December 09, 2005

Goldstein: Private Medicine & PQ -- MemLane: Asymmetrical Again? & PM Hype, Crime Pays -&- Maritime Scuttlebutt

Do you suppose it's asymmetrical?

Lorrie Goldstein: Today, let's examine how this bias applies to health care. Dec. 6, 05


[. . . . ] The Liberal government of Quebec Premier Jean Charest recently announced it will delay a white paper on reforming medicare in Quebec until after this election.

That paper will outline Quebec's plans for expanding private medical insurance
in light of the Supreme Court of Canada's recent ruling declaring as unconstitutional Quebec's laws banning the purchase of such insurance. This in light of the lengthy wait times patients now face for treatment.


Hint: Ask Paul Martin about the Quebec Liberal Party's passing a "little-noticed resolution" in Laval, I think it was; ask him about his plans for health care. Will he continue to use a private clinic? What are his plans for the rest of us? Does he own stock in any . . .

Search: Martin's dirty work




Memory Lane: Transport Min. Jean Lapierre & Asymmetrical Federalism

Asymmetrical . . . again

Or is there a more appropriate word?


Transport Minister Jean Lapierre: "With government in Ottawa that's sensitive (to Quebec) we can deliver the merchandise." -- "Quebec negotiates an extra $500 million in federal transfers" Jonathan Montpetit, Nov. 11, 05, CP


[. . . . ] Lapierre's speech to the Quebec wing included several references to deals struck between Ottawa and Quebec City over the past year, outlining what appeared to be a battle-plan to overcome Gomery fallout.

Citing agreements reached on health-care and day-care funding, parental leaves and gas taxes, Lapierre described a federal government that is attentive to Quebec's needs [. . . ]




Memory Lane: on the ascendancy of Paul Martin to the PMO

Another litany.

Paul Martin Architect of a new Canada, or just full of hot air? The Manitoban, Feb. 4, 04, by Carson Jerema, Volunteer Staff

http://
umanitoba.ca/manitoban/
2003-2004/0204/nf_01.html


Relations with the west [ . . . . ]
Federal-provincial relations [ . . . . ]
New deal for cities [ . . . . ]
Health and social assistance [ . . . . ]
Corporate tax cuts [ . . . . ]

[MP and Justice Critic] Vic Toews agrees that tax cuts are positive for the economy. However, Toews is concerned about Martin's relationship with his former companies. Toews says that when Martin was finance minister he registered nine companies in the Barbados, depriving the federal treasury of approximately $200 million. Toews questions whether Martin's former companies will be paying taxes.

"What I'm concerned about is if he's lowering the tax rate, is he also putting back his companies to paying taxes so that they are to bear their fair share?"

Professor Baragar argues that corporate tax cuts don't necessarily increase productivity and investment.


The armed forces [ . . . . ]
The budget [ . . . . ]
The democratic deficit [ . . . . ]
Canada-U.S. relations [ . . . . ]
In the end [ . . . . ]

The hype surrounding Martin's ascendancy . . . overstated, . . . judge him on what he actually delivers . . . Otto Lang says it would be impossible for Martin to live up to the hype.





Crime pays -- "Lysyk out on parole: Disgraced Edmonton banker who stole $16M now in halfway house after serving 14 months", Chris Purdy, The Edmonton Journal, Dec. 6, 05 via Newsbeat1

A former bank [of Montreal] manager imprisoned for stealing $16 million in one of the biggest bank frauds in Canadian history is now a free man after 14 months in prison.

[. . . . ] The Bank of Montreal recovered $5 million in cash and assets. The bank has launched a lawsuit against Lysyk, his wife, daughter, son-in-law and six escorts alleging they were all part of a conspiracy to defraud the bank. The suit has yet to go to trial. [. . . . ]


For any of the guys out there who might think of calling an escort service--apparently Ottawa is full of them--search: their male associates

Some criminals with the right political connections abuse taxpayer money and don't go to jail at all. Special cases. Politics.



Scuttlebutt

Incidentally, I've heard that one piece of wisdom circulating in the Maritimes for a while has been; if you want a job, join the Liberal Party, then vote as you wish at the ballot box. With their compliant media, the usual suspects have managed to keep Easterners in thrall to the promise of something positive in the future, along with pork for the better placed friends -- and it worked. Maritimers seemed to actually belief the guff they'd been fed for so long by the party of pork and sleaze. However, in grocery stores and elsewhere, the scuttlebutt is that--not putting anyone's job in jeopardy, you understand--Maritimers' attitudes are changing . . . in response to revelations about how the rich gerrymander the system to become even more rich.

This dawning awareness may be behind the media's pro-PM/Lib frenzy and that dreadful hatchet job done on Stephen Harper by Global TV news Nov. 30. No-one reads the wealthy Irving family-owned newspapers expecting in depth coverage nor balance. The papers serve, not so much for news as for advertising sales, a few job ads--some already designed to fit one person earmarked as the favoured--notices of meetings, weddings, births, obituaries, and the like. CTV and Global? See my post Dec. 6. CBC. There are subtle changes in their coverage, as they try to appear more 'balanced' ... but they fail because of strident bias, tone, placement, what they choose to feature, and photos of the PM lead every newscast, huffing and puffing and promising . . . same old, same old; kill any story that might disturb their cushy jobs, propped by taxpayer paid advertising money.



Gov's 'Client Groups', Another Episode: The Quebec might separate series, Newspapers & My meander, Khadr: "child"

I think I might have a few ideas about the client groups who live on OPM and/or join do gooder groups to run other peoples' lives . . . in their own best interests of course.

The only party in town -- Why do so many people seem to believe that government under anyone but the Liberals is unthinkable? Paul Wells, Nov. 23, 05 via Jack's Newswatch

The highlight of the social calendar this autumn in the nation's capital has been the majestic Running of the Terrified Liberal Client Groups.

Teams of hardy journalists pen themselves up in cramped Parliament Hill press theatres with herds of federal grant recipients -- Aboriginal groups, environmentalists, starving artists -- who have been pushed to the brink of panic by rumours of a coming election. The thought that the Liberal era might be ending causes a stampede. The risk of being trampled in the rush to the scrum microphone is real. [. . . . ]


Ask a farmer whose profits are eaten into by protected critters--or even big and/or cute ones--about the animal lovers and the hug a plant crowd--the plant that grows on his property that he isn't supposed to destroy because his land is its habitat--what he thinks when those who know about these things come a-calling and telling him what he can--and cannot--do on his own land, providing he is not polluting the water or ruining someone else's land. Often these are the same people who are living on OPM sluiced from governments on high or supported by those living on the public teat in some helping way. (universities are a familiar habitat, for example).

As for the aboriginal handouts, that, and the system have to end some time, somehow, by an act of Parliament, if necessary. It is time for the natives to take care of their own families, houses, ATV's, education and all the rest, or suffer the consequences. I am not the only one tired of the milking White guilt crowd , those who speak for the rest and through whom the $$$ are funnelled. Canadians in general did not cause any parents to become so addicted that they cannot look after their own children. The effort to educate natives who lived in the bush was a noble effort to bring natives into the twentieth century and, if some abused that, punish the individuals. The rest of us are NOT responsible. Natives must choose to straighten out their own lives, not blame everyone else forever. That cow has been milked dry.

I have always wondered how many of these groups would survive if Canadians' tax money were not thrown their way.

One could ask: is it art worth supporting if nobody wants it enough to pay for it? I know; I remember Theo Van Gogh sold something like only two paintings in his lifetime, and they were bought by his brother, so that is used an argument for supporting artists who must live until their work is recognized as masterful. Still, the veneration of art supported by OPM has moved into the realm of the ridiculous, IMHO.** Sometimes, just sometimes, Canadians would like to judge art and value for themselves, instead of being patronized--their taste dismissed as plebian--by those who know about these things , those who consider their own taste to be elevated compared to that of the hoi polloi, who do not sit on art judging committees. The artistic types know better. Who decides whether the taste of those who judge is adequate to satisfy those who actually work, contribute, and pay their tax dollars into the arts. . . via government?

