June 23, 2005

Is Paul Martin dying the "Death by a thousand cuts"? -- & More

Is Paul Martin dying the "Death by a thousand cuts"? June 21, 2005


Well, if he is, nobody would be surprised. Canadians expect their mainstream media to be on the PM's case over the democratic deficit, the PM-controlled appointment process that sees . . . well, somewhat like-minded individuals appointed to the courts / SCOC, the difficulty in gaining access to information, the lack of accountability, the sorry security situation, the corruption, the . . . well, what certainly looks like the buying of votes with taxpayers' money and cabinet position(s), the "arm's length" setup and other little goodies that occurred when PM was Finance Minister . . . and more. It would be no wonder if they didn't attack him severely; he was supposed to be a breath of fresh air compared to what had gone before.



Where is Bashkortostan and why should anybody care?


Chinese oil producer makes offer for Unocal -- China’s CNOOC confident its $18.5 billion bid will trump Chevron -- In Canada, "no worries, mate" NBC Jun. 23, 05


Government by Frederic Bastiat, 1848 via ??? -- I apologise but I forgot to copy the source of the link.


NY 9/11 -- Take back the Memorial
-- petition


Updated: Rick Mercer & Web Ring for Democracy & Freedom --&--Bud Talkinghorn: "End world poverty"--Give me a break, Bob

Update 2: There was a link error in "Canadian Winners" so I am reposting it here.

What do they have in common? Alexandre (Sacha) Trudeau, CBC's Neil MacDonald, the headline writers of the Toronto Star June 17, 05, honestreporting.ca -- Be sure to follow the links for more that is of interest.



Update1 : Note WebRing -&- CBC & Rick Mercer

May I draw everyone's attention to the WebRing at the bottom of the page. It is time we support freedom and those individuals being persecuted because they want democracy in China.

You can take action. Think how simple it is for the next time you go shopping.

Would any business men and women in North America who are providing decent wages and benefits to their employees like to leave a message in the commment section? Maybe we can start something to support our jobs--to help family, friends and neighbours. Are there any businessmen out there who do not believe that beggaring our own to make a buck is the most important thing in life?

Some might be interested in Boycott China! -- bumper sticker -- via the Shotgun

Send me an e-mail with your address ( US addresses only ) and I'll snail-mail you back one free bumper sticker! [boycottchina@ioa.com]


Banned by China! WebRing

Many websites are strategically banned by the Chinese government, based on content. Nobody using the internet in China is able to access these websites. How do we know which websites are banned by China? We test all submissions to "Banned by China!" at http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/filtering/china/test. Banned websites are encouraged to join this Ring.


Look for this to add to your own website: Don't Feed the Dragon


Personally, I'm looking for one that says:

Don't Feed the Dragon That
Tortures its Own Citizens and
Threatens Ours Through Spies & Intimidation


Ah, we might as well go for broke and suggest to CBC and Rick Mercer:

Canada's CBC Harasses UN Over
Atrocities in Darfur and Zimbabwe


CBC Calls for Palestinian
Terrorists to End the Jihad Against Israel


CBC Sends Rick Mercer to the Middle East to Teach
Democracy with Humour. . . Ridiculing Hamas


Those who have heard the latest news on the CBC & Rick's Propaganda for Paul attempt to ridicule another politician will understand what inspired the last one; Rick is going to try to do with Jason Kenny's name what Rick did to Stockwell Day, who has, incidentally, turned out to be an excellent MP and critic. . . but you won't hear that on the Liberal Propaganda Organ. Mercer actually thinks he's funny.

Now, a final suggestion:

Bob Geldof's next concert will start with a bonfire of all schoolbooks in the Muslim world that teach hatred and jihad. He will raise money to buy schoolbooks that do not urge children to become terrorist jihadis.


Did anyone hear a rumour that Mercer has been looking into buying Paul Martin's name for a website; it is said that he intends . . . all in the spirit of "CBC balance" to remind the PM:

Paul Martin, follow through on your "priority" to "end the democratic deficit" in Canada.


Carried away there, I was. . . but the potential is so delicious.

Impact on Canada of Corrupt Foreign Officials in Other Countries Alasdair MacLaren, Ottawa, Ontario, September 2000

They seem to know some of the words but . . .




End world poverty--Give me a break, Bob

Mr. Geldof has hit on the perfect slogan. The fact that it is sheer nonsense is not the point. The point is that Live 8 is this year's Woodstock. The Yuppie kids who will attend won't remember Bob's last aid concert. I doubt 50% could find Ethiopia on a map of Africa. That will prove to be a blessing for Bob. Because, well, that concert to save Ethiopia from famine didn't really work out all that well. It seems the President for Life, Menguistu, thought that the food aid would help plump up his bedraggled Marxist troops. Then because he likes liquidity, he demanded tha all the foreign aid currency be exchanged for the worthless Ethiopian one. Their currency was trading for astronomical sums on the black market. Most countries wouldn't even accept it. The Live Aid people could do nothing about this larceny, so they sucked it up, and then erased that fiasco from the "official record" of Live Aid.

So how is Sir Bob going to save the world's poor, when there was such a snafu in Ethiopia? Does he really believe that Africa hasn't lots of Menguistus? For instance, the little glimmer of hope that the last election in Kenya produced has been extinguished. The "anti-corruption" winner is a bigger kleptocrat than the one he deposed. Even in South Africa, the jewel of Africa, the slow momentum of despotism is evident. I think Geldof should scale back a bit.

Saving Darfur would be a worthy goal. He shouldn't be scared off by the UN and Africa failing to end the slaughter (again). All that fuzzy karmic good will that the ecstasy-dosed kids will project can see the refugees through. And the big boys at the G-8 will be humbled into throwing billions at the kleptocrats . . . who will use it to attack yonder tribe in the northern regions. That will end the famine problem, as most of the starving will be dead, or in exile. "I need lots of food for my tribe, that has seen me through many necessary massacres," will be the klepto's "election" mantra. That simple message will give said dictator another mandate for eternal rule--98.7% affirmation votes is the gold standard in much of Africa. Getting a hundred per cent would make the referendum look rigged.

Somehow, I don't think that Sir Bob's grasp of recent African history is very strong. Perhaps I could recommend Paul Theroux's book, Dark Star Safari--From Cairo to Capetown to him.. It was the chronicle of Theroux's return to Africa, after having worked as a member of the Peace Corp in Malawi, and a lecturer in Uganda twenty years earlier. He was stunned to see that almost every aspect of Africa had declined. His former private school in Blantyre had fallen into neglect. The donated books and teaching tools had been looted, mainly . He also saw a new pathology which had turned millions into beggars. They had come to expect that Western aid would keep them going. This is what he, a keen observer, found after twenty years of regression. The guaranteed continuation of the AIDS crisis was tied up nicely by a Finnish AIDS lecturer, who was giving up. She told Theroux that her final report on the dire Zambian situation ended with,

"What did my AIDS wisdom mean when all the male students propositioned me sexually for nine months straight? They are naturally sexually promiscuous and, despite seeing their their acquaintances and relatives dying all around them, they are in total denial. I tell them that they are committing sexual suicide, and they laugh at me."


Stopping the AIDS plague in Zambia might be expensive and complex, but maybe Bob's concerts could handle it. Ending world poverty might be an over-reach.

Although later, having a 2005 "End world poverty!" t-shirt is pretty cool. And by God, giving those capitalist pigs a good boot in the a** was empowering. Too bad that Live 8 didn't work out very well. Still, what with the ecstasy, it was a stone hoot. I heard that Sir Bob is mounting "End poverty in Togo" at the turn of the decade. The mainliner band will be K'aos. How cool is that?

© Bud Talkinghorn

Perhaps Bob could rally the Canadian government to support freedom fighters in China, instead of encouraging business with the Communist oppressors. Maybe he could expend his energy shaming the UN into doing something about the thugocracies in Zimbabwe and a few other basket case countries, along with helping the refugees of Darfur.

A great idea came from a National Post letter this morning, from George Grossman of Toronto. He suggests Bob, himself, buy a ticket, fly over and start working on the ground.


Defend Marriage.ca -- Hacked & Fixed -- Vote

June 21, 2005

Important Notice!

The National Marriage Petition Website Was Recently Attacked in an Effort to Log Thousands of Fraudulent “Yes” Votes.

Additional Security Has Been Installed and

The Site is Functioning Again

defendMARRIAGE.ca


Please help spread the word to those you might have referred. Tell them that the site is functioning again; so if they tried to vote and could not, they should try again.

Brief Background

Late on the night of Friday, June 17, a robot voting program attacked the National Marriage Referendum Web site. This robot began to make thousands of fraudulent “Yes” votes to the referendum question “Should Parliament pass Bill C-38 to legalize same-sex marriage in Canada.”

It was easy to determine that these were fraudulent votes because all were “voted” using variations of just a few Hotmail e-mail accounts and by the huge volume coming in per hour. About 4,000 of these fraudulent “Yes” votes were registered before all voting was suspended. These fraudulent votes have been eliminated from the database. In the eight days that the referendum was posted before this attack more than 100,000 legitimate votes had been cast, with “Nos” in the majority by about a 3:1 margin.

At the rate at which people were voting legitimately, at least 20,000 Canadians were denied the opportunity to make their voices heard on this important issue. No doubt some of the people you referred, or who they referred, were prevented from voting by this dishonest effort to skew the results of the referendum.

defendMARRIAGE.ca

National Marriage Referendum [mailto: email@referendumcanada.ca]


Security: Food & Pandemic, Torture, China Spies--Threats & Intimidation in Canada -- Kyoto-North, PM, Business -- Inuktituk & Global Commerce? & More

HOMEBREW AC -- Grandinite -- You have to love guys who have the ingenuity to figure out how to do things like create a home-made air conditioner.

Given the price of oil and electricity, this knowledge might come in handy. Note how the stock price has risen with one of the oil companies operating in Canada, Husky Energy.

Hang Seng Index: 14161.02 +181.67 +1.30%

Check the rise in one year for CA:HSE -- also the three year price rise -- involved in Alberta, Newfoundland offshore, and planning more -- " plans second large Canadian ethanol plant"




Before reading the articles below, this Table of Contents is worth skimming.

Working Together to Combat Organized Crime: A Public Report On Actions Under the National Agenda To Combat Organized Crime Date Published: 2004-05-12

Introduction

A Growing Problem: Increase in Organized Crime throughout the 1990s

Building a Collective Response to the Problem of Organized Crime in Canada

National and Regional Coordination: Governments Working Together to Address Key Priorities

Canada's Illicit Drug Trade: Fuelling the Organized Crime Machine

Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs: The Public Face of Organized Crime

Economic Crime: Taking Advantage of Vulnerable Canadians and Our Economy

Economic crime, which includes identity theft, credit card fraud, insurance fraud, telemarketing fraud, securities and stock market fraud, and counterfeiting . . .


High-Tech Crime: Technology's Dark Side
High-tech crime includes traditional crimes committed with the use of advanced technology, such as fraud on the Internet, as well as new activities, such as hacking. New technology can also be used to store evidence of crimes that have been committed.

[. . . . ] One of the most disturbing aspects of high tech crime today is the sexual exploitation of children on the Internet. This activity victimizes the most vulnerable members of our society -- children. The 2003 CISC Annual Report notes that collectors of child pornography or child abuse images can use the Internet to acquire huge quantities of images. For instance, a 2003 Ontario-based investigation uncovered a collection of over 1,000,000 images of child pornography.13


Money Laundering: Cleansing the Proceeds of Organized Crime

Trafficking in Human Beings and Migrant Smuggling: An International Organized Crime Problem

Corruption: When Organized Crime Infiltrates The Authorities


Corruption within governments and police forces can undermine fair and effective government, lower economic growth and breed poverty. Organized criminal elements, in turn, may exploit these weaknesses and flourish in countries with corrupt governments.


Street Gangs: Organized Criminal Groups in our Communities

Governments Working Together to Address Emerging Issues in the Fight against Organized Crime

Intimidation of Criminal Justice System Participants and their Families: Attempting to Influence Criminal Investigations and Trials

Criminal Activities Relating to Diamond Mining: Organized Crime Infiltrates a Growing Industry

Organized Crime at Canada's Marine Ports: Moving Contraband Items Through the Gateways to Our Country


Governments' response to other components within the National Agenda to Combat Organized Crime

Strengthening Legislative and Regulatory Tools

Research and Analysis

Informing Canadians About Organized Crime

Conclusion: Maintaining Strong Partnerships





Linking leftwing activists to Information Highway

Hidden Paul Martin firm linking leftwing activists to Information Highway -- "the Paul Martin corporation that somehow disappeared from Martin's public disclosure statements circa 1995" by Judi McLeod & David Hawkins, February 3, 2005

David Hawkins, Foundation Scholar-Cambridge University, and founder of the Citizen's Association of Forensic Economists at Hawks’ CAFE, and CFP investigative journalist Judi McLeod

[. . . . ] the Directorate of Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defence (DNBCD) . . . Canadian Department of National Defence.

. . . technical support services to the Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) Integrated Technical Support Directorate . . . .

The paper trail shows . . . Upper Lakes Shipping Group . . . Canadian Shipbuilding & Engineering (CSE) . . . merger . . . CSL . . . CSL Group and Upper Lakes Shipping. . . Upper Lakes Group.

[. . . . ] In the booming business of providing military and civilian-surveillance, Lansdowne Technologies also trained inspectors attached to the United Nations Monitoring, Verification Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) in 2001.

. . . Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs . . . UNMOVIC inspectors with Dr. Hans Blix traveling to Ottawa to launch the training course.

When it comes to the behind-the-scenes push for One World Order, Maurice Strong protégé, Prime Minister Paul Martin has the proverbial finger in all the right pies.


A Google search for "Lansdowne Technologies" yielded several references, some of which look intriguing.

Canadian Space Industry Guide - Lansdowne Technologies Inc.
Lansdowne Technologies Inc. ... Lansdowne has assisted in the management of the Canadian Space Station Program (CSSP) including ...
www.conveyor.com/space/org/lansdowne.html

CSA - Proactive Disclosure of Contracts Over $10000
Vendor Name:, LANSDOWNE TECHNOLOGIES INC. Reference Number:, 9F02846420.
Contract Date:, 2004-04-20.
www.space.gc.ca/asc/eng/resources/ publications/contracts-2004-d.asp?trimestre=1&id=29

Disclosure of contracts over $10000 - Reports
Vendor Name:, LANSDOWNE TECHNOLOGIES INC. Reference Number:, 2005000723.
Contract Date:, 2004-04-21.
www.cra-arc.gc.ca/agency/ contracts/2004-2005/q1/2005000723-e.html

Martin's ties to NWO
www.bcrevolution.ca/martin's_ties_to_nwo.htm
21 Jun 2005

HMCS HAIDA News
hmcshaida.ca/phase1.html

9/11 planning and a possible sequel
www.apfn.net/messageboard/ 04-27-05/discussion.cgi.21.html





Pandemic vaccine in hands of global depopulation advocates by Judi McLeod & David Hawkins Monday, March 14, 2005

"The AVDP is a 14-year project to develop new vaccine systems and related medical countermeasures to protect Canadian Forces personnel against political chemical and biological warfare threats."

[. . . . ] Anti-American to the core, Strong has said, "The United States is the greatest threat to the world s ecological health." (AP). Strong headed up the review panel on the World Bank-funded Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR). CGIAR is accountable to the world's farmers.

"Food security looms. . . .

[. . . . ] And now with Paul Martin in the PMO, his blind trust Lansdowne Technologies Inc. has been awarded a 14-year contract from the Canadian Department of Defence to develop vaccines?

Who are Canada's "allies" with which she is "cooperating closely" in the Allied Vaccine Development Project as advertised on Lansdowne s website? [. . . . ]


The above was previously posted May 1, 05



Bird flu: we're all going to die
Charles Arthur, June 2, 05

[. . . . ] Last week the journal Nature pulled together an entire online resource on the threat of avian flu

[. . . . ] There have already been a couple of cases of deaths from H5N1 where the only logical pathway is human-to-human
See NEJM


Pandemic could cause food shortages, expert warns CP, June 16, 2005

Dr. Michael Osterholm suggested policy makers must start intensive planning to figure out how to ensure food supplies for their populations during a time when international travel may be grounded or severely cut back, when workers are too sick to process or deliver food and when people will be too fearful of disease to gather in restaurants.

