October 22, 2005

Supreme Affirmative Action -&- Dingwall as Captain Porker?

The Supreme Affirmative Action Scandal

I read with incredulity the news that Irwin Cotler, the Justice Minister, was considering appointing an aboriginal as the next Supreme. This is political correctness carried into the realm of absurdity. He babbled on about how natives had their own "traditional legal system". Well, that tradition doesn't have any body of case law as background to make complex legal decisions. Besides, whoever got appointed would only bring his own tribe's attitudes and sense of justice to the bar. Going down this road would lead to inferior appointments based on elitist illusions about "inclusion at all costs". Would we have to appoint a visible minority the next time? Minister Cotler has been a disappointment from the beginning; now, he is proving to be dangerous, as well. To make a mockery out of the already weakened Supreme Court could have far reaching consequences. Among a large segment of the populous there is the sense that the Supreme Court is far too activist--writing-in laws that fit their left wing ideology, and of course, that of their Liberal sponsors. The justice system doesn't need any more glances directed askance at it. And if you don't care about the social issues surrounding this appointment, then just care about the financial aspects of enormous land suits brought forth by natives across the country. The taxpayer cannot support billions more put on their tab.

© Bud Talkinghorn



David Dingwall Appearing this Halloween as Captain Porker?

You have to almost laugh as you hear Dingwall testifing before some House Committee. "Yes, I deserved all these entitlements because these are my entitlements", he said in his best Louie the Sixteenth voice. His performance was imperial in its "Let the peasants eat cake" attitude. Basically, it is a defense of:: I was a political appointee with no experience, except in garnering political favour. I collected as much as I could. That's what we all do. We are the real Masters of the Universe here in Canada. How dare you impugn me with tales of corruption. No matter how much hush money the Liberals will pay to silence this guy, the muck is going to stick. He not only hired Chuck Guite, he is Chuck Guite in spirit. They talk about "donor fatigue", but we are witnessing scandal fatique. The snail trail of sleeze never ends. Stories of inappropriate use of the $11,000 an hour government jet abound. It is a total disregard for the taxpayers' money.
Now Canadians feel that, if the rest were audited, this egreious display of "entitlement" would be staggering. It is a volcano that the Liberals must continuously sit upon. No matter how much they stuff into the vent hole, there are still gutters of arrogance gushing out. And slime that can't escape attention. I wait for that day when it erupts in all its glory. Let us witness the politicians who also think that living large is their perogitive. Let us see them naked and defiant. Surely, even our political brain-dead electorate will awaken from its summer snooze, and realize that while they were sleeping this corrosive sleeze was oozing around them.

© Bud Talkinghorn--Maybe this sounds hyberbolic, but it isn't. This particular case has only come to light recently. The opposition is digging ever deeper. More is coming, so sit back and pour yourselves a gin and tonic.


Auditor General's November 2005 Report

November 2005 Report of the Auditor General of Canada to the House of Commons via Newsbeat1

Each of the following is described in greater detail on the AG's website

Chapter headings:

Chapter 1, Royal Canadian Mounted Police—Contract Policing.
Chapter 2, The Quality and Reporting of Surveys
Chapter 3, Canada Revenue Agency—Verifying Income Tax Returns of Individuals and Trusts
Chapter 4, Managing Horizontal Initiatives
Chapter 5, Support to Cultural Industries
Chapter 6, Elections Canada—Administering the Federal Electoral Process.
Chapter 7, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada—Meeting Treaty Land Entitlement Obligations
Chapter 8, Other Audit Observations. Each year this chapter makes observations on specific matters that warrant Parliament's attention and have not been raised in a performance audit chapter. This year's observations deal with the following:

* CIDA—Tsunami disaster relief
* Transport Canada—The Quebec Bridge
* Parc Downsview Park Inc.—Transfer of Downsview lands and financing of future operations
* Changes to the Employment Insurance Act—A new rate-setting process

October 21, 2005

Adam Radwanski: on Politics Today

Adam Radwanski: Deep thinkers need not apply -- contains the best paragraphs on Canadian politics today!

[. . . . ] But its coverage was symptomatic of a broader phenomenon. For anyone tempted to come up with nuanced solutions to complex policy problems in this country, the lesson is simple: Nobody cares.

That the media tends to give productivity and other dry policy topics short shrift outside the business pages is forgivable. Its job is to sell copy. What's less forgivable is that those charged with running the country do likewise.

It's a product of our political culture that there is little incentive for governments to engage in serious long-term planning. Governments rarely look beyond the next election. Few ministers spend enough time in portfolios to undertake major structural change; when they do get ambitious (as, say, John Manley arguably once did in Industry), their reforms are just as likely to be put on the backburner by their successors. And election campaigns inevitably focus on hot-button concerns -- not how many jobs will be created down the road. [. . . . ]



NDP: Gay Rights Trump Other Rights & Right and Wrong

Gay rights trump other rights such as free speech and the freedom to vote one's conscience. This says it all about what the NDP values. Remember NDP MP Bev Desjarolais who voted against same-sex marriage? She was turfed out of the NDP caucus. However, criminality combined with supporting gay rights? A winning combination! No contest!

VANCOUVER CENTRE'S CHOICE -- ethically challenged Svend Robinson (caught stealing a $64,000 diamond ring) vs ethically challenged Liberal Hedy Fry ("They are burning crosses in Prince George, as we speak" -- and "In the 1993 federal election campaign Ms. Fry admitted to "fudging" prescriptions as a physician, writing them in the name of the gay partner or the lesbian partner who had the benefits because they were not transferrable to the other partner")

If the ordinary Canadian who speaks of Judeo-Christian values instead of gay 'rights' had done any of that, do you think he/she would be running for an NDP seat in Parliament?



Updated: Guns, Drugs, Guerrilla Video, "Punishment", Mandatory Minimums -&- Gov Example?

Liberal lead over Tories is five percentage points, suggests Decima poll Alexander Panetta, Oct. 21, 05

Pollster Bruce Anderson said increased scrutiny on the Liberal government is the reason behind the narrowing lead.




Small update:

Yesterday, I listened to an impassioned speech about concern for victims, instead of the present overemphasis on the rights of criminals--excellent examples of how criminals are coddled with taxpayer money while victims get virtually nothing that costs money -- wrong priorities. I do not remember the Western Conservative MP's name but check Hansard for Oct. 21, 05.

Do not miss the excerpts on justice, crystal meth, house arrest for drug dealers, visits to amusement parks, and more criminal fun in that best of all possible worlds, Canada , on Newsbeat1 -- or the original Hansard excerpts-Question period- Oct.19,2005

Hon. Stephen Harper (Leader of the Opposition, CPC): [. . . . ] The president of the Ontario police chiefs said, “Conditional and intermittent sentences, house arrest, 2 for 1 and 3 for 1 earned sentence protocols, mandatory parole and weekend passes to local theme parks do little to dissuade murderers, marijuana grow operators, ecstasy manufacturers, carjackers, child molesters and others from committing these horrific crimes”. [. . . . ]

Hon. Stephen Harper: Mr. Speaker, talk about a bunch of people who just do not get it. Yesterday the Vancouver Board of Trade said that crime is so bad in Vancouver it is doing damage to the economy of the city. Vancouver Police Chief Graham says federal laws allow thieves to reoffend and they get bail again and again and again. [. . . . ]


Search: Correctional Service Canada , use the Access to Information Act to , International organized crime , Liberal patronage appointee, Senator Larry Campbell , crystal meth , three big meth labs , mandatory minimums



Related -- from over the last few days

Drugs, Gangs, "Strategy", Convincing Judges & Parliament

Weekend passes for sex offenders

Bill C-65--Street Racing, Gun Registry, Parental Involvement Needed--Youth Criminal Justice Act



Hansard- Oct 18,2005- Bill C-248 amending Controlled Drugs and Substances Act-Private Member's Business

Mr. Jay Hill (Prince George—Peace River, CPC) moved that Bill C-248, An Act to amend the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (trafficking in a controlled drug or substance within five hundred metres of an elementary school or a high school), be read the second time and referred to a committee. [. . . . ]

The purpose of Bill C-248 is to impose mandatory prison sentences upon those convicted of trafficking in a controlled drug or substance within 500 metres of an elementary school or a high school. The mandatory sentences imposed would be one year or more for a first offence and two years or more for a subsequent offence.

