UN Refugees getting evicted in Ottawa

  • Thread starter Thread starter MW 002
  • Start date Start date
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
https://www-aljazeera-com.cdn.amppr.../8/16/dd18840740b54646b25cabd721a1ec24_18.jpg
Heron Gate mass eviction: 'We never expected this in Canada'
About 150 homes in one of Ottawa's most diverse and affordable communities are expected to be torn down in coming months

by Jillian Kestler-D'Amours
21 Aug 2018
Ottawa, Canada - Binto Mohamed hasn't had a good night's sleep since May. That's when she received a letter telling her that her family of 10 had until September 30 to find a new home.

"There's a piece of me missing, because of the stress," she says, standing in the middle of her dimly-lit kitchen, the air thick and sticky in the overpowering August heat.

Mohamed, a mother of eight, knows her house is far from perfect.

The kitchen sink is about half full of dirty, brownish water; the drain hasn't worked for the past year, and despite putting in a request to have it repaired five months ago, it's still blocked.

Without a working sink, dirty pots and pans sit unwashed on the stovetop, which itself is covered in a crusted splatte

The bathroom light fixture has been broken for months, while the outer glass of a double-paned window is missing off the first-floor room Mohamed's disabled 18-year-old daughter sleeps in, in a hospital bed. In the winter, cold air seeps in, making the teenager ill.

But this home is all Mohamed has ever known since she moved to Canada with her family from their native Somalia in 2014.

They are now one of more than 100 families facing eviction in Heron Gate, a neighbourhood in the south end of Ottawa, in what a local tenants' rights group says is the "largest forced displacement in Canada" in recent history.

ba9543fbc94b4412a0b45d87744d8072_18.jpg

For years, Heron Gate tenants have complained of general lack of upkeep and maintenance services of their units [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

Several families have found new homes, but despite seeing other places and scouring the listings every day, Mohamed hasn't found anything affordable that can accommodate her large family and its needs.

"I came to Canada thinking it was an escape, only to realise it's like torture," she says in Somali through a translator.

"People are playing with our lives," adds her husband, Jamale Ibrahim.

"Winter and the cold is coming," Mohamed says, "and we have nowhere to go."

Company defends plan
Heron Gate is one of Ottawa's most diverse communities, home to a large number of residents of Somali and Arab backgrounds. It comprises a mix of townhouses, medium-sized buildings and tall apartment towers.

n late May, the landlord - Timbercreek Communities, a large real estate company that bought up large swaths of the community - announced plans to demolish about 150 units here.

The company, which operates in 27 cities across Canada, said the townhouses are no longer viable and it gave tenants until September 30 to find alternative housing.

The required notice period under the law in the province of Ontario is at least 120 days.

Under the provincial Residential Tenancies Act, a landlord can issue eviction notices for the purpose of demolishing a property or conducting extensive renovations, among other reasons.

In an email to Al Jazeera on August 10, Timbercreek said 70 percent of the affected tenants in Heron Gate have found new places to live.

https://www-aljazeera-com.cdn.amppr.../8/16/1b2adeca80c04c2d88e53eef5fdc5555_18.jpg

The company is offering displaced tenants three months' rent, as well as an additional $1,530 ($2,000 Canadian) compensation, up from an original offer of $1,150 ($1,500 Canadian), to move. It is also negotiating reduced rates with moving companies, and employing a relocation team to help tenants find other properties, the company said.

"Timbercreek is going beyond the requirements of the law in providing relocation assistance," its statement read.

"Timbercreek's vision has always been for Heron Gate to be a diverse and sustainable community. A project of this magnitude, however, requires that tenants relocate during the revitalisation process. We will offer all impacted residents the right to return to Heron Gate when the redevelopment is completed."

Homes in poor condition
However, several families who remain in Heron Gate say they're struggling to find alternative housing that meets their needs and doesn't exceed their budgets.

Mumina Egal, a member of the Heron Gate Tenant Coalition, which advocates on behalf of the residents facing eviction, said families of eight or nine people are being told to look at two-bedroom apartments, much smaller than what they need.

One resident of Heron Gate who spoke to Al Jazeera said she paid about $1,000 ($1,305 Canadian) for a three-bedroom townhouse. She said she visited similarly sized apartments after getting her eviction notice, but the rents are in the $1,380 ($1,800 Canadian) to $1,530 ($2,000 Canadian) range, plus utilities.