[. . . . ] "I think we'll have a very limited food supply," he said in the interview.

"As soon as you shut down both the global travel and trade . . . and (add to it) the very real potential to shut down over-land travel within a country, there are very few areas that will be hit as quickly as will be food, given the perishable nature of it." [. . . . ]





The Abiding Communist Threat in its Open and Hidden Manifestations




Would you do business with these guys?

Do not miss the photos.


High-profile Torture Victim Dies Surrounded by Chinese Security Agents -- One of China’s Highest Government Leaders Personally Involved Falun Dafa Information Centre

[. . . . ] In July of 2003 Gao was sent to Longshan Forced Labor Camp. During her detention Gao was physically beaten by camp personnel, report sources familiar with her case. Almost one year later, on May 7, 2004, at approximately 3:00pm, Tang Yubao, the deputy head of the No. 2 Brigade along with team leader Jiang Zhaohua, summoned Gao to the duty office and began to torture her by means of electric baton. Sources report that the torture continued for some 7 hours. Those detained with Gao in the labor camp say she sustained multiple burns to her face, head, and neck. Gao’s face was covered with blisters and her hair was matted with pus and blood. So severe were the injuries that Gao was left disfigured and had difficulty seeing.

In a desperate attempt to escape her torturers, Gao later jumped from the 2nd floor office window of the facility, sustaining multiple fractures. Subsequent hospitalization allowed those close to Gao to take photos of the injuries to her face and body. The shocking photos made their way overseas, where rights activists publicized them widely. Details of her case were submitted to related government offices in the U.S. and other nations and presented to the United Nations.

[. . . . ] Politburo Standing Committee Member Personally Oversaw Gao’s Case

As international pressure mounted concerning Gao’s case, one of China’s highest-ranking officials stepped in: Politburo Standing Committee member Luo Gan. Luo proceeded to order the Liaoning Province Chinese Communist Party Political Judiciary Committee, the Procuratorate, the Department of Justice, and the Police Department to conceal any and all information about Gao’s case. [. . . . ]


With the UN informed, what will happen? Exactly! Bring on Bolton.



Editorial: China's odious spies June 20, 05

[. . . . ] Canada will also purchase $21 billion worth of goods from China this year, and we have $700 million invested there.

[. . . . ] So it is more than offensive to be told that Chinese Canadians in Toronto and other cities are being spied on and harassed by agents of the People's Republic of China. [. . . . ]

[. . . . ] One document supplied by Hao names Killian Ye, a Toronto Falun Gong adherent, as the subject of a 2004 report to top officials in Beijing. Hao says Chinese spies keep tabs on practitioners, tap phones and threaten and harass them.

Other Falun Gong practitioners confirm they have been harassed. [. . . . ]




FBI / CSIS Corroborate China's Spies here -- but

Editorial: Spies come in from the cold only to get heat Jun. 7, 05

[. . . . ] But the countries they are in — Canada and Australia — refuse to believe them or publicly acknowledge what they are saying.

Why? Because both administrations have huge and influential money ties with China
which has never been closer.

[. . . . ] Here we detailed how in the high-rise glass towers of Vancouver — Tricell (Canada) Inc. and Top Glory Enterprises Ltd., both incorporated in the late ‘80s worked for the Communist government of China.

[. . . . ] Their so-called “lies” have even been corroborated by the spy boys at the FBI, Canadian Security Intelligence Service and Australia‘s ASIO.

[. . . . ] China‘s state-owned enterprises have been carving up the Alberta oil-sands.

Hence it is not surprising that the claims by Chen and Lai have no merit in Canberra and Ottawa.





Chinese spy on Falun Gong: claim June 21, 05

The Chinese government has been spying on members of the Falun Gong movement in Australia, according to alleged Chinese security documents.

The claim has been made by Chinese defector Hao Feng Jun, who says he worked for the local branch of a security service known as 6-10, set up specifically to wipe out Falun Gong.

ABC TV's Lateline has obtained some of the hundreds of security documents Mr Hao says he smuggled into Australia on a computer file downloaded from a police computer in China. [. . . . ]

William Luo, a Brisbane-based Falun Gong member, told ABC TV that he had been approached by a Chinese man a few years ago who threatened to kill his daughter because of his involvement in the movement. [. . . . ]


Threats and intimidation. . . .




Canada's North and Security

Global warming opens Northwest Passage Levon Sevunts, Washington Times, June 13, 05

RESOLUTE BAY, Canada - Steadily melting Arctic ice is not just exposing vast unexplored fishing stocks and mineral wealth. It's also rapidly making the Northwest Passage - the passable sea route sought by Henry Hudson and other explorers of the 16th and 17th centuries - fully navigable in the summer.

That, in turn, is forcing Canada to confront a range of sovereignty issues, including disputes with the United States and other Arctic neighbors.

[. . . . ] "The heart of the dispute is the transit of international shipping, and who gets to set rules," says Rob Huebert, associate director of the Center for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary in Alberta. [. . . . ]


Search: Canadian Forces Northern Area (CFNA) , Canada's RADARSAT-1 , RADARSAT-2



Sgro Rpt. pdf

Multicultural Policy -- flawed -- Anti-Semitism



Technology Diversion

A little boy goes to his father and asks "Daddy, how was I born?"
The father answers: "Well, son, I guess one day you will need to find out anyway!

Your Mom and I first got together in a chat room on Yahoo.
Then I set up a date via e-mail with your Mom and we met at a cyber-cafe.

We sneaked into a secluded room, where your mother agreed to a download from my hard drive.

As soon as I was ready to upload, we discovered that neither one of us had used a firewall, and since it was too late to hit the delete button, nine months later a blessed little Pop-Up appeared and said: You've Got Male!"


Thanks JK in California.




Kyoto & Global Warming

Evidence is underwhelming James M. Inhofe, June 14, 05

Sen. James M. Inhofe, R-Okla., chairs the Environment and Public Works Committee.

Despite the lack of a scientific consensus to warrant such measures, climate change alarmists — in the heat of the summer for the scariest effect — are promoting mandatory caps on carbon dioxide emissions in the USA. It's a classic case of "ready, fire, aim."

[. . . . ] hockey stick graph. . . .

Recent Canadian research discredited the graph because of its errors and improper methodologies.

[. . . . ] Two international leaders once described Kyoto's intent. Margot Wallstrom, the European Union's commissioner on the environment, said Kyoto is "about leveling the playing field for big businesses worldwide," and French President Jacques Chirac called it "the first component of an authentic global governance." [. . . . ]







Saddam's psychic sandbox Judi McLeod, June 18, 2005

In a search sponsored by oil magnate and "Soviet agent of influence" Armand Hammer, American satellites found `The Atlantis of the Sands’.

