[NEWS] Five cultural links: Hitler, Internet, Nova Scotia roads, BC gangs, Pontic Greek
- The BBC takes a look at Pontic Greek, a Greek dialect that survives precariously in exile from its homeland in Anatolia.
- Klaus Meyer writes at The Conversation about how Hitler, in his rise to power, became a German citizen.
- Low-income families in the Toronto area face serious challenges in getting affordable Internet access. CBC reports.
- Jeremy Keefe at Global News takes a look at Steve Skafte, an explorer of abandoned roads in Nova Scotia.
- In some communities in British Columbia, middle-class people have joined criminal gangs for social reasons. CBC reports.
Written by Randy McDonald
August 27, 2019 at 10:15 pm
Posted in Assorted, Canada, Demographics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Toronto
Tagged with abandoned, adolf hitler, atlantic canada, austria, british columbia, canada, citizenship, clash of ideologies, crime, cultural capital, diaspora, fascism, germany, greece, internet, language, links, nazi germany, news, nova scotia, pontic greek, popular culture, three torontos, toronto, turkey, \