These mandatory sentences apply to substances and amounts of substances as listed in schedules I, II, III, IV and VII of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, but the bill also would set maximum sentences depending upon the substance and/or the amount of the substance. [. . . . ]




Video on Pulse24 -- “The Real Toronto” unveils the inner workings of the increasingly violent gang culture. Bandana shrouded members flash hand signs and show off a frightening arsenal of weaponry in the crudely made production.

The guerrilla video was shot by a man called the Mad Russian and it chronicles life for gang bangers in about nine different neighbourhoods."


This is what has become of Toronto the Good?




Government Example?

From Campbell Clark, Oct. 18, 05 via Newsbeat1 -- Canada has for three years been sliding on the Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index

The drop has coincided with the recurring effects of the federal sponsorship scandal, which erupted in 2002 and shook federal politics in 2004 and again this year, but the TI study does not examine the cause of the decline. [. . . . ]



Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index



Michael Yon-Pundit Review Radio, New Blogging Venture, UN -&- Terror

With so much happening in Iraq, from the trial of Saddam to the voting on the Constitution, Michael Yon will be back on the Pundit Review Radio this Sunday evening. [Oct. 22, 05]

Michael will be joining us live from Iraq to give us a preview of his upcoming Weekly Standard column on last weekend's historic voting, we'll also get his perspective on Saddam's trial and the overall situation on the ground

When: Sunday, October 23, 9pm EST
Where: Streaming Live at Boston's Talk Station, WRKO
Contact: Call us toll free at 877-469-4322


About Pundit Review Radio

Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week Kevin & Gregg give voice to the work of the most influential thought leaders in the new media/citizen journalist movement. This unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening at 9pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston's Talk Leader.


For a bit of background on Michael Yon, independent journalist, see some excerpts from Michael Yon here.



New Blogging venture soon to be launched Newsbeat1



Claudia Rosett -- UN Newsbeat1



"Our allies are going to be the people oppressed by the supporters of terrorism"
Secrets of Terror By Jamie Glazov
FrontPageMagazine.com, October 20, 2005

Frontpage Interview’s guest today is Ryan Mauro, the 19-year-old author of Death to America: The Unreported Battle of Iraq and the youngest hired geopolitical analyst in the country. He is a volunteer analyst for Tactical Defense Concepts and Northeast Intelligence Network and is the owner of WorldThreats.com. He will be speaking at the 2006 Intelligence Summit on his work in open-source intelligence. [. . . . ]




Terrorism Knowledge Base PDF via Newsbeat1.


October 20, 2005

Quick Tour

Treatment of flu going assymetrical?

Maria McClintock: Quebec receives majority of anti-flu drug: report... via NealeNews

OTTAWA -- The federal government has stockpiled 14.5 million doses of the anti-viral drug Tamiflu for provincial use, with Quebec receiving well over half while Ontario got a token amount, Sun Media has learned. [. . . . ]




"ethically entitled to the entitlements"

Greg Weston: on David Dingwall, Andre Ouellet

Of course, it means nothing that Auditor General Sheila Fraser discovered Canada Post, VIA Rail and other Crown corporations were up to their chequebooks in the Adscam fiasco, laundering millions of dollars into all manner of dubious sponsorship deals.

Who cares? It's not our money.


Mr. Dingwall appears convinced he is "entitled" and that is the problem with those who have been at the trough at the top of the government team. There are good, decent legislators on the back benches who are appalled at this sense of entitlement. Could that have anything to do with their not rising in the government hierarchy to exalted positions? Why doesn't the MSM investigate what they have to say?

John Ivison and Don Martin assess Mr. Dingwall's performance somewhat differently in their articles in the National Post today.




Canadian "Journalism"

Lorne Gunter: Could the Star and Travers be up to their old Liberal-saving tricks? Oct. 19, 05

[. . . . ] That would be true, if it were true. But read the column carefully. It is written in the style of a news story, presumably to give it the appearance of objective fact, rather than merely the writer's opinions. Yet Travers never once cites a source. What he is claiming to know is confidential, "secret" even. Who told him? There is not so much as a "sources close to Judge Gomery have revealed," or even the ubiquitous "Ottawa insiders claim." [. . . . ]


Read the last paragraph of the article. That's how it's done.



Abotech scandal update excerpt or the full post is at Angry in the Great White North


From the Hallowed Halls of Canadian Justice by Wonder Woman of North American Patriot


Wary of the Chinese Auto Industry? photos, videos, Oct. 18, 05, on Red State Rant, via Jack's Newswatch.



Bill C-65--Street Racing, Gun Registry, Parental Involvement Needed--Youth Criminal Justice Act

Hansard Oct. 18, 2005: excerpt -- Bill C-65, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (street racing)

Criminal Code

Hon. Paul Harold Macklin (for the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada) moved that Bill C-65, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (street racing) and to make a consequential amendment to another Act, be read the second time and referred to a committee. [. . . . ]

Mr. Myron Thompson (Wild Rose, CPC): Mr. Speaker, I will ask a pointed question and I would like to get some answers straight to the point.

Knowing personally what Mr. Cadman's intentions were in regard to solving the problems that exist with these issues, when I look at the legislation I would like to ask the member who just spoke why, when the government is dedicating this legislation to Mr. Cadman's memory, did it go to such effort to water it down from the version that Mr. Cadman presented to the House on a number of occasions?

Just why is it watered down?
And I ask the member to please not use the charter excuse.

Mrs. Joy Smith (Kildonan—St. Paul, CPC): Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the opportunity to comment on this bill.

It is a regrettable time in the House of Commons. Just a few short days ago, members opposite voted against raising the age of consent from 14 to 16. It is a regrettable time when justice issues are so watered down that in actual fact it renders things very ineffective, especially in memory of the member of Parliament for Surrey North, who spent so much of his time fighting for justice issues.

I listened to the comments by members opposite. They talked about the private member's bill being less enforceable. The comment made by the member who just spoke was that he wants this to be enforceable. I have a problem with that when the gun registry money cannot be shut down to put front line officers on the street. The government is totally out of whack when it comes to the justice issues.

Could the member opposite please comment on, number one, how in the world this enforcement would occur when we do not have the police resources to take care of the everyday things that are happening? Number two, again, why this bill was watered down when the former member of Parliament was so zealous and so adamant about the specific things that needed to be in it?

(1025)

Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I very much support the bill, but I do have a question about one aspect with regard to linking the street racing activity to a consequence of some aggravating circumstance causing death or criminal negligence.

I think the question that the public may want to address is with regard to the offence of street racing itself, even in the absence of causing bodily harm or some other criminal negligence. I am wondering whether or not the issue of the repeat offender in terms of the street racing issue, which raises a risk to the public at large in terms of the event itself, should not also have been a focus of the bill to the same extent. [. . . . ]

(1030)

[. . . . ]

Mrs. Joy Smith (Kildonan—St. Paul, CPC): Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to have the opportunity to speak to Bill C-65, an act to amend the Criminal Code, street racing, and to a make consequential amendment to another act. This is another bill that I am sure has the best of intentions to put forward some frameworks to address the street racing problem in our country.

Today I want to put some comments on the record about the credibility of what is happening in the House of Commons. I speak as a former justice critic for the province of Manitoba and as the mother of a police officer. I feel the government has had over a decade to make things right, to make our streets safer. The government has failed miserably on all accounts.

In our city of Winnipeg, Manitoba many honourable police officers are trying to suppress crime. The problem is the laws at hand and the lack of resources, accountability and concern for the victims of crime.

We have had bills on trafficking of persons and on the age of consent. We have had pleas time and time again in the House of Commons to shut down the gun registry and put those resources toward front line police officers.