[. . . . ] NASA observations indicate a nomadic Sahara. After moving to the south between 1981 and 1984, the Sahara retreated northward 88 miles from 1985 to 1986. However, it migrated 34 miles south in 1987. The southern boundary retreated 62 miles to the north in 1988, then expanded 46 miles to the south in 1989 and 1990. [. . . . ]





Canadian Research in the North -- "international cooperation"

CHAPTER 8 - SUPPORTING SCIENTIFIC, EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL COOPERATION IN THE ARCTIC

In my opinion, no northern or circumpolar foreign policy in Canada will have tangible success if it's not based on the continuity of Canadian research in the North. But that research must heretofore also offer opportunities and possibilities for development; development in training, education, economic development and business opportunities for our northern populations. This twofold perspective which advocates that we continue our research and create conditions favourable to northern populations means that we must continue to support research and training in the North if we want Canada to maintain its important place; we must at the same time renew ourselves and the way we do things in order to adapt to. . . new internal realities. [47:2]

Michel Allard, Director of the Centre d' tudes nordiques,
Laval University

Given the rapid changes in Arctic realities described in preceding chapters, important challenges arise in the gathering and use of knowledge for the benefit of Arctic peoples and the wider world community. Among key issues are future trends in publicly supported Arctic scientific research and education, which the changes underway and the region's increasing integration into the global picture make more necessary than ever.
In addition, important foreign policy commitments such as the Arctic Council and the AEPS undertaken by Canada and the other Arctic states demand first-rate scientific expertise. This does not mean simply continuing the multi-million dollar "big science" of past decades, however, but focussing research on the changing needs of the region as defined by its residents, building their capacity to carry out such research and combining traditional indigenous and modern scientific knowledge. Most Arctic states have reduced their domestic funding for science in recent years, which places an even higher premium on international cooperation to increase efficiency and reduce cost. As [Gerard] Duhaime of Laval University argued at a NATO-sponsored seminar in 1995, given their common interests and challenges, states interested in Arctic research must address the problems at several levels: ensuring that their domestic arrangements are adequate as well as reviewing existing international cooperative arrangements, and creating new ones where necessary.210 [. . . . ]





The Canadian North: Embracing Change -- pdf -- Centre for Research and Information on Canada (CRIC), 2000 McGill College Avenue, Suite 250, Montréal, Quebec H3A 3H3. 1-800-363-0963, Fax: (514) 843-4590. www.ccu-cuc.ca

Table of Contents
1 Preface
2 Introduction
by Stephen Kakfwi, Premier of the Northwest Territories
4 The Three Territories: An Introduction
by Robert M. Bone
9 Aboriginal Peoples in Northern Canada: The Peaceful Revolution Meets Global Capital
by Frances Abele
16 Politics and Government in the Territorial North: Familiar and Exotic
by Graham White
24 Economic Development and the Environment
by Robert M. Bone
30 New Challenges to Canadian Arctic Security And Sovereignty
by Rob Huebert




Nunavut is the largest territory, by far, covering over 2 million km2. The Northwest Territories lie to its west. Three provinces — Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Quebec—along with Hudson’s Bay, form its southern boundary. Greenland is to the east and Russia just over the North Pole.

Most Canadian Arctic islands (which include some of the largest in the world) are part of Nunavut. The western most islands belong to the Northwest Territories. At the same time, Nunavut has the smallest territorial population (26,745 inhabitants).


[. . . . ] While all residents of Nunavut have equal rights, the demographic reality is that 85 of every 100 of its inhabitants are Inuit, making the territory a vehicle through which their political aspirations can be expressed. Demography and politics have forged Nunavut into a unique political entity within Canada. Territorial government policies and programs reflect Inuit aspirations, beliefs, and values. Two examples of this are: (a) the principle of decentralization that ensures that government is close to the people; and (b) the principle of promoting of the Inuktitut language and culture.


Search: UNRESOLVED SOVEREIGNTY


Canada is hoping to encourage immigrants to move to areas other than the big cities. Want to make a guess? Can Inuktituk as a language of global commerce be far behind? -- in my humble opinion, of course. Check for language programs and funding for them within agreements.




When "academic freedom" justifies academic terror or here Tzvi Kahn, American Thinker, June 21, 2005


According to the logic of a recent report issued by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), denying accused criminals a job constitutes an unethical breach of "academic freedom." So, if Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein had doctorates and respectable publication records, could they receive teaching positions at an American university? More to the point, what about Mohammed Yousry, an adjunct lecturer in Middle East studies at York College of the City University of New York (CUNY), a person accused of providing material support to a terrorist organization?

After all, in America's criminal justice system, alleged offenders are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law – and bin Laden and Hussein have yet to receive fair and open trials. Until then, if their academic records were otherwise sterling, a university may not penalize professors on grounds ostensibly unrelated to their scholarship or teaching. Such grounds, according to the reasoning of the AAUP report, include alleged support of a terrorist organization aiming to slaughter the very students the professor teaches. [. . . . ]


What if rights collide?




Bombardier Transport décroche une commande de 239 M$US -- needs translation but the rough translation I found online was of interest. Check for an article on "Équipe Canada signs for 340 M$ of contracts in Russia"



The Charter of whose Rights? John Lawrence, June 18, 2005



Politically Incorrect -- RCMP puts political correctness before law enforcement -- not charging the Sikh young man who cut off his own hair and blamed it on racism -- wasting police time and resources in an investigation Arthur Weinreb, Associate Editor, June 14, 2005. Would they have been called racist if they had charged him? He's a youth.




This clears up a few questions: why kids would kill themselves as jihadis -- Chrenkoff, June 21, 05 (?)

"He was trying to drive into a busy checkpoint and the Marine guards wounded him and disabled his car before he could reach the intersection and activate the bomb," West wrote. "When they opened the door to remove him, they found him chained to the seat with his hands taped to the steering wheel. He had an activation switch on his body that he could use but they also found a remote-control activation device under the front seat. It was hidden in the floor of the car so he probably didn't know it was there... He was going to die whether he wanted to or not." [. . . . ]




June 22, 2005

NY: 9/11 Memorial Petition

Take Back the Memorial

Update: Added Information and Links, along with Correction

Update: This is in response to the comments that people left on my analysis at the bottom of a post. I had checked something carelessly. For the corrected item, comments and other links and information I added today, search:

GG & Order of Canada-Aga Khan May 9, 2005 -- the comments here

The link -- put together without spaces

http://frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/
2005/05/gg-order-of-canada-aga-khan-paul.html#comments


It was posted the week of May 8 to May 14, 2005.
http://frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/2005_04_17_frosthitstherhubarb_archive.html
Related: scroll down for Paul Martin Gives $30-million to the Aga Khan Foundation -- Charity Begins with Taxpayer $$$ . . . Not at Home, Frost Hits the Rhubarb, April 22, 05 -- or copy and place this link in one line.

http://frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/
2005_04_17_frosthitstherhubarb_archive.html



June 21, 2005

No Soft Bigotry of Diminished Expectations Here, eh? -- & More

This morning I read an article that began with recounting natives' success in law school that, instinctively, I knew I should read further. I felt that, in the spin, I was being told how to think.

Inuit program produces first law graduates -- 'To get to the pinnacle, as a clerk for the Supreme Court, that should dispel critics' Sarah Schmidt, Jun. 21, 05, CanWest

[. . . . ] the multi-million-dollar cost of producing 11 Inuit lawyers . . . . affirmative-action university admissions programs

[. . . . ] Graduates Madeleine Redfern and Aaju Peter were co-recipients of the McCarthy Tetrault Prize for excellence in contract law in their first year, beating out more than 100 other law students studying at UVic. And Ms. Redfern, who was also awarded the Osler Hoskin Harcourt Award in property and contract law, begins her legal career as a clerk at the Supreme Court of Canada -- a posting for which more than 200 leading law graduates in Canada vie every year and only 27 are awarded.


That is amazing, considering the past performance (see below) and the entrance standards waived, standards that other law school entrants are expected to meet. Who benefits?

Follow the money and what is going on with development in the North: mining, oil, gas, promotion of language and culture. Remember the agreement signed by Minister Scott with the natives in Labrador? A component included promotion of culture and language, I seem to remember. The promotion of native languages and culture in the face of the problems in places like Netuashish . . . well, it boggles the mind. Let's see, now, will agitation for recognition of native languages will become the next right discovered in the constitution? I see a proliferation of language rights and other rights that will render Canada unworkable . . . and who would benefit from that?

The background to the above-mentioned success:

[. . . . ] A decade ago . . . . alienated from their culture and isolated from their families, the students all dropped out and returned home.

[. . . . ] didn't have to write the Law School Admission Test.


[. . . . ] Of the 15 students accepted at the beginning of the four-year program, six dropped out. Two additional students joined the program in September, 2002, and caught up to their peers to join them at today's graduation.

