July 23, 2004

Canadians' Security and Other Government Priorities

List of Articles:

* Playing games with Canadians' security -- Berger on the 'Wall' -- The election debate behind the documents-in-pants caper

* Federal government committed to marijuana decriminalization: Martin

* Immigration Minister Judy Sgro keeps job, fires aides (two of whom cost taxpayers' $$$ for accommodation)

* Bulgarian Olympian lands in Canadian jail over decade-old, transatlantic car fraud -- Note use of fake documents

* Political correctness run amok -- CRTC

* CRTC: Censoring a voice of reason -- His critics say he is vulgar -- but Jeff Fillion's real 'crime' was that he dared skewer Quebec's sacred cows






Playing games with Canadians' security -- Berger on the 'Wall' -- The election debate behind the documents-in-pants caper

So much for the Canadian govenment touting how great their intelligence was. It was an alert U.S. Customs oficer who noticed Ressam sweating which aroused her suspicion and he was caught after trying to escape. We're short at least 700 CSIS agents. When is the government going to take protecting the public seriously instead of cranking up the hot air? Security is so tight in Parliament that Frank magazine staffers were able to access restricted areas. If security can't protect MP's what the h*** are the rest of us supposed to do? Instead of playing games, they should implement Senator Kenny's recommendations, in addition to getting the staffing for our security agencies up to where it was 10 years ago.

There's no shortage of money -- the gun registry, the sponsorship scandal and all the money falling out the back door of the Brink's truck as it travelled across the country on the election route attest to that.

From today's vantage we can see the consequences. Ahmed Ressam was one of the would-be Millennium bombers whom the French had identified to U.S. intelligence agencies as an al Qaeda operative planning to attack America. But the "wall of separation" meant that when an alert U.S. customs officer stopped Ressam as he tried to enter the country from Vancouver, the Justice Department had no idea who he was. This helps illuminate the claim made in the missing memo, according to Mr. Ashcroft's testimony, that our success in stopping these 1999 attacks was a result of sheer "luck."

Berger on the 'Wall' -- The election debate behind the documents-in-pants caper. July 21, 2004

[. . . . ] Mr. Berger admits to having deliberately taken handwritten notes he'd made out of the Archives reading room. On the more serious charges involving the removal (and subsequent discarding) of highly classified documents--including drafts of a key, after-action memo Mr. Berger had himself ordered on the U.S. response to al Qaeda threats in the run-up to the Millennium--he maintains he did so "inadvertently."

There's only one way to clear away the political smoke: Release all the drafts of the review Mr. Berger took from the room.

If it's all as innocent as Mr. Berger's friends are saying, there's no reason not to make them public. But there are good reasons for questioning Mr. Berger's dog-ate-my-homework explanation. To begin with, he was not simply preparing for his testimony before the 9/11 Commission. He was the point man for the Clinton Administration, reviewing and selecting the documents to be turned over to the Commission. [. . . . ]

Mr. Berger admits to having deliberately taken handwritten notes he'd made out of the Archives reading room. On the more serious charges involving the removal (and subsequent discarding) of highly classified documents--including drafts of a key, after-action memo Mr. Berger had himself ordered on the U.S. response to al Qaeda threats in the run-up to the Millennium--he maintains he did so "inadvertently."



Federal government committed to marijuana decriminalization: Martin

Federal government committed to marijuana decriminalization: Martin Alexander Panetta, CP, July 21, 2004

OTTAWA (CP) - The federal government is committed to marijuana decriminalization and will reintroduce legislation to make it happen, Prime Minister Paul Martin said in his first statement on the issue since winning re-election.

The Liberal government will bring back a bill that died with the election call and re-table it after Parliament resumes sitting in October, he said Wednesday following a meeting of his new cabinet. "The legislation on marijuana - the decriminalization of minor quantities of marijuana - that legislation will be introduced."

According to the original bill, anyone caught with 15 grams of pot or less would receive a ticket instead of criminal charges. But those caught trafficking more than 15 grams would receive harsher penalties.

Critics say the bill could lead to more cases of intoxicated driving and cause traffic snarls at the Canada-U.S. border while American customs agents intensify their search for drugs.

They also bemoan the 15-gram ceiling for non-criminal use, calculating that it would become legal for someone to carry more than 30 joints at a time.
[. . . . ]


Immigration Minister Sgro keeps job, fires aides

Minister keeps job, fires aides Campbell Clark, July 22, 04

[. . . . ] Some of those fired said people were told the staff are not "diverse" enough.

The staff fired at Ms. Sgro's office ranged from her chief of staff, Ian Laird, to junior aides.

Mr. Laird and Ms. Sgro's senior policy adviser, Ihor Wons, became the subject of controversy when hospitality and travel expenses for ministers and their staff were made public recently.

The two aides filed expense claims of roughly $3,300 a month to live in temporary accommodations in Ottawa for six months after they were hired. [. . . . ]


How quickly a Minister can move since her own position might have been threatened by the bad publicity; however, look how slowly things move when aliens can enter Canada using fake documents. The following is only example.


Bulgarian Olympian lands in Canadian jail over decade-old, transatlantic car fraud -- Note use of fake documents

Bulgarian Olympian lands in Canadian jail over decade-old, transatlantic car fraud CanWest News Service, July 22, 2004

A former Olympic weightlifter from Bulgaria was sentenced to one year in a Manitoba jail yesterday after pleading guilty to a bizarre, nearly decade-old fraud case that began in Winnipeg and spanned the globe. Encio Encev, 49, admitted to entering Canada on a bogus passport in 1995 and obtaining a bank account and credit cards using his fake identity. He and two other men then purchased five vehicles worth more than $200,000 that they planned to ship to Bulgaria, where they would sell for big profits. [. . . . ]



Political correctness run amok -- CRTC

Political correctness run amok Arthur Weinreb Monday, July 19, 2004

The CRTC, an independent government body is out to control the media in such a way that the values of the Liberal Party of Canada and their values only are reflected in programming. We all know from the past election, anyone who does not agree with the Liberals is un-Canadian and does not have so-called Canadian values. [. . . . ]



CRTC: Censoring a voice of reason -- His critics say he is vulgar -- but Jeff Fillion's real 'crime' was that he dared skewer Quebec's sacred cows

Censoring a voice of reason Frederick Tetu, National Post, July 22, 2004

[. . . . ] Observers in the rest of Canada might have already wondered why Quebec's nationalist leaders haven't leapt to Fillion's defence. Think about it: a federal institution, based in Ottawa and headed by an anglophone, closes the most popular radio station in Quebec city, the heart of Quebec's French heartland, for reasons of content. It would seem to be a golden opportunity for the likes of Bernard Landry and Gilles Duceppe to protect les interets du Quebec, and lambaste the CRTC for not being sensitive to francophones' preferences, for not understanding Quebec's unique character, and so forth. Since Quebecers often like to brag that they are more culturally permissive than English Canadians, the CRTC's decision could easily have been cast as an act of Anglo-Saxon Puritanism.

Yet none of this has happened. On the contrary, Agnes Maltais, a former Parti Quebecois minister from Quebec city, and one of the only surviving PQ MNAs in the region, was quick this week to tell anyone who would listen that the CRTC's decision was "une decision juste."

But this sanguine reaction should not come as a surprise. Jeff Fillion -- along with Andre Arthur, the anchor of CHOI's sister station -- has long been disliked by Quebec's separatists.
[. . . . ]

Crime

List of Articles:

* Officer faces charge of releasing driver in return for tickets

* Canada Free Press interviewed by KABC LosAngeles -- Toronto police association caves in to the left

* Student from China charged with killing schoolgirl Cecilia Zhang

* Life was hell, so he turned on the Angels -- Informant who helped RCMP put away three full-patch members of the biker club's Nova Scotia chapter tells Julian Sher he's not a rat; he just wanted to save his family


Officer faces charge of releasing driver in return for tickets

Quote to Note:

Mr. McCormack, who testified at a car dealers' licence hearing about Mr. Geller, was asked to leave his job on the board of the police union but refused.


Officer faces charge of releasing driver in return for tickets Jeff Gray, July 21, 2004

A Toronto Police officer has been charged with accepting hockey tickets from a man he let off after the man refused to give a roadside breath sample, in another example of alleged misconduct at the downtown 52 Division.

Constable Paul Stone is charged with insubordination and misconduct under the Police Services Act after allegedly arresting a man --identified in police documents only as M.A. -- for refusing to provide a breath sample, then releasing him in return for the tickets. The infraction allegedly occurred in February. [. . . . ]

Police Services Act charges are less serious than criminal charges. They carry penalties from reprimands to dismissal. All the charged officers are to make their first appearances at police-headquarters hearings on Sept. 23.


There is more.


Canada Free Press interviewed by KABC LosAngeles -- Toronto police association caves in to the left

Toronto police association caves in to the left Judi McLeod, July 21, 2004

The best way to restore public confidence in our police service is for the police association to clean up its act.
[. . . . ]


Student charged with killing schoolgirl Cecilia Zhang

Student charged with killing schoolgirl Cecilia Zhang Paul Cross, CP, July 22, 04

[. . . . ] Min Chen, 21, a visa student from China, has been charged with first-degree murder, said Peel police Chief Noel Catney.

[. . . . ] Catney said Chen has been in Canada on a student visa from Shanghai since 2001. [. . . . ]


There is more today, here Young man a frequent visitor to Zhang home


Life was hell, so he turned on the Angels -- Informant who helped RCMP put away three full-patch members of the biker club's Nova Scotia chapter tells JULIAN SHER he's not a rat; he just wanted to save his family

Life was hell, so he turned on the Angels July 20, 2004, Julian Sher

He misses the clout the most, the stature that came from being a drug dealer associated with the Hells Angels.

"I miss the perception of power when you walk into a bar -- the visibility and the adulation," says Bill, still an imposing figure at 6 feet, 230 pounds. "If you were in their bars where they fit in, everybody liked you."

And, of course, he misses the cool, hard cash, the $5,000 to $10,000 he pulled in every week from cocaine and hashish sales. "It was easy money," he says with only a trace of wistfulness, "a lazy way to make money."

But bikers and drugs are behind him now. After more than 15 years on the drug scene in Halifax, Bill became a police informant. The two years he spent making undercover drug buys and secret electronic recordings led to the conviction of three members of the Hells Angels chapter in January, 2003. Part of the RCMP's Operation Hammer, those convictions helped shatter the Nova Scotia chapter of the outlaw motorcycle gang.

Bill is in the RCMP's witness-protection program. Neither his name nor location can be revealed. But, for the first time, he has emerged to tell his story as a warning to young people who, like him, are lured by the thrill of the bikers.

"I think a 20-year-old kid should take that first moment that he meets a Hells Angels and he's scared and he should stay scared," Bill warns. "I'm a firm believer in first impressions, and if you were scared of them, there's a reason you were scared of them."
[. . . . ]

UN Vote on the Israeli fence, Tolerance

List of Articles:

* Soft on Islam

* Two Canadian Terror Sites Shut Down

* Why was Canada hiding amongst this group? -- Cameroon, Canada, El Salvador, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Uganda, Uruguay, Vanuatu.

* George Soros Teaches the FBI Tolerance -- The guide grants Arab and Muslim concerns a higher priority than standard law enforcement practices -- Can you believe this?


