surely not from the elected City Council or Mayor of Hamilton.

Civic protocol for mayoral visits does not matter to such non-inclusive reactionaries. They need youhere only to legitimize themselves in their eyes. They desperately require the presence of a popular orpopulist leader who can push their local agendas. They are most willing to manufacture the aura of arock star for such compliant leaders -- as they once did for Glen Murray, and now for Toronto's cityplanner Jen Keesmat, and our very own city planner Jason Thorne.

Unless you are the type who likes his coat tails to be used as a surf board for Hamilton's lost generationthat has yet to learn the critical importance of intercultural relations in city building, and gratitude forimmigrants who are bringing millions of dollars into Hamilton every year – then you are most welcometo Hamilton. You will surely find hundreds of sleep walkers and surf boarders, who will embrace you andmost graciously genefluct, to make your stay most pleasurable. And it surely could be your TEDxmoment, but hardly your TEDTalk moment, if that makes you happy.

If not, and you do have bigger aspirations for yourself in the post Calgary phase - possibly provincial oreven federal in nature, then please don't indulge in such cheap Dutchification of Canadian cities,sonmething which Glen Murray tried and lost his power over. Least of all, please don't let your coattails be used for inadvertently endorsing Hamilton candidates by your mere photo opp presence, oreven worse, unknowingly endorse a wrong direction at the wrong time, for Hamilton -- a city vastlydifferent from Calgary in its resources and intellectual capital.

A better approach, if you do love us so much, would have been for your office to call the mayor's officefirst and set up a formal visit to Hamilton. You would only expect the same protocol be followed by othercity mayors who are interested in coming to talk to Calgarians on many suburban sprawl issues.

@nenshi is a popular twitter handle for many in Hamilton. And 'Naheed' the man behind this handle,has a glorious future in Canadian politics. So should he stick his nose into Hamilton's most dirty politicsonly four days before its municipal election and risk getting a cold from a city he knows nothing about --an enigma, where its left is the closeted far right, and its right the center left?

Proud Calgarian's... kindly do help Naheed, Canada's most beloved mayor, make the right choice! To visit or not to visit Hamilton for a fake TEDx moment, 4 days before its municipal election, is thequestion.

Warmest regards, from Hamilton, Ontario.

@HamOntReporter | Mahesh P. Butani

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