The students, many juggling family responsibilities, were provided with an annual living allowance of up to $52,000 to ensure money was not a barrier to completing the program. The sponsors included the governments of Nunavut and Canada, the Kakivak Association and the RCMP. [. . . . ]


A Google search reveals that the Kakivak Association "is the economic development arm of the Qikiqtani Inuit Association" and the "Association’s job is to support training programs, business start-ups". Search for yourself to find the funding; for example, one of the articles listed is "Aboriginal Human Resource Development Council of Canada" which mentions "Danny Eegeesiak, Kakivak Association, Iqualuit". Two items looked promising:

www.qikiqtani.nu.ca/english/about-intro-controlled-kakivak.html

www.ahrdcc.com/resource/gc_training_old_schedule.htm


Compare the above with the treatment of the budding law school student in your family who:

* must pass difficult entrance exams to enter law school as do most students, the successful of whom must be prepared to foot their own rather high university fees and other expenses

* is not given $52,000 a year to attend law school while raising a family -- in fact nobody outside the family and a few friends cares how the children survive

* is not hired to work in some capacity at the SCOC upon graduation, usually -- Think about it, a green graduate off to clerk at the SCOC. . . . What are the odds of that happening with your child?

* does not have his/her work and life experience--at the local fast food outlet or call centre, for example--count toward law school entrance

* is not taken under the wings of some high powered groups such as provincial and federal governments, along with the first nations association(s) and even the RCMP. When did this become part of the RCMP's mandate . . . in a time of diminished funding and increased security concerns?*

* has to compete with all the aspiring law school students, presumably on a level playing field



Will oral history become a large part of the assessment of rights--to land and other people's money--in future?

Are we dumbing down for "diversity" or does it just appear this way? Now that the Metis, it seems, are included--or at least the native percentage is, sort of an assymetical component of treating with culturally favoured individuals--in the special programs and funding department, who is to pay for the expanded finances this will require? What is the plan?

May I suggest that Canadian parents join--or start--a linguistically and culturally identifiable group to pursue rights; include need for funding. Start investigating your family's ancestry for an ancestor who belonged to a currently favoured group. If you don't, there may be so many special groups that, in future, you may be unable to afford to educate your own because of group rights accorded others. Guess who has brought you this?




Dust My Broom: Alberta Floods -- Photographs June 19, 05 -- How much money has been allocated by the feds for Alberta's flood victims?

Where Oil Is Mined, Not Pumped -- High Demand for Petroleum Makes a Boomtown in Northern Alberta By Justin Blum, Washington Post Staff Writer, June 15, 2005; Page A01

Recent government appointments Compiled by Bea Vongdouangchanh -- Note that Helen McDonald, is now acting Chief Information Officer for the Government of Canada and Assistant-Secretary of Policy and Service Transformation, Treasury Board of Canada.

Export of personal data has Canadians worried -- poll Chris Cobb, National Post, Jun. 21, 05

[. . . . ] survey commissioned by the federal Privacy Commission. . . . Under the act, all U.S companies . . . U.S. security agencies. If that information involves private individuals, it's illegal . . . . much of it outsourced by the federal and provincial governments.


From the Supremes, an illusory 'right' David Frum, June 21, 05, National Post

As a practical matter, then, Choualli v. Quebec has created not a new right for the citizen, but a new power for the judiciary.




Smoothe, Useless -- PETER WORTHINGTON RECOUNTS CASES WHERE CANADIAN FOREIGN AFFAIRS OFFICIALS DID LITTLE OR NOTHING TO HELP CITIZENS IN TROUBLE ABROAD June 20, Toronto Sun

That's how our diplomacy works -- as it did in the 1970s when David Somerville was imprisoned in Tanzania as a suspected spy, and then external affairs minister Mitchell Sharp insisted Canada was doing everything possible for Somerville, when it was doing nothing. [. . . ]

Sharp's negligence was exposed when Somerville became a Toronto Sun reporter and told all. [. . . . ]


Check the rest.

Shake Hands with the Devil--General Dallaire, the UN, and the Heart of Darkness

The story of the UN fiasco in Rwanda is well known. Even in its broadest outlines it engenders disgust and despair. The numbers of people slaughtered and the brief time span of its occurrence is so numbing that we can hardly contemplate it. And this was no shadowy conflict with invisible terrorist armies; no this was openly played out on every city street and every rural hamlet. The killing was brutal and personal. Neighbour killing neighbour, Ostensibly an ethnic conflict, it was one where the frenzied killing targetted any moderate Hutu, as well as the Tutsi. So extremist were the Interahamwe--the rag-tag youth militia, that even being part Hutu didn't save you.

Lt. General Romeo Dallaire saw this holocaust in its infancy and despite his numerous, detailed reports, was to see it in its grotesque adult form. Besides the gut-wrenching descriptions of refugee churches being bulldozed and the casual mutilations of women and children, there was the cynical, power jockeying of the UN personnel and their leaders. From the begining, Dallaire's mission was an orphan. Even some of the basic necessities to carry out his limited role were withheld. The peacekeeper component was flawed. There were Bangladeshi troops, who were only sent for the pay they would draw from UN coffers; then there were the Belgian commandos, who had come straight from fighting in Somalia. The latter were tough, but undesciplined. On top of those impediments, there was political intrigue. The only countries that could field an emergency rescue force had been bloodied in Somalia and Bosnia. There was no stomach for committing tens of thousands of soldiers to this backwater with no strategic interest. The French did have an interest however. They went so far as to demand Dallaire's removal, because he had pointed out that the French had military helping the Revolutionary Guard, a Hutu extremist segment of the army. In fact, the French were the only one's who seemed to care about Rwanda.

The signs that something horrible was brewing could be seen everywhere. For me, one of the most chilling scenes was the student registration process. Suddenly, for the first time ever, students were asked to give their ethnic backgrounds, so they could be targetted for extermination later. Dallaire found out from an informer that the President / military strongman, Gen. Juvenal Habyarimana, was secretly arming various bands of militia for a future elimination of his political foes, along with the entire Tutsi population. Dallaire also discovered a plot to ambush Belgian UN troops. When he transmitted this knowledge to the UN's Kofi Annan and Canadian General Baril, they told him to stay out of the internal hostilies. Annan went as far as to demand Dallaire immediately tell President Habyarimana about the plot. As the president had probably authorized the ambush, doing that would be nonsense; besides, it would put his informer in grave danger. Dallaire knew where some of the hidden militant armories were and could have seized them. Much like HItler could have been stopped in early 1932, swift action might have nipped this massacre in the bud. Instead, when the signal was given over the radio in Kigali, the weapons were handed out and the vast butchery began. Mind you, much of the death came at the end of a machete or club. "Ridding Rwanda of the Inyenzi"--the Tutsi cockroaches--was seen as righteous by the mobs.

To read Shake Hands with the Devil, is to understand why nothing is going to happen in Darfur. It follows that old adage, "A black killing a white is homocide; a white killing a black is justifiable homocide, and a black killing a black is...really, who cares." The extent and savagery of the African civil wars have hardened our hearts. Three million dead in the Congo, children with amputated limbs in Sierra Leone, finally peace in the southern Sudan with the Christian blacks, immediately followed by ethnic cleansing of Muslim blacks in Darfur. It gets to be too much. There is no sliver of light piercing that Heart of Darkness. Even if we could stop the dozen or so wars now raging there, HIV/AIDS, a slow Black Plague, is wiping out millions--this after 20 years of the Uganda example as a gallows sermon Perhaps Dallaire's message is that only swift intevention has a hope. Once the bloodlust gets the upper hand, intervention is doomed.

A documentary was made of the hundreds of thousands of prisoners in Rwanda, who participated in the mass murders. Even though an admission of guilt and a repentance would have reduced their sentences, almost all refused to comply. Their unrepentant hate stare was the image that stayed with me. Those were the faces that haunted Dallaire long after he came home.

© Bud Talkinghorn




Abortionist accused of eating fetuses Kansas City clinic closed as grisly house of horrors June 14, 2005, WND.com via Cotillion.


North America & Madrassahs -- Fifth Column

A Madrassah in Bridgeview, Illinois or here Daniel Pipes, FrontPageMagazine.com,June 20, 2005

Islamic schools. . . acting largely out of public view but with many signs suggesting their radicalization. [. . . . ]

Unfortunately, [Marguerite Michaels of Time Magazine] proved clueless about the real nature of the Universal School. She portrays it as a moderate institution, but the information she herself provides points to its being a school imparting an extreme version of Islam.