** Related is Bud's post, "The fraud of the Turner Art Prize--Shedboatshed" in the post entitled: Licenced, Regulated, Indoctrinated -&- Other Bud Bites



Liberals in a panic over Quebec By Arthur Weinreb, Associate Editor, Dec. 7, 2005

[. . . . ] Speaking to a group of 600 supporters in Boucherville, Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe said, "Fortunately, the Bloc is here. Fortunately we’ll make the Liberals disappear". Lapierre criticized the Bloc leader by saying "That kind of language, where you say you want to make your opponents disappear, there’s a little bit of a Nazi tone in that."

Lapierre’s comments were criticized by Jewish groups for trivializing the horrors of the Nazi regime. It certainly isn’t surprising that the Liberals would downplay Nazism in order to score political points. To many on the left there is little difference between Nazis and the Conservatives. These are the same Liberals who see Saddam Hussein and his henchmen as poor victims of American aggression.




"There was frankly little hard evidence that the newsroom capacity is being built up, even to develop the emerging journalism of the Internet, where the audience - and importantly, the young audience - is clearly growing." By the Project for Excellence in Journalism and Rick Edmonds of The Poynter Institute

There is no substitute for a hard copy of the newspaper with early morning coffee . . . but I suspect those who agree are a dying breed. At least no webmaster can alter what is on paper.* If the government(s) continues 'educating' our young, there will be no need for a newspaper; most will be 'passing' and 'succeeding' while playing computer games, buying lottery tickets, watching--not playing--some sport, listening to rap or hip hop or whatever is currently the flavour of the month, being 'nice' which is politically correct, being taught to ignore the evidence of their eyes and intelligence in the service of mouthing the mantras . . . ah, add to the list yourself, but they will not be reading newspapers

And they won't be learning useful skills either, skills like how to grow things, to cook, to make or take care of things, to repair others, and to fend for themselves. Courses like that? That's so 'yesterday'. We got rid of shop / industrial / motor mechanics / the rudiments of electrical skills; we tossed home economics--cooking, learning useful home or craft skills like knitting something for yourself or making your own clothing--pursuits that kept many a teen busy during those difficult years. Now . . . . . . ta da! We are so progressive. We use computers in our schools. We are inclusive, diverse, multicult, learn our rights--but not our responsibilities, must feel the requisite amount of guilt about our ancestors' part in all the world's ills . . . and ours if we don't . . . blah, blah, blah. . . . oh, yes, and send $$$ . . . . loads of guilt geld.

Speaking of students, when did girls become so foul mouthed? Privately, everyone has exasperation and fury words, but publicly, while walking along the street talking to a girlfriend? They need a mother--or to be pc about it, a parent--with time to notice, to be fully engaged, preferably one parent at home if they choose to become parents. Teens need a strong father, maybe not smacking them, but at least noticing and curbing their unacceptable behaviour -- nothing like loss of the family car and other privileges with the additiion of a few household chores--or else! . . . or more creative approaches. The point is, it takes a family and if our government continues, the male-female family with co-operative roles in child upbringing will be dead. Is it any wonder we have bullying and discipline problems, despite the money spent on education for a group of, by world standards, extraordinarily blessed young people?

I hasten to add, not all and not all programs fit my description above and I know of many well-meaning members of the system -- but to be in the system, they cannot speak up too loudly, nor too much, nor can they too often question the received wisdom. You know how the game is played, don't you?

Finally, have Canadians have been lied to so much that they now lie to themselves about what is before their eyes? The blinkin' system is corrupt, pervasive, and has to change, throughout, before those who have altered the system that used to work and their control is supreme and unchangeable.

* Memo to government: stop (removing or altering evidence of your activities from ) changing government websites -- removing materials and updating them which has the effect of removing sensitive information that citizens deserve to know . . . you know, the ones who pay the bills.




The ones who pay the bills don't want to see the Omar Khadr "child" either, nor do they want to pay to support him, nor his family. Turf the whole tribe out to where they came from; let Osama and Co. pay their way.

Alleged U.S. medic murderer portrayed as "teen" and "child" by Toronto Star Judi McLeod, Nov. 9, 2005

With murder and attempted murder charges laid against him by the U.S. military, 19-year-old Omar Khadr was presented on the front page of the Toronto Star as a "Toronto teen" and a "child" yesterday.

"Omar Khadr is a child," Muneer Ahmad, a Center for Constitutional Rights lawyer, told the Star.

[. . . . ]The charges against Khadr, announced by the Pentagon on Monday, stem from a grenade attack in Afghanistan that killed U.S. medic Sgt. Christopher Speer and cost Sgt. 1st class Layne Morris his sight in one eye. [. . . . ]


Search more information on the Center for Constitutional Rights. Who backs it? Is tax money contributing to this?



December 08, 2005

Our Glorious Leader, Kim il Pinocchio -&- Leak? Income Trusts -&- Ignatieff or Chyczij?

When you hear our Glorious Leader, Kim il Pinocchio huff and puff about the Kyoto Accord and that his government is going to . . . holier than thou in the US . . . blah, blah, blah, point out page A6 of the National Post, Dec. 8, 05, Canada's Kyoto History, part of an article:

Martin adds fuel to global warming debate, by Anne Dawson, with files from Alan woods and Elizabeth Thompson.



November 2005 A United Nations report finds that by 2003, Canada's greenhouse gas emissions have risen by 24% from 1990 levels. Canada has the sixth highest rate of increase on the list of 40 countries. The United States, which is the biggest emitter of greenhouse gases and which has been maligned for not signing Kyoto, has seen its emissions rise by 13% since 1990.




An appealing move! The Anointed, Michael Ignatieff, or the local Riding President, Ron Chyczij?

Whose party is it, anyway? Kenneth Kidd, Dec. 4, 2005



[. . . . Ron] Chyczij has been the president of the Liberal riding association in Etobicoke-Lakeshore for more than a year, but his real ambition is loftier: To become the party's local candidate in the federal election now underway.

Party headquarters, alas, had other plans, chiefly the installation of one Michael Ignatieff, late of Harvard University, as the riding's Liberal standard-bearer.

"They chipped me out on the basis of some very minor technicalities," says Chyczij. This he's appealing. [. . . . ]




Online posts suggest leak in income trust case

Kathy Tomlinson, CTV News
[Someone gave this to me; check for the link and the date--Dec. 6, 05?]

In the two weeks since Canada's Finance Minister announced a tax cut to dividend-paying stocks, the big question in financial and political circles is whether some people had advance notice of his Nov. 23 announcement. A CTV Whistleblower investigation into what happened that day has found that may have been the case.

"I believe some information leaked out somewhere," said Christopher Thomas of Measured Markets, a company that analyzes stock trading patterns.



Noblesse Oblige . . . Should bloggers bow in appreciation?

Some bloggers would have written anyway; just watch them try to throw all jail for speaking out. BaaaaaaaaaaaaD Optics!

A gift to the Opposition

Elections Canada sees no problem with blogging during the election by Romeo St. Martin. [PoliticsWatch Updated 4:15 p.m. December 2, 2005]


OTTAWA — Canadian bloggers may breathe a little easier Friday after Canada's chief electoral officer confirmed that he doesn't plan to have a crackdown on political blogs during the election campaign. [. . . . ]


He may not 'plan to' but what if . . . ?

Well, some powerful, perhaps even desperate people with plans, who are involved int the election, might just pack enough clout if they see their plans threatened to . . . well, take corrective action, shall we say. You've seen them at work before, surely. A little thing like bowling over anyone or anything that gets in their way is not beyond them. Who appointed Canada's Chief Electoral Officer? I ask only because I have seen the system kick in.

Note: I don't even know the name of this individual (Chief Electoral Officer) who may be the soul of honour; I am simply extrapolating from what I have seen take place in the past at the behest of the powerful . . . and politicians, some of whom are one and the same. NJC





The REALity: Libs & Funding -- Spoor? -- Toronto Port Authority (TPA)

LIBERAL PARTY'S LITTLE FUNDRAISING WAYS -- Read and bring it to the attention of others.

The embarrassment to the Liberals was because the data laid bare the fact that the Conservatives had received more than twice the amount in contributions from individual donors than the Liberals. The Tories received $10.9 million from 68,000 individual Canadians, whereas the Liberals received only $5.2 million in donations from 17,501 individuals.