I came to Canada thinking it was an escape, only to realise it's like torture."

BINTO MOHAMED, HERON GATE RESIDENT FACING EVICTION

A recent article in the Ottawa Citizen bore the headline, "Rising rents and cutthroat competition". The newspaper reported that "Ottawa's residential rental market has recently become red-hot, with demand and prices ballooning and vacancies increasingly scarce".

Last year, the city had a 1.7 percent rental vacancy rate, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, and the average rent for a two-bedroom townhouse was $925 ($1,209 Canadian), the Citizen reported.

In Heron Gate, the tenant coalition has also criticised Timbercreek for failing to keep the units in good condition.

44379ceea4394b118f1a5688d0859071_18.jpg

Timbercreek says it 'continues to maintain Heron Gate units' [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

For years, tenants have complained of bug infestations, water damage to their ceilings, inadequate rubbish pick-up, and broken windows and floorboards, as well as general lack of upkeep and maintenance services from the company.

Asked to comment on the complaints, the company said it "continues to maintain Heron Gate units and quickly respond to repair requests".

But a resident, Amina, who didn't give Al Jazeera her last name out of fear of reprisals, keeps her food in closed rubbish bags because her kitchen is overrun by cockroaches.

A handful of bugs scurry into the cracks of the cupboards, as she opens them, one by one, to illustrate the problem. She has more than half a dozen sticky anti-cockroach traps around the room, in the corners and in a space between the fridge and a cabinet; each was full of insects.

"What we're living right now is not a life," the mother of four says.

Uprooting a support network
Abdullahi Ali has been through this type of thing before.

he 64-year-old was forced to relocate from a home in another section of Heron Gate in 2015 after Timbercreek slated it for demolition.

At that time, dozens of families were displaced when about 80 townhouses were razed. Today, a crane and a construction site stand in their place, soon to be transformed into "three, six-storey multi-residential buildings".

Now, the four-bedroom townhouse Ali moved into after that first eviction is also set to be demolished, and his household of nine people - Ali, his wife, six children, and a granddaughter - has been forced to look for a new home once again.

He currently pays $1,225 ($1,600 Canadian) in monthly rent, plus utilities.

"They didn't tell us they intended to demolish [this home, too]," Ali tells Al Jazeera, just outside his front door, the construction site where his previous home stood towering over his right shoulder in the distance.

If they had, Ali says he wouldn't have stayed in Heron Gate.

"It's Canada, it's a highly respected nation for human rights. This is worrying ... This is something we never expected to happen in Canada," he says.

Evicting the residents of Heron Gate does more than strip them of the roofs over their heads, he adds.

For many, especially new immigrants who don't speak English and lack a local support network, the community is a lifeline.

"We support each other. This is our culture, and this is how our community works," Ali says.

It's Canada, it's a highly respected nation for human rights. This is worrying ... This is something we never expected to happen in Canada.
ABDULLAHI ALI, HERON GATE RESIDENT FACING EVICTION

After the demolition notices were issued in May, the Heron Gate Tenant Coalition went door-to-door, collecting data from the households affected.

Eighty-nine percent of the nearly 600 residents facing eviction are people of colour, the group found, while 44 and 24 percent are of Somali or Arab background, respectively.

"A lot of them are dependent upon the community via translation work, for moral support, for babysitting while they go out to find jobs or go to English class," says Egal, who grew up near the neighbourhood.

"Taking them away from this neighbourhood and moving them to the east end or moving them to the west end - where they don't have those community ties for the day-to-day necessities of life - is extremely debilitating," she tells Al Jazeera.

3bc25faa9e0749ec9623a8418c60e0dc_18.jpg

Liban Mohamed has so far not found another home that is affordable [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

Liban Mohamed is one such person. The 29-year-old moved to Heron Gate in 2015, five years after he first landed in Edmonton, in Western Canada, from his native Somalia.

Currently studying for his high school equivalency certificate, he pays $380 ($500 Canadian) a month to rent a house with two roommates. Theirs is one of the homes subject to demolition.

He hasn't found another place yet, and Mohamed says he can't imagine living anywhere else.

"My community is here," he tells Al Jazeera. "It's very stressful. It's not easy to move."