Several examples concern sexuality: [. . . . ]

Other attitudes concern the place of Muslims in the United States:

[. . . . ] This siege mentality furthers the Islamist agenda of grievance and demanding special privileges.

[. . . . ] Seeing Americans and Muslims, or more accurately, non-Muslims and Muslims, as separate populations is a key component of the Islamist project.

A preoccupation with foreign policy rounds out the picture:


"They are obsessed with foreign politics," says Steve Landek, the mayor of Bridgeview. "I come to talk to them about better sidewalks. They want to know how to run for Congress so they can change America's Israeli policy."

Assigned in English class to write about his American Dream, a 15-year-old wrote that the territories under Israeli control should be returned to the Palestinians and "the Jews should be left to suffer."

I finished Marguerite Michaels's article doubly dismayed. First, that a veteran Time journalist cannot see an American madrassah before her very eyes, replete with the alienation, resentment, supremacism, and isolation that feed the Islamist temperament. Secondly, that this "model school" quietly and openly churns out graduates hoping they will create an Islamic States of America.


I feel even more concerned about the Muslims' ability to bring an alien culture here and, because North Americans fear being termed racist or intolerant, Muslims are allowed to continue to perpetuate this perversion of male-female relationships, along with emphasizing hatred and killing. Our Judeo-Christian heritage has promoted reasoned discussion and allowed women to be free. It has encouraged women to grow through education, and men to respect them for it. Madrassahs are incompatible with freedom, as our culture has developed it. Muslims must adjust, not the rest of us.

As for the teenagers' concerns, all teenagers are curious about the changes in them growing up; thus they become obsessed by sexuality. Age and facing the cares of the world take care of it; adults should be mature enough to add some perspective, instead of fostering over-concern. However, the whole Islamic belief system promotes carrying this obsession into adulthood; it fosters the obsession with sex and with the idea that it is the women who are sinful, the temptresses of the innocent males. It sounds weak to me, as though these men were controlled by others; actually, they seem to be controlled by their own sexuality.

Frankly, we don't need this. Besides, one begins to question why the males, even adult males, are so obsessed with sex that, in the face of the more important concerns, the potential for freedom--even the freedom to choose to explore or not--fuss and fidget over whether a woman has her hair covered or speaks to a male, and whether she is causing the male to sin. They haven't learned to take responsibility themselves and seem to need women to blame. Muslims need to modernize and moderate Islam by ending all the talk of killing and jihad and, instead, promote the ability to question, to be tolerant and accepting of others, even of Muslims who choose to become free . . . or Muslims should get out. Yes, out!

As a woman, I don't want Islamic attitudes, particularly those toward women, here. I knew that the first day I saw a woman in a burqa. In fact, from what I can see and read, much of Islam is inimicable to a free society. How are the rest of us supposed to respect Islam if the major concern--at least the one which Muslims themselves keep talking about--is killing their enemies, particularly the Jews, which incidentally, often involves suicide bombing and the reward, a bunch of virgins? Grow up. Try talking to your enemies and to women instead of killing. That is why our society grew into one Muslims wanted to come to; we talked and reasoned out our differences or we agreed to disagree with, but not kill, those who had other beliefs.

This topic is important in Canada, given the Muslim schools and activism already here. I do not care whether I am considered racist for what I have said. Not controlled by a Muslim male--nor any other, for that matter--I am still free to speak out on what I see as utterly foolhardy . . . until our government decides to apply hate crime laws/regulations/whatever they're termed to people who still question their misguided multiculturalism and tolerance for what most of us find to be anathema. They will still have a hard time quieting those of us who are talking about what we see and hear. The more we get to know of the intolerance of some who have come to our shores, the less we want this, and the more we should speak out. Just try and stop us!


Does the Government Fear the Public's Right to Know?

Do they have reason to? Are they afraid of John Reid's Competence? Is there "backtracking" from the Justice Minister, Irwin Cotler?

CIVIL CIRCLES -- Who will be next access 'guru'? Access to Information Commissioner John Reid's term is up on June 30, but the government still hasn't decided who will take over. MPs say that stinks. Bea Vongdouangchanh, The Hill Times, June 20th, 2005

The House Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics, last week tabled its report recommending that Mr. Reid's term, which ends June 30, be extended by one year. The House voted overwhelmingly to adopt the report but opposition MPs said the Liberal government intends to ignore the recommendation and appoint a new commissioner.

Some names being tossed around were Robert Marleau and Michel Drapeau.

"The image is that John Reid is a thorn [to the Liberals] so they have to get rid of him, but where does that leave the public's right to know? I know they prefer to get rid of his senior staff and I know they would prefer to have a more tame person," Mr. Rubin said. [. . . . ]


Might I suggest that John Reid seems to have been competent enough that he be kept on? If the ADSCAM, sponsorship slush fund government doesn't want him, is that not an excellent recommendation?

Failing that, consider someone not out of the Centre, maybe someone out of the West or someone not connected to . . . whatever has been and will be revealed. How utterly ridiculous that the group withholding the information is appointing the individual who will decide what information will be allowed to get out. Where are those whose names are being mentioned as potential replacements from? Could one guess?

This appointment and the democratic deficit will not be fixed by the government holding the documents and information, the same government which has prepared whistleblower legislation designed expressly to protect themselves . . . Bah, humbug. The very idea is risible.


CPC MP's & Senators Win Right to Defend Canadians in Montana BSE Case

Rick Casson, MP
Lethbridge
Diane Finley, MP
Official Opposition Critic for Agriculture and Agri-Food
Ted Menzies, MP
Official Opposition Critic for International Trade

June 20, 2005

Conservative Members of Parliament and Senators Win Right to Defend Canadians in Montana BSE Case

OTTAWA - In an unprecedented step, 64 Conservative Party of Canada Members of Parliament and six Conservative Senators have been granted status to file an amicus brief in a Montana court by the same judge who earlier refused a similar application by the federal Liberal government. With their amicus brief, the Conservative Parliamentarians will be the lone representatives of Canada’s legislature in the RCALF-USDA court case in Billings, Montana.

Canada’s Liberal Government has no ability to defend the Canadian cattle industry in the District Court case as it never appealed Judge Cebull’s dismissal of its own amicus application.

US District Court Judge Richard Cebull’s decision was issued late Friday but was made available to the plaintiff and defendant parties this morning. Judge Cebull is hearing the case for a permanent injunction against live Canadian cattle and beef exports on July 27 in Billings.

The Conservative MPs and Senators waited until the end of the appeal period before bringing their own extraordinary application. Conservative MP for Lethbridge, Rick Casson, explained that “we were waiting for the Liberals to do the right thing for our cattle industry, but they just did not care enough to re-enter the ring. We encouraged them to fight for Canada – but their focus was on the Sponsorship Scandal rather than Canada’s cattle industry. We took the unprecedented step of having the Official Opposition fight to protect Canada in a foreign court and we will not back away from this fight.”

[. . . . ] International Law expert, Barry Appleton, counsel for the Conservative Parliamentarians, stated that “this US court decision marks a turning point for the recognition of Canadian MPs by the US courts. This decision demonstrates the valuable contribution that MPs and Senators can make to legal disputes in the United States that involve key Canadian interests.”

[. . . . ] The Conservative Parliamentarians’ application to the court and Judge Cebull’s order can be obtained online at http://www.appletonlaw.com


June 20, 2005

Today's Posts

Today's Posts: a list because not all are listed in the menu at left

* On the verge of deportation a THIRD time? -- Pipes: MCB-CAIR
* Honour Roll, Tipping Point: Pigs, Analyses Resource
* Security: Hackers & Spammers -- Fixes -- Biofuel
* 3. US, Canada, China, Security, Drugs and Related [ Scroll down for #1 and #2 ]
* Corcoran: Junk Science -- Think What Kyoto is Based On
* CRTC: Pursuing "outdated protectionist policy"
* Amnesty International, Freedom House & Discrimination
* Canadian Winners!
* Who is going to pay?
* Wave this under their noses when they claim they "knew nothing" -- CPC MP Helena Guergis' Solution
* 2. CFP's McLeod & Forensic Accountant Hawk -- UN, Volker & Annan
* 1. Rural Revolution --& -- Another Perspective: Communism, Grand Strategy, Alleged Sino-Soviet Split, Economic Impact -- Junk Science, Gov & Kyoto


On the verge of deportation a THIRD time? -- Pipes: MCB-CAIR

Force those in charge of our security, immigration and refugee policies to take responsibility. This is akin the one who murders his mother, then begs the mercy of the court because he's an orphan.

No problems in Canada? Our borders are secure? Our Deputy PM and responsible for security tells us not to worry. . . so how did this happen?

Con artist pleads for Canada's protection -- Arab-Israeli says he scammed terrorists Adrian Humphreys, National Post, Jun20, 05

[. . . . ] On the verge of being deported from Canada for the third time, he is making an unusual plea for mercy to Canadian authorities.

The Arab-Israeli man says sending him back to Israel endangers his life because among his many, many victims are terrorist groups in the thick of the Middle East turmoil.[. . . . ]


Read Diane Francis today; she writes of the PQ's former Parti Quebecois Cabinet Minister, Richard Le Hir, explaining why the PQ felt that it had to take drastic, devious, illegal measures because the federal government was importing immigrant voters so fast that the intent appeared to be to overwhelm separatists. Thus, the PQ government felt they would lose any chance of separation if they didn't do something. You might not agree with Quebec's separatists but one may understand, even empathize, with the fact that the Liberals have for years been importing voters to Canada, abusing Canadians' good will and wish not to be unduly discriminatory. Well, you see all around you what the government has wrought.

Solution: Send this con artist (scroll down) to Shawinigan and Jean Chretien, the next one to Paul Martin and one to each of the Immigration Ministers (e.g. Kaplan, Sgro, Volpe) for all the years since Liberals opened up our ports and borders to anything on two legs that comes to Canada, with or without documents, legally or otherwise. I think this happened to facilitate their remaining in power; they could get in as long as they would support--vote--Liberal and, especially, if they had an extended family that would. Let these Ministers of the Crown be held responsible for the or the recipient of the "house guest" goes to jail.

Pandering for votes by evoking the memory of Trudeau, his &*%##* Charter, and the UN--home of despots and their enablers--has been government policy. This piece of garbage will be allowed to stay in Canada "because he has a Canadian family". I can feel it in my bones. The government won't kick the the worst out nor provide adequate support, including $$$, so the rest of us may feel secure. Well?

My idea suits me.




Sir Ibrahim Hooper and Lord Salam Al-Marayati? and Lodi, California Mysteries Daniel Pipes, weblog, June 2005

Sir Ibrahim Hooper and Lord Salam Al-Marayati? Well, they live in the wrong country to receive such accolades, and much they must rue it, for their British counterpart, Iqbal Sacranie, was knighted today, in the Queen's Birthday Honours. As secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain (on which, see Chris Blackburn's analysis, "The Dark Side of the Muslim Council of Britain"), Sacranie has been one of the most important advocates of radical Islam in the United Kingdom – so what could be more appropriate than to reward him with a hoary English title?

The comparison with Hooper is not a stretch, for the MCB and CAIR work together; Beila Rabinowitz of MilitantIslamMonitor.org has even called the MCB "a carbon copy of CAIR." [. . . . ]





Lodi, California Mysteries weblog, June 11, 2005

Lodi, California Mysteries The arrest this week of five men of Pakistani origins in Lodi, California, on what are likely to be terrorism-related charges . . . . an American citizen born in Stockton, California . . . . Pakistani religious royalty – so, what are the father and son doing in California as unskilled laborers? [. . . . ]

. . . . found with $28,093 in cash . . . . breaking U.S. customs regulations
by taking out so much cash without declaring it? [. . . . ]


Could one hazard a guess? They lied?


Security: Hackers & Spammers -- Fixes -- Biofuel

Besides the hackers out of China using some of the addresses from IP blocks that begin with 222 and 61 (if I recall correctly) which I have mentioned in the last couple of weeks, there is must be some in Korea. Watch for hackers from this block.

IP block of addresses:: 211.107.232.0-211.107.232.127
Connect ISP name: KORNET




Mastercard let the cat out of the bag

MasterCard: Only 68,000 cards at high risk -- Accounts among 40 million exposed in security breach

[. . . . ] MasterCard traced the breach to CardSystems [. . . . ]

CardSystems’ chief financial officer, Michael A. Brady, said Friday that his company was “blindsided” by the MasterCard release, adding that his company was told by the FBI not to release any information to the public.


To whose advantage would it be to quckly lay the blame, disregarding or misinterpreting instructions from investigators? The result is that revealing this might compromise the investigation.

Think money and who would be in a position, either because of reputation or because they were involved and desirous of getting a warning out to others, so they would not be caught. Who work on the computer systems?


Check your credit card company regularly for unusual activity. As a rule of thumb, I don't use credit cards online; of course, considering my hatred for shopping, I don't need to. It is still worth considering.




Adobe PDF Patch Plugs Data Leak Threat

blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/
Brian Krebs on Computer Security

According to Adobe, the latest version gets rid of a fairly serious security flaw. By convincing a target to download a specially crafted PDF document, attackers could "discover the existence of local files," -- i.e., read documents on the victim's computer.

[. . . . ] By the way, if you browse the Web using Mozilla's Firefox Web browser and have always had trouble loading PDF documents, you might consider following the advice here to fix the problem.



Search: Archer Daniels Midland Co. , tax subsidy

Scroll down that same page.

Search: "Canada, Australia Echo U.K. Cyber Attack Warnings" and follow the link to Canadian Cyber Incident Response Center.

Search: "Trojan horse" program , custom-made for each target, focusing on individuals who , attacks focusing on Canadian companies




Targeted Trojan E-mail Attacks -- "In particular, data on the size and times of HTTP or TCP port 80 connections"

Canadian Cyber Incident Response Centre (CCIRC) -- www.ocipep.gc.ca, "Information Note Number: IN05-001", 16 June 2005 -- via Washington Post

The Canadian Cyber Incident Response Centre (CCIRC) has received reports of a new e-mail-based technique for spreading Trojan horse programs. Because of the nature of this technique, standard defensive measures such as anti-virus software and firewalls are not completely effective. [. . . . ]







Brazil biofuel strategy pays off as gas prices soar -- Oil substitutes include sugar cane, corn, soybeans, beets, cornstalks Dan Morgan, Washington Post, June 18, 05

[. . . . ] Efforts to gain wide acceptance in the United States have faced political, economic, and technical obstacles not present in Brazil.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has vowed that his country will become the world's leader in renewable energy. It is already the largest producer and exporter of ethanol, sending half a billion gallons a year to a dozen countries, including the United States. [. . . . ]



Ground corn produces less ethanol than sugar; the tropics have sugar to burn.


Honour Roll, Tipping Point: Pigs, Analyses Resource

Memory Lane

Andre Ouellet was forced to resign under Pierre Trudeau in 1976 (National Post, June 20, 05, B16) -- but he was rehabilitated and made head of Canada Post, only to be forced to resign again, after he ran up massive expenses. His immediate predecessor had managed on $15-20,000 in expenses. (There might have been something about his predecessor being pushed out but check this and the value of the expense claims.)

Don't miss the rest of the trip down memory lane: Leader of the PC Opposition, Jean Charest 1990, invited to become a Liberal and lead Quebec as Premier; Art Eggleton 2002, rehabilitated and now a Liberal Senator, and many other familiar names from both the Liberals and the Mulroney Tories, though the Liberals have the edge. Remember, this compilaton does NOT yet include the fallout from current scandals, nor from the as yet un-whistleblown . . . whatever.

No wonder some located in the Centre of Canada are afraid of a leader from the West -- one who has not been corrupted. This newspaper page is worth framing, until the next one appears with the fallout from the latest scandals; this one is a very revealing map of "Politics as a Blood Sport" in Canada.




A Nightmare Scenario 6/27/05, By Mortimer B. Zuckerman

Should we sound the alarm for a worldwide epidemic that might not occur? There is no choice with the avian flu emerging from Asia. Last week's disclosure . . . .


Find out why you should care about the tipping point.