[. . . ] the Liberals have their own little ways to make up for any loss of income. . . For example:

* a secret $5,000 a head cocktail party in Calgary with Mr. Martin in attendance. . . . a $200,000 plus bonanza for the Liberal party. [. . . . ]

* Another scheme by the Liberals to lose money was revealed by the Globe and Mail (August 17, 20 and 24, 2005) when the Liberal government gave $35 million to the Toronto Port Authority (TPA). The TPA, whose operations are vague at best, was established under the Canada Marine Act. It has three Liberal politicians involved in administering it. They are: Transport Minister, Jean Lapierre; Immigration Minister, Joe Volpe; and Toronto MP, Tony Ianno.

Because of the Port Authority's mysterious ways, it is known locally as "Little Mexico-on-the-Lake." The $35 million was allegedly given to the Toronto Port Authority to settle a law suit. However, not a single lawsuit against the federal government or any of its agencies, or the Port Authority itself has ever been filed. Nobody knows the names of the beneficiaries, none of whom have filed a claim for this money. What is also most peculiar is that the Port Authority is prohibited under the Marine Act from receiving any government subsidies. In short, who got this money - and why? Who were the lobbyists in all this? . . . . MP Jack Layton raised a question about this lost $35 million in the House of Commons (Hansard: June 7, 2005 p. 6728) but none of the three Liberal politicians involved, nor the Port Authority itself, have ever bothered to respond to his and other enquiries about the "lost" money.

. . . how many other little cubby holes. . . . many others hidden from view and sadly removed from the reach of Auditor General Sheila Fraser. . . . won't be able to look into the $35 million grant to the Toronto Port Authority because the Marine Act conveniently provides that the Toronto Port Authority is not an agent of the Crown except in restricted circumstances, that happily (for the Liberals), does not apply in this case. Therefore, the grant is out of reach not only of Mrs. Fraser, but also of Parliament, since the Toronto Port Authority is legally a separate entity from the government.

Search:

a genuine talent for "losing" taxpayers' money that never seems to be recovered

Jane Stewart [And check out elsewhere information on Min. Pierre Pettigrew who ran the department before her; I always wondered if Stewart were not appointed to take the fall, should it come to that. She was a good soldier for the Liberals under Chretien, and where is she now? ]

another record breaking multi-billion dollar surplus

surge to $11.3 billion in the 2006 fiscal year.

Ipso Reid Poll

a substantial rise in the proportion of undecided



Priceless! All for a Kyoto photo of Martin -&- the Mtl Greenhouse Gases Conference

"reading two nursery rhymes to some P.E.I. school kids."

Grits full of hot air on Kyoto Ottawa Sun: Election, Dec. 8, 05

. . . Paul Martin. . . gas-sucking rent-a-jet from New Brunswick to Prince Edward Island. . . . smoke-belching buses to. . . a rural grade school, . . . [flew] to Montreal. [. . . .]


Following that, the next day onstage in Montreal at the big Kyoto hoo-hah, Hypocritical Henry harangued the rest of the world, and particularly, the US. He was orating to

officials from 157 countries on the urgent need to cut greenhouse gases -- airplane and bus fumes included -- that contribute to global warming.

"Traditional fossil fuels have become too costly to waste, too expensive to use indiscriminately, with too great and lasting an impact on the planet," Martin said in dire tones. "We need to accept that with our behaviour, with our actions, we affect one another and the planet we share. We are in this together."


No, Paul, we're not together. We weren't invited to join you on the jet nor at the conference. Furthermore, you use Other People's Money to electioneer for yourself while we sit shivering . . . because people like you . . . ah, y'er a hypocrite!



PM & Team: Scamberg -&- Secret Agenda



More on the link to this litany later; the jpg is entitled Scamberg; I have to check further on this link as I'm drowning in files. Try

http://
scamberg.libscam.godsandartists.com/
index.php/main_page

via Jack's Newswatch within the last couple of days. He has more information.

http://
www.jacksnewswatch.info



Martin's Hidden Agenda November 28, 2005

"Unlike the last election, when fears of a hidden agenda were said to have turned voters sour on the prospect of a Conservative Government, one-in-three of those polled now believe the Liberals are harbouring secrets.

Only one-in-four now sees the Conservatives that way."

Hmm. I wonder why that is? [. . . . ]


Another must read litany

Scary SCOC Goddess Supreme

aka Chief Justice McLachlin

A truly scary person in Canadian politics CNEWS Forum, 12/05/2005

Put rights before Constitution -- Chief Justice: McLachlin tells judges to be bold 'even in the face of clearly enacted laws'

A truly scary person in Canadian politics casper34, (excerpts)

Our Chief Justice of the Supreme Court believes that she and her eight colleagues have a duty to ignore the written law passed by the people's legislators when a simple majority of them think that 25 million Canadians and their 300 representatives just aren't smart enough to get it.

This election needs to be about law and order as much as it is about government corruption, and how government sleaze and the lack of respect for the rule of law is poisoning our society.

Our government and our judiciary is used to ignoring hostile public opinion. Maybe we're just not being hostile enough.

Canadians are not protected by our justice system, but are treated with contempt by most of the people sitting on the bench and the government that put them there.

This should come as no surpise. When the Liberal government treats us and our money with contempt, does it come as any surprise that the people who are appointed as judges, in our system that lacks oversight for those appointments, share the government's attitudes? [. . . . ]


The big problem, as I see it, for the Liberal government(s) has been that any change in the system might not reward the "right" people -- and if you check who have power, you'll know who they are. The system reflects the top -- it starts with the gerrymandering, managing, re-writing, regulating, rewarding, sluicing and slushing, et cetera, using the tax $$$ that are OPM as pork $$$. The system's head ( guessing -- aided by the appointed members of the legal system and moneyed elites ) has been using that panoply of powers and abilities that allow a few to prosper, whether by position or otherwise ( make M/Billions on the backs of the citizenry). It is especially galling to those who have not developed the ability to huff and puff one thing while doing the opposite. . . or nothing.

The system's elite, headed by the increasingly desperate sounding PM, canvasses for what are IMHO, the most amenable to maintaining the system as it is and, lo and behold, that person becomes a justice and later a Supreme.

It seems obvious from past decisions made by the SCOC that the one who demonstrates the greatest contempt for the views of the majority of the citizenry and the long term good of the country would be the obvious candidate to be appointed Supreme Goddess. The same system ensures the continuance of the rottenness at the heart of the Canadian judicial system that treats criminals better in some cases than the victims.

Like the CBC, the appointed SCOC justices give the PM / PMO / government / political party what they need to maintain control though, with McLachlan's latest uttering, the SCOC may be planning on an even greater power kick . . . one that even those who do the appointing don't expect. Someone wrote that we might as well skip elections and Parliament and just let the courts run the whole shebang.

System change is needed; end the appointment process and the fiction that ordinary human beings, once they become justices, lose all quite human leanings toward one political philosophy or another. Admit that our SCOC and undoubtedly most of the courts are politicized, through human nature and by the nature of the appointment process -- and sheer luck favouring those with power already, there would be responsible, well-meaning individuals land on the bench. Nevertheless, the system is too tainted by politics.

End also the secretive funding of intervenor groups such as are funded under the Court Challenges Program. Is that not a covert avenue to subvert the will of the people? And then, there is the riding parachute system . . . and . . .


Licenced, Regulated, Indoctrinated -&- Other Bud Bites

Child care--Harper has it right

This child care debate could be the sleeper issue of the election. It comes down to the Liberals / NDP wanting to licence, regulate, and doubtlessly dictate the curricula of this-now-state-run institution; while the Conservatives want to give the money outright to the parents, to use as they see fit. Do the Canadian people want a system that parallels what was so successful for the Communist Chinese and Russians in indoctrinating children? The system already has their left-leaning allies in the universities to "re-educate" students later on. And just let your imagination run free when considering the vast bureaucracy that will be needed. Thinking about the $$$ tens of millions more spent on the Indian Commission for Reparations to Natives (or Reconciliation Commission--whatever its formal name) in residential schools would be a good start. The auditors found that three times as much money was spent by the commission on themselves, than on awarding Natives who were victimized.

© Bud Talkinghorn

Was setting up another vast bureaucracy the point, Bud? Think how many Libs will be given jobs.