Soft on Islam

Soft on Islam Klaus Rohrich Thursday, July 22, 2004

Last Sunday a Methodist minister in Coquitlam BC urged his parishioners to go out and set fire to all the area’s mosques. On the same weekend, a Catholic clergyman in Yonkers, N.Y. rigged a couple of his altar boys with dynamite-laden vests and sent them out to blow up the headquarters of the Muslim-American Association of New York. A month previous, a Baptist minister in Atlanta, Georgia called for the eradication of all Muslims and told his church that if they died while engaged in the act of killing Muslim "Infidels", they would be guaranteed a spot in Heaven, at the right hand of Jesus. A Rabbi in Stockholm, Sweden urged his Schul to form up gangs and "smite Muslims, wherever they may find them". [. . . . ]


If that doesn't get you to the Canada Free Press site, nothing will.


Two Canadian Terror Sites Shut Down

Two Canadian Terror Sites Shut Down Sean Beesley

Hamas and Hezbullah will have to find a new home to spread their murderous message, as their Canadian Hosted websites are shut down in British Columbia.

On Monday July 19th Canada Free Press Reported that 19 of 25 or 76 percent of the terror websites listed in a new report by the The Middle East Media Research Institute, were in fact hosted in the United States. While Canada was hosting as least one terrorist website. Following Monday’s report Canada Free Press attempted to contact the companies listed in the MEMRI report for comment. The only Canadian company listed, RackForce Hosting, has taken the issue very seriously and set a strong precedent with their response as described in their official statement. [. . . . ]



Arafat's Pilfered Profits

Arafat's Pilfered Profits Rachel Ehrenfeld, FrontPageMagazine.com | July 22, 2004. *Rachel Ehrenfeld is the author of Funding Evil: How Terrorism is Financed and How to Stop It and is the Director of the American Center for Democracy.

[. . . . ] Arafat’s control of the stolen wealth of the PLO and the Palestinian Authority enables him to continue to call the shots and shoot down, yet again, the prospect of a viable Palestinian State.

Jawad Ghussein, who was the secretary-general of the Palestinian National Fund until 1996, remarked yesterday on the phone from London, "the billions Arafat has stolen over the years from the Palestinian people facilitated the corruption of the Palestinian leadership, and is the source of his power over them." He went on to say that Arafat "took aid money and contributions that were earmarked for the Palestinian people, to his own account." Ghussein was in a position to know: for twelve years, he had deposited $7.5 to $8 million each month into Arafat's personal bank account.

The International Monetary Fund report "Economic Performance and Reforms under Conflict Conditions," released in September 2003 in Abu Dhabi, concluded that $900 million in PA revenues from 69 commercial enterprises belonging to the PA in the West Bank, Gaza and abroad, "disappeared" between 1995 and 2000. The report also found that the 2003 budget for Arafat's office, which totaled $74 million, was missing $34 million that Arafat had transferred to pay unidentified "organizations" and "individuals." Furthermore, the report revealed that at least 8 percent ($135 million) of the PA's annual budget of $1.08 billion is being spent by Arafat at his sole discretion. However, the IMF report did not take into account Arafat's control of 60 percent of the security-apparatus budget, which leaves him with at least an additional $360 million per year to spend as he chooses.

This report was followed by news that in the period between July 2002 and September 2003, Arafat transferred $11.4 million to his wife, Suha's French bank accounts. But recent information reveals that in 1996, Suha Arafat arrived in Buenos Aires with $30 million in cash that she invested in a business with other Palestinians. [. . . . ]


See also: The Arafat File containing these items:

* UN blames Arafat for 'chaos' -- 'Lack of political will' behind lawlessness in Palestinian areas

* Arafat's wife accused of money laundering

* Arafat 'diverted $300m of public money to Swiss bank account'

* Canada's Contribution



Why was Canada hiding amongst this group? -- Cameroon, Canada, El Salvador, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Uganda, Uruguay, Vanuatu.

It couldn't support a democratic country trying to protect its citizens from terrorists?
General Assembly Plenary -- Tenth Emergency Special Session 20 July 2004

The representative of Uruguay said her delegation's abstention should not be seen as disrespect of the International Court of Justice or its advisory ruling. Uruguay had abstained because the text had considered only one side of an issue that everyone recognized was very complex. The issue of the wall should have been considered within the context of the overall situation in the region. By focusing on only one aspect, the Assembly was not contributing to the effort to ensure peace. Uruguay believed that returning to the Road Map was the best way forward.

[. . . . ] The representative of Canada said that, at time of the resolution referring the issue to the International Court of Justice, Canada had questioned whether the request was a useful step, given the highly charged political environment. There were elements of the opinion that reflected Canadian policy on the applicability of international law and opposition to the settlements within the Palestinian territories. Any action by the General Assembly should contribute to advancing a just, lasting and negotiated settlement to the conflict. The ICJ had said that the question of the wall was part of a greater whole. It was the Assembly's responsibility to consider the opinion as part of the greater whole, before adopting a resolution. The draft did not adequately discharge that responsibility.

He said Canada remained concerned with the barrier's adverse effect on the dire socio-economic situation in the occupied Palestinian territory. Although Israel had a duty to protect its citizens, its measures had to be in accordance with applicable humanitarian law. While Canada had concerns regarding the route of the barrier, the issue could not be seen in isolation from Israel's security concerns. Israel had the right to take measures to protect its people, including by restricting access to its territory, but had to do so in accordance with law. It was the responsibility of the international community to help create favourable conditions for the conflict's resolution in the context of the Road Map. . . .


What a pointless Canadian response! What is a country to do in the face of suicide bombers? Wait for the UN?


George Soros Teaches the FBI Tolerance -- The guide grants Arab and Muslim concerns a higher priority than standard law enforcement practices -- Can you believe this?

George Soros Teaches the FBI Tolerance Daniel Pipes and Sharon Chadha, FrontPageMagazine.com | July 22, 2004

The special agent in charge of FBI’s Washington Field Office has participated in a new initiative called the Promising Practices Guide: Developing Partnerships Between Law Enforcement and American Muslim, Arab, and Sikh Communities. This is a worrisome development because that guide’s adoption could significantly impede the war on terror.

[. . . . ] At first glance, this sounds promising, as it offers ways to take advantage of Arab, Muslim and Sikh unique “linguistic skills, information, and cultural insights” to develop new counterterrorism initiatives.

But the guide’s authors, Deborah A. Ramirez, Sasha Cohen O’Connell and Rabia Zafar, quickly alert the reader as to their true agenda. “The most dangerous threats in this war” they write, “are rooted in the successful propagation of anger and fear directed at unfamiliar cultures and people.” The most dangerous threat, they say, is not the very real violence of Islamist terror but the alleged bias of American authorities against some minority populations. The guide might present itself as an aide to counterterrorism but its real purpose is to deflect attention from national security to the privileging of select communities.

[. . . . ] The guide grants Arab and Muslim concerns a higher priority than standard law enforcement practices. For example, the routine rotation of law enforcement personnel is said to obstruct a sense of belonging; Salam Al-Marayati of the Muslim Public Affairs Council complained that “Once you know somebody [within law enforcement], they move [on].” The guide’s authors accept that constant rotations reduce the chance of corruption but nonetheless advocate that these communities be excepted and allowed to develop cozy relations with law enforcement. [. . . . ]

Kennewick Man

'Kennewick man' free to reveal secrets

'Kennewick man' free to reveal secrets Nicholas Kohler, National Post, July 22, 2004

[. . . . ] Despite that tantalizing clue about who first arrived here thousands of years ago, archeologists have been barred from studying Kennewick Man by legal manoeuvres from northwestern U.S. native groups, who claim him as an ancestor.

But last week, the native tribes who sought most actively to recover Kennewick Man from the clutches of scientists surrendered to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeal's February decision that Kennewick Man is not Native American under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

[. . . . ] ''They defined 'Native American,' which is a key term under the statute, as anything that predated 1492,'' Ms. Barran said. ''Which leads to the really easy argument, 'Well heck, if we find a viking sword here -- it's Indian.'' [. . . . ]



If you dig it up, it must be Indian -- No European shrieks when the corpses of Napoleonic soldiers are exhumed

If you dig it up, it must be Indian Colby Cosh, National Post, July 23, 2004

[. . . . ] Maybe it is time to speak of anthropological research as free speech for the dead. The 9,200-year-old skeleton known as Kennewick Man has, since its discovery in Washington State eight years ago, been sitting in a storage bin waiting to tell its story. It's a story that could rearrange the pre-Columbian annals of North America. But some don't want them rearranged, and the whole affair has become a case study in bureaucracy's gift for murdering inconvenient history and generally behaving loathsomely.

Northwestern Indian tribes immediately claimed Kennewick Man as kin in 1996 and claimed proprietorship of his remains under the federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990. NAGPRA provides for tribes to be able to take possession of and reinter an ancestor, forever preventing any invasive scientific fidgeting with his bones. The problem was that Kennewick Man doesn't look like any living racial group's ancestor at all, being morphologically most like the Ainu of Japan (whose own origins are rather clouded and debatable). [. . . . ]


Link to this and find out more.

July 22, 2004

Law and Order Chief Julian Fantino and his Enemies -- He seems to be what Toronto needs; just read the crime reports

List of Articles:

* Julian Fantino has all the right enemies -- You have to love this one!

* Facing Charges are a Former Police Union President and the Son of a Former Police * Chief -- and the union doesn't want Chief Fantino? Could we guess why? -- Cop facing bribery allegation -- hockey tickets accepted: probe

* Union bombshell undermines chief -- no 'confidence' in Fantino: cops

* Chief's fate decided in city hall sandbox

* Second Ecstasy lab bust -- fire crew finds pill press, dope

* Shotgun fired into home

* Armed robbers terrorize captive

* Come clean, mayor: Ootes -- Miller's influence questioned





Julian Fantino has all the right enemies -- You have to love this one!

Julian Fantino has all the right enemies July 22, 2004, John Downing, Toronto Sun

We've been urged in famous quotations to judge a man by his foes as well as by his friends. Wise words!

Which is why I think Julian Fantino should have continued as Toronto's police chief. Just look at his foes!
[. . . . ]



Facing Charges are a Former Police Union President and the Son of a Former Police Chief -- and the union doesn't want Chief Fantino? Could we guess why? -- Cop facing bribery allegation -- hockey tickets accepted: probe

Cop facing bribery allegation July 21, 2004, Alan Cairns, Toronto Sun

[. . . . ] William McCormack Jr., the son of former chief Bill McCormack Sr., faces 25 charges amid allegations that he tipped bar owners of impending liquor and drug probes, ate and drank for free at bars, attended a hockey game for free with a bar owner, attended Woodbine Casino and Casino Rama while on duty, failed to report sex assault allegations and listed himself at work when he wasn't.

McCormack Jr. also faces criminal charges of conspiracy to commit breach of trust, fraud and influence peddling.

Criminal charges have also been laid against Rick McIntosh, who stepped down as police union president in April amid reports he was seen at an illegal gambling den in Vaughan. He faces charges of breach of trust, conspiracy to commit breach of trust and influence peddling. [. . . . ]



Union bombshell undermines chief -- no 'confidence' in Fantino: cops

Union bombshell undermines chief -- no 'confidence' in Fantino: cops July 21, 2004, Rob Granatstein and Alan Cairns, Toronto Sun

TORONTO'S POLICE union has likely driven the final nail in Chief Julian Fantino's coffin, announcing yesterday it backs the move not to rehire the city's top cop. The bombshell came the day before the expected nasty debate today at City Hall, where many councillors are expected to call for the Police Services Board to revisit its decision to dump Fantino.

"We're convinced the vast majority of the people of Toronto agree with the decision made by the Police Services Board to close the book on the Fantino era and move forward," said Al Olsen, acting president of the Toronto Police Association, in a release yesterday.

The letter also slams the chief, saying the force has lost the public's confidence under his watch and has lacked leadership.