It has already moved from chickens to birds to pigs. [. . . . ]




Resource:

Country Analysis Briefs: Iraq -- Check for other briefs.

Iraq is estimated to hold 115 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, and possibly much more undiscovered oil in unexplored areas of the country. Iraq also is estimated to contain at least 110 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. The country is a focal point for regional and oil security issues.

Note: The information contained in this report is the best available as of June 2005 and is subject to change. [Link to this site] for a complete chronology of events pertaining to Iraq from 1980 through March 2005.[. . . . ]


the graph -- OPEC Revenues Fact Sheet


3. US, Canada, China, Security, Drugs and Related

What follow are somewhat related to previous posts -- see menu at left for

2. CFP's McLeod & Forensic Accountant Hawk -- UN, Volker & Annan

1. Rural Revolution --& -- Another Perspective: Communism, Grand Strategy, Alleged Sino-Soviet Split, Economic Impact -- Junk Science, Gov & Kyoto




3. US, Canada, China, Security, Drugs and Related

Hanson On China via this or this


Licia Corbella: Epidemic of espionage -- Spies cost our economy billions and put Canadian jobs in peril June 19, 2005, Calgary Sun

While CSIS is mandated to investigate economic espionage, it is barred from investigating corporate espionage.

As a result, the 25 foreign governments involved in espionage in Canada, often only have to incorporate a business within Canada to become exempt from official investigation.


Search: Michel Juneau-Katsuya, a former CSIS agent and now the CEO of Northgate Group , economic and industrial espionage in Canada , $1 billion a month


Chinese intelligence operations inside Canada

China's Ring of Crime -- Chinese Intelligence and Triads Team Up Against America Charles R. Smith, July 31, 2002

In early 2000, six individuals, including a Chinese general, were indicted by a U.S. grand jury, convened in Detroit, for running an illegal smuggling operation. The indictment of Chinese Gen. Zhang (pronounced Fhang) Wei included as evidence videotape taken by a Canadian undercover operative who managed to penetrate the smuggling ring. (See: Inside the Dragon's Den .) [. . . . ]

Ironically, after being indicted in the United States, Chinese Gen. Zhang may have met with Canadian officials, including Immigration Minister Elanor Kaplan, during a briefing in Fujian on how to combat illegal people-smuggling. The briefing included plans for Canadian security and law enforcement operations to combat smuggling.

[. . . . ] "Intelligence indicates that these specific individuals with these three groups: triads, Hong Kong investors and people close to China's leadership, have been identified working in concert with the Chinese government to gain influence through some of their 'financial ventures' in Canada. [. . . . ]



Search: linking the main agencies of the Canadian intelligence community , video surveillance , bought by a Chinese multinational , Tycoon or Overlord? , Red leaders of Beijing , Panama , Nassau , Grand Bahamas , a conduit for illegal , Buying Influence Inside Political Parties , Canadian Member of Parliament (MP) Darrel Stinson [No, he's not one of those whose influence was bought, I feel I must insert here. NJC]

Book: Inside the Dragon's Den

Resource with links: Asia Pacific News Service Wire Stories

Dangers in policing related to grow ops

Search: up to 10,000 children in Ontario , "Gwen Boniface, commissioner of the Ontario Provincial Police" , Green Tide Summit
[Title: "Police want private sector's help" Keith Leslie, CP, March 04, 2004]




U.S. Police and Intelligence Hit by Spy Network -- Spies Tap Police and Government Phones Charles R. Smith, Dec. 19, 2001 --

Note the date: The Canadian connection has been under-investigated--if not unreported--until lately when there has been a little bit. Why had journalists ignored this? Still the MSM are generally supportive of the government in power . . . in power of ruining careers to remain in power . . . and dispensing advertising $$$.

[. . . . ] "The critics also underestimated the incompetence and total ineptness of the people running our intelligence and law enforcement services during the Clinton-Gore years. One guy uses his home computer for storing top secret documents; another high-tech guru guy can't figure out how to save and retrieve his e-mail, and the guy in charge of everything is having phone sex over an open line with one of his employees," said Brown.

[. . . . ] Lisa Dean, vice president for technology policy at Free Congress Foundation, delivered a scathing critique of the breach of the U.S. law enforcement wiretap system.

"We are exercising our 'I told you so' rights on this," said Dean.


Search: CALEA , organized crime units , Comverse Infosys , reverse wiretaps , a poor substitute for real law enforcement and intelligence work , This approach leads to a compromise in national security and in personal security , "New Zealand, India and Chile"

I don't know enough to decide whether this is an argument in support of the perils of outsourcing . . . or not; judge for yourself. It is definitely worth reading, but so are the rest of these links.


Related: scandals

This resource should interest Canadians.


Corcoran: Junk Science -- Think What Kyoto is Based On

Sinking science: Junk science week -- Ottawa plans to ban lead fishing sinkers to save Canada's loons - though in fact the annual death toll is six Peter Shawn Taylor, June 18, 05

This year's fishing season could be the last time Canadian anglers are allowed to use those ubiquitous lead fishing sinkers. That's because the federal government is proposing to ban lead tackle and force fishermen to find more expensive alternatives. [. . . . ]





A healthy tan: Excess exposure may be hard on the skin, but the healthful effects of UV outweigh skin cancer and melanoma risks

Institutionalized lawlessness Terence Corcoran, June 14, 2005

For this, our sixth-annual Junk Science event, the theme is institutionalized lawlessness: How junk science is used to further entrench the arbitrary power and scope of governments and their agencies. Our opening example: the federal Competition Bureau, which is taking an Alberta-based owner of tanning studios to competition court for claiming that tanning may be good for you.

Junk science occurs when scientific facts are distorted, risk is exaggerated and the science is adapted and warped by politics and ideology to serve another agenda, even just to keep bureaucrats busy. The Competition Bureau's pursuit of Fabutan Sun Tan Studios of Calgary fits the mould of an agency attempting to turn official junk science into a vehicle for expanded regulatory power.

[. . . . ] The scientific focus is on vitamin D, of which the sun is a major source. Too much sun causes three melanoma deaths for each 100,000 people in the United States. But too little sun, and therefore too little vitamin D, may cause 70 deaths per 100,000 people from other forms of cancer. Dr. Edward Giovannucci, a Harvard University professor, recently published a review of evidence on exposure to sunlight. His conclusion was that higher sunlight exposure or vitamin D consumption appears to lower the risk for some cancers. "I would challenge anyone to find an area or nutrient or any other factor that has such consistent anti-cancer benefits as vitamin D," he said. [. . . . ]



CRTC: Pursuing "outdated protectionist policy"

"Redirecting dollars to provide government support for an industry that Canadians won't support themselves is outdated protectionist policy."


Irrelevant CRTC tithes satellite radio Paul Kedrosky, Financial Post, June 18, 2005

[. . . . ] One of the essential characteristics of satellite radio is an explosion of stations and options, with something emerging for virtually any market you can imagine. If people want bluegrass music from left-handed musicians from Digby, Nova Scotia, they will get bluegrass music from left-handed musicians from Digby, Nova Scotia. The old restrictions about spectrum space fall away in satellite radio, and infinite "spectrum" becomes a solution to the market's prior inability to economically provide content for small groups of like-minded listeners, however fringe they might be. [. . . . ]


Government gets the CRTC involved; costs go up and Canadians will find ways to circumvent the system which props up music and entertainment whch they may not want, have no interest in, or find too expensive.

I'm waiting for this government and its controlling agencies to crash.

Kedrosky is always worth reading. I repeat; check the Financial Post often.

Amnesty International, Freedom House & Discrimination

On Amnesty International or this

"I’m still a little uneasy about citing Amnesty, ever, simply because of its political nonsense. It seems to want credit for 'evenhandedness,' and this means grouping the United States with genuine human-rights violators. It’s far wiser to rely on Freedom House, which actually knows the difference between Guantanamo Bay and the Gulag."


Would one dare term this a good shot . . . from the Shotgun?

Appropos of the above, using discrimination means being able to "make or see a distinction; differentiate (cannot discriminate as between right and wrong)". The Canadian Oxford Dictionary also adds "have good judgment". . . in this case, perhaps just the application of common sense?