February 25, 2006

Bud: Economic Giant, Coren on Mothers, Ice Dancing

China: An economic giant stumbles

In the National Post financial section (Wednesday, February 15 FP3) Jacqueline Thorpe exposed the inherent weaknesses that have beset the Chinese. She enumerates them:

1) Unemployment is rising, mainly due to technology replacing millions of workers. From 1996 to 2000, economic growth rose 8.3%, while employment rose only 0.9%. The ratio of GDP to urban employment has dropped 80%.

2) While China's GDP is 5% of the world's total, it consumes 50% of the of the world's coal production, 45% of cement, and 25% of its iron. But China is not an effective user of these resources, taking 15% more resources to equal one unit of GDP compared to the world average. Their steel and chemical factories take 50% more energy than the global market.

3) Poor pollution control has led to drastic deforestation from acid rain, toxic water supplies, and killer smog. Beijing would be happy to have Toronto's smog days. In the summer, almost every day is a smog day.

4) Eventually, the trade deficit that the world is racking up in trade with China will lead to high tariffs on China's exports. The pressure on WalMart to buy more American goods will spread to other outlets selling Chinese imports. Already, the West is becoming alarmed at their vanishing manufacturing base. Outsourcing jobs is another bone of contention.

5) The rising inequality between rural and urban workers is bound to foster social unrest. The number of riