Another NCC win. The best mayor We never got.
Nussbaum is the one who got away.
Another NCC win. The best mayor We never got.
Nussbaum is the one who got away.
Thursday night, just before 11 p.m., LeBreton Flats lit up for twelve minutes. No announcement. No warning. Residents blocks away thought something had gone wrong. Some called it in as an emergency.
It wasn't an accident. It was Canada's national Canada Day fireworks display — cancelled July 1 by a thunderstorm — quietly detonated eight days later during Bluesfest, on a Thursday night, past the festival's own 11 p.m. cutoff, and into the start of the city's overnight noise bylaw window.
The city knew exactly what it was doing. It just decided you didn't get a vote.
That's it. That's the accountability mechanism. A sentence about a debrief nobody outside city hall will ever see.
The city's stated reason for withholding notice: publicizing the display could have drawn large crowds to the streets around a ticketed festival, and the Special Event Advisory Team — police, emergency services, public health, and other departments — judged that risk worse than the risk of a no-warning fireworks show going off late at night in a residential city.
Except the same team that was managing crowd-safety risk apparently didn't manage the much more foreseeable risk: setting off a twelve-minute show on a weeknight, after the festival's own curfew, inside the window where the city's own noise bylaw says fireworks shouldn't happen. Somerset Coun. Ariel Troster called it unacceptable. Another councillor called it completely inappropriate at that scale with no notice, and said it legitimately frightened residents. This isn't a fringe complaint — it's coming from inside the building.
Canadian Heritage's technical explanation for why the fireworks weren't simply stored and reused is legitimate: once armed, a firework isn't inventory, it's a live safety liability, and disarming would have put the crew at risk. Fine. That explains why they had to go off sometime. It does not explain why the "sometime" was chosen with zero public notice, in violation of the city's own noise rules, by a committee nobody can name.
Personally? The marvel of fireworks has worn off for me. Drones are the future.
But in this instance, it's comparable to every governance failure I've documented on this blog: a decision with real public cost gets made by an unelected body, below the level where anyone who has to face voters has to answer for it.
"Not me" did it.
There's no name attached to the call. There's no public accounting of the tradeoff they made. There's no mechanism that turns "lessons learned" into anything you or I will ever read.
A "post-event debrief" is the institutional version of a 311 ticket closed in bulk — a process that lets the file get marked resolved without anything being resolved. No findings get published. No one in that room answers to voters. The only reason we know any of this happened is that nearly 40 people were angry enough to file a complaint and a councillor was angry enough to post about it.
Compare that to what accountability would actually require: a named decision-maker, a public rationale before the fact instead of a press statement after it, and a debrief whose findings you can actually go read. None of that exists here.
It's staff discretion end to end, with the public bearing the cost and the confusion.
Taxpayers paid for a fireworks show they were told was cancelled, then had it go off in secret over their homes at 11 p.m. on a Thursday, and the only consequence on the table is an internal memo.
That's not a communications failure. That's the system working exactly as designed — a design with no one in it who has to answer to you.
I am testing to see the click rate versus my Polemics.
You get all the fun, with a dose of Cod Liver oil!
Want more clicks? Post a cat video or a good recipe. Here we have French Toast!
A great use of day old baguette!
Made with eggs, milk with brown shar, cinnamon, and vanilla. Served with coffee, fresh berries and yogurt.
😀
WELCOME TO MUNICIPAL POLITICS IN 2026!
Here's a clear breakdown of the angles.
His activity follows the same low-engagement pattern as the “This is not a popularity contest” post.
Recent posts (June–July 2026) on X show:
Examples of recent posts:
MY account has ~1,110 followers. The algorithm isn’t boosting MY content, and there’s almost no organic sharing or conversation happening around it.
@rawlsonking has a clear advantage in reach:
Summary of comparison:
Incumbents generally have a built-in advantage here through name recognition and the ability to post “I showed up for your event” content.
On platforms like X (and similar dynamics on Facebook/Instagram), local municipal content rarely goes massively viral unless it hits one of these triggers. Higher-performing posts usually include:
Challenger vs. incumbent reality: Challengers often struggle with reach unless they land a resonant issue that gets picked up by media or goes semi-viral in neighbourhood Facebook groups. Incumbents benefit from regular positive visibility.
Overall verdict on the original post: It fits the lower-engagement category (substantive policy critique + blog link). It hasn’t gained meaningful traction
and is unlikely to without a shift in format, visuals, or external amplification.
This is very typical— and it's a well-documented pattern in how human attention and media ecosystems work.
Right now (as of July 10, 2026), Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's wedding on July 3 at Madison Square Garden is still fresh in the news cycle. It was a massive celebrity spectacle with ~1,000 guests, Adam Sandler officiating, high-profile performances, and wall-to-wall media coverage.
Simultaneously, the FIFA World Cup 2026(hosted across North America) is in the quarterfinals stage, with matches like Spain vs. Belgium happening imminently and the final set for July 19. These events generate enormous global engagement — views, social buzz, betting, discussions — because they're exciting, visual, communal, and have clear winners/losers with immediate emotional payoffs.
Meanwhile:
These are serious, ongoing conflicts with real human costs. They receive media coverage, but sustained public focus and engagement are much lower than for the wedding or World Cup.
This isn't new or surprising — it's rooted in psychology, economics, and technology:
This explains the low traction on the Peter Karwacki blog post we discussed earlier. Policy-focused, oversight-oriented local politics content is substantive but lacks the visual hook, emotional spark, or immediate dopamine of sports/celebrity content. It's competing in an attention marketplace that heavily favors lighter or more sensational fare.
This pattern doesn't mean people "don't care" about wars or serious issues.
Attention spikes during major escalations, and many do engage deeply (activism, donations, following updates). But sustained, broad focus is harder for complex, long-running conflicts without simple resolutions or personal ties. Local politics often suffers similarly unless tied to immediate, visible impacts (e.g., a pothole or community event photo).
It's a feature of human nature amplified by modern media — not a moral failing, but a reality of limited attention and how platforms are designed.
The original post's struggle fits right into this bigger picture.
Serious governance discussions rarely go viral the way a World Cup goal or celebrity wedding does.