A cynic's advice: Consider joining the Liberal Party right now if you want a daycare job, in case PM & Co (buy off) convince enough people to vote for them. You may always vote as you please but cover your proverbial, if you want to work. Use the join now, pay later plan -- or ask for a forgiveable loan. NJC



Taxing mutual funds and other stocks



It was revealed in a National Post letter to the editor (A-17) by Stephen MacPhail, who is COO for CI Financial Inc., that there is a hidden GST embedded in the price at sale. If you see your mutual funds as a savings element rather than a consumption one, than you should be infuriated. Food for thought, if you can't afford food after liquidating your mutual funds.


Mohammed Hagi Mohamud--Poster child for the IRB

Why the totally dysfunctional IRB has not become a major election issue speaks to the crimping of genuine freedom of speech. The Liberals try--and apparently succeed--to silence all critics of their failed immigration / refugee policies with shouts of "racist". Here is Mohamed, who has two imprisonments for violent offences; yet is still allowed to remain in Canada to kidnap, rape and nearly beat to death a woman. One snatched off the Skytrain platform in Vancouver, yet.


How toothless our IRB has become. In a related story, we have a CBC morning anchor ( Nancy ? maybe ) demanding to know why the Vancouver police have stationed armed transit officers on the Skytrain system. When the chief officer said a number of felony and fugitive arrests were made, the anchor replied, "Do you need armed police to do that?" Duh!



The fraud of the Turner Art Prize--Shedboatshed

If you ever had doubts about the "cultural elites'" proclamations of genius, then you should check out the current winner of The Turner Art Prize. Simon Starling won for his "Shedboatshed" entry. He bought a ramshackle shed, disassemled it and turned it into a boat, then reassembled it into the wretched shed it previously had been. Starling follows in the footsteps of previous winners. Last year some chap won for a barren room that had a lightbulb that changed colours when he entered or left. For some strange reason his name escapes me. The year before that, a woman won for her "Unmade bed", featuring used condoms, an empty liquor bottle and a pair of "nicotine-stained" panties. Oh yes, and the unmade bed looked like anybody's after a hard night. I wait with bated breath for next year's winner. While the Turner Prize is an English one, Starling has a fan in the curator of the AGO in Toronto. Mr. Moos agrees with Starlings suggestion to sink Henry Moore's statue, Warrior with Shield, into Lake Ontario, so it can be encrusted with zebra mussels. I leave you with Mr. Moos's comment on this brilliant plan. "...the idea typifies the artist's concern with the legacies of modernism and his quest to explore the tensions between aesthetic perfection and ecological devastation." Or maybe we should just sink both Starling and Moos into Lake Ontario and see if their mussel encrusted forms would also be a "legacy of modernism."

Turner must be turning over in his grave knowing that these travesties are being awarded in his name.

© Bud Talkinghorn


Welcome back, Khadr

As part of the Liberals' "family reunification" immigration program, we have the return of Abdullah Khadr. First we got one brother who was released from Gitmo. He claimed to have repudiated his al-Qaeda ties. Then Mama Elsamnah Khadr, daughter and crippled son returned home. They made it clear that they weren't reformed. However much they proclaimed that Canada was a moral cesspool, they chose to leave that Islamic heaven called Pakistan. Now we have the return of Abdullah, who states he was tortured in Pakistan, with Canada's complicity. This is a man who ran an al-Qaeda training camp in Afganistan and was named in a radical Islamic website as the person who was responsible for the suicide attack that killed a Canadian soldier. The government refused to comment on his re-entry to this country and what they plan to do with this fanatic. All that's left to complete this touching family reunion is to have daddy's corpse sent here and for Omar Khadr to be sprung from Gitmo. Perhaps Martin can follow Chretien, who helped daddy Ahmed get out of prison in Pakistan, and lean on Bush for a commuting of Omar's detention. He might vote Liberal, you understand, and who knows how many Canadian Muslims would be grateful for such compassion.

© Bud Talkinghorn



The Liberals' handgun ban idea: Martin shoots himself in the foot again

You have to give the Liberals credit. First they create that useless two billion dollar gun registry albatross; now Paul Martin wants to create a monstrously stupid ban on handguns. Ostensibly, this is to quell the gun murders in our cities. The logical flaw is that the criminals already have illegal handguns. They are not going to turn them in through some amnesty--Toronto 's police have already gone that route and it didn't work. Nor will the drug thugs stop bringing them in from America. All that this ban will accomplish is the creation of another incompetent, expensive bureaucracy and the wrath of those owning legal handguns. The liberal elites in Toronto will love the idea, but then they also loved the "Yes side" on the Charlottetown referendum / Meech Lake Accord. Thank you Paul, for providing another moronic policy--another nail in your electoral coffin.

© Bud Talkinghorn

It's job creation, Bud.

I enjoy your bites . . . The pure evil genie in me hopes they give the usual suspects lockjaw . . . a hiatus in the blunderbuss and bafflegab of the electioneering. NJC





Bud bites

Merry Spineless Holidays

It must be a sign of some cultural meltdown that the Christmas holidays cannot be be openly celebrated. It is supposed to be Christ's birthday, isn't it? The richest irony for me--a completely lapsed Anglican--is that while we try to smother any reference to Christ, or any ritual denoting Christianity, Canadians have an official multicult policy of encouraging every known religion to celebrate their holy days and sacred rituals. The Melanesian Cargo Cult gets more official respect than Christianity in this country. While I am not a believer, I fully understand that Christianity and its European expression are indelibly etched into our history. And that ethos has created a wonderful land. One has only to look at the countries that embrace Christianity to see the difference in cultural, political, and economic progress compared to the other religion-based societies.

I do not expect the Muslims to tone down their al Eid Fitr or even make an attempt to be inclusive. The same with the Hindus and Jews. It is preposterous that the majority religion of this country should allow itself to be cowed so easily. Perhaps the handwriting was writ large when Chretien forbide the Christian clergy to mention anything distinctly Christian at the Swiss Air crash memorial in or near Halifax; even though the majority of the victims were themselves Christians. Of course, It doesn't help that so many of the Christian segments are more concerned with left-wing social issues, than with spiritual matters. It was with great glee that I read that the folks who gave Boston their Christmas tree wanted it back. They found out that the Boston City Council wanted to name it a "holiday tree". After the American networks picked up on that story, the council backed down. It is now officially a "Christmas tree" again. Would that all Canadians had the guts to stand up to these politically correct tyrants. Merry Christmas.

© Bud Talkinghorn



Some geezer rock'n'roll nuggets that made it to CD's

"Roger McGuinn: Born to Rock and Roll"

This is a complilation of his solo work after he left The Byrds. While he was with that band he was the main creative force--what Jerry Garcia was to The Grateful Dead. His version of Tom Petty's "American Girl", with Tom Scott on sax pushing the song into overdrive is worth the price of admission alone.

"Gregg Allman: Laid Back"

If you thought that the deaths of brother Duane and bassist Berry Oakley ended the music, you were wrong. Gregg rolls out behind a stellar band. Deep swamp music, with a concluding "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" that will make you want to join the Pentecostal church or the visit with the congregation.

"Crown of Thorns"--Randy Scruggs and Friends

Randy is the son of Earl, so you would expect hardcore bluegrass music. However, he marshals a fine band and special guests to pump out everything from blues, to country, to rock. The one true blugrass tune, "Lonesome Ruben", features Earl on banjo and the incomparable Jerry Douglas on dobro. He ends with a pretty guitar solo of Joanie Mitchell's "Both Sides Now".

"Tribute to Gram"--Various artists

The tribute was organized by Emily-Lou Harris, Gram Parson's old lover. Gram, himself, was an extremely talented singer and songwriter, who flamed out at 27 through an overdose. Harris has such musical creds that she could corral the disparate likes of Peter Tosh, Chrissy Hynd and Steve Earle to sing the songs. Quality songs sung by quality people.

"Slide Rule"--Jerry Douglas

When God Clapton set up the roster of great guitar players to join him at the Guitar Festival he expressly asked Jerry to come. Douglas has won so many Grammy Awards for his slide dobro work that as one Nashville guitar ace said, "Ain't no point in going to these damn awards, Jerry just going to win again anyway." Especially tasty fills were evident in his backing of Allison Krauss on "Have You Met My Baby?". [I have heard this one--enjoyable. NJC]

© Bud Talkinghorn


Gremlin Spoor & Pack Rats R Us to the Rescue -&- Memory Help Lanes

Whenever a link is corrupted or changed, I suspect that it may be because there may be something worth looking at that some people would prefer remain hidden. Whoever is responsible might be ***, but they're rather dumb *** if they haven't figured out that other readers will figure out that they should probably search further.