More time to find alternatives
If the residents that remain in Heron Gate refuse to move by September 30, Timbercreek can go to Ontario's Landlord and Tenant Board to apply for a formal eviction order. It must then apply to the city for permits to demolish the units.

The company says it will "design a community that fits the needs of the people in the community", but it doesn't have a plan in place yet for the type of units that will replace the townhouses.

Because landlord and tenant issues fall under provincial laws in Ontario, the City of Ottawa says it can't intervene in the eviction process. The city only gets involved once a landlord applies for a demolition permit or files a development proposal.

d7e9ce41a1be4645ba74c0426c24c30d_18.jpg

About 10,500 families in Ottawa are currently on a subsidised housing wait list [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

A spokesperson for Mayor Jim Watson said his focus has been "to encourage Timbercreek to increase compensation to affected households, and to provide families with more time to look for a new home".

"Mayor Watson sought, and received reassurance from Timbercreek representatives, that the company is focused first and foremost on helping families relocate and not on the eviction process," Livia Belcea told Al Jazeera in an email.

However, the need for affordable housing far exceeds availability in Ottawa.

About 10,500 families are currently on a subsidised housing waiting list, which gives them access to "rent-geared-to-income assistance and associated housing benefits", said Shelley VanBuskirk, director of the city's housing department.

Wait times are four years or more, on average, she said in an email.

Additionally, low vacancy rates, coupled with high demand in the private rental sector and higher rental costs, "are placing additional demands on the wait list for social housing and for affordable housing options", VanBuskirk said.

Back in Heron Gate, residents have asked Timbercreek for more time – as much as a year's leeway - to find other places to go.


The residents who remain are in a "desperate situation", says Abdullahi Ali. They called on the city to do more to support the people facing eviction.

Daniel Tucker-Simmons, a lawyer representing some of the residents, said a request for accommodation was sent to Timbercreek's lawyer and to Mayor Watson.

These mass evictions are having a differential, a discriminatory, impact on my clients because of their race, because of their ethnicity, because of their religion.
DANIEL TUCKER-SIMMONS, LAWYER REPRESENTING SOME HERON GATE RESIDENTS

They're asking that if parts of the neighbourhood need to be demolished, that the current tenants receive more relocation assistance, and be guaranteed a right to return to units with similar rents once the redevelopment is finished. It also asks that units be preserved if they can be.

The request is currently being considered, Tucker-Simmons said. If he doesn't receive a response, he said the complaint could be sent to the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal, which adjudicates on alleged human rights code violations.

"These mass evictions are having a differential, a discriminatory, impact on my clients because of their race, because of their ethnicity, because of their religion," he said.

While they wait to see what happens next, a sense of anxiety runs through every home and every family, says Ali's wife, Saido.

We don't say hi [to each other]. We say, 'Did you find a house?' … Our minds [are] always [on this]."


TL;DR: a bunch of tax payer funded Somalians are getting evicted from their ghetto neighbourhoods and are upset about it.
 
I'm willing to be patient, but if you haven't learned how to get a sink unclogged in 10 years, time's up mate. I don't expect you to have perfect Oxford-level English skills, but after 10 years, if you still bring a translator with you everywhere and most of what gets said to me through them are demands for more gibs..... fuck off. I don't expect you to be pulling down 99th percentile income, but, after 10 years, if you've birthed more children then had jobs.... get the fuck out.

Also, when the government of Canada said "everyone welcome, no questions asked!" and suddenly had to find room for the Gibsmedat Army, how many shady landlords stepped up and offered housing they fully didn't intent to invest in because they KNEW the Govt. would eagerly pay them for it in lieu of stuffing the refugees in hotel rooms and sports venues for years on end....and knew that running those crappy apartments into the ground so they'd have no choice but to be condemned was the east way "out" without having to pay a penalty? It was likely the endgame all along and they made a tidy profit doing it.

This was going to happen the moment the neolibs at the top went orgasmic at the thought of being immortal national heroes for letting in the most without a thought as to where to put them or what to do with them, just that they got them in..... and once they were on "their" side of the border they couldn't care less what happened. (unless one got mugged, then it was white hate crime)

It's even worse for Canada because the border-hopping (illegally, not through you know, an ACTUAL border crossing) and claiming asylum has caused the Trudeau Liberals to evaluate their claims just as if they'd crossed legally (asylum/refugee status, even though MANY of the border hoppers are gibmedats who have LEGAL STATUS in the United States), and as a result they're putting both legit refugees and "irregular" border crossers in hotels, homeless shelters, and other such places.