Once again we are hearing eloquent speeches from the Liberal members across the House. They say that they will get tough on crime, that they will honour the spirit of Mr. Cadman's private members' bills and that they will make things happen. This is something that is hard to believe. People across Canada are becoming very alarmed with the criminal acts happening in our nation and with the lack of consequences for these criminal acts. [. . . . ]

(1345)

Bill C-65 is nothing but a neutered version of Mr. Cadman's past bills. Although it does provide for mandatory driving prohibitions, the inclusion of street racing and aggravating factors for sentencing, it fails to include the clauses on repeat offenders, which were an essential part of the Cadman bills.

I want to go over those particular points, those particular amendments that I feel should be included. They are:

(a) for a first offence, during a period of not more than three years plus any period to which the offender is sentenced to imprisonment, and not less than one year;

(b) for a second or subsequent offence, if one of the offences is an offence under section 220 or subsection 249(4), for life:

(c) for a second offence, if neither of the offences is an offence under section 220 or subsection 249(4) during a period of not more than five years plus any period to which the offender is sentenced to imprisonment, and not less than two years;

(d) for each subsequent offence, if none of the offences is an offence under section 220 or subsection 249(4), during a period of not less than three years plus any period to which the offender is sentenced to imprisonment.

In other words, these clauses are basically an increasing scale of punishment, restating Chuck Cadman's intent in the bill.
[. . . . ]



CPC MP Mr. Andrew Scheer: Gun Registry

Mr. Andrew Scheer: Mr. Speaker, I love talking about the gun registry. As long as the Liberals keep defending it, the Conservatives will keep being elected in Saskatchewan. There is nothing defensible about the gun registry.

Let me address a few of the member's points. First of all, the fact that it may be checked by police officers around the country is meaningless. Try to picture an RCMP officer or a city police officer who checks the gun registry and it says that there are no guns present in this house. The registry says that no one in this house owns a gun because no one in the house has registered a gun. The officer says that he will then take off his bullet-proof vest, leave his guns in the car, and sidle up to the door and just walk in because he now knows, 100% for sure, that there are no guns in that house. Does the member really believe that there is any police officer in this country that would do that? Of course not. Maybe that Liberal member might do that, but I doubt he would be on the force very long if that is what he did.

Second, about the cost that is $20 million a year. Let us try $85 million a year. Only a Liberal who said that the plan would only cost $2 million would think that he is somehow being fiscally responsible by charging Canadians $20 million or $85 million. Only a Liberal would think that way. [. . . . ]




CPC MP Mr. Vic Toews: Youth Criminal Justice Act -- Parental Involvement Needed

Mr. Vic Toews: Mr. Speaker, I can give the member one specific example. It is a matter that is near and dear to her heart, and that is the failure of the Youth Criminal Justice Act to provide responsibility and accountability to those offenders who in fact have breached the law.

In the Youth Criminal Justice Act we see a trend by the government to separate the parent from the child. I think we see it in many other circumstances with the government, but we see the destruction of that relationship. In order to ensure that a child remains on the straight and narrow, it is so important to keep the influence of the family on that child.


I recall when I was prosecuting under the old Juvenile Delinquents Act, we could not prosecute a case unless one of the parents was in court. The parents had to appear in court. They had to explain sometimes why their child was involved in the criminal acts.

Now the parent has no say at all under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. In fact, the only one who has a say in the child's well-being is the lawyer. That is to whom the judge looks and says that whether or not the parents agree with this course of action, it is the lawyer who determines what is in the best interests of the child. That is specifically in the youth criminal justice jurisprudence.

I have had conversations with many parents who have stated, “I wanted my child to go in and accept responsibility so that we can get this past us and work with this problem”. In fact, the lawyer said, “They will never be able to prove it and we'll get this young offender off”.

We believe that the family should be involved in the justice system and in helping a young individual. Instead of creating a legal barrier between a parent and child, we want to reconnect the two so that there can be accountability, responsibility and in fact ensure that the child is on the proper path.
(1615)



October 19, 2005

Updated: Charisma, MP Greg Thompson: Emergency Debate on Passport Initiative, Border & Comment Period

Updated added just below this first item.

Mike Strobel: Charisma and Clinton's speech -- Stroebel not impressed Oct. 19, 05 -- Just read the whole thing -- h/t Newsbeat1

[. . . . ] Bill Clinton waggles his finger (and that's not all he waggled) and swears he did no interns. It's a lie.

KNEES BUCKLE

Now, Slick Willy commands $150 grand US per speech.

Charisma. [. . . . ]


A beautiful mind, eh, Canada? I suppose in certain sectors of Canada, it would pass -- perhaps on a CBC "greatest" . . . er, contest?



Update 1:

But Clinton Has "Charisma", Mr. Freeh!

Freeh at Last Posted Oct 14, 2005, Oliver North, Human Events Online

[. . . . ] Compare that to the three major issues that have defined the legacy of Bill Clinton's time in office -- scandal, corruption and personal moral failings. That legacy was reinforced this week with the release of My FBI , a new blockbuster book by former FBI Director Louis Freeh.

[. . . . ] ". . .There was always some new investigation brewing, some new calamity bubbling just below the headlines."

Freeh continued: ". . . His closets were full of skeletons just waiting to burst out."

When Clinton nominated Freeh to be director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 1993, he called him a "law enforcement legend." But it didn't take long for that belief to change, later referring to Freeh as "an insufferable Boy Scout." Former Clinton Chief of Staff John Podesta told CBS News that the relationship between Clinton and the FBI chief deteriorated so badly the president always referred to him as "F-ing" Freeh. [. . . . ]


Slick language, slick Willie.

Search: 177 pardons and commutations , after the Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia in 1996 , Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah , Clinton presidential library


Message to the Mainstream Media

Don't give Canadians hogwash on charisma; give us reports of decency, honour, integrity, attention to what is important, not to gaining personal advantage using taxpayer dollars. Point out the decent MP's from all parties. Stop concentrating on what is peripheral and singularly unimportant to good governance.


Even traditional Liberals are appalled

I talked with a Liberal friend lately and we agreed we are both 'conservatives' in that we see things worth conserving; we do want a big change in accountability, transparency and integity in government. We want Parliamentary input, sober consideration of implications for the long term as well as Parliamentary control, instead of PM/PMO appointments.

My friend is appalled by what has been revealed in the Gomery hearings, the Dingwall "gummy" affair, the Dept. of Fisheries, the Dept. of Indian Affairs . . . and more. Probably, my friend will vote Liberal because . . . well, old habits and connections . . . but doubt has entered the mind. The Liberal government for the last many many years has lost its liberalism, in the classical liberal sense. Paul Martin and team are, as were JC & his team, a government of control, socially left to maintain control and to gain votes -- governments of corruption and profligacy with what should be a sacred trust, the taxpayers' $$$. PM and team form a government desperate to remain in power.

IMHO, too many skeletons will fall out of the closet if . . .




CATCH-UP AT THE BORDER NYPost, Oct. 19, 05

October 19, 2005 -- More than a few ears must have stood up yesterday when Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told a Senate panel that the government is intent on sending home every single person who enters the United States illegally.

"Our goal at [the Department of Homeland Security] is to . . . return every single illegal entrant — no exceptions," Chertoff said. [. . . . ]



Related: Hansard, Oct. 18, 05, MP Greg Thompson (New Brunswick Southwest, CPC): the Western Hemispheric Travel Initiative (WHTI) often referred to as the passport initiative.

Mr. Greg Thompson (New Brunswick Southwest, CPC): [. . . . ] In accordance with the requirement of the Standing Orders, I hereby give notice that I will, at the next sitting of the House, make application for an emergency debate on actions taken by the United States of America that will have long lasting and negative consequences for the Canadian economy. With the potential to create more destruction in our trading relationship than the Softwood Lumber issue or BSE.

Mr. Speaker, I am referring to the Western Hemispheric Travel Initiative (WHTI) often referred to as the passport initiative. This initiative will require the use of passports by all U.S. Citizens leaving and returning to their country, this Mr. Speaker would also require Canadians to have the same form of identification ie passports [for travel to the United States]. Thus far Mr. Speaker, Canada has been somewhat silent on this issue, despite the fact that the economic consequences for our country will be great. As evidenced by the statistical information the various sectors of our economy have stated. (Statistical information on this issue would overburden you...but it is information that has been gathered by the Auto and Trucking Industries, Universities, Banks and Corporate Businesses, Border Commissions and Councils [including, obviously, the tourism council] and Provincial Governments.)

This debate I believe...is critically important because under the American Congressional Rules [and it is important for us to understand this] “there is a period of comment” where Canadians are allowed to comment on the impending legislation. [. . . . ]

The Speaker: [. . . . ] the comment period ended on October 31. I therefore do not see the urgency for an emergency debate at this point in time but there may come a day in the next few weeks when there would be some urgency and therefore emergency in terms of this debate. [. . . . ]


Let's see, the Speaker lives in one of the finest homes in Ottawa, I believe. He has a fine taxpayer-provided salary, a chauffeur-driven car, and will have a pension -- doesn't have to worry too much about getting across the border with his load or for some other income-related reason, doesn't run a business which depends on easy border crossing either way . . . so this is not urgent?



Drugs, Gangs, "Strategy", Convincing Judges & Parliament

"Justice Ian Nordheimer seemed skeptical about Grant's gang ties, saying there was little direct evidence of his membership in the Crips."

What would it take to have convincing evidence, judge? But I'll bet the justice doesn't live in the worst area(s) for drug/gang/gun violence in Toronto.



Gang gun violence-drug trade-enablers & "STRATEGY"

Editorial: on "enablers" -- the soft on drugs crowd -- "the folks behind this study somehow managed to spend $300,000 of our money to develop this 'strategy.'"



"The difference is in the sentencing"

Related: There is much more on this site: Hansard- Oct 18,2005- Bill C-248 amending Controlled Drugs and Substances Act-Private Member's Business excerpt on Newsbeat1 -- or 38th PARLIAMENT, 1st SESSION -- EDITED HANSARD • NUMBER 136, Tuesday, October 18, 2005 -- "Controlled Drugs and Substances Act"

Mr. Jay Hill (Prince George—Peace River, CPC) moved that Bill C-248, An Act to amend the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (trafficking in a controlled drug or substance within five hundred metres of an elementary school or a high school), be read the second time and referred to a committee.

[. . . . ] Drug dealers regularly discuss with each other the best place to go to plead guilty when they are caught red-handed dealing drugs, especially major drug deals. Where do they go? They go to the province of British Columbia and try to get into a Vancouver court. The charge is waived into Vancouver by the federal Department of Justice, whether the individual is originally from New Brunswick, or Manitoba, or Saskatchewan. These dealers set up residence in British Columbia, go to court and receive a conditional sentence. They walk out of court having been told to keep the peace but there is no way to effectively enforce a conditional sentence. Dealers think B.C. is a nice place to live so they set up business.

Is it any wonder that we have somewhere in the range of 10,000 grow ops in the lower mainland of British Columbia when across the line there are three or four cases a year in the United States? The difference is in the sentencing. [. . . . ]




Hurricane Wilma: Category 5

Wilma strongest Atlantic storm ever recorded -- "a Category 5 monster that forecasters warn is 'extremely dangerous.'" CTV.ca News Staff



Weekend passes for sex offenders

MP and Justice Critic Vic Toews questions "Weekend passes for sex offenders" [Check the Oct. 18, 05 Hansard transcripts.]

Vic Toews rose in the House of Commons yesturday to ask the Liberal government why convicted murderers and sex offenders are being given weekend passes to children's amusement parks.

Audio Link (unofficial transcript follows):

Mr. Vic Toews: Mr. Speaker, this morning Ontario police chiefs identified this government's laws, including house arrest and early parole, as obstructing their fight against crime and strangling the justice system. The police chiefs tell us the parole board has been giving weekend passes to convicted murderers and sex offenders so they can attend local theme parks.

Could the minister explain to wondering Canadians why convicted murderers and sex offenders should be given weekend passes to children's amusement parks.

Hon. Anne McLellan (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, Lib.):Mr. Speaker, obviously the purpose of the parole system has to be to ensure the public safety. That is why in fact I have asked the Standing Committee on Justice to review both the Corrections and Conditional Release Act and the parole system to determine whether we have the balance right.

The specific incidents that the hon. member refers to I am not aware of. I was made aware of the allegations by the Ontario Police Association just a few minutes ago. I will undertake to investigate whether or not any federal prisoners were sent to any amusement park anywhere.


Rehabilitation, redemption, a return to society are admirable goals but studies show that pedophiles, particularly, do not seem to benefit from society's good will. This is ridiculous.


Blogs & Gag Law: Let's rumble!

Nothing like muzzling dissenters and having a stacked deck at election time Oct. 18, 05, Posted by Paul Tuns -- trackback

[. . . . ] One lawyer even predicted that [Chief Electoral Officer, Jean Pierre] Kingsley may even send a note to prominent bloggers to inform them that they ought not to blog about the election in a partisan manner in an effort to intimidate them, to preemptively silence them. It is incumbent upon us bloggers to not succumb to such intimidation. . . . someone should begin a legal defense fund for the first blogger Kingsley tries to make an example of.


Read the whole and the comments.

To spur us on to greater endeavour . . .



Updated: Just a Bunch of Stuff

Note: I simply haven't the time to group these in any logical manner nor to post each separately today. Life intervenes. NJC



Updated--links added: Do not miss these articles from the National Post, Oct. 19, 05

The grown-ups' public intellectual contest; contrast with the 'quality' candidates with which CBC presented Canadians -- As they say in the hinterland, "some difference!"

* Lorne Gunter: Tom Flanagan, "Alberta's know-it-all"--literally -- Profiled for Canada's top Public Intellectual contest

* Andrew Coyne: Justice by quota

Andrew Coyne on appointing a new justice for the SCOC, quotas and logic -- reductio ad absurdem -- Excellent!

* David Frum: From axis of evil to the evils of Harriet Miers

* Canada, U.S. to begin open skies talks -- And what comes next? Think about it. Think some more.


* Total acquires Deer Creek Energy -- 78% and is going after 100% of the shares www.lexpert.ca -- Desmarais connection -- Financial Post, Oct. 19, 05

Check the law firms involved.


Kofi Annan, Coming to a Computer Near You!

* Internet -- "Keep Kofi's hands off the Internet" the move to wrest non-existent control of ICAAN from the US -- perhaps to give it to the UN. Excellent! -- This is not online at the National Post, Oct. 19, 05, but it was published as an editorial in the Wall Street Journal -- well worth reading.

GLOBALONEY: The World Wide Web (of Bureaucrats?) -- Keep your U.N. off my Internet. BY ADAM THIERER AND WAYNE CREWS, October 9, 2005 12:01 a.m. EDT



Venezuelan Orimulsion & China -- Note this, NB and NBPower.

"CNOOC plans to learn about the advanced technology and expertise of oilsands development" -- scroll down for the link.

China Looks to Latin America for Potential Oil Supplies -- China has become a major importer of Venezuela's Orimulsion , a tar-based fuel developed and branded by Petroleos de Venezuela that can be used in boilers. Chinese companies in partnership with Petroleos de Venezuela are investing $330 million to produce 6.5 million metric tons of Orimulsion annually by the end of this year. China has constructed at least one major electrical power plant designed to burn this fuel in Guandong province. [. . . . by Greg Flakus, 3 Oct 2004 by Epoch Times]



* Yang Hua, of Beijing-based CNOOC (China National Offshore Oil Corp), is excited with their low-cost entry into Canada's oilsands. "CNOOC plans to learn about the advanced technology and expertise of oilsands development", added Fu Chengyu.



A Little Background to Enjoying the Upcoming Trudeau Hagiography . . . or idealized biography such as the lives of the saints

CBC has been advertising a new TV program on the "charismatic" Pierre Trudeau--charismatic, so they keep repeating. I beg to differ.