Memo to guys who run all or want to: You might take this post under advisement and leave the internet alone. Let the people speak out.

Memo to our government: Do your penance in Opposition and come out later . . . much later . . . considerably chastened, ready to offer the alternative that any government needs to keep it honest.



The link was changed completely and I have the the original file. (Nyaaaaa, nyaaaa, nyaaa! ) Fortunately, Pack Rats R Us came through with a copy and the link.


Gremlins substituted this link so it has been useless--Bloggers, beware:

Bad link
http://
frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/



The post: FHTR week of Aug. 14 to Aug. 20, 05 -- "I have many names . . . if you are interested." -- Ecstasy & Political Activist Ravinderjit Kaur Puar aka 'Six Feet Under'

This was a good link and, hopefully, still is.


http://
www.theasianstar.com/show_case_do.pdf

Details of show case documents against Ravinderjit Kaur Shergill (also known as Ravinderjit Kaur Puar) -- download pdf


United States of America,
Plaintiff,
v.
Ravinderjit Kaur Puar,
a/k/a Ravi,
a/k/a Amanareet K. Paur,
a/k/a Ravinder Puar Shergill,

Sarbjit Singh Virk,
a/k/a Sabee,

Kamaljit Singh Ghag, and
Sarbjit Singh Sandhu,
a/k/a Sabee

Defendants.


Note the woman has three aliases and two men use the same alias. All are from BC. Get the pdf file and check the charges. [. . . . ]

'F--- with us, you die' -- A drug bust reveals another side of an aspiring B.C. politician August 12, 2005, Ken MacQueen, Macleans

http://
www.macleans.ca/topstories/politics/
article.jsp?content=20050815_110488_110488

'Six Feet Under' Daughter of Vancouver Sikh leader, Politically Connected, Ecstasy Seller

'Six Feet Under' A Vancouver woman with connections to the B.C. NDP and federal Liberal party has been arrested in Seattle and charged with trafficking ecstasy after a four-week sting involving the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency.

'Six Feet Under' Daughter of Vancouver Sikh leader nabbed in U.S. ecstasy sting, allegedly tells agents how family runs gang. Do it our way, or you're ...'Six Feet Under' Kim Bolan, Vancouver Sun

http://
www.fathers.ca/bc1.htm


Puar's father, Kalwant Singh Puar, is on the executive of Vancouver's Ross Street Sikh temple. He has been a high-profile supporter of federal Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh . . . . ecstasy . . . .

"They don't f--- around with me because ... . . . . In Vancouver ... you pay for it and you know how bad you pay for it."

She said that is why no one rats out other gang members involved in drugs: "No one talks to the cops. If you're in jail with this person, you have a family member out there.". . . . In one meeting, she claimed "her family organization 'has it very well with the cops' and that police in Vancouver, B.C. work for the organization as her father is very well connected politically," the documents said. When the DEA agent told Puar that his sister had recently been beaten up, the Vancouver woman offered to have the person who did the assault "taken care of,"


B.C. ACTIVIST JAILED IN U.S., ACCUSED OF SELLING ECSTASY Robert Matas, 08 Jul 2005, Globe and Mail, posted on DanceSafe.org forums

http://
www.mapinc.org/safe/v05/n1091/a01.html


[. . . . ] Ms. Shergill and her father Kalwant Singh Puar have been active in the federal Liberal Party and provincial NDP.

. . . . She was a Paul Martin delegate in the federal leadership campaign bid but did not attend the convention. [Could the convention have interfered with business? ]

She joined the provincial NDP in September, 2004, and ran unsuccessfully for an NDP nomination in the recent provincial election.

Her father, who operates four tow trucks under contract for Buster's Towing, is regarded as a valued supporter of federal Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh. [. . . . ]




Memory Lane: Drug smuggling Canada-US

IMET: Success in the Northwest By Patrick J. Guimond, Group Supervisor, RAIC/Blaine, Wash. -- Note: RAIC = Resident Agent-in-Charge (RAIC) in Blaine, Wash


The marine smuggling threat involving British Columbia marijuana, "BC Bud," is increasing. It is transported both to and through the nearby San Juan Islands for eventual delivery to the west coast and points beyond. Also, large amounts of cocaine destined for British Columbia travel northbound through the northern end of the I-5 corridor. To address this threat, the Resident Agent-in-Charge (RAIC) in Blaine, Wash., initiated a Strategic Problem Solving (SPS) project, known as the Integrated Marine Enforcement Team (IMET). [. . . . ]




Ex-judge gets 18 months; lawyer gets 3 -- Pair accepted cash from accused drug kingpin -- That happened in the US? . . . oh . . . By TRACY JOHNSON, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER


A former Edmonds Municipal Court judge was sent to prison for a year and a half Friday for laundering dirty money from an accused drug kingpin while his friend, a criminal defense attorney, got three months in prison for quietly accepting $20,000. [. . . . ]




Memory Lane: Drugs, Guns & Gangs

FHTR: Aug. 14-20, 05

Guns, Drugs and Crime: Canada's Violent Crime Rate a Shock! -- Canada Blames US -- Gun-control folly here, up north, across the pond...drug-gang violence

http://
www.nationalreview.com/script/print
page.p?ref=/comment/lott200508190817.asp

Crystal meth pushers will face life sentences -- Crackdown comes as meth use rises: New law also targets chemicals used to make 'poor man's heroin'

http://
www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
soundoff/story.html?id=d60b4c2d-a4
d3-4460-818a-991d86287eeb

The menace of crystal meth -- Do not miss the before and after photos -- Show them to your teenager.

http://
www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/
features/crystalmeth/index.html

The Terror Trail

[. . . . ] The Enemy Within Frank J. Gaffney Jr., FrontPageMagazine.com, August 19, 2005

http://
frontpagemag.com/Articles/
Printable.asp?ID=19191


The frightening thing is that the would-be assailants were not terrorist adherents to the political ideology of Islamofascism when they went to jail. They became Islamists while in prison ... Saudi-backed ... Jamat Ul-Islam Is Saheeh




Update 2 re: Whistleblowers, Sidewinder and Muzzling Whistleblowers

Update 2 re this post: “We have a man here that cannot be bought.”, Whistleblowers, Sidewinder, Memo to the CBC, Profiling, Monarchist & GG, Aug. 17, 05, particularly the part on Sidewinder.

http://
frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/2005/08/
we-have-man-here-that-cannot-be-bought.html

Analysis: Bin Laden’s Ho Chi Minh Trail in Canada Joe Fernandez, Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2001

http://
www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/
2001/12/4/184659.shtml

[. . . . ] “We have a man here that cannot be bought.”, Whistleblowers, Sidewinder, Memo to the CBC, Profiling, Monarchist & GG

Whistleblowers: Silencing the Whistles

If you read nothing else, read this, the COMMENTS!

http://
www.smalldeadanimals.com/archives/002504.html

And don't miss this one:

Silencing the Whistles

http://
westernstandard.blogs.com/shotgun/
2005/08/silencing_the_w.html

with links to Operation Sidewinder: In Canada spies are us -- "It was Sidewinder that sounded the first alarm bells that China is one of the greatest ongoing threats to Canada’s national security and Canadian industry." by Judi McLeod, Canadafreepress.com, January 26, 2005.

http://
www.canadafreepress.com/2005/
cover012605.htm

It, in turn, has other links. If you check them, you will be led to a veritable spiderweb and treasure trove of information links which just gets more and more extensive and informative. [. . . . ]

Stephen Harper

http://
bluemapleleaf.blogspot.com/2005/07/
stephen-harper-bbq-tour-comes-to.html




Final comment on the above: Canada Free Press has some pure gold in terms of research and articles that Canadians should read. Great job, Judi McLeod & Gang.