You know what this means? It means homeless people are being displaced because of the government's rather ill-thought-out "Welcome to Canada" spiel, and housing is already at a premium, and it's just getting more expensive. Cities are raising taxes and the costs of utilities also go up due to insane government policies, resulting in MORE homelessness. There are MANY factors that contribute to homelessness, but this sure as shit ain't helping, like, AT ALL.
 
There's no way this is true.....is there?:optimistic:

It might be a slight exaggeration, but...I've heard from a credible source that when first somalians started to come as refugees to my country, it led to many problems which were simply not foreseen. For their absurd nature. For example; no-one had thought that you would have to teach people to use fridgerators or electric ovens, as these things are in my country business as usual, but apparently weren't for the somalians in the 90's. This led to several instances of somalis burning down their apartments because they made fires indoor to cook, or storing meat in closets because they simply couldn't understand the idea of having a fridge.
 
That's a scam among the Somali community in Scandinavia. In Norway the single mother gets ~$1800 per kid, per month, in a trust based system so even if they suddenly have more kids with their ex-husband - no questions asked. Add the other benefits on top of that and it pays to be "divorced". There's a cottage industry of 'consultants' that help people tard cum the system with schemes like that.

Our government had to sort of recognise polygamy because some Muslims were having their minor wives claim parenting payment at the single rate ($768 per fortnight) instead of the partnered rate ($496 per fortnight).

If there's a loophole, a lot of refugees are all over it.
 
Our government had to sort of recognise polygamy because some Muslims were having their minor wives claim parenting payment at the single rate ($768 per fortnight) instead of the partnered rate ($496 per fortnight).

If there's a loophole, a lot of refugees are all over it.

Yeah, we haven't accepted polygamy yet(marrying, moving in with and getting 12 year olds pregnant, that's another story) and that leads to some absurd situations. A Syrian man, his three wives and 15-16 children got technically divorced from two of the wives and a bunch of the children, which forced him to pay childcare/alimony, but without an income the state does that for him. He's also in his late 50's so he's never going to work.

They also got newly built apartments for a total of $2,000,000 in a very nice area, paid by the municipality, when confronted with this the municipality defended it by saying that it's only temporary, the families have two years to find other accommodations before they sell the apartments for a profit. Jokes on the municipality though, their idea hinges on the families moving, if the families doesn't want to move(and why would they move from their luxurious ocean side apartments in the peninsula) there's nothing they can do about it.
 
So with the 30th right around the corner, do you think residents will stubbornly remain in their ghetto or will they flee like cockroaches?
 
So with the 30th right around the corner, do you think residents will stubbornly remain in their ghetto or will they flee like cockroaches?

Given that they seem to want to make someone else find them a new place, I guess they'd stay. Whether the landlord can automatically send in the sheriff to evict them after the 30th or whether that's the point where they can apply for an order to take back possession of the premises is unclear.
 
Unfortunately, I found it on 4chan. Evidently news outlets are being as vague as possible about the altercation that forced the fair to shut down. Facebook deletes videos of it on sight too.

Has anyone considered that suppression of the truth in the long term is going to end horrifyingly for anyone involved.
 
Has anyone considered that suppression of the truth in the long term is going to end horrifyingly for anyone involved.
it's weird, because it's like, someone should say to them "DO you want the Alt-right? Because that's exactly how you get the Alt-right"
 
Given that they seem to want to make someone else find them a new place, I guess they'd stay. Whether the landlord can automatically send in the sheriff to evict them after the 30th or whether that's the point where they can apply for an order to take back possession of the premises is unclear.
I’m taking a bet that there would have to be escorted off the premises by the police- which will make for an interesting news article.
 
"For years, tenants have complained of bug infestations, water damage to their ceilings, inadequate rubbish pick-up, and broken windows and floorboards, as well as general lack of upkeep and maintenance services from the company."

I'm not going to assume it's the people living there that caused this shit, but I can personally confirm from my personal experience that the quality of your neighbors can cause some serious fucking domino effects. Note that this experience isn't in Canada but a very similar country economy- and culture-wise.