[The] government of Canada won't be reviewing the oilsands sale to China. Jackie Jura, independent researcher

But that's not surprising. After all, Canada's Prime Minister for decades, way back when, Pierre Trudeau, opened our door to China and his like-minded "mandarins" (elites who own politicians) are still running government now. [. . . . ]


Scroll down to the bottom for several links, among them, Chinada's Sovietization and Canada's Red Trudeau Jackie Jura, Orwell Today

Mr. Trudeau told the wife of U.S. chargé d'affaires Hugh Cumming that he was a Communist and a Catholic, then went on to criticize the U.S. and praise the Soviet Union.

Concerned that the incident involving a former Privy Council employee would undermine U.S. estimates of Canada's security, Mr. [George] Ignatieff was dispatched in what appears to be a pre-emptive strike.


Search: George Ignatieff, then second-in-command at the Canadian Embassy in Washington

Let the hagiography begin. CBC getting its ducks in a row for an election to return more of the same. As Jackie Jura says:

Our resources are being devoured by our enemy and not a comment is made by the politicians who are instead distracting the masses with local pork-barrel corruption and upcoming election talk.




What Does It Take To Arouse A Sense Of Shame Among Politicians Who Use Immigration Tactics (Importing Voters Regardless Of The Problems They Cause) To Deceive Canadians And To Disregard The Broader Good Of Canada?

[. . . . ] Police and other law enforcement officials in the Greater Toronto area are very much aware of similar behaviour among Tamils and other recent immigrant groups who have also imported "the way things are done at home". The enormous size of these groups makes it very difficult for Canadian officials to control such violence. It is important to note that the enormous cost of dealing with this behaviour in these immigrant groups is never calculated when officials add up the cost of immigration which Mr. Martin and others want to increase by 40%. The latter proposal is generally regarded as the ultimate in corruption.

In other words, the answer to the question, "Why has the Canadian government not taken strong action against the very large Tamil group in Canada?" is that they rely on the Tamils to elect a number of MP's in the Greater Toronto area and strong action might alienate the Tamils. All morality is subordinated to getting elected. [. . . . ]





Paths to power -- How the Liberals seduce voters with the classic bait and switch routine JOHN GEDDES, Macleans, Oct. 18, 05 via Newsbeat1

Blend social and business themes, play off the Americans, strive to be pan-Canadian -- Liberals turn to these elements again and again. But another constant must be most galling to their opponents: their mastery of using power to stay in power. The governing party's ability to make appointments, dispense patronage, and recruit talent looms large in Clarkson's book -- and in Martin's recent record. He recruited Frank McKenna as a high-profile ambassador to the U.S., hooked Belinda Stronach with the bait of cabinet clout, and snagged Michaëlle Jean, whose appointment as Governor General restored fading Liberal hopes in key Montreal-area ridings with big ethnic votes. [. . . . ]




Get "the full catastrophe"

Government Failure in Canada, 2005 Report: A Review of the Auditor General's Reports, 1992-2005 October 2005, Fraser Institute, Jason Clemens, Mark Mullins, and Niels Veldhuis

Executive Summary: The discussion of the limitations of government and subsequent government failures is wholly absent from debate in Canada where, unfortunately, we still assume that governments act benevolently and without institutional constraints. That this is not true is plain to see in the pages of the reports of the Auditor General of Canada, which provide concrete evidence of the existence, and the extent, of government failure in Canada. [. . . . ]




"Mr. Guité said he rigged the process"

"The inquiry heard conflicting testimony about how Pierre Tremblay, then the chief of staff to then public works minister Alfonso Gagliano, was hired to replace retiring bureaucrat Chuck Guité." By DANIEL LEBLANC, Tuesday, October 18, 2005 Page A4

OTTAWA -- An affidavit prepared by the Public Service Commission for the Gomery inquiry sheds new light on the controversial hiring of a former Liberal aide to head the sponsorship program in 1999, including the role of a federal official who would become an aide to Prime Minister Paul Martin.

The inquiry heard conflicting testimony about how Pierre Tremblay, then the chief of staff to then public works minister Alfonso Gagliano, was hired to replace retiring bureaucrat Chuck Guité. Mr. Guité said he rigged the process at Mr. Gagliano's behest; the former minister denied any political interference. [. . . . ]




There's something else going on here

Why is a country that prides itself on nebulous and dubious virtues like tolerance and diversity not able to nail the really basic ones like honesty, integrity and loyalty? Occam's Carbuncle, Oct. 17, 05




"a cache of used needles and "safer crack kit" paraphernalia -- left mere steps from the children's playground"

Drug dealers laughing in Toronto By SUE-ANN LEVY, TORONTO SUN, Oct. 18, 05

"Harm-reduction" sites and services encourage illegal drug users and alcoholic street people to continue to ingest their poisons using clean equipment in a safe environment. The theory is that it will eventually lead to fewer overdoses and less open use of drugs on the street.

[. . . . ] "What a sad message to send out to our children ... that now you can have a safe, warm, cozy place to do your crack," she said. "And the people who run this city don't feel they can help you with treatment."



Former Martin aide on witness list for Commons Earnscliffe probe by Romeo St. Martin, [PoliticsWatch Updated 7:05 p.m. March 21, 2005]

Mentions $240,000 , Terrie O'Leary , Warren Kinsella , Don Drummond , Auditor General Sheila Fraser , Allan Cutler




No wonder PM won't allow Byfield to take his Senate seat for Alberta

He was elected, he reasons, and he writes. Why, he even has an ethical core!


Corruption has been built into Canada’s system of government Link Byfield, 10 October 2005, CCFD

Link Byfield is chairman of the Edmonton-based Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy, and an Alberta senator-elect.

Corruption doesn’t start with spendthrift good-old-boys like Dingwall and Ouellet milking the system while everyone looks the other way, or shopping bags stuffed with sponsorship cash going secretly to political campaign offices.

That comes later.

It starts with popular but dishonest political language and spending aimed at buying votes en masse.

Employment Insurance, for example


[. . . . ] In fact, EI is not “insurance” at all, just another gigantic regional equalization program, in which year-round workers in high-employment areas like Ontario and Alberta subsidize seasonal workers in low-employment areas like Cape Breton. [. . . . ]




Canadian ecstacy and pot heading to Japan James Gordon, Oct. 18, 05

OTTAWA -- Canada is becoming a major exporter of narcotics to Japan, according to an RCMP intelligence report, and this country's links with Colombian drug cartels are multiplying.

[. . . . ] methamphetamine . . . . ecstasy . . . . marijuana . . . . Canadian organized crime elements and Colombian cartels . . . . drug trafficking and terrorism [. . . . ]




Excerpt, Hansard: Oct. 18, 05 Newsbeat1

The proposed amendments to the Criminal Code in Bill C-49 would create three new indictable offences that specifically address human trafficking. The first contains the global prohibition on trafficking persons. The second prohibits a person from benefiting economically from trafficking. The third prohibits the withholding or destruction of identity, immigration or travel documents to facilitate trafficking in persons.

The legislation also ensures that trafficking may form the basis of a warrant to intercept private communications, to take bodily samples for DNA analysis and to permit inclusion of the offender in the sex offender registry. Bill C-49 also expands the ability to seek restitution to the victims who are subjected to bodily or psychological harm.

Again, without serious penalties for these very serious, abhorrent crimes, the exploitation and abuse will continue. In this legislation, there are no mandatory minimum prison sentences. We need to send a clear message that slavery is wrong.

[. . . . ] º +-(1615)

We already know that the government wants the age of sexual consent to be 14, one of the lowest in the world. It causes us problems. We have pedophiles looking at our children. They lure them through the Internet. Now there is a plan from the government to legalize prostitution and solicitation. With a low age of consent and the plan regarding prostitution, we must have multiple types of legislation to protect our vulnerable children and our women.

[. . . . ] I do support Bill C-49 going ahead, but we have to toughen it up.




Will There Be A News Conference By Irwin Cotler?
Announcing an RCMP investigation into who is responsible for the leak of contents of the Gomery ADSCAM report to the media?
Kate McMillan, Oct. 18, 05

[. . . . ] None of this clumsy obfuscation would be possible in a country with a diverse and independant media. (I'll also suggest that none of it would be likely in a country where Senators and Governors General were elected, instead of plucked from the "journalistic" whorew (sic) ranks.) [. . . . ]


I read somewhere that pretending to leak is, actually, a Liberal attempt to do damage control -- that the report is bad for Martin. All is speculation yet.