Bud: The Economy -&- Selective Memory -&- Shopping List for Terrorists -&- Memory Help Lanes

Taking Credit for the Economy? It's that selective memory of our PM's again

The next time PM claims he is responsible for the economy--the positive aspects--remember, his memory is short. This is the PM who doesn't acknowledge any connection to the Party of Corruption, needless to say, the political party of government, which he heads.

Consider this: FHTR Dec. 3, 05, "A Report Card for Liberals Paul Martin & Team", Bud's words bear repeating -- noted also on CNEWS Forum rosemarie59

The economy

Ah, the linchpin of Liberal bragging rights. "Look at the deficit shrink and the surpluses grow", is their mantra. The truth is that the First World's economy has been expanding, our weak dollar has given us great trade surpluses with America, and China and India desperately want our resources. All these factors would benefit any party that governed during this period. Ironically, Paul Martin, who made his name on fiscal responsibility, has now carpeted Canada with most of that surplus. God forbid that the Conservatives should get elected and use it for their programs. If the Liberals are lucky and that happens, the Conservative cupboard will be bare when the next recession hits them.



'Shopping list for terrorists' -- Government's info website irks military hardware manufacturer Dec. 6, 05, Stephen Dylag, CNEWS

The street addresses of companies that make everything from high-calibre bullets to grenades are available on one website -- all thanks to the Canadian government.

Every company or individual in Canada that deals with military hardware or dangerous goods must register with the federal Controlled Goods Directorate -- cgd.gc.ca/ cgdweb/text/index_e.htm -- but the directorate may be giving away more information than is necessary.





Memory Lane: Outsourcing and Jobs

FHTR week of Aug. 14 to Aug. 20, 05

Outsourcing & Implications for Canadians with Few Job Skills -- Canadian, eh? Trying to buy made-in-Canada souvenir items . . . and guess what? Read how many jobs have disappeared in the last year alone. Kerry Diotte, Aug. 19, 05

http://
www.edmontonsun.com/News/Columnists/
Diotte_Kerry/2005/08/19/1179002.html

Trend toward contracts over full-time jobs Sandra Cordon, Aug. 18, 05

http://
cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/
2005/08/18/1178720-cp.html


Memory Lane: CN/BC Rail Deal -- Plans

News Junkie Canada, Dec. 23, 04: Top cabinet ministers back BC Rail deal despite fraud charges; two fired

http://
newsjunkiecanada.blogspot.com/
2004_12_23_newsjunkiecanada_archive.html

the original article by Dirk Meissner, Dec. 22, 04

http://
cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Politics/
2004/12/15/784296-cp.html

VICTORIA (CP) - . . . . despite fraud-related charges against three former Liberal government workers accused of attempting to influence the deal.

[. . . . ] $1-billion deal. . . . CN Rail and the B.C. government. . . partnership last year that would see CN take over the freight operations of BC Rail under a renewable 60-year lease.

The 1,600-kilometre BC Rail main line runs from North Vancouver to Fort Nelson, including the resource-rich northern community of Tumbler Ridge. [. . . . ]



FHTR week of Aug. 14 to Aug. 20, 05

Search: Robert Virk and David Basi , trial Nov. 28 -- related to the BC Rail story, I seem to remember. [What happened with that? Or has it been delayed? . . . what with the election and one thing and another? ]


Memory Lane: Border and Security

FHTR week of Aug. 14 to Aug. 20, 05

The "Peaceful" Ones, Aly Hindy & Nuclear Sites, & More Weapons arrest at U.S.-Canadian border -- Two Canadians allegedly tried to bring guns, ammo from United States August 14, 2005

http://
edition.cnn.com/2005/
US/08/13/canada.weapons/

Aly Hindy Imam Salaheddin Islamic Centre

Fundamentalist, and proud of it -- Canada's most controversial Muslim cleric spent his professional life working around vulnerable nuclear facilities in Canada and the U.S., designing ways to protect them from explosions, tornadoes and plane crashes Mohammed Adam, Ottawa Citizen, Aug. 13, 05

http://
www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/news/
story.html?id=7a6a9cc3-0d73-4d
5e-8172-71e37702ede6

Nuclear facilities? This is the imam of the Scarborough Salahedin Mosque. . . . "I spent 21 years working to improve our nuclear facilities at Pickering, Bruce and Darlington.



Memory Lane: Security, Hijab & PM

Security: Muslim women allowed into Canada need not remove hijabs at security check, PM says -- "Identity Politics" alive and well

Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin [in the interest of votes? Of rewarding Muslims who overwhelmingly voted for more of the same Liberal . . . call it what you will] decreed from on high, despite the fact that Muslim women increasingly are being recruited as terrorist jihadis, that Muslim women may enter Canada to "special" treatment. They do not have to remove the hijab at security checkpoints (The National Post, Aug. 14. 04, A5). Now the Canadian Islamic Congress will be agitating for the next concession to those who pursue the "religion of peace, that no Muslim woman in a bourqa be searched. After all, they are merely women, second class citizens. The fact that saheeds have been able to hide packs of explosives conveniently under their clothing eludes our politically correct PM. Identity politics is alive and well under with Martin. This is really comforting to the rest of us! We might appear "racist" if we don't mete out "special" rules for each identity group, mightn't we? [. . . . ]




Ipsos Reid: The sky is falling series...

Should Conservatives be worried?

According to another IPSOS-Reid poll heading articles by Chris Wattie, National Post, A1 & A4, Dec. 6, 05:

"Gomery not a big issue: poll" and "Tories failing to make gains in Ontario, B.C."

But, should Canadians trust polls from any of the usual pollsters who have gained so much taxpayer money under the Liberal government(s)? It is instructive to see where IPSOS-REID fits in the scheme of things -- receiving Liberal government money -- and why it might like the money tap to continue pouring $$$ from another Liberal government.







'Free' & suckers fall for it every time

But make a guess as to what accompanied the offer.

Saudis Have Radicalized 80% of US Mosques LGF, Dec. 6, 05 via Newsbeat1

[. . . . ] As examples, she listed three important groups: the Islamic Society of North America (lgf: search), which “supports the Muslim Brotherhood (lgf: search) and the Saudi regime;” the Islamic Circle of North America (lgf: search), which “is composed of members of Jamaat e-Islami, a Pakistani Islamic radical organization similar to the Muslim Brotherhood that helped to establish the Taliban;” and the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) (lgf: search), “founded in the 1980s by pro-Hamas activists.”


JPost: more


December 06, 2005

Of Polls & Polecats -&- Pit Bulls

I can produce many polls . . . if you are interested . . .


Here is what neither AP nor Ipsos want Canadians, in this case, to know and assiduously avoid saying: Ipsos is a French polling firm." -- "When France Polls America..." Nov. 29, 05.

A closer look at Ipsos polling data, however, gives reason to pause -- regarding the company's methods.

While that excerpt concerns US voters, this concerns Canadians, as well:

On June 27, 1939, Prime Minister Eduard Daladier went before the French Chamber of Deputies and alluded gravely to the evidence of German preparations for war. "While all these events are occurring on our borders," Daladier continued,

at the interior of our country we are witness to an active campaign of propaganda, the links of which to foreign influences have now been demonstrated. The point of the campaign is to break the unity of France and to open a breach in the combined energies of the French nation, through which all sorts of intrigues and maneuvers will be able to pass.


Hardly anyone today would question the perspicacity of the French prime minister's words. Americans might be well advised to recall them the next time they read the results of an AP-Ipsos poll.

John Rosenthal's writings on international politics have appeared in Policy Review, the Opinion Journal, Les Temps Modernes and Merkur. He is the editor of the Transatlantic Intelligencer (www.trans-int.com).




Canadian Pravda's Pitt Bulls Pushing

CBC is in full distortion mode -- of what Conservatives stand for and everything Stephen Harper says -- so frantically are they distorting-'reporting' inadequately and / or mendaciously, in full Propping PM mode. CBC has fallen so far from being a credible news source as to have become the renewed . . . energized . . . Pravda Pitt Bulls Pushing Paul & the Pets


Bud Talkinghorn on CBC 'Balance'

'Reporter' Julie Van Dusan has been assigned to cover the Harper campaign. (The nickname, Julie Van Medusa, has been earned, not just for her incredible hairdo, which sprouts snake-like in all directions, but, especially, for her stony-eyed hatred of Harper sprouting from every pore and report. She once actually hissed at him during an interview -- I saw her performance and that was my assessment, Calgary, TV). Canadians can expect that same vaunted 'balance' from her reports. She will slag him at every opportunity.

The Liberals give the CBC about a billion dollars a year; the CBC gives the Liberals good press. It is that simple.


Also there are the infamous CBC polls. Their national poll this week gave the Liberals 34% approval, the Conservatives 29%. However, CBC failed to mention that 25% of those polled were from Quebec. Take the Quebecois out of the poll and it would probably be a dead heat in the rest of Canada or even higher for the Opposition Conservatives. That analysis was, of course, excluded from their coverage. They also failed to mention that outside parts of Montreal, the Liberals are dead in the water, as the BQ is resurgent across the province.

Anyway, the Gomery report slimed the Liberals in general, and an Ipsos-Reid poll shows that 73% of Canadians do not believe Gomery's exoneration of Martin. Furthermore, in unscientific polls of people who care enough to vote at sites like the National Post and CNEWS, the Conservatives are doing just fine.

End of Bud Talkinghorn's post



Related: 'Culture of defeat' taken out of context: Harper CP, Nov. 30, 05

[. . . . ]At the time, Harper told an interviewer the region's entrenched voting patterns are not as troublesome for his party as Atlantic Canada's sense of political impotence.

"I think in Atlantic Canada, because of what happened in the decades following Confederation . . . there is a culture of defeat that we have to overcome,'' Harper said.

"It's the idea that we just have to go along, we can't change it, things won't change. I think that's a sad part, a sad reality the traditional parties have bred in parts of Atlantic Canada.'' [. . . . ]


Link for the rest. There is also a post on FHTR on this somewhere.



FHTR Comments

The mere fact that Stephen Harper might change how things are done in Ottawa has brought out the ones who profit from the system as it is.

See today's post: CAW, unite; you have nothing to lose but the vendors -&- Scrap Metals China Bound? -- Buzz Hargrove has told his Canadian Auto Workers Union to vote Liberal.

Did I mention that NB Premier Bernard Lord wrote to Paul Martin & Team with a list of reasons for more federal money: infrastructure, economic investment, etc. Behind his request for funding is the same kind of asymmetrical plan that has been so successful for Quebec, but Lord neglected to threaten separation so his letter remained unanswered as of Dec. 2 news. The Minister for NB pork through ACOA/AIF, the general payer out of largesse from federal coffers, Andy Scott, came up with an offer of somewhat less . . . not vote buying, of course. Anyway, in case the Conservatives win, Bernie has submitted his list; he's checked it twice and Santa had better deliver . . . some time.

Don't people ever get it? Let's stop the pork for votes. Change the way the system works in Ottawa and have all money requests subjected to votes based on the needs of the whole country and what is best for Canada's future. [Spending of taxpayer money should be voted on by MP's, one item at a time, not through omnibus bills covering a little of this and lot of that . . . pork.

Isn't it time to take seriously the reports presented after much investigation by Parliamentarian committees -- for where spending must occur? Committee work must count for something, not just as a tank to keep citizens' and MP's ideas and demands on hold until a report can be generated . . . and then be ignored or discounted by the real power above Parliament.] MP's must stop placating every noisy group with OPM just to keep their butts on those seats in the House.



The Citizens, too, Have Duties...if Canadians want responsible spending and governance

Let's, as citizens, start giving credit and respect to politicians who are forced by realities to respond to requests for money with realistic answers, not bafflegab. Politicians, too, must make the responses public. Maybe then we would not be subject to pre-election MP mail-outs, at taxpayer expense, touting all that the MP's have spent in their ridings and with whom they have schmoozed. . . including photos of the MP with those he/she wants to court.

Some examples of what Canadians should expect from a Member of Parliament in responses to requests:

* We can't afford this. Here are what I believe need money first. . . . Shall we discuss this?

* I have to learn more about this and about competing claims on taxpayer money from across the country. You understand that this money is not loot for me to spread and call 'investments', but the fruit of the labour of citizens who have worked hard for it. They and you a deserve considered response on spending. My reasons for voting for A instead of B or C, instead of D are or will be on the government and my websites.

* I don't want to get your hopes up only to have to vote against this when I know what else is competing for money and why -- if I am to make decisions based on the good of the whole country. Maybe your/our area will get what you ask but I cannot promise until I know more.

* If I make a positive decision on this for this area, what about that area? that need?

* Which is more important to Canada? To your area? What would you do in this circumstance? How would you weigh the merits of these competing needs?

* I don't know yet whether what you want is a good idea or not; I have to find out more and to run it by Parliament.

* Let me get together with the members of the Opposition from this area and others, in committee, not as enemies nor adversaries, but as people who want to make the best decisions with what are limited resources. We'll consider what you want.



Politicians are not intended by the citizenry to be purveyors of pork; they are stewards of the country and its resources.

Suggestion: These committee discussions would be available on the government and opposition websites, in text and in video, and not be subject to government editing nor removal of the sensitive bits. [Exceptions would have to do with security -- and no hiding the pork under that, either] Furthermore, as part of learning how government works, how citizens / students actually fit in, that governing is not something for 'those guys off in Ottawa', students in school would be assigned to read, analyse and discuss the arguments and the decisions -- instead of being fed predigested bits by those with the hands on educational and / or media power levers. It might replace the social engineering that is going on too often now, using other people's money, by those with access to the tap.

The above was not intended to be exhaustive, just an idea, but many of us are so tired of hot air and no substance, of Question Period without answers, of lies/mishandling of the truth from and about politicians of whatever stripe and whatever they say. We just want the whole charade of democracy which is buttressed by the same old groups ended.

As for the CBC, I would be a candidate for a public broadcaster--Canadian programming such as nature programs, exposure to music, drama, art, discussion, the kind of thing that appeals to one who hates regular programming with its so-called comedy, soap operas, ads, the usual--but my public broadcaster has been co-opted by one (left / Liberal) political party and pushes the NDP as the alternative. Enough! Give us reasoned, thoughtful commentary, analysis backed by journalistic research, a range of thought and no more "Let's get a negative sound bite" in the service of maintaining the guys who keep the CBC in business.

Related: Christopher Waddell, "Media should ignore the static, stick to the facts" The Globe and Mail, Dec. 3, 05, A8 -- excellent

The only way we are going to get balanced, informed reporting and analysis is if we divorce news and funding. As it is, all taxpayers pay for broadcasting that supports--nay, encourages--tie-ins and networking among government and groups -- among:

* the Parliament, Senate, civil service and the following:

* the mainstream media: radio, TV, newspapers, magazines, advertising, etc. and the new media: ISP's not independent of the CRTC and government, and any other information disseminating and advertising businesses connected to them

* NGO's of which citizens know too little, crown corporations, agencies, foundations, councils, congresses, whatever groupings get, live, and survive even partially on taxpayer money outside the scrutiny of those who work to make this money [No more hiding the amounts, how used and the purpose]

* government suppliers and lobbyists: lobbying for, grants, loans, anything--even publicity--which favours one business over another, contracts about which the taxpayers can learn little -- including free services now and government contracts later, political favours delivered via business trips which help out those in that group, but not others, and special business-other country or area councils which can be covers for much more . . . etc.

* all the rest that goes with the above: media access to the favoured few, high cost taxpayer-funded social occasions--parties, dinners and the like [Limit it!]--social affairs funded by lobbyists and those who are after something, all those special affairs to which are invited favoured media and/or political donors


How will Canadians end this incestuous, corruption-breeding relationship? Many Canadians are thinking.

For example, would it be feasible to separate the decision to buy or do anything that involves awarding contracts and spending taxpayer money from the choice of purveyor? Could the process be broken into more than one phase:

* The Parliamentary decision to move forward on something;

* Then another sub-group--an all-party committee--of Parliament would prepare a list of the specifications and requirements necessary --which may call for knowledgeable individuals and groups to present their information to them.

* Then, once the specs are written, posted and bidding occurs, there would be an entirely different group make the decision on the awarding of a contract(s).

* No committee would be involved in every phase; rotation of membership would be routine and spending money would be taken out of the hands of those who have decided to start the process of buying or contracting.