Olsen said the union believes "the best way to restore public confidence" in the force is to back the board's June decision not to renew Fantino's contract and look for a new chief. [. . . . ]



Chief's fate decided in city hall sandbox

Chief's fate decided in city hall sandbox Christie Blatchford, July 22, 2004

The attempts of a group of councillors, led by Frances Nunziata and Giorgio Mammoliti, to get on to the floor the subject of Chief Fantino's contract -- a motion to extend it, as the chief wanted, was recently defeated at the police-services board, failing on a tie vote -- were doomed from the get-go.

The keep-the-chief councillors had mustered boxes of petitions, signed by upward of 30,000 citizens, which they were allowed to present to the city clerk. They had also led a group of about 200 in a little rally from police headquarters to city hall in support of the chief, and these folks were welcomed by Mayor David Miller.

But that was the extent of the mayor's largesse.

Sitting in the chair, he said he had done a "full review" of the rules and the Police Services Act both, and determined that "there is no question it is wrong for this council to be debating what is a personnel matter," and promptly ruled Councillor Mammoliti's motion out of order.
[. . . . ]


Second Ecstasy lab bust -- fire crew finds pill press, dope

Second Ecstasy lab bust July 21, 2004, Rob Lamberti, Toronto Sun

MARKHAM FIREFIGHTERS uncovered their second clandestine Ecstasy operation within four days yesterday. The one they found Saturday was reportedly one of North America's largest known labs and was stocked with enough explosive chemicals to wipe out three homes.

Yesterday they found a pill press and kilos of pills in plastic bags in a cold cellar after responding shortly after 9 a.m. to a kitchen fire call at a home at 99 Brunswick St. near Kennedy Rd. and 16th Ave.
[. . . . ]

Cardwell said clandestine drug labs are a burgeoning problem in Ontario: "We've seen a number of murders occurring out west. Right now the government doesn't seem to be addressing it."


Shotgun fired into home

Shotgun fired into home July 21, 2004, Kim Bradley, Toronto Sun

[. . . . ] Const. Ryan Robinson said the motive for the 1:20 a.m. shooting on Larksmere Cr., near Birchmount Rd. and Steeles Ave. E., is still under investigation. "But it's definitely not a random occurrence," he said. [. . . . ]



Armed robbers terrorize captive

Armed robbers terrorize captive July 21, 2004, Kim Bradley, Toronto Sun

YORK POLICE believe an armed gang that has terrorized kitchen staff at three Markham restaurants since May has escalated its crimes to include abducting, beating and robbing a Scarborough man. "We're pretty certain it's the same guys. They just did it a little differently this time," said Det.-Sgt. Fred Moffatt. "It's as invasive a robbery as you can get."

Durham cops called York at 6:20 a.m. Monday after a 36-year-old Scarborough man reported being abducted from Keung's Restaurant on Kennedy Rd. in Markham at 3:30 a.m., then robbed and beaten before being dumped in Oshawa. [. . . . ]



Come clean, mayor: Ootes -- Miller's influence questioned

Come clean, mayor: Ootes July 21, 2004, Rob Granatstein, Toronto Sun

A MEMBER of the Police Services Board is demanding Mayor David Miller come clean on the influence he had on the decision not to extend Chief Julian Fantino's contract. Councillor Case Ootes wrote to Miller yesterday, in a letter obtained by the Toronto Sun, asking the mayor to say when and which board members he told to defer a decision on Fantino's future until the new board was in place in the fall. [. . . . ]


US and Berger, Former National Security Adviser

List of Articles:

Berger key figure in Chinagate -- Klayman: Kerry's choice as adviser shows can't be trusted

Al-Qaida-OKC link included in Berger doc? -- Author: Missing draft possibly presents evidence of Al-Zawahiri visit

Former National Security Adviser Sandy Berger

Democrats target Bush on file theft -- DNC chairman attacks over Berger case, suspecting election-year politics at work





Berger key figure in Chinagate -- Klayman: Kerry's choice as adviser shows can't be trusted

Berger key figure in Chinagate July 21, 2004

Former National Security Adviser Sandy Berger – now the target of an FBI probe – was a key part of a deal the Clinton administration made to secure an illegal $300,000 contribution from the communist Chinese government, one of a number of instances in the 1990s in which he was blamed for security breaches.

"Sandy Berger has misused sensitive information in the past," Larry Klayman, who investigated the Chinagate scandal while chairman of Judicial Watch, told WorldNetDaily.

Klayman, now a U.S. Senate candidate from Florida, led the probe that triggered exposure of an illegal contribution made to Clinton through former Little Rock, Ark., restaurateur Charlie Trie. That deal corresponded with Berger's delivery of a written commitment to China that the U.S. government would not take any action to stop the escalating military actions by Beijing in its attempts to intimidate Taiwan.

[. . . . ] In exchange for allowing U.S. defense contractors to sell technology to China, Beijing poured millions of dollars into Clinton's election campaign. Clinton recieved funds from known or suspected Chinese intelligence agents, including Trie, James and Mochtar Riady of the Indonesian Lippo Group, John Huang and Maria Hsia.

As detailed in Jack Cashill's explosive new book, "Ron Brown's Body," Clinton Commerce Secretary Ron Brown served as a front man in many of the deals. Brown died suddenly in a suspicious April 1996 plane crash just as an investigation got under way. [. . . . ]



Al-Qaida-OKC link included in Berger doc? -- Author: Missing draft possibly presents evidence of Al-Zawahiri visit

Al-Qaida-OKC link included in Berger doc? July 21, 2004, Ron Strom

The woman who wrote the definitive book on a Middle Eastern connection to the Oklahoma City bombing says the classified terror-threat report at the center of a criminal investigation of former Clinton aide Sandy Berger might include information about a high-level al-Qaida operative having visited OKC ahead of the 1995 attack on the Murrah Federal Building.

As WorldNetDaily reported, Berger removed handwritten notes and secret documents from a National Archives reading room prior to his testimony before the 9-11 Commission. One of the documents was the draft of an after-action report he ordered his anti-terror czar, Richard Clarke, to write in early 2000. Berger has spoken publicly about how the review brought to the forefront the realization that al-Qaida had reached America's shores and required more attention. The draft report of the NSC "Millennium After Action Review" addresses the Clinton administration's handling of al-Qaida terror threats during the December 1999 millennium celebration.

Jayna Davis, author of "The Third Terrorist: The Middle Eastern Connection to the Oklahoma City Bombing," points out the writing of the report was in the same timeframe Yossef Bodansky, former director of the Congressional Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare, confirmed that Dr. Ayman Al-Zawahiri, one of al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden's lieutenants, traveled to Oklahoma City in the spring of 1995 " to insure the smooth execution of the pending terrorist strike against the Murrah federal complex," said Davis.

[. . . . ] Bodansky is the author of the new book "The Secret History of the Iraq War," as well as "Bin Laden – The Man Who Declared War on America."

Davis' book documents her contention the government purposefully and willfully ignored evidence that implicated Middle Eastern suspects in the OKC attack – evidence that FBI and governmental sources believe possibly could have prevented the terrorist attacks of 9-11. [. . . . ]



Democrats target Bush on file theft -- DNC chairman attacks over Berger case, suspecting election-year politics at work

Democrats target Bush on file theft July 21, 2004

Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe filed a Freedom of Information Act request today to back his suspicion that the Bush administration publicized the FBI probe of former National Security Adviser Sandy Berger for political purposes.

Berger, who resigned yesterday as a security adviser for the Kerry campaign, is the focus of a Justice Department investigation for removing classified documents and handwritten notes from a secure reading room prior to the Sept. 11 Commission hearings. [. . . . ]


Security and Defense: Airports, Defense Minister Bill Graham and the Military

Airport insecurity

There's been a recent PR attempt by the government to play down the amount of drug activity and how much improved the security is in order to fly under the American radar screen. The Americans aren't buffoons.They realize exactly what is going on here. The Government has given virtually a free ride to crooks and terrorists. They haven't re hired 2500 RCMP officers yet, which would only be a start.

In the Greater Toronto Area. The police are tripping over themselves with the amount of drug operations being carried out in residential areas. This is not being done by Ma & Pa Kettle. Instead of the BS, why doesn't the government provide the tools necessary to protect Canadians? Is Canada a safe haven for crooks and terrorists? Does night follow day?

Airport insecurity July 21, 2004

[. . . . ] Yet there are still dangerous, gaping holes in Canadian air security. These holes were apparent immediately after the Sept. 11 attacks and have become ever more glaring since. They have been pointed out by sources as diverse as the Senate committee on national security and defence, the Auditor-General and this newspaper. But incredibly, the holes remain. Why?

It has been known to Ottawa for 18 months -- since the publication of the Senate's mammoth report, The Myth of Security at Canadian Airports -- that lax security air-side (in the parts of the airport not accessible to passengers) now poses the greatest potential threat to air safety. At Pearson, tens of thousands of employees enter and leave the unseen underbelly of the airport each day, but they're only sporadically searched. The pass-check system is random, not universal.

Likewise, checked baggage is screened only randomly. Total baggage screening won't be introduced until the end of next year. And despite compelling calls for the RCMP to be put in charge of airport security nationwide, it remains primarily the responsibility of privately run local airport authorities -- all 89 of them. Why? [. . . . ]



Bud: Bill Graham moves to the Defense Ministry--alas!

Having distinguished himself with his 'soft power' diplomacy, Graham wants to bring this 'soft power' to the military. Well, that portfolio is a no-brainer (luckily for him) as already there is nothing left in the military except soft power. Oh, Bill will make sure that the forces are kept up to a mini-peacekeeping level. I can almost hear him saying, in his best Colonel Blimp, bombastic way:

"Now, I know that we sent our peacekeepers and Mounties to Haiti a few years ago. You say there was no success, and I say, "Well, it took eight whole years to become a hellhole again. It all depends on your definition of 'success'. Anyway, look at the optics--colourful, vibrant culture, blending the age-old customs and religions of Africa with Canadian disco--a pol's diversity dreamscape. Look! It'll play well in Montreal. Put a thousand more down there."


But maybe I am being unduly critical here. I mean, after all, what a show of force the Kazemi situation presented. He is recalling the ambassador. I am underwhelmed. How about cutting off all trade--except that sacred cow 'oil' of course. I realize that Graham would lose his street creds with that house of horrors that populates the UN General Assembly if he took a principled stand on Israel or the endless slaughter that plagues the Muslim world. But 'soft power' means simply kissing every Third World thug's a**. Now, he is going to bring that same mentality to the military. So they complain about under-funding and under-staffing? So what? When Bill gets through with them their election clout will collectively be that of Amherst, N.S. Any election downside will be seen by Bill as "acceptable collateral damage". The chance of really fighting Islamic terrorism is doomed. Graham is probably saying to his new crew:

"You have to understand that these Afghanis have real bombs and guns We are not going to commit troops against people who defeated the British at the height of their colonial powers. Have The Globe and Mail catalogue our every fallen soldier? No thank you. I have to show some success. In Haiti, they only have machetes and stones, right? Send our boys down there. I think the optics will play well on CBC. Progressive Canada extending its hand to the benighted of Haiti. Oh, yeh, stop mentioning that it was the first free colony in the Northern Hemisphere. It confuses the message."


© Bud

Grits hustle refugee student loans

Grits hustle refugee student loans July 21, 2004, Antonella Artuso, Queen's Park Bureau Chief

REFUGEES AND new immigrants will get faster access to student loans under changes announced yesterday by the Ontario Liberal government. Refugees who have yet to achieve permanent residence status will qualify for some of the $500,000 in new student aid.

The Liberals are also throwing out a requirement that immigrants be in the country for at least 12 months before qualifying for student aid -- a change that will cost $6.8 million. [. . . . ]


Once here, refugees receive access to various taxpayer funded services; now they can go into debt -- and may never get out like the rest of Canada's students. Get them started early, eh? Why?