The Cost of "a pervasive welfare system"

Immigration and the Welfare State in Canada: Growing Conflicts, Constructive Solutions Herbert Gruebel, Fraser Institute, October 2005, ISBN/ISSN 1206-6257

[. . . . ] Government employees and academics have studied the reasons for the low incomes of recent immigrants in Canada. The findings of these studies are still tentative, but point to the large numbers of immigrants who bypass the government screens that are designed to allow entry only to foreigners likely to be economically successful. Those bypassing the screen include large numbers of family members and refugees, many of which have low earnings capacity. [. . . . ]

. . . its main recommendation involves a fundamental reform of Canada’s immigration selection process to prevent the need for such measures and to avoid large costs to taxpayers in the future.




Paul, the Panderer "has gone too far"

[. . . . ] As part of the accumulating evidence that Harper should go for the good of his party, the Liberals and reporters point to the failure of his Conservatives to much improve their standing in opinion polls.


Who pays for the polls and do the polling companies work on government contracts? If so, forget the results. Note that Fisher once sat as an NDP member.

I have heard of polls that show the Conservatives under Stephen Harper as steadily climbing. One poll showed that people chose the Conservatives by over 80% (at the time I saw it); it was about as scientific as the polls paid for by those who want to maintain the status quo.





Documenting government waste and inefficiency.

Sponsorship Scandal Only One in an Endless Series of Government Failures:Review of Reports from the Auditor General Predicts More Problems John Clemens and Niels Veldhuis. Oct. 17, 05 -- second in a series

[. . . . ] Second, once objectives are prioritized, governments should use innovative mechanisms such as privatization, private-public partnerships, and outsourcing to ensure that the highest quality, lowest cost combination of program delivery is achieved on a regular basis.

Third, governments should provide more resources and authority to monitoring and watchdog agencies such as the Auditor General, as well as expanding Access to Information abilities of third parties to better ensure internal controls and public accountability. [. . . . ]





The biggest problem with government is government. Greg Weston, Oct. 18, 05

[. . . . ] "The main lesson from the facts assembled by the auditor general is that governments are not very effective vehicles for accomplishing outcomes," the Fraser study concludes.

"Therefore, the objective must be to minimize the tasks that are undertaken in the public sector.

"Public purpose can be accomplished as well, or better, by contracting, privatizing, or ceding the activity to the private sector."




Oil thirst from China adds fuel to trade tussle - Globe and Mail - 14 Oct 2005


Hansard-Criminal Code-Bill C-49- trafficking in persons Oc.17,2005 -- Hansard

People are being told they can come to Canada and get a job and that it is a wonderful country. It is a wonderful country, but they are brought into Canada under false pretences. When they arrive here they are told that the job they were promised is no longer there but that they do have another job, which turns out to be that of a sex trade worker. It is terrible to trap people into that. The visas and passports are seized and taken from these people. These people are afraid to go to the police in case they will be deported from Canada, so they keep quiet and they are trapped.
[. . . . ]



"verbal advice only"

Hansard excerpts- Question Period - Oct 17,2005 -- Newsbeat1

Government Contracts [. . . . ]

David Dingwall [. . . . ]

Indian and Northern Affairs Canada

Mr. Jim Prentice (Calgary Centre-North, CPC): Mr. Speaker, Canadians now see that the virus of Liberal entitlement, rot and corruption has spread into the department of unlimited spending.

The Minister of Indian Affairs has now been caught signing a major contract with an Ottawa consulting firm that demands verbal advice only and specifies that the consultant leave no paper trail for the Auditor General.

Canadians have seen these sorts of liberally sensitive gag order contracts before: the Earnscliffe contracts with the Prime Minister's former office, the Groupaction contracts, and now Indian affairs.

Who instructed the minister to avoid public accountability, to avoid the House, and to avoid the Auditor General?

Hon. Andy Scott (Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, as I said, as part of an audit exercise within the department and following Treasury Board guidelines, the branch hired experts. The contract called for an oral presentation on the initial findings from confidential employee interviews. It was a small part of the contract. There is a contract. There is a statement of work. There is a clear audit trail which shows the department got what it paid for.

[Translation]

Mr. Jim Prentice (Calgary Centre-North, CPC): Mr. Speaker, that is verbal notice of a dirty Liberal agreement. Two weeks ago, the President of Treasury Board confirmed that he does not know how much the Liberal government is spending on aboriginal programs. What a surprise. Even consultants working for the department are doing so in secret. The Auditor General made this same criticism about the sponsorship scandal and the Earnscliffe contracts.

Why is the minister hiding the truth from Canadians?

[English]

Hon. Andy Scott (Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, clearly the member did not listen to the answer in the first instance. There is a contract. It is very transparent. It shows the department got what it paid for.

National Defence [. . . . Gun Registry]

Mr. Colin Carrie (Oshawa, CPC):
[. . . . ] Over the weekend a TTC bus driver was shot in the head after getting caught in the middle of a dispute during his shift. Just hours before the shooting, I attended a crime and justice forum in Scarborough where constituents were in unanimous agreement that mandatory prison sentences were needed to control the recent wave of violent crime. The Liberal government has opted for throwing money at an ineffective gun registry instead of investing in front line policing to keep our communities safe. [. . . . ]




Conservative MP John Reynolds Slams Liberal Party on Integrity

“Integrity is doing the right thing at all times and keeping in mind that we are sent here as trustees and representatives of the people of Canada and the money they send us is sent in trust. Those dollars are Canadians’ dollars and we must never forget that. Unfortunately the Liberals seem to have forgotten what the ‘public trust’ means and seem to have adopted the belief that what’s good for the Liberal Party is good for Canada.” Frank Tridico, LTVNews, Oct. 18, 05

Frank Tridico is author of upcoming book, Inside Sault Ste. Marie Politics



Stop Islamophobia

'Stealth' Islamists recruit students Ali Hussain posted by him on CCD 2005/10/18

The Sunday Times began the investigation after a report by Professor Anthony Glees of Brunel University, which said colleges had become breeding grounds for extremists.

[. . . . ] Razaq said: "Stop Islamophobia is set up by us. But we don't actually push it like that. The moment they link Hizb ut-Tahrir with Stop Islamophobia, they'll bring the whole campaign down."

[. . . . ] He explained the "party method", which he said was non-violent but demanded complete dislocation from democracy and British secular values.

"You don't work with the system," said Razaq. "Our political work is outside the system in order to create that Islamic change.
We want influential people, but when you win them over you win them over to the framework of Islam." [. . . . ]




Four lobbyists investigated for possible ethics breaches -- First such investigations ever launched under ethics guidelines



Google and privacy By ANICK JESDANUN, Oct. 17, 05

[. . . . ] It also describes in greater detail what Google is doing to protect against abuses.

But it remains silent on how long information is kept. That's an area of growing concern as Google offers more and more services that potentially collect and store a wealth of personal data, making the company's servers a prime target for abuse by overzealous law enforcers and criminals alike. [. . . . ]





[McCallum] said the companies, PetroChina and CNOOC Ltd., were "very positive" in their response to his pitch to invest in Canada. By GEOFFREY YORK, October 14, 2005 Page A1 With a report from Dave Ebner

They are likely to get a more welcoming response from Canada than from the United States, where CNOOC's bid to acquire the American oil company Unocal was blocked by an angry political reaction.

Mr. McCallum said he received the 400,000-barrels-a-day estimate yesterday from Chinese and Canadian investors in Beijing, who called it an "ambitious but realistic target" for China's aspirations in the Canadian oil patch. [. . . . ]

In April, PetroChina signed a preliminary deal to take 200,000 barrels a day from Gateway, one of three big oil-sands deals China has made this year. In May, SinoCanada Petroleum Corp. -- an arm of state-run Sinopec -- paid $105-million for a stake in the Northern Lights oil-sands project and CNOOC has paid $150-million for a one-sixth stake in MEG Energy, a small Canadian company with proprietary oil-sands technology.


Search: called for quick implementation of the Canada-China "strategic partnership"

IMHO, Chinese interests, inroads and influence are not limited to oil. Watch that "proprietary oil-sands technology". Warning based on past experience with intellectual capital, copyright, design (AECL nuclear -- Sunpoke design) . . . .




The Top 10 Models in Fuel Economy By Marc Lachapelle

According to Natural Resources Canada's ratings for new 2005 model year vehicles




I'm off to Arizona to find this place!

Diversion just in from JK, a friend in the US.

For the farmers in our midst.



Four retired guys are walking down a street in Yuma, Arizona. They turn a corner and see a sign that says, "Old Timers Bar . . . ALL DRINKS 10 CENTS!" They look at each other, then go in, thinking this is too good to be true.

The old bartender says in a voice that carries across the room, "Come on in and let me pour one for you! What'll it be, Gentlemen?"

There seems to be a fully-stocked bar, so each of the men ask for a martini. In short order, the bartender serves up four iced martinis shaken, not stirred, and says, "That'll be 10 cents each, please." The four men stare at the bartender for a moment, then look at each other.

They can't believe their good luck. They pay the 40 cents, finish their martinis, and order another round. Again, four excellent martinis are

produced with the bartender again saying, "That's 40 more cents, please."

They pay the 40 cents, but their curiosity is more than they can stand. They have each had two martinis, and so far they've spent less than a dollar. Finally one of the men says, "How can you afford to serve martinis as good as these for a dime apiece?"

"Here's my story," the bartender said. "I'm a retired tailor from Brooklyn, and I always wanted to own a bar. Last year I hit the lottery for $25 million and decided to open this place. Every drink costs a dime, wine, liquor, beer, all the same."

"Wow. That's quite a story," says one of the men.

The four of them sipped at their martinis and couldn't help but notice three other guys at the end of the bar who didn't have a drink in front of them, and hadn't ordered anything the whole time they were there.

One man gestures at the three at the end of the bar without drinks and asks the bartender, "What's with them?"

The bartender says, "Oh, they're farmers from Saskatchewan. They're waiting for happy hour at 5 o'clock when drinks are half price."




October 18, 2005

Public Intellectual Mark Steyn -&- Iraqi Celebration

Public Intellectual: Barbara Kay on Mark Steyn -- excellent


Mark Steyn on Multiculturalism

If you wake up one morning and switch on the TV to see the Empire State Building crumbling to dust, don't be surprised if the announcer goes, "Insurging rebel militant forces today attacked key targets in New York. In other news, the president's annual Ramadan banquet saw celebrities dancing into the small hours to Mullah Omar And His All-Girl Orchestra . . ."



Video of celebration in Iraq -- Note this, MSM!


Quick Tour

The Liberals' China syndrome Bruce Garvey, National Post, Friday, October 14, 2005

[. . . . ] There is one nightmare scenario that has haunted anyone with a semblance of wit since 9/11 -- the prospect of the U.S. slamming the border shut over some security breach. In an instant, there goes the Canadian economy.

[. . . . ] And for Martin to blithely fantasize about replacing our common North American heritage with some strategic soul mate partnership with China is the height of irresponsibility.

Speaking of which, where does the Martin family shipping company build its new tankers? You guessed it -- China. Just sayin'. [. . . . ]


Is Canada's PM so desperate he's verging on out of control?



Re: Paul Martin's personal financial interests in China Stan Lai, vice-president, Formosan Association for Public Affairs, Toronto

[. . . . ] The Chinese government offers favourable contracts to those nations that excuse its shameful behaviour. Is the Martin government prepared to excuse the human rights atrocities committed by the Chinese government? Will Ottawa downplay the persecution of Falun Dafa practitioners and the military threat to democratic Taiwan? [. . . . ]




Too important to miss

Which part of NO don't you understand? Breaking America's grip on the net posted on Italics Mine, -- "After troubled negotiations in Geneva, the US may be forced to relinquish control of the internet to a coalition of governments", by Kieren McCarthy, Thursday October 6, 2005, The Guardian

Old allies in world politics, representatives from the UK and US sat just feet away from each other, but all looked straight ahead as Hendon explained the EU had decided to end the US government's unilateral control of the internet and put in place a new body that would now run this revolutionary communications medium.


And into the breach, that moral beacon, the UN?



Gomery Inquiry Transcripts


The West Must Unite -- The Fight against Jihad: Dealing with India and China By Wolfgang Bruno. Posted by Ted Belman on 13:05:51 2005/10/17

[. . . . ] Muslims in India make up about 150 million people, and their growth rate exceeds those of Hindus and Sikhs. Combined with the populations of Bangladesh and Pakistan, non-Muslims could be a minority on the Indian subcontinent by mid-century. Muslims still consider India to be "unfinished business", which is why the Saudi royal family has cleared plans to construct 4,500 Islamic madrasas in South Asia. [. . . . ]


What the world needs now is . . . peace, more "peaceful" instruction?



Does the white man have a monopoly on racism? Wonder Woman, Shotgun, Oct. 17, 05

I don't think racism, in any form should be celebrated. But doesn't it strike anyone as strange that a black man, using the term "Black Power" is not considered offensive, but a white man, using the term "White Power" is? Aren't they equally offensive?




Kevin Libin says it is "the most scintillating talk radio permitted by the CRTC."




Dean Beeby: Dept. of Fisheries audit horror stories

[. . . . ] The audit also probed whether the Fisheries Department has been following rules laid out on Dec. 12, 2003, when Prime Minister Paul Martin ordered senior federal officials to post expenses on the Internet each quarter.

A sampling showed some senior officials at Fisheries neglected to disclose a few business trips "due to administrative oversight." [. . . . ]


How often have you tried to find something supposed to be on a government website, something that was pointed out by someone else, only to find it seems to be missing? Deleting the evidence?




ADSCAM DNA reveals Patient Zero -- Ho hum. Another day, another example of Liberal Party sleaze. Black Rod, October 16, 2005

[. . . . ] "On April 19, 1970, a handful of Canada's most powerful businessmen met privately at the elegant Montreal home of financier . . . .

"On April 27, 1970, a cheque for $3,000.50 went to . . . , then a federal cabinet minister." [. . . . ]

Search: controlled by a trusted Liberal Party bagman



CWF goes from Western champ to Eastern chump Ezra Levant, Oct. 17, 05.

CWF=Canada West Foundation

[. . . . ] The CWF's financial reports tell the story: their largest source of funding is now from governments -- including from Ottawa's Privy Council Office, Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (the renamed HRDC department that lost $1-billion in tax dollars) and Western Economic Diversification Canada, the Liberals' Western-patronage arm. He who pays the piper, calls the tune.

Big Liberals on the CWF's board [. . . . ]




"often has roots in eastern Europe"

Graphic photographs of the rape of a young girl were embedded in a spammed e-mail -- what you should do if this arrives

Gillespie said people who receive child porn spam should delete it and report the incident to Cybertip.ca, a not-for-profit agency endorsed by the federal government and police services across the country [. . . . ]




Rumsfeld says he 'has nothing but respect' for Canadian Forces: Hillier -- The military relationship between Canada and the U.S. appears to be positively warm, according to Canada's top soldier Chief of Defence Staff Rick Hillier. Oct. 17, 05, Christopher Guly

Despite the heated rhetoric across both sides of the Canada-U.S. border, the dispute over duties charged on Canadian softwood lumber is "not personal between the two countries," says Canada's Ambassador to the U.S. Frank McKenna. [. . . . ]

Gen. Hillier shared comments from U.S. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who told the CDS that he has "nothing but respect" for Canadians.

"He said, 'The only problem is there are too few of you in uniform.'"




Washing hands defence against bird flu 14.10.05, By Jeremy Laurance, NZ Herald, via Newsbeat1

LONDON - A global campaign today will launch a secret weapon against the spread of avian flu - a small plastic bottle of alcohol rub and a warning to wash your hands.

Health officials will warn that clean hands are the best defence against the threatened flu pandemic and that regular use of alcohol rub could save millions of lives from other hospital infections. [. . . . ]




Criminal Intelligence Service Canada Annual Report 2005 Table of contents

The Organized Crime Marketplace in Canada
Characteristics and Methods
Structure and Composition
Violence and Intimidation
Cross Border Movement
Technology and Crime

Criminal Markets
Contraband
Financial
Human Beings as a Commodity
Illicit Drugs
Motor Vehicles
Natural Resources

Conclusions




China unwise to act the bully

Trade sanction threat ignores their thirst for Canadian crude
Oct. 14, 05, Calgary Herald

Canada's biggest concession to the People's Republic, [ . . . . ]

National Revenue Minister John McCallum, in Beijing to sell Canadian energy, should deliver one short message to the Chinese, then be on the next plane home:

"We're the market, you're the seller. You need us more than we need you."

Second, "We're the energy source, you're the buyer. You need us, more than we need you. So, back off, or we'll see you on the spot market, suckers." [. . . . ]


But that would interfere with so many plans.




Schadenfreude, Age of Consent, Olympic Buck Passing Team

"A Great German Word" -- "malicious satisfaction in the misfortunes of others" or CCD

[. . . . ] I am sure that at least some of the flowers, fruit and vegetables that cater to European sophisticates came from the more than 3000 Gaza greenhouses. They were all built on barren empty land by the Jews who ­ until a few years ago - employed over 12,000 Palestinians there. Since the start of the last Intifada and several terror attacks by the more demented employees, the number of Arabs working the greenhouses was drastically reduced, and they were replaced by Thais, Africans and Filipinos. [. . . . ]

Just an hour or so after the Jews left Gaza thousands of Palestinians swarmed into the empty settlements. The Palestinian police watched the mob demolish the abandoned synagogues and set them on fire. They also watched with interest as part of the crowd turned on the greenhouses ­ breaking windows, taking plates of glass, wiring, computer and electronic parts and irrigation pipes and timers. It didn¹t take long ­ after a few hours or so the greenhouses that it had taken years to build were just so much junk. [. . . . ]



I wrote some time ago that I was waiting to read of the Palestinians' creating, growing, developing, inventing anything the world wanted -- for example, even producing the largest pumpkin in the Middle East. I won't hold my breath. They have been schooled in hatred and destruction . . . so Canada's government imports "Palestinian students" to "study"--and stay--and so, we get the Concordia hate fest when Mr. Netanyahu came to speak. And Canadians undoubtedly will vote for more of the same. Quality immigration via universities -- but they vote Liberal and fit into . . . . well, you figure it out.


David Warren: Age of consent via Speak Up For Truth : Of such are the Kingdom of Heaven

We are living, today, in the most child-unfriendly society that has existed.


This is not an argument for day care.



The National political Olympic buck passing team is in damage control mode after an innocent hard working Bus driver was shot -- On the crawl, I see he lost his eye. -- via Newsbeat1

There are several good links on the Newsbeat1 site.


October 17, 2005

Clinton on US-CA Relations -&- Mike Duffy

Bill Clinton: speaking in London now -- emphasized environment and helping the poor Third World, also that US-CA may differ but are friends, still. Tell that to Ambassador McKenna, PM Paul Martin, Min. McCallum and the rest who seem to be taunting the US with tar sands oil. It could backfire. According to Andrew Coyne, Canada's lumber industry is subsidized because of low stumpage for public land trees so the US is not necessarily in the wrong. Check for his article.


McCallum as the Energy Minister will do as PM/PMO and the PM team tell him. What a perfect choice to send off to China. He takes his orders so well.


Duffy--shilling for the Liberals

I just heard Duffy's panel (CTV) and he treated the news, the questions, the whole sleaze of Ottawa as simply a chance to get a woman from the PMO, an NDP rep. and a Conservative rep. to spar, but he did not address seriously what Canadians want addressed. There was not a sense that Duffy understands the outrage Canadians feel at "business as usual" over several years of corruption under Paul Martin, Jean Chretien, and their teams. He did not mention the private member's bill on tax havens, specifically, the one that gave advantages to companies such as Paul Martin's CSL in the past and now to his sons' company. Duffy treats so much as though it were a joke and the opposition as beneath notice when they mention corruption. Duffy tosses what are legitimate questions in the House off as Conservatives simply wanting an election. Duffy has been around the pigs at the trough too long.

It looks from something that was said that the government is going to try to shift more of the blame for the sponsorship scandal onto civil servants, as much as possible anyway -- that they are somewhat a law unto themselves, undirected from the PMO. IMHO, bosh!

That "rogue civil servant" explanation

Oct. 14 - Testimony previously under publication ban has been released by Judge Gomery which gives a closer look at the financial relationship between Jean Brault and Chuck Guite (Money bound Brault and Guite) all of which seems to be in line with the "rogue civil servant" explanation: [. . . . ]



Duffy gushed over Clinton's charisma -- not mentioning his demeaning the office of the Presidency. Give me a decent PM and forget charisma. It is rather like celebrity -- being well known because you're well known. Charismatic because the MSM claim it to be so? And the sheep gobble it up. The last time we had the PET charisma, a spending spiral began which drove up the debt and has continued with every PM since. We need a sober, conservative government that will treat Canadians' hard-earned money with great care and respect.

We're to be treated to more of the Trudeau hagiography this week on CBC, I believe. Oh, woe! Does it never end?


Signs of arrogance with the public's money...........

Gomery website and Invitation for public input


Mtl. Harbour Project, Sen. Fox, Lucien Bouchard, Autoroute & More

Harbour facelift could be quick: Fox -- move Bonaventure Autoroute-- "Harbour project co-chairs Senator Francis Fox and former PQ Premier Lucien Bouchard . . . "private sector investments in housing and commercial properties along the water By Jason Magder, The Suburban, via Newsbeat1

Search: $9 billion , entertainment centre , Casino and the Cirque du Soleil , N.D.G. Community Council , make gambling more accessible to Montreal’s poor.

Read this one -- you'll pay . . . somehow.

Harbour and port development seem to have become very popular -- Vancouver and the highway up to Whistler, Kitimat-Prince Rupert, Toronto, and now Montreal. Note the lucrative land and facilities development aspect even with what is sold as port development. Check the "entertainment" aspect, the need for road construction or in the above case, movement of a major route.

Pre-election.
Paul Martin and his team getting the pork and patronage set up for the election? What if he loses? Why, then everything has been signed and the ones who follow are stuck with it -- except in the case of JC and the badly-needed helicopters, of course.


Gomery's Reading, Money Laundering? Refresh your memory

Before an election, refresh your memory with these.

PoliticsWatch: What Gomery read over the summer by Romeo St. Martin, PoliticsWatch, October 14, 2005

Is Money Laundering the Correct Term for It?

Related: scroll for "comments" by EBD, ET, Tony, Maz2, and check this website: http://www.notcanada.com.



Many More Hot Scandals and Scams Sept. 27, 04


Many More Hot Scandals and Scams Mar. 23, 04


Summer of Scandal Sept. 15, 03


More PoliticsWatch Features


Privacy Laws-Update Photo -&- PM-SCOC

Privacy Laws: Be Infuriated!

Did phony refugee spread HIV? -- had a "fake ID" Alan Cairns, Toronto Sun, Oct. 14, 05

[. . . . ] The Canada Border Services Agency was alerted recently that Waldo Llano, 34, not only admitted having the AIDS virus, but also had a history as a male prostitute and may have had sex with many partners while living in Canada for 18 months.

PRIVACY LAWS [. . . . ]


Privacy laws: where have you noted their use before? Check this for where.

Search a different take on privacy, protection, and the privacy act -- in the last photo and caption .





Link Byfield: New Supreme Court selection process another example of pretend democracy

[. . . . ] In the future however, thanks to Paul Martin and Irwin Cotler, a new committee will review the available candidates and reduce the list to three. From those three, the PM and justice minister will choose the lucky divinity.
Except that ... the PM and justice minister will:

* Decide who goes on the review committee.
* Decide which candidates are reviewed.
* Not allow candidates to be directly questioned.
* Make the final pick.


Some reform.


What we get are courts that are activist where we don't want this, and soft in the areas where we need protection.