Fortunately for Canada, I shall never be an MP. I suspect I would tie everything up in minutiae and too little would be accomplished. I might even learn that a little of the old political pork grease is necessary to even get people interested in tendering . . . if the system were honest, but, as things are, there is so much secrecy that we can't even learn that political patronage might be a necessary reality.

At present, citizens feel cheated by the way the process works. It would be reassuring to the citizenry if some new way--a more open and honest way--of working were tried, an attempt to address what is obviously a very broken system.

Someone wrote that, since the last two Governors General were chosen from the very Liberal/leftist CBC, it is time, and it would be fair to choose by lottery our next GG from the general populace. Alternatively, at least rotate the position for a two or three year stint among the three mainstream political parties who could suggest any citizens as candidates. The final choice should be a decision of Parliament, not again of the tired and corrupt governing party and its power-hungry leader(s), the party and government which have set the rules and/or the process to favour itself -- whether appointing GG's, justices and SCOC members, elections--who pay and how Canadians will pay for the whole democratic process, when elections occur, and so much else. Particularly, no political party should have its hands on the media levers that this one has had and with which it has so abused Canadians' trust in the news.

No Prime Minister and his closest advisors should be able to make decisions on hiring, buying, spending and all the rest in a flurry just before the writ is dropped; the obvious buying of votes is so tacky -- and this government has pushed it beyond the usual level of unseemliness so that it and its predecessors for a number of years have revealed to us just how sick our system is.

For now, give us smaller, responsible, transparent, accountable governance without the array of hidden networks, backers and those who grow rich from the system and those who then feed us government propaganda, predigested, as our news.


Plotter or Agent for Change? -&- Woods Kitties

Opinion — Liberal win will trigger anglo Yes vote -- “If the Liberals still win, the next time there’s a referendum,” he told me, “I plan to vote Yes. I don’t want to be part of a country that tolerates this level of corruption.” "And they’re off." , Tommy Schnurmacher, The Suburban

[. . . . ] Martin will present himself as the honest man best suited to tidy up the sleaze and corruption that were the hallmark of the nasty Chrétien Party — a political organization with which he is not very familiar.

Martin vaguely recalls serving as finance minister, senior minister for Quebec and vice-president of the Treasury Board during those fateful years, but most of it is hazy.

He was far too busy plotting the minutiae of the coup to oust Chrétien to pay any attention to anything else.


Search:

a Neanderthal Genghis Khan whose hidden agenda involves
accuse him of having a secret plan to
He will look as earnest as possible as he warns Canadians about the separatist...
it is a Liberal victory that would spark a




Skipping down the garden path, I met a woods kitty . . . . . . . but isn't that the same as a skunk?

Liberal media bombshell? November 24, 2005

In an article that was supposed to be about Liberal campaign tactics, Globe and Mail writer Jane Taber drops this little bombshell about the perhaps all-too-cozy relationship that exists between the media in this country and the Liberal Party of Canada:

Meanwhile, a lobbyist for a communications company told Ontario Liberal MPs at their caucus meeting yesterday to expect a negative campaign both from the opposition and the news media.

Charles Bird is a lobbyist for Bell Globemedia (owner of The Globe and Mail and CTV) and is the Ontario campaign chairman for the federal Liberals. He told Ontario MPs the electorate is "very volatile" and warned that "it's going to be a very negative campaign." [. . . . ]


A lobbyist for the corporate giant that owns two of this country's most prominent media outlets is now running the Liberal campaign in Ontario in the upcoming federal election. Isn't that lovely?




Good Questions
Paul Tuns quotes Greg Staples;
"how can a campaign chairman for a party be allowed to work for the largest media conglomerate in Canada?"
Small Dead Animals, Nov. 26, 05

Scroll for comments:

Belinda who? MacKay seen with new heiress
http://
www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/
news/story.html?id=0fef3
e53-532b-41ca-b8ed-ef2b4c191c80 [. . . . ]

Posted by: John Crittenden at November 26, 2005 03:52 PM [. . . . ]
Mata Hari Desmarais/Stronach : MacKay is the john-target>>> Power is the Game. Sex wins. This how a dynasty maintains Power. Librano$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Belinda who? MacKay seen with new heiress
Sophie Desmarais: Mila Mulroney played matchmaker a month ago

Julie Smyth
National Post
Saturday, November 26, 2005 >>>
via nealenews
Posted by: maz2 at November 26, 2005 07:33 PM


That is one perspective; even more interesting it the list at the bottom of the webpage.

More revealing . . . learning . . . understanding



HANGING? Yes, CTV really did report that. "The clip of Craig Oliver speaking through the wrong hole is now up on the CTV website. I wonder how long it will remain there." November 30, 2005


And thanks to our dithering "leader",

my father has hepititis C, thanks to that load of hillbilly blood he bought off one former governor William Jefferson Clinton, courtesy of the inbreds from the Arkansas corrections system. [. . . . ]




Of shoes and ships and sealing wax...of parachutes and kings

Leaders still don't get it. The most basic idea of democracy eludes them. No matter a candidate's stellar qualities--and Michael Ignatieff seems to have many, PM/PMO/Head Office's appointing candidates who are then dropped into winnable ridings is profoundly undemocratic and shows contempt for the riding association and citizens.

Canadians don't want star candidates parachuted in after locals have worked years to build up the local association, keeping the party lamp lit, working on policies and doing the nitty-gritty of funding and keeping interest alive locally between elections, searching for and vetting prospective candidates, only to have their decisions tossed aside, as a non-local is foisted upon them and the locals' own choice tossed aside -- not having that star quality or charisma.

Michael Ignatieff sounds like an acceptable--maybe excellent--candidate but he should have gone to the riding, presented himself to and talked with the local association. He might have convinced them of his value as a candidate and his potential likely would have been appreciated; then he could have run in a fair candidate selection process. Perhaps he would have won, after locals had been exposed to his intelligence and bathed in his charisma up close . . . rather than hearing of its emanating from Harvard. Having the decision on a candidate made by (the PM / PMO / leadership ) those with the levers on power and dropped smack dab in their laps is the kind of anti-democratic activity that makes the prospect of more of the same government(s) anathema to so many of us.

Additionally:

* Ordinary people want to make their own decisions -- and not just about their own candidates.

* They want government to stop what is overstepping its bounds, taking even more of workers' money than is necessary . . . for the government's own pet projects. People want to keep enough of their own money to actually have some left to make their own decisions on discretionary spending, I might add.

* They want a level playing field, not grants, subsidies, forgiveable loans and all the apparatus of the leftist social engineering and the gerrymandering of the local economy -- designed more to buy votes and to maintain power than for the apparent good these do, we find when we dig a little deeper.

It's called democracy, not divine right of (faux) kings, fellas.


Speaking of Kings . . .

What Was Learned from the Shipping Kings in October?

Paul Martin's sons were supposed to have been questioned in October, in time for a fall election or has that died a natural death . . . a political death?


More trouble for Paul Martin June 23, 2005, Angry in T.O. / and
http://
bendgovernment.blogspot.com/

[Canadian Steamship Lines] has been the greatest source of Paul Martin's significant wealth and we've always known that our Prime Minister pays his corporate taxes to a foreign country, at a tax rate of about 2%, to avoid paying into social programs as a corporate citizen. Now his sons, which hold the company in a "blind trust" have been called before the [Standing Commitee on Finance] to answer its questions concerning CSL.


One comment following:

Name me one country in the world, except ones run by a dictator, who would elect as their leader someone who refused to pay taxes in the country he wants to lead. . . . Not only does he avoid paying taxes in Canada he also lines up at the trough to the tune of 200 million in non refundable tax payer grants to his company CSI. What a joke. . . Barrie McClarty



CBC -- "explain how their father's steamship line business takes advantage of tax havens in Barbados"


I have read that what shipping companies such as CSL do to minimize or eliminate taxes in such a competitive business is a legal business practice so . . . why doesn't everyone take advantage of this? What is the cost of setting up a business with . . . is it a head office (presence? logo on stationery?) in a haven such as the Barbados? Could we save the trip and turn Canada into a haven? . . . Not a good idea? Someone explain this -- the how and why for those without enough money to contemplate . . . much of anything beyond wishes . . . a most comfortable position, however, since one avoids the Christmas rush. It's an ill wind . . .