I live in a part of city that's mostly used to house students and foreigners in, so often loud and rowdy, but all things considered not too bad. I've lived in two places in this neighborhood, the first of which was a family apartment shared with two roommates. That block had dozens of refugee families and often had problems with people throwing out mattresses, broken televisions, and leaving piles of garbage right on the doorstep of a small building that had several garbage containers you're supposed to throw them in. To get inside to dispose of your own trash bags you had to wade in sickening mounds of filth. The company that owned these buildings had said multiple times that such behavior was not tolerated, and even brought in big steel containers to the yard, basically saying "okay we know you fucks can't be bothered to drive your furniture to the landfill so here, we're footing the bill for you to fling that shit in this big thing and we'll pay to carry it off, so stop littering the goddamned yard."

That company eventually sold the whole fucking block to another company (can't imagine why,) who must've not realized what they got because similar "compromises" soon ensued. Nobody living there gave a shit, notices about it came in several languages, including Arabic. Another thing that I always fucking despised was that every summer a bunch of the fucks drove inside the open-air parking hall next door and started playing really loud music through their speakers for hours on end. Often very late, as well. Complaints of the noise never got anyone to do shit.

I just so happened to move out of that block further down the road, a building handled by a business that was more catering to singles instead of families. The apartment I looked at had about five Middle-Eastern men living in it with barely any furniture, but hey, it's a nice apartment and I'm not scared of previous tenants (although I will say that the drains being absolutely clogged was a fucking nightmare to fix by myself when they were filled with globs of hair and cue tips.) The person showing me around the block happened to mention that the area had gotten much nicer recently with - and she seriously paused for a moment thinking of the words - "troublemakers recently evicted." Make of that what you will.

I have seen about half as many foreign people in this block compared to the rest of the neighborhood and the garbage containers are behind locked doors - occasionally I still see women wearing burkas sneak there during the night to leave furniture when it's written clear as day that you are not allowed to leave that stuff there, but I'm going to be fair and say that everyone does it, some more than others, especially since you need a car to get to the dump. I have never once received a note saying "All residents, friendly reminder that you gotta stop littering fucking everywhere" in any language since I moved out of the place that had a fuckton of refugee families, fancy that. Occasionally I still walk past that other place I used to live at, and it's still always littered with casually flung trash bags and old furniture. When I see any refugee complain of "inadequate rubbish pick-up" it makes me think of those piles of trash that weren't ever even put where they're supposed to be, while other yards in the same fucking neighborhood are absolutely goddamned pristine.


tl;dr - certain groups of refugees lower property value and the landlord's ability to give a fuck
I don't know how much of it is intrinsic to culture and how much of it is learned. Doing aid work, you do encounter a lot of people who have a seemingly superhuman ability to resist putting forth effort. People refuse to put in the necessary 2 percent to meet your 98 percent. It's quite remarkable; I've seen numerous people in isolated, desolate Third World communities pass over once-in-a-lifetime opportunities because they just couldn't be fucked to make an appointment on time or something like that.

Frequently it goes beyond mere laziness and becomes a kind of obstinate perversity – as if, on principle, you demand not only a huge pile of free stuff, but you demand to have it delivered to you and piled at your feet while you sit inertly. If you have to so much as stand up and hold out your hands to receive your free stuff, nothing doing! You'd rather get nothing. I really don't know what the cause of it is, and, of course, it's the sort of thing it's hard to publicly acknowledge without being branded a Nazi.

Maybe the behavior you're describing is fundamental to their culture; maybe by the time you make it to wherever you are, you've learned that people will accommodate you rather than punishing you if you refuse to follow the rules.
 
I don't know how much of it is intrinsic to culture and how much of it is learned. Doing aid work, you do encounter a lot of people who have a seemingly superhuman ability to resist putting forth effort. People refuse to put in the necessary 2 percent to meet your 98 percent. It's quite remarkable; I've seen numerous people in isolated, desolate Third World communities pass over once-in-a-lifetime opportunities because they just couldn't be fucked to make an appointment on time or something like that.

Frequently it goes beyond mere laziness and becomes a kind of obstinate perversity – as if, on principle, you demand not only a huge pile of free stuff, but you demand to have it delivered to you and piled at your feet while you sit inertly. If you have to so much as stand up and hold out your hands to receive your free stuff, nothing doing! You'd rather get nothing. I really don't know what the cause of it is, and, of course, it's the sort of thing it's hard to publicly acknowledge without being branded a Nazi.

Maybe the behavior you're describing is fundamental to their culture; maybe by the time you make it to wherever you are, you've learned that people will accommodate you rather than punishing you if you refuse to follow the rules.

Well for one, our country did at one point try to return some Iraqi dipshits to their home country. Once they got to the airport in Iraq, the police were told that they didn't want them back.

So that should tell you the level of quality that is "seeking refuge" - we don't call them refugees, we call them 'party house seekers.'
 
Well for one, our country did at one point try to return some Iraqi dipshits to their home country. Once they got to the airport in Iraq, the police were told that they didn't want them back.

That's the story all through Europe. Try to deport some criminals, rapists, murderers and their country says no thanks, you can keep 'em.
 
Postmodernist progressives don't believe in oppressive, toxic, truth... only locally-agreed-upon narratives.

You're thinking of post-colonialists, holding the particular view that these poor oppressed assholes just need more from us Western oppressors, and that they wouldn't be in this situation if we hadn't stopped them from being the noble savaged they used to be.

Let's get our shit right. Post-modernists aren't relativists, don't think anything goes, and that's been a caricature for years. Here's Rick Roderick making fun of that way back in 1993:

http://rickroderick.org/307-derrida-and-the-ends-of-man-1993/

The idea that there could be the right interpretation. In a way there is no more powerful idea in the discipline of philosophy than the idea that there can be the right interpretation. After all it’s that idea that allows us to give our student B’s and C’s as opposed to the A’s we would make if we had written the paper. It’s what keeps us – it seems – continually to read Aristotle and so on, in order to Get Them Right, finally.

Derrida makes the outrageous claim that in the last analysis there is no such thing as the right reading, the right interpretation. There is no interpretation that can bring interpretation to an end. Good books, really great texts, do not cut off interpretation. They lead to multiple interpretations. Great examples of this would be The Bible, which I think it’s pretty obvious has not yet reached closure on interpretation. I mean, you know, I grew up in a community where there were Baptists, Methodists, Church of Christ. Took me a while to get into the city and meet Jewish people, Muslims, others. It became clear to me that reading the Old Testament, it was difficult to come up with The Right Interpretation. And what was wrong was the very idea that there could be The Right Interpretation.

Now, the converse is the claim that people find outrageous, but it’s not made by Derrida. That means that since there is no “The Right Way”, then any way is as good as any other. Now Derrida is not compelled to hold that view and he doesn’t. Not every way to speak and/or read is as good as every other! And let me just put it simply: no-one holds that view. Derrida, to the extent that he refuses to play a standard philosophical game just will not play. The fact that there is no final book, you know, one last master encyclopaedia containing all the wisdom, total coverage, final knowledge, the last book, none other ever needs to be written, Derrida considers that a reductio ad absurdum of the idea of perfect interpretation; the right interpretation.

This does not at all mean that we don’t in loose, rough and ready ways judge interpretations. All the time. And this does not at all mean that practically speaking that some interpretations are obviously slightly better than others. Let me return to familiar ones like the traffic light. If it’s red and you see it as green, the outcome can be disastrous, Derrida doesn’t deny it. You know, it’s a bad misreading [laughs]. Bad misreading. But, ah, this is a familiar mistake and it is made about a lot of Derrida’s work. Philosophers call someone a relativist, by which they mean it’s a person that holds that any view is as good as any other view. My simple response to that is this: that is a straw person argument. No-one in the world believes it or ever has believed it.

No-one – Derrida or anyone else – believes that every view is as good as every other view. That’s only a view we discuss in freshman philosophy class in order to quickly refute it. I mean no-one believes it. There are no defenders of the view. And since this tape will be going out, if we run into one it will be interesting, but we will likely find that person in one of the institutions Foucault discussed rather than in some seminar, okay. That’s where we will find them, if anybody believes that. No, Derrida’s kind of slippage is to remind us that the text of philosophy is not fixed; can not be fixed. It is of the nature of the text of philosophy and its relation to language that we cannot fix it once and for all. In a way it’s like the leaky ship where we haven’t got anything to stop the leak so we just keep bailing. I mean, the leak is in the language.
 
Back
Top Bottom