July 21, 2004

The UN, Israel, the Fence -- Note Canada's "soft power" surge

* The Simon Wiesenthal Center is demanding the United Nations' General Assembly declare suicide bombings a crime against humanity.

* Israel ignores UN vote against security barrier





The Simon Wiesenthal Center is demanding the United Nations' General Assembly declare suicide bombings a crime against humanity.

Wiesenthal Center to UN: Declare suicide bombs crime against humanity Jul. 21, 2004, Tia Goldenberg

The Simon Wiesenthal Center is demanding the United Nations' General Assembly declare suicide bombings a crime against humanity.

The statement came with a denouncement of Wednesday's UN vote, which adopted an anti-security fence resolution, 150 for to 6 against.

"Isn't it remarkable that the dominant issue of our time - terrorism and suicide bombing - has not been taken up by the General Assembly, despite the fact that the terrorist culture of suicide bombings continues to claim an increasing number of innocent Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist and Jewish victims," the Center's Rabbi Marvin Hier and Rabbi Abraham Cooper said.
[. . . . ]

It has been reported that Canada did not vote on a UN resolution that Israel must take down the fence. Why, if it stops suicide bombers? Now stage two of Canada's "soft power" can take place; our minister can stomp his feet, turn his back, and . . . . pout? Have a hissy fit?


Israel ignores UN vote against security barrier

Israel ignores UN vote against security barrier 21 July, 2004, Mark Colvin: Jane Hutcheon on the line from Jerusalem.

JANE HUTCHEON: Well, basically the foreign ministry has said Israel will not stop building, neither will it abdicate its inalienable right to self defence.

[. . . . ] DAN GILLERMAN [Israel's UN Ambassador]: We reject absolutely the attempts to use the law as a political weapon as if the law applies to Israel but does not apply to anyone else. When all is said and done, it is simply outrageous to respond with such vigour to a measure that saves lives and responds with such casual indifference and apathy to the ongoing campaign of Palestinian terrorism that takes lives. This is not justice but a perversion of justice and people of conscience around the world see it as such. [. . . . ]


It makes sense to me.

Aeroflot crashes again

The title in meant mainly in a public relations sense, not that, given their physical crash rate, there isn't a case to be made for the other meaning, as well. This time the story is of a drunken flight crew attacking their Aeroflot passengers [National Post, July 21, 04, A9]. They were so smashed they didn't serve the meal until the plane was in descent, thus spilling the food all over passengers' laps.

The story reminded me of a story of an acquaintance and his only trip with Aeroflot. It was in the late 70's and he had gotten the ticket through a 'bucket shop' agency in London. The flight plan was to go from London to Moscow to Bombay to Bangkok. Price $265. The flight section to Moscow was packed. Pre-teen children were sitting on their parents' laps. A regular meal and bar service were given. Upon arrival in Moscow, all that smiling charm disappeared. The velvet glove voice of the chief steward took on that of a Siberian gulag commandant. "You will leave all paper on the plane. No written material other than work-related papers can accompany you. You will be challenged," With that admonition, passengers left the plane and walked across the tarmac, accompanied on both sides by machine gun-toting police. Suddenly the line stopped dead. The head of the line had come to a metal stairway. There, one by one the passengers had to climb two stories and present their passports, visas and tickets. It took twenty-five minutes just to get into the airport. When they reached the transit lounge, there was a huge sign that said in English. "Welcome to Russia, comrades."

Part of that 'welcome' was for the 18 in-transit passsengers to occupy a room furnished with four plastic chairs (one broken) and no chance to buy anything. There was nothing to do except look at the grimy murals of Lenin and Stalin and the "Smash the Capitalists" propaganda posters which, come to think of it, would have been great souvenirs. It was of husky factory workers trampling a bunch of fat capitalists--one sporting a cumberbund--true capitalist piggies. The females had the forearms and the ham fists of lady wrestlers. They probably didn't put up with sexism, either. Their fresh peasant faces belied the serious a**-kicking capitalists in transit would get if they fooled with the USSR People's Paradise.

One traveller struck up a conversation with an East German, who was going to Bangkok to do engineering work. Along the way, that passenger remarked that the 2:30 flight to Bangkok couldn't come quickly enough since he didn't get one of the four chairs and had to stand. The German looked shocked. "But the Bangkok flight leaves at 2:10, not at 2:30", he said. "No, the ticket says 2:30." The engineer whipped out his own ticket and pointed out the time--2:10. Much laughter ensued as the German queried another German -- who had another flight time of 2:25. Either ineptitude or vast paranoia could account for these discrepancies. It was a good thing those three did not organize a time bet, because all were wrong. At 1:10 p.m., all were awakened from sensory-deprived stupor by a bullhorn voice announcing: "All Bombay/Bangkok passengers will proceed to gate 1. Have your carry-on luggage ready for inspection by customs." Why go through Russian customs? They hadn't been allowed to leave the in-transit room. Still, all meekly complied. Finally, once all safely herded together, they were escorted down a hallway that needed more lightbulbs. At the end, all had to again present passports and tickets for inspection. The gun-toting military met all at the bottom of the stairs, where they were semi-frog marched to the plane they had left. It had only been refueled. One passenger's Time magazine had disappeared.

The plane ascended with its eleven passengers. One of the three who had conferred over departure times tried to sit opposite his new-found German acquaintance but was directed back to his seat by a rather bullish stewardess, who could have been the female in the "capitalism crushed" poster. It was a command, not a request. The East German said, "I'm used to rudeness in East Germany, but this is too much. These airport people must all come from the other side of the mountains. I'll send a beer up to you to show you we communists are not all barbarians like these Russians." Well, he never did, simply because his call (among others) for beer were met with a stern, "Nyet!" Finally, exasperated by their demands, the stewardess walked into the front crew section and never emerged for the remainer of the flight to Bombay. At least Soviet technological backwardness had one advantage. When one hit the mechanism to have the seat decline, the seat collapsed 90 degrees, effectively turning it into a bed. The one who told this story slept through most of the eleven hour flight to Bombay.

© Bud--A new extreme sport for the traveller is there for the picking. Try some of the other Eastern European airlines -- you know, the ones with guillotine metal food trays. Guess what would happen if the plane hit rough weather.

Attention Bloggers: Exploring the Fusion Power of Public and Participatory Journalism

A Groundbreaking Conference: Join the best thinkers in journalism, academia and the blogosphere as we help chart a course for the future of journalism and how it is taught.



Exploring the Fusion Power of Public and Participatory Journalism
August 3, 2004, Toronto, Precedes AEJMC Convention

Participatory journalism tools in the form of weblogs and other electronic communications are changing the face of mass media, but are complementary to public journalism. These are powerful tools as Howard Dean’s campaign proved by using weblogs and MeetUp to get 170,000 people nationwide to sign up for face-to-face meetings. The Daily Kos, a citizen run weblog, has 1.5 million unique visitors a month. These are just two of many impressive examples. Learn how we can borrow from or incorporate these tools to improve the state of journalism.

Walk Away Knowing:

• What journalists can put to use now

• What questions researchers should be asking

• What journalism professors should be teaching

• How citizens around the world can practice participatory journalism

• How to begin building information communities.


There is a fee; however, if you are poor, there is an address to which you may write and you may be able to attend free of charge.

CRTC, Al Jazeera, Epic Backwardness

* Al Jazeera:

* Elmasry: Don't censor the Arab CNN

* Bud: The CNN of the Arab world?

* Letters: Al Jazeera

* Robert Spencer: Jihad TV Comes to Canada


* Jonas: Backwardness on an epic scale





Elmasry: Don't censor the Arab CNN

Don't censor the Arab CNN Mohamed Elmasry, National Post, July 19, 2004

Last week, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission managed to eviscerate free speech in Canada -- under the pretense of protecting us from harm.

For the first time in its history, the CRTC has asked cable television distributors to censor all "abusive" material from a news network, the Arabic-language satellite station al-Jazeera, as a precondition for them carrying its 24-hour-a-day programming.

Why target only al-Jazeera? Why not other networks, such as CNN, BBC or even our CBC?

The new CRTC rules are designed to keep anti-Semitic or other abusive comments off the air. In principle, this apparent concern for human rights is laudable. In practice, however, these limitations will prove virtually impossible to enforce.

To turn commercial distributors into unpaid censors is impractical and flies against any notion that Canada is a liberal democracy whose constitution protects free expression. Moreover, to target only al-Jazeera with this unprecedented condition is beyond discriminatory -- it is racist.

No distributor can afford to monitor a 24/7 news network: Even if they wanted to, the costs of compliance would be astronomical. [. . . . ]



The CNN of the Arab world?

The president of the Canadian Islamic Congress, Mohamed Elmasry, thinks that al-Jazeera should be licenced for cable viewing in Canada. He equates this anti-semetic and anti-western station with CNN. Well, if CNN would have people on who identified all Muslims as corrupt pigs, whose sole interest is to murder all non-Muslims, then it would be like Al-Jazeera's coverage of Israel and the West. It is not unusual for guest speakers on this station to make absurd claims, such as, for example, that the Jews were behind Sept.11, as well as any other terrorist attack committed by Islamic fanatics.

Al-Jazeera fans the flames of hatred towards any belief that is not consistent with their medieval dictums. This Elmasry is the same man who is pushing for Sharia law to be introduced into Canada for Muslims. I would think such a barbaric code would never have a chance; however, not only do we have the Liberals in thrall to the immigrant vote, now we have the loony-left NDP having an influence. As almost all Charter challenges that succeed eminate from the left, anything is possible. My attitude: You want to live under Sharia law or view the terrorist beheadings of Westerners on Al-Jazeera, then move back to the Middle East.

© Bud

Letters: Al Jazeera


ONLINE EXTRA:Our readers on crimes in jail and Al-Jazeera

Bad decision

Re: Al-Jazeera Terms Irk Cable Firms, July 16. Al-jazeera in Canada? OK, but I’m glad the CRTC is at least keeping Fox News out of the country. Tender Canadian minds might frizzle if exposed to a right-of-centre viewpoint, and U.S.-based at that! Without the ongoing protections of such entities as the CRTC, the billion-dollar CBC, the courts, and, the Liberal Party of Canada, this fragile thing we call Canada would simply collapse in a week.

Richard K. Ball, Charlottetown


Another letter --

[. . . . ] It is one thing to have a strong and intelligent point of view based on knowledge and truth, but al-Jazeera encourages the cruelest of human behavior with reporting and editorial content based on perpetuating long standing myths of Jewish blood libels and by relying on the propaganda of Arab dictators as the gospel truth. For those who do not understand the extent of al-Jazeera’s deception, a viewing of its English language web site would be most informative if not disturbing.

Canadians should fear that al-Jazeera may find a Canadian-based audience. Anti-Western sentiment, particularly that based on untruthful information, is a direct threat to Canadian national security. [. . . . ]

Interestingly, CRTC allows Canadians to view the lowest rated of the US-based news channels including CNN, CNN Headline News, CNBC and MSNBC but does not permit the Canadian broadcast of Fox News Channel, the highest rated and most viewed cable news channel in the US. Is CRTC’s mission to ensure the quality of programming made available to Canadians or to appease those among us who would rather kill us? [. . . . ] Jeffrey M. Brown , Thornhill, Ont.



Robert Spencer: Jihad TV Comes to Canada

Robert Spencer, FrontPageMagazine.com | July 20, 2004

[] But the incidents recounted above and others like them suggest that Canada may be getting more than it bargained for. According to a recent report by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, “Terrorism of foreign origin continues to be a major concern in regard to the safety of Canadians at home and abroad. … Canada is viewed by some terrorist groups as a place to try to seek refuge, raise funds, procure materials and/or conduct other support activities. ... Virtually all of the most notorious international terrorist organizations are known to maintain a network presence in Canada.” From the looks of its track record, Al-Jazeera will provide these Canadian-based terrorists with a source of news, encouragement, and instruction.

What’s more, it will serve these radical Muslims as a useful recruiting tool. For jihadist recruiters in Canada, Al-Jazeera is likely to be an electronic madrassa beaming, twenty-four hours a day, the teachings and perspective of radical Islam into the living rooms of Canadian Muslims. Nor will this be a problem for Canada alone: what is to prevent those whom Al-Jazeera radicalizes and recruits for the global jihad from slipping across the border into the Great Satan?



George Jonas: Backwardness on an epic scale

Backwardness on an epic scale
George Jonas, National Post, July 19, 2004

[. . . . ] As a footnote to the decision of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to let al-Jazeera into the country, it seems that our brave broadcast commissars may have remembered that if fence-sitting were an Olympic sport, Canada would invariably bring home the gold.

The CRTC appears to have straddled the fence with admirable aplomb. [. . . . ]

Next item. As the anarchy continued in Gaza City this weekend, with gunmen from rival Palestinian factions burning down Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority offices yesterday, it illustrated again that turmoil in the Muslim world has little to do with Israel's policies, or even with Israel's existence. It would be in a state of upheaval if the Jewish state had never come into being.

Take a list of events: Egypt's use of poison gas against Yemen in the 1960s; the killing of tens of thousands of Syrian citizens by Assad the Elder; the killing of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi citizens by Saddam Hussein; the hundreds of thousands of Muslim casualties on both sides of the Iran-Iraqi war between 1980 and 1988; Saddam's invasion of neighbouring Kuwait; the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan; the global terrorism of al-Qaeda; the Indian-Pakistani nuclear standoff over Kashmir; the kidnappings and killings by Muslim guerrillas in the Philippines; the fratricidal murders in Algeria; the recent Muslim massacres in Indonesia; the current slaughter of black Christians by Arab Muslims in the Sudan -- all these and similar events over the last half century had nothing, nothing whatever, to do with Israel. There wasn't even an indirect connection. Presumably, these events would have occurred if no Jewish state had ever existed or even envisaged. [. . . . ]


Iran--Guerillas, Sikh Terrorist Site, UN--Al-Tuwaitha-Nukes-Humanizing Terrorists

* Gang rivalry leaves one dead at weddings

* Guerrillas claim links to Canada -- Iranians captive in Iraq

* Internet site recruiting for Sikh terrorist group -- 'Younger Babbar Khalsa'

* The UN, Al-Tuwaitha, and Nukes

* Ted Turner Humanizes Terrorists

* Habeas Dangerous





Gang rivalry leaves one dead at weddings

Joel Kom, CanWest News Service, July 20, 2004
EDMONTON - Rivalry between Asian gangsters was blamed for weekend shootings and stabbings that marred two wedding celebrations and left one man dead and another clinging to life, Edmonton police said yesterday. The fight erupted between guests at separate receptions on Saturday night. Police spokesman Andy Weiler said the mayhem began when gang members from one party came into contact with enemy gang members from the other party. Tap Cong Tran, 24, of Edmonton, died at the scene after being stabbed. Meanwhile, a 20-year-old man continues to cling to life after suffering major head trauma.



Guerrillas claim links to Canada -- Iranians captive in Iraq

Guerrillas claim links to Canada -- Iranians captive in Iraq Stewart Bell, National Post, July 19, 2004

Canadian government officials visited a former Iranian guerrilla base north of Baghdad last month and met with dozens of detained members of a militant group who say they come from Canada.

After reports U.S. troops were holding several Canadian members of an outlawed faction called Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), Ottawa dispatched two envoys to the group's headquarters.

Thirty-seven of the MEK members told the officials they were Canadian citizens or landed immigrants, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. In all, 81 are claiming links to Canada, a lawyer said.

Authorities are trying to verify their immigration status. They are being held at Camp Ashraf, which was the MEK's military headquarters until U.S. forces captured and disarmed it last year.

The MEK is a militant group that has been fighting for more than two decades to overthrow the Iranian government. Saddam Hussein financed the group and gave it a military base for staging attacks against his neighbour. [. . . . ]



Internet site recruiting for Sikh terrorist group -- 'Younger Babbar Khalsa'

Internet site recruiting for Sikh terrorist group -- 'Younger Babbar Khalsa' Kim Bolan, CanWest, July 19, 2004

VANCOUVER - A group claiming to be a new version of the banned Babbar Khalsa terrorists is recruiting on the Internet.

An e-mail on a chat room hosted by Waheguroo is inviting anyone over 18 to apply with their phone number and home country to join the "Younger Babbar Khalsa (Shaheed Talwinder Singh Parmar branch)."

Mr. Parmar, a former Burnaby. B.C., resident who founded the Babbar Khalsa, was a suspect in the Air-India bombing when he was killed in the custody of Punjab police in 1992.

The e-mail writer, who identifies himself as Harmanjit Singh Khalsa, said it is difficult to fire up the Sikh separatist movement again because the India Congress party government has appointed a Sikh, Manmohan Singh, as President.

Mr. Khalsa suggests waiting for the Hindu-led BJP to take power again for "the movement to start again from the ground."

In the meantime, he suggests, "what we can do is get those responsible for attacks on Sikhs during the militant days."

One of the people named is K.P.S. Gill, the former head of the Punjab police who rid the state of Sikh separatists with an aggressive campaign in 1992 that saw many leaders, including Mr. Parmar, captured and killed.

In other e-mails on the same Web site, several people talk of what they can do to kill Mr. Gill, who is retired and lives in Delhi. [. . . . ]



The UN, Al-Tuwaitha, and Nukes

The UN, Al-Tuwaitha, and Nukes The UN, Al-Tuwaitha, and Nukes, The American Thinker, July 20, 2004

The UN’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), was very upset last week that the US had shipped about 1.8 tons of low-enriched uranium and other radioactive material out of Iraq for disposition in the US. One would think that the IAEA would have appreciated our work in assisting them in the implementation of the provisions of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in this particularly volatile region of the world. But one would be wrong.

The actions, or more appropriately, the inactions of the IAEA regarding Iraq since the end of Gulf War I, betray the agency’s true agenda. Rather than inspect, report, and implement restrictions in accordance with the provisions in the treaty, the agency has in effect become an enabler of rogue nations who are attempting, or who have already succeeded in developing or acquiring special nuclear material and equipment. In other words, the IAEA is simply a reflection of its parent organization, which routinely delays and obfuscates the efforts of the US and the UK in controlling banned substances and delivery systems.

Time after time, the agency has either intentionally or naively bought into the lies and deceptions contrived by nations of the Axis of Evil during IAEA visits and inspections. In most cases, the IAEA avoids confrontation like the plague in order to maintain access to the facilities. If they are booted out, as was the case with North Korea, their impotence is on display for all to see. In other cases, the agency joins in the deception, thereby allowing these rogue states to level the nuclear playing field with the West and Russia. Their reaction to the shipment of nuclear material out of Saddam’s nuclear research center at Al-Tuwaitha is a perfect example of this tactic. [. . . . ]



Ted Turner Humanizes Terrorists

William R. Hawkins, FrontPageMagazine.com | July 20, 2004

The great argument of American civilization at this time is between those who covet our heritage and those who disdain our collective achievements. An example of this liberal Anglo-American antipathy to the accomplishments of Anglo-American civilization is on display in the new TNT mini-series "The Grid." On first impression, the show has the trappings of an "imperial adventure." The story involves a team of American and British counter-terrorist agents working to break a new global Muslim jihadist network that has launched a deadly Sarin gas attack in London. The series, which is to run on Monday nights from its two-hour premiere July 19 to its conclusion August 9, is a collaborative effort of Turner Network Television and the BBC.

In the name of what liberals call "realism," writers for "The Grid" sought to avoid black and white, us-versus-them stereotypes. As one promotional item on "The Grid" website stated, "Perhaps not every viewer will be ready to accept non-stereotypical terrorists, characters who aren't extremists in every way, characters who are depicted in such a way that we can actually begin to relate to them. But executive producers Tracey Alexander and Brian Eastman believe portraying these characters is an essential step in creating a better, more peaceful world." Or as Alexander puts it: "I think not only is it really important to look around the world and see what's going on, but also to look at the way people see us and are judging us. It's really the only way we can hope to kind of cook up some understanding." [. . . . ]



Habeas Dangerous

Henry Mark Holzer, FrontPageMagazine.com | July 20, 2004

Late last month, the Supreme Court of the United States decided its first three War-on-Terrorism cases. It’s bad enough that two of the three decisions considerably weaken the President’s power as constitutional Commander-in-Chief to fight that war, exemplify judicial activism at its worst, and again expose the Court as an Orwellian “more equal than others” branch of government. Worse, is that the decision in the third case – Rasul v. Bush – augurs ill not only for the War-on-Terrorism, but for all future United States military actions. To understand the importance of Rasul and the danger it poses to America’s national security, it is necessary to examine first the other two cases.

Rumsfeld v. Padilla. An American citizen, Jose Padilla (the so-called “dirty bomber”) was arrested in Chicago, brought to New York, later designated an “enemy combatant,” and given into military custody in South Carolina. Assigned counsel sought habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (in Manhattan), challenging Padilla’s detention.

In a narrow technical decision, the Supreme Court held that Padilla’s lawyer had sued in the wrong jurisdiction. Since the “immediate custodian” who had control of enemy combatant Padilla was the warden of the naval brig in South Carolina, that jurisdiction, not New York, was where the alleged dirty bomber’s case belonged. Accordingly, the Supreme Court told Padilla that if he wanted to challenge the detention, he would have to re-file his case in the South Carolina federal court. Thus, Padilla decided nothing substantive—the case only further defined the statutory meaning of “immediate custodian.” (Justices Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg and Breyer were prepared, knowingly, to misinterpret the habeas corpus statute and reach the merits because Padilla’s claims, apparently unlike the plain meaning of a venerable federal statute, were “important”). [. . . . ]


Three Articles

* MDs urged to battle prostitution laws

* Limo driver lured girls to sex ring, police say -- Charged with prostitution of 15-year-olds

* A confederation of Angels: One man's dream come true -- The Hells Angels only in Canada





MDs urged to battle prostitution laws

MDs urged to battle prostitution laws Margaret Munro, CanWest, July 20, 2004

Canada's leading medical journal is urging doctors to lobby the federal government to change Canada's "hypocritical" prostitution laws.

The Canadian Medical Association Journal says current laws favour people buying sex and high-end escort services, while street prostitutes are put at risk.

"Physicians should urge federal politicians to repeal all prostitution laws" and start over in a bid to reduce the harm and deaths associated with the sex trade, the journal's editors write in today's issue.

The editorial, accompanied by a commentary by prostitution expert John Lowman of Simon Fraser University, deplores the hypocrisy of the "two-tier sex trade" that now exists in Canada -- the off-street licensed trade and the black-market street trade. [. . . . ]

Mr. Lowman, who has studied prostitution since 1977, says "we need to create viable opportunities for people to leave prostitution if they so choose, and we need to get prostitution off the street so children and youths cannot be lured into it, unaware of what they are getting into. In the short term, we need to figure out where adult prostitution can occur in a way that minimizes health risks."

He says reconvening the parliamentary committee on prostitution law reform is an "indispensable first step" in developing policies to address the plight of street prostitutes. The committee was dissolved before the election.



Limo driver lured girls to sex ring, police say -- Charged with prostitution of 15-year-olds

Limo driver lured girls to sex ring, police say -- Charged with prostitution of 15-year-olds Siri Agrell, National Post, July 19, 2004

TORONTO - Manicures, makeup and dinners out were the rewards four 15-year-old Ontario girls received after being allegedly being forced into a prostitution ring by a 61-year-old limousine driver.

Peel Regional police arrested a Brampton man last week after receiving a complaint from one of the girls, who detectives say were rented out to stag parties.

The man had apparently met the teens, three from London and one from Mississauga, on an Internet chat site where he had advertised for models.

When the girls arrived in Brampton, police allege he put them to work as prostitutes, driving them to stag parties after receiving orders on his cellphone, and waiting for them outside in his airport limousine. [. . . . ]

It is not illegal to have consensual sex with a 15-year-old, but paying for such services is a crime.

Piara Marok has been charged with obtaining juvenile prostitution and will appear in court on Aug. 9.



A confederation of Angels: One man's dream come true -- The Hells Angels only in Canada

A confederation of Angels: One man's dream come true Globe and Mail, Biker Series, Tu Thanh Ha, July 19, 2004

MONTREAL -- Walter Stadnick had a dream.

[. . . . ] "The Hells Angels only, throughout Canada, with no other biker clubs," Stéphane Sirois recalled Mr. Stadnick saying.

The gang's hold over the country would be so strong that the bikers' "bottom rockers" -- patches on the back bottom of their vests that show which province or city they represent -- would say only "Canada," Mr. Stadnick told him.

At the time of that 1996 conversation, the gang had chapters in Nova Scotia, Quebec and British Columbia. The Prairies and the rich Ontario market remained out of reach.

But less than five years later, local bikers in both areas had "patched over." Ontario alone was suddenly home to one of the world's largest concentrations of Hells Angels.

Mr. Stadnick's dream was reality.

Walter (Nurget) Stadnick, 51, born Wolodumyr Stadnik, is a secretive man little known to the public. But as architect of that great expansion, he is one of Canada's most pivotal organized-crime figures.

His recent trial in Montreal gave a rare look at his life and the gang's inner workings. It showed how he and his Hells Angels sidekick Donald (Pup) Stockford -- two English-speakers in the sea of francophones who formed the gang's power base in Quebec -- were behind the arrival in Ontario of the world's mightiest biker gang.


July 19, 2004

Those Who Ride Bikes in Groups

List of Articles: There is an earlier compilation below.

* Those Who Ride Bikes in Groups

* Globe and Mail Launches Investigative Series on Hells Angels

* Part I: Iona Station, Ont. — This is where the war began

* When Hell comes to town -- The Hells Angels' Ontario invasion is sometimes raw and violent, sometimes slick and quiet -- canada.com





Globe and Mail Launches Investigative Series on Hells Angels

Globe and Mail Launches Investigative Series on Hells Angels

TORONTO, July 16 /CNW/ - Starting this Saturday, July 17, The Globe and Mail, Canada's National Newspaper, will launch a four-part series on the Hells Angels. Through in-depth investigative reports, the newspaper will explore the biker gang's expansion in Ontario, its control of a cocaine empire, and the unique challenges it presents to police and prosecutors.

"Most Canadians have no appreciation of the scope of the Hells Angels' criminal activities or of the aggressive and sophisticated expansion of its operations in Canada," said Edward Greenspon, Editor-in-Chief, The Globe and Mail. "Not only does this series look at how the Hells Angels operate but also at the devastating impact they have on communities and individuals."

The Hells Angels Series 'Power of the Patch' will examine:

- the development of the Hells Angels' massive cocaine business in Ontario;

- the two very different responses of two Canadian cities to the presence of the Hells Angels in their community;

- how Walter Stadnick, 'the ambassador of the Hells Angels', has helped build a nation-wide criminal organization;

- the life of a drug dealer formerly associated with the Hells Angels now turned police informant;

- the regrets of a businessman who was extorted by the Hells Angels, agreed to testify against them, and today is in a witness protection program;

- and the challenges facing law enforcement in prosecuting the gang.



Part I: Iona Station, Ont. — This is where the war began.

Part I: Iona Station, Ont. — This is where the war began. Timothy Appleby and Michael den Tandt, Globe and Mail, July 17, 04

It was Oct. 22, 1999, a blustery Friday. Wayne (Wiener) Kellestine, the grizzled boss of the St. Thomas Loners and one of the most feared bikers in Ontario, was off to a wedding.

For weeks, the world's most powerful biker gang had courted the Loners, hoping to assimilate them and gain a beachhead in the lucrative Southwestern Ontario drug trade. For weeks, thanks to Mr. Kellestine's obdurate sense of independence, they had failed.

But within moments of his 4-by-4 pulling up to the deserted crossroad in this sleepy hamlet southwest of London, Ont., Mr. Kellestine would discover an elemental truth about the Hells Angels: They don't take no for an answer.

Before it was over, this bustling city of 360,000 would see an unprecedented — for Ontario — mobilization of public opinion against outlaw bikers. The Hells Angels nonetheless succeeded in becoming the dominant organized criminal presence in the area, as they have across Canada. [. . . . ]

But for the most part, London's Hells Angels are staying out of the public eye. As they burrow deeper into the community and become more adept at insulating themselves with proxies, they're getting harder to stop. The big reason is fear — the power of the patch.

"Guys don't want to tell," one police officer flatly declared.

"You do your six months, nine months, 18 months, get out in good time, you're in good standing with the club. Anybody in their right mind would take that over giving evidence and putting up with what the H.A. would do to you."



When Hell comes to town -- The Hells Angels' Ontario invasion is sometimes raw and violent, sometimes slick and quiet.

When Hell comes to town July 17, 2004, Timothy Appleby and Michael den Tandt tell the tales of two cities

Although their formal presence in London dates back only three years, the Hells Angels now have extensive interests in the city's strip clubs, tattoo parlours and half-dozen exotic-massage joints (called "rub 'n' tugs" by the locals). They or their associates hold interests in at least two car dealerships. They're deeply involved, police say, in intimidation and extortion. And, as in the rest of Ontario, they do a booming trade in cocaine, ecstasy, marijuana and prescription drugs.

Nowadays, London's Hells Angels and their associates rarely swill cheap beer in dingy bars with their Harleys parked outside, sources say. They drive BMWs and Hummers and frequent martini bars with dress codes. Their links with legitimate businesses are extensive.

Indeed, some wealthy Angels associates here are more influential than many full-patch gang members, sources say. They choose not to wear a patch because "they don't want the heat," a police officer says.

But for all their wealth, the Hells Angels' hold on the city's underworld is still founded on the threat of mayhem. In contrast to nearby communities such as Kitchener-Waterloo -- where the Angels vigorously promote themselves as good citizens -- intimidation, beatings and other violence, much of it drug-related, are common.

[. . . . ] "What we hear on the street is that 80 to 90 per cent of the cocaine is coming through the H.A.," said a police officer attached to the local Biker Enforcement Unit. "When you arrest someone in possession of cocaine and ask them, it's usually the same thing: 'It's Hells Angels coke.' "


The series includes:

[July 17] Front: An empire of cocaine

Focus: A tale of two cities

MONDAY: Ambassador for the Hells Angels

TUESDAY: The perils of testifying against a Hells Angel

THURSDAY: The challenge of putting outlaw bikers behind bars

Compilation

List of Articles:

* 5 men, youth appear in British court in alleged bomb plot involving Canadian -- but we have no terrorists here

* Cybercast News Service -- Terrorist Money Laundering

* Trudeaupia: Ethnic crime gangs -- The Rise of Middle Eastern Crime in Australia

* Five strategists, four questions

* Link Byfield -- Mumbo-jumbo

* Coyne on the CRTC Decision -- a must read

* Colby Cosh: In the name of the public good

* Cosh on Conservatives, Harper

* Spanish Judge: Morocco Biggest Terror Threat to Europe

* Expert: Spain Ignored Mosque Tied to Bombs

* Michael Coren: Religious hatred has to be stopped -- We probably all agree on that; it's the how that is the problem

* West Nile victims young and old fighting pain, fatigue

* New sleeper worm has political link

* RCMP aids Olympic security

* The new face of policing: 900 retirements anticipated -- "almost 800 officers who left in 2001 and 2002"

* DNA databank to cost $30M: RCMP

* New tricks for T.O. 'students' -- Foreign escorts are big business

* Fantino pals pitch public -- petition total reaches 15,000 -- People want law and order (keepthechief.ca)

* Amalgamation was no bargain

* Update: Elections Canada to charge Moore -- What about those who brought Moore's film to Canada to influence the election?

* Industry resists rules to police trading -- Firms left to adopt their own policies

* Another article on the whistleblowers that were fired at Health Canada




5 men, youth appear in British court in alleged bomb plot involving Canadian -- but we have no terrorists here

5 men, youth appear in British court in alleged bomb plot involving Canadian -- Kevin Ward, Canadian Press, July 17, 2004

LONDON (CP) - Five men and a 17-year-old accused of conspiring with a Canadian man in an alleged British bomb plot made a brief court appearance Friday.

The men and the youth, who cannot be named because of his age, spoke only to confirm their names during the hearing to review a timetable for the release of evidence to defence lawyers. A similar hearing will be held Oct. 15.

Momin Khawaja, 25, an Ottawa software developer, has been named as a co-conspirator in the case. He was denied bail in May by an Ontario Court justice when he appeared on charges that the RCMP say are related to the alleged British plot.

Khawaja has been charged by the RCMP with participating in or contributing to the activities of a terrorist group and facilitating terrorist activity. The charges fall under Canada's anti-terrorism law.

The five men charged in Britain were among eight people arrested March 30 during anti-terrorist raids in and around London in which police seized 600 kilograms of ammonium nitrate fertilizer from a self-storage warehouse.

Anthony Garcia, 21, Omar Khyam, 22, Jawad Akbar, 20, Waheed Mahmoud, 32, and the 17-year-old appeared at the Old Bailey court charged with conspiracy to cause explosions, an offence that falls under ordinary criminal law. The maximum sentence is life imprisonment.

A sixth man, Nabeel Hussein, 19, was charged under anti-terrorism legislation with possessing the fertilizer for possible use in "the commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism." [. . . . ]



Trudeaupia: Ethnic crime gangs -- The Rise of Middle Eastern Crime in Australia

I would like to thank the person who led me to this.

Ethnic crime gangs
July 1, 04

Here's a very disturbing article by a retired cop in Australia about the hand-off treatment Australian cops are required to give ethnic crime gangs:

In hundreds upon hundreds of incidents police have backed down to Middle Eastern thugs and taken no action and allowed incidents to go unpunished. Again I stress the unbelievable influence that local politicians and religious leaders played in covering up the real state of play in the south-west.


Are there any Canadian cops out there with similar stories in Toronto, Montreal or Vancouver? Anonymity can be assured.

Jaeger


This link led to The Rise of Middle Eastern Crime in Australia Volume XLVIII Number 1 - January-February 2004, Tim Priest

I BELIEVE that the rise of Middle Eastern organised crime in Sydney will have an impact on society unlike anything we have ever seen.

In the early 1980s, as a young detective I was attached to the Drug Squad at the old CIB. I remember executing a search warrant at Croydon, where we found nearly a pound of heroin. I know that now sounds very familiar; however, what set this heroin apart was that it was Beaker Valley Heroin, markedly different from any heroin I had seen. Number Four heroin from the golden triangle of South-East Asia is nearly always off-white, almost pure diamorphine. This heroin was almost brown.

But more remarkable were the occupants of the house. They were very recent arrivals from Lebanon, and from the moment we entered the premises, we wrestled and fought with the male occupants, were abused and spat at by the women and children, and our search took five times longer because of the impediments placed before us by the occupants, including the women hiding heroin in baby nappies and on themselves and refusing to be searched by policewomen because of religious beliefs. We had never encountered these problems before.[. . . . ]

I wonder whether the inventors of the racial hatred laws introduced during the golden years of multiculturalism ever took into account that we, the silent majority, would be the target of racial violence and hatred. I don’t remember any charges being laid in conjunction with the gang rapes of south-western Sydney in 2001, where race was clearly an issue and race was used to humiliate the victims. But then, unbelievably, a publicly-funded document produced by the Anti-Discrimination Board called “The Race for Headlines” was circulated, and it sought not only to cover up race as a motive for the rapes, but to criticise any accurate media reporting on this matter as racially biased. It worries many operational police that organisations like the Anti-Discrimination Board, the Privacy Council and the Civil Liberties Council have become unaccountable and push agendas that don’t represent the values that this great country was built on.

MANY OF YOU would have heard of the horrific problems in France with the outbreak of unprecedented crimes amongst an estimated five million Muslim immigrants. Middle Eastern males now make up 45,000 of the 90,000 inmates in French prisons. There are no-go areas in Paris for police and citizens alike. The rule of law has broken down so badly that when police went to one of these areas recently to round up three Islamic terrorists, they went in armoured vehicles, with heavy weaponry and over 1000 armed officers, just to arrest a few suspects. Why did it need such numbers? Because the threat of terrorist reprisal was minimal compared to the anticipated revolt by thousands of Middle Eastern and North African residents who have no respect for the rule of law in France and consider intrusions by police and authority a declaration of war.

The problems in Paris in Muslim communities are being replicated here in Sydney at an alarming rate. Paris has seen an explosion of rapes committed by Middle Eastern males on French women in the past fifteen years. The rapes are almost identical to those in Sydney. They are not only committed for sexual gratification but also with deep racial undertones along with threats of violence and retribution. What is more alarming is the identical reaction by some sections of the media and criminologists in France of downplaying the significance of race as an issue and even ganging up on those people who try to draw attention to the widening gulf between Middle Eastern youth and the rest of French society.

That is what we are seeing here. The usual suspects come out of their institutions and libraries to downplay and even cover up the growing problem of Middle Eastern crime. Why? My opinion, for what it’s worth, is that these same social engineers have attempted to redefine our society. They have experimented with all manner of institutions, from prisons to mental institutions and recently to policing.
[. . . . ]


This is well worth reading -- a talk by a retired detective. Do link.


Cybercast News Service -- Terrorist Money Laundering

Tearful FBI Agent Apologizes To Sept. 11 Families and Victims Jeff Johnson, CNSNews.com Congressional Bureau Chief, May 30, 2002
Editor's note: Corrects length of investigation to four years rather than ten.

Capitol Hill (CNSNews.com) - In a memorandum written 91 days before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, an FBI agent warned that Americans would die as a result of the bureau's failure to adequately pursue investigations of terrorists living in the country.

FBI Special Agent Robert Wright, Jr., who wrote the memo, led a four-year investigation into terrorist money laundering in the United States. [. . . . ]

Wright had written a manuscript, entitled "Fatal Betrayals of the Intelligence Mission," for presentation to Congress.

"The manuscript outlines, in very specific detail, what I believe allowed September 11th to happen," he explained.

Wright spearheaded the investigation code-named "Vulgar Betrayal," which led to the 1998 seizure of $1.4 million of U.S. funds "destined for terrorist activities."

The investigation determined that U.S.-based Hamas terrorists were using not-for-profit organizations "to recruit and train terrorists and fund terrorist activities in the United States and abroad, including the extortion, kidnapping, and murder of Israeli citizens."

The criminal investigations were initiated over the objections of FBI intelligence officers, who Wright charges did not want their probes of terrorist suspects interrupted or ended by the suspects' arrests for criminal activities.



Linda Frum: Five strategists, four questions

Five strategists, four questions Linda Frum, National Post, July 17, 2004

Last month, the Liberals won their fourth straight federal election. Linda Frum asked five prominent conservative strategists what the Conservatives got wrong in the recent campaign and what -- if anything -- party leader Stephen Harper can do next time around to reverse the trend.

WHAT WAS THE BIGGEST MISTAKE THE CONSERVATIVES MADE IN THE CAMPAIGN?

Alister Campbell, former advisor to former Ontario premier Mike Harris: "Underestimating the willingness of the Liberals to go negative, stay negative and never blink about using the Big Lie."

[. . . . ] Rod Love, former chief of staff to Ralph Klein: "The same mistake all the parties made: not talking frankly about practical solutions to real problems faced by Canadians in their everyday lives."

WILL A FEDERAL PARTY WITH TRUE CONSERVATIVE PRINCIPLES EVER BE ELECTABLE IN CANADA?

[. . . . ] Hartt: "If the Conservatives gravitate from principled conservatism to the mushy middle, they will only be elected when the electorate is fed up with the real Liberals. What the Party needs to do now is to hold a policy convention designed to explain and popularize why conservative ideas are actually better for people than cost-inefficient government give-away programs. This can be done by using a format for the convention whereby well-known, eloquent spokespersons for the conservative view lead the discussion on each topic instead of the classic resolution-debate-vote-resolution-debate-vote format. The outcome would be a locus classicus of party orthodoxy, and an antidote to accusations of hidden agendas."

Love: "Yes. This time, Canadians voted for the crooks they knew, as opposed to the Conservatives they didn't know. Next time, they'll vote for a Conservative they know, because the crooks can't change their ways."

CAN A LEADER WHO WASN'T BORN IN QUEBEC EVER HOPE TO BECOME PRIME MINISTER?

[. . . . ]

WHEN WILL THE NEXT ELECTION BE AND HOW WILL IT COME ABOUT?

[. . . . ] Grey: "Within two years. Paul Martin will try to tell the world: 'Jack Layton made me do it' when it comes to enormous spending increases. But it won't hold together for too long. The Bloc will not force an election any time. They will never have it as good as they have it right now.

Love: "The Liberals will choose some empty but symbolic motherhood issue to be defeated upon in the House, and go to the polls with a call for voters to punish the opposition for "plunging this country into an unnecessary election." It won't work.



Link Byfield -- Mumbo-jumbo

That al Jazeera made it this far in Canada is a farce while RAI and Fox didn't. Al Jazeera is a non credible outfit and a propaganda machine not merely an ordinary entertainment or news channel. I notice Mr. ElMasry of Waterloo Computer Engineering Department has written a defense of Al Jazeera in today's National Post (July 19, 04).

Mumbo-jumbo July 16, 2004, Link Byfield, Calgary Sun

[. . . . ] In a new book, Democracy Off Balance, Ontario lawyer Stefan Braun demolishes the whole idea that governments can protect us from "hate speech."

The first problem, says Braun, is that nobody can objectively distinguish between "hate" and mere criticism.

The second problem is that anti-hate laws are (inevitably) group-oriented, and discriminate constantly between groups that have the sympathy of governments and others that don't.
Third, says Braun, even though the CRIMINAL law defines "hatred and contempt" very strictly, no such care is exercised by non-criminal tribunals and commissions (like the CRTC), human rights commissions, professional discipline bodies (teachers, lawyers, media, doctors), and interest groups (for women, gays, ethnics, etc.).

Soon, everyone in society is afraid to say anything critical of members of groups with an inside political track.

Finally, says Braun, hate laws of all sorts are aimed squarely at preventing the public from receiving an idea, for fear people will believe something they shouldn't (reread that CRTC quotation above).

That is, the public is assumed too gullible to see through it, or too prejudiced to try.
If this is true, we should ditch democracy. People who are too inept to choose what they read and hear are too stupid to elect governments.

And if this isn't true, we should ditch hate laws.

They aren't necessary.



Coyne on the CRTC Decision -- a must read



[. . . . ] Few Canadians can be familiar with how tightly the CRTC has woven itself into the industry's day-to-day operations, in the sacred name of Canadian content. Every minute of every hour broadcast by every outlet in the country is monitored, recorded and categorized, depending on how many gaffers and key grips were Canadian and whether the script involved recognizably Canadian themes. Nor is this concern restricted to safe areas like culture: the CRTC once ordered a Windsor-area radio station to stop broadcasting so much U.S. news.

But that's just one of the many concerns that worry the CRTC's head. There is also the urgent need to prevent . . . .

And all to the boisterous applause of the numerous client groups that have grown up around it: broadcasters, cable and satellite operators, film and television producers, the recording industry, and so on. It's all very well for the cable industry to complain, in response to the Al Jazeera decision, that "cable companies do not want to be forced into the position of having to decide what is appropriate for Canadians to watch." But that is precisely what the industry was built on.



Colby Cosh: In the name of the public good

In the name of the public good July 14

In recounting CHOI host Jeff Fillion's railleries against foreign students and chesty newsreaders, the Globe neglects to mention one of the complaints that got CHOI heaved into oblivion:

106. In March 2003, Astral Broadcasting Group Inc., the Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership (Bell ExpressVu) and Cogeco Radio-TV complained that host Jean-François Fillion promoted piracy on the air by urging his listeners to pirate Bell ExpressVu and Vidéotron ltée. signals and that the host was thereby seriously and deliberately undermining the Canadian broadcasting system. Several pages of stenographic notes were appended to the complaints, which contained six comments to the following effect: [. . . . ]



Cosh on Conservatives, Harper

Cosh on Conservatives, Harper

What I've heard since the election is a disguised universal clamour from Eastern Canadian Conservatives for another Brian Mulroney--someone who can build a coalition including the West while keeping the West in its place. You should notice that this tacit longing is being expressed mostly by advocates of the PC-Alliance merger, which lost a net 45% of the Ontario PC vote from 2000 and was hence a near-total failure. But advocates of the New Mulroney strategy will not apologize: the merger is merely a foundation for the future, they'll say.

The strategy seems to be predicated on the idea--I am dignifying a psychological defence mechanism here with the term "idea"--that Harper's Alberta origins (as a politician) had nothing to do with his failure to fulfill the promise of his campaign's first days. It also tacitly proposes that a Calgarian will serve just as well to reconstruct the Conservative Party in Quebec (and Ontario) as a boy from Baie Comeau. Shucks, who'd ever think otherwise?
It's charming, really, to witness how far central Canadians--and brilliant ones at that--will press these points. [. . . . ]



Spanish Judge: Morocco Biggest Terror Threat to Europe

Spanish Judge: Morocco Biggest Terror Threat to Europe July 16, 04, AP

MADRID, Spain — Europe's biggest terrorist threat is Morocco (search) — seething with as many as 1,000 Al Qaeda adherents capable of homicide attacks and skilled at slipping through the continent's southern gateway, Spain's leading anti-terrorism judge testified Thursday.

The impoverished kingdom just a short ferry ride across the Strait of Gibraltar has about 100 Al Qaeda (search)-linked cells that raise money by dealing hashish, fencing luxury cars and smuggling people into Spain, Judge Baltasar Garzon (search) told lawmakers investigating the Madrid train bombings. Most of the 17 suspects jailed in the March 11 bombings, which killed 190 people, are Moroccan.

"They use every means and mechanism, and their activity can even be initially perceived as ordinary delinquency," Garzon said of the cells.

"In my opinion it is the gravest problem Europe faces today with this kind of terrorism."
Garzon said his figures came from police and intelligence data. [. . . . ]



Expert: Spain Ignored Mosque Tied to Bombs

Expert: Spain Ignored Mosque Tied to Bombs Jul 14, 04, Daniel Woolls, AP

MADRID, Spain - The Spanish government deliberately ignored a mosque known for fundamentalist preachings and frequented by suspects in the Madrid train bombings because the facility was financed by Saudi Arabia, an academic expert testified Wednesday.

Spanish authorities knew for years the city's largest mosque, the Islamic Cultural Center, adhered to the Wahabi fundamentalist movement sponsored by Saudi Arabia, Islam expert Jesus Nunez told a commission investigating the March 11 bombings.

Authorities did nothing to monitor the mosque because Saudi Arabia provides Spain with oil, Nunez said. [. . . . ]



Religious hatred has to be stopped -- We probably all agree on that; it's the how that is the problem

Religious hatred has to be stopped July 17, 2004, Michael Coren, Toronto Sun

FRANCE WAS briefly in shock last week over an alleged attack on a woman and her 13-month old baby.

The woman was lying, and may be mentally ill. But the blanket coverage of this case throughout France has forced the country to ask some difficult and painful questions.

People believed the story precisely because there has been an explosion in the number of anti-Semitic attacks in the past few years. Put simply, they weren't surprised.

To generalize about the country and its history would be wrong. Yet the French have long shaken their heads in disbelief when they recall the collaboration of Vichy France and the relative failure of resistance in the occupied part of the country.

Compared to the collective defiance of Denmark or even German allies such as Bulgaria and Italy, the French know they did far too little. A concerted effort has been made to explore these dark alleys and find the way to a brighter, lighter road.

But a major roadblock has been the fact that many of the culprits behind these new attacks are North African. [. . . . ]



West Nile victims young and old fighting pain, fatigue

West Nile victims young and old fighting pain, fatigueKerry Fehr-Snyder, The Arizona Republic, Jul. 16, 2004

One shuffles around with a walker and is too tired even to talk on the telephone. Another takes all morning to get ready for work and then manages only a few hours a day at the office. Still another seemingly has aged decades.

These victims of West Nile virus didn't die; they just felt like they wanted to.

As of Thursday, the number of people in Arizona sickened by the virus had ballooned to 114, up from 67 last week. The state still leads the nation for the virus. The majority of them live in Maricopa County.

[. . . . ] Medical experts aren't sure but believe that people infected with the virus develop antibodies that prevent them from becoming ill again.

[. . . . ] "It's a lot cheaper to buy DEET than to fight this thing," he said.



New sleeper worm has political link

New sleeper worm has political link Munir Kotadia, ZDNet (UK), July 16, 2004

A second variant of the Atak worm, which goes to sleep to avoid detection by antivirus software, has been linked to an al-Qaida sympathizer who once threatened to release a powerful worm if the United States attacked Iraq.

[. . . . ] According to Radu, Atak.B is a mass-mailing worm that tries to turn off the most popular antivirus and firewall applications and then open a backdoor to give control of the system to the author. Like its predecessor, the worm attempts to avoid being detected by antivirus researchers by going to sleep when scanned. [. . . . ]



RCMP aids Olympic security

RCMP aids Olympic security Tom Godfrey, Toronto Sun, July 16, 04

The RCMP are working closely with anti-terrorist cops in Greece to prevent possible attacks during next month's Olympic games. The force will provide a senior officer to accompany the Canadian Olympic team to help with their security during the August 13-29 games.

[. . . . ] Greek police have also been provided by Interpol with a list of suspected terrorists worldwide who may try to sabotage the event, police said.

The RCMP is among Interpol's 183 member countries who are working with Greek police. In addition to a list of global terrorists, Interpol has created a 24-hour hotline to provide Greek police with instant background checks.



The new face of policing: 900 retirements anticipated -- "almost 800 officers who left in 2001 and 2002"

900 out of 5000 is about 20% of the police force leaving. The crooks will love having inexperienced officers around. Knowing that this situation was going to occur, what was done about it in the past 3 years? . . . . and Miller wants to get rid of an effective experienced Chief? Why doesn't he just give the keys to the city to the crooks?

July 18, 2004, Ian Robertson, Toronto Sun
One of the interesting examples of a new police officer mentioned in the following is one who is female, bilingual and inexperienced. I know of at least one big bruiser of a male who was refused entry to the police.

BORN IN remote Gaspe, Isabelle Cotton had no idea she'd some day be patrolling downtown Toronto as one of the city's new breed of young, well-educated cops. Arriving in the mid-1990s to finish her university degree and learn English, she quickly adapted to Canada's largest city.

After studying public relations at Laval University in Quebec City, she came to Glendon College, part of York University.

"I like to talk," Cotton said with a grin. But she faced a particularly tough challenge outside Quebec.

"I moved to Toronto without speaking a word of English," the 29-year-old constable said in an interview.

[. . . . ] The mass hiring of officers in the mid-1970s has resulted in many retiring or taking early pensions in recent years. An exodus of 900 senior officers is expected this year -- in addition to almost 800 officers who left in 2001 and 2002.



DNA databank to cost $30M: RCMP

Between trying to hide the $25 milion cap on the gun registry in the RCMP budget and this, policing services are still short at least 2200 officers. When are they going to stop playing financial sleight of hand and fund them properly?

DNA databank to cost $30M: RCMP July 15, 2004, CP

THE RCMP says creating a special DNA databank to help solve missing-persons cases could cost as much as $30 million and entail hefty ongoing expenditures. A study by the national police force's forensic laboratory service found introduction of the hi-tech tool would mean hiring additional personnel and finding new money.

"Although there is some genuine interest to develop such a database, the startup and maintenance costs are significant," says an RCMP summary of the study obtained by Canadian Press.

RCMP forensic labs have already begun contracting out some DNA testing to the private sector to keep pace with demand for analysis of materials such as blood, body fluids and hair for police.
[. . . . ]


New tricks for T.O. 'students' -- Foreign escorts are big business

New tricks for T.O. 'students' -- Foreign escorts are big business July 15, 2004, Tom Godfrey, Toronto Sun

FOREIGN WOMEN who claim to be students are coming to Canada as visitors to earn big bucks working as hookers and escorts, police and immigration officers say. Most of the women -- from Eastern Europe and South America -- are allowed to remain in Canada for three months as visitors and are not supposed to work.

But police say the women are brought here by agents who advertise their services on several Web sites. Customers then book appointments online.

Detectives said even many Toronto businesswomen are also booking the services of male escorts on the Internet. Male escorts advertise their services for up to $120 for 30 minutes. [. . . . ]


Unfortunately, there is more.


Fantino pals pitch public -- petition total reaches 15,000 -- People want law and order (keepthechief.ca)

What does Miller say about the gun registry when a homeless guy can get an uzi and spray people ooutside a mall in Ottawa? Coddling criminals doesn't work. The social engineering for the past 30 years hasn't worked. People have a right to be protected. Those causing harm have to take the responsibility themselves instead of people making excuses for them. There's a $30 billion criminal enterprise in Canada ($6 billion in Toronto terms) and about 15000 grow houses in the GTA that Miller may not be aware of. Someone should tell him.

Fantino pals pitch public -- petition total reaches 15,000
July 15, 2004, Zen Ruryk, City Hall Bureau Chief

POLICE CHIEF Julian Fantino's City Hall supporters are turning to the public for help in their battle to save his job. A furor erupted last month when the police services board refused to extend Fantino's contract beyond its March 2005 expiry date.

Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti yesterday unveiled plans for a pro-Fantino rally at 1 p.m. next Wednesday at police headquarters on College St., just east of Bay St.

Plans call for those attending the rally to march to City Hall where the chief's political backers will present a pro-Fantino petition to council.

[. . . . ] Mammoliti added that about 15,000 people have signed on-line (keepthechief.ca) and hard copies of a petition supporting the extension of Fantino's contract.



Amalgamation was no bargain

Meanwhile government's got a windfall from increased property valuations. Seniors didn't get corresponding increases in their fixed incomes to compensate higher taxes. (fees). No journalists bothered to delve into how the windfall money was squandered. Politicians feel they can squander money in computer leases, increased health charges, decreased services or the gun registry and sponsorship and the public would be none the wiser.

Amalgamation was no bargain July 15, 2004, Sue-Ann Levy, Toronto Sun

A 52-PAGE report on City Hall's ever-ballooning staff numbers, released yesterday, is a testament to why Toronto's parks, streets and roads are a decaying, filthy mess.
The report proves what I've been stating in this space for some time now -- that amalgamation has been not only the furthest thing from a downsizing exercise, but an excuse to harmonize wages and services to the highest level.

It's pretty clear that setting priorities has never been on the radar screen here. Instead of putting dwindling dollars into core services -- garbage pickup, maintaining roads, picking up litter and protecting parks -- council's bleeding hearts have chosen to beef up fuzzy public health programs and to toss money into the homeless black hole.

The report to the long-term fiscal plan committee says the city has 1,646 more employees this year, compared to 1997 (before the megacity was born). Based on a list of average city salaries I recently received through a Freedom of Information request, that's an added cost of anywhere from $79 million to $122 million per year alone, without benefits. [. . . . ]



Update: Elections Canada to charge Moore -- What about those who brought Moore's film to Canada?

Elections Canada to charge Moore Justin Boudreau, Managing Editor, Canadafreepress.com

Elections Canada will lay charges against shockumentary filmmaker Michael Moore.

[. . . . ] Moore’s pre-election advice lecturing Canadian voters not to vote Conservative quickly enraged a number of Conservative Party supporters who launched the website: www.chargeMoore.com in an effort to encourage Elections Canada to uphold its own law.



Industry resists rules to police trading -- Firms left to adopt their own policies

Ten years of leaving investors unprotected -- They protect the industry not investors.

Industry resists rules to police trading -- Firms left to adopt their own policies Karen Howlett, July 12, 04

Canadian securities regulators and the mutual fund industry itself have failed to introduce rules to detect and deter abusive trading practices such as market timing, leaving companies to tackle the issue on their own.

Mutual fund companies have not been able to agree on a set of industry-wide rules to clamp down on sophisticated market professionals who make quick profits by zipping in and out of their funds. As a result, policies aimed at curbing a practice that hurts long-term investors vary widely from company to company.

The Investment Funds Institute of Canada (IFIC) set up a committee in January in response to the U.S. mutual fund scandal, where widespread evidence of market timing and other questionable trading had been uncovered.

According to sources close to the committee, IFIC president Thomas Hockin urged the Canadian industry to proactively take steps to address market timing before domestic regulators imposed any new rules. But the committee could not reach an accord, revealing how difficult it is for IFIC to speak with one voice for the industry, the sources said.

Mr. Hockin was on vacation last week and unavailable for comment.

Ralf Hensel, senior counsel at IFIC, acknowledged in an interview that the committee wanted to recommend that companies impose an automatic, 2-per-cent penalty against any investor who jumps in and out of a fund within five days. But the proposal -- similar to draft rules in the United States -- was dropped following resistance from some fund companies, he said . [. . . . ]



A letter on the whistleblowers that were fired at Health Canada

July 16, 2004, Tracey McCowen

Maple, Ont. -- Could it be a coincidence that Health Canada fired three high-profile critical scientists on the same day? Fired them in the summer while people are golfing and cottaging, fired them when the Senate (which has previously come to the scientists' defence) isn't sitting, and when a newly elected government isn't yet organized?

What is certainly coincidental is that on the same day that story appeared, The Globe published André Picard's column, Reporting Of Negative Clinical Results Is As Necessary As The Positives (July 15). In addition, The Globe published an editorial about the necessity for freedom of speech (The CRTC's Guide To Improper Speech -- July 15). Ironically, these articles are intricately intertwined. The question now is who will hold the opaque, Draconian Health Canada to account? [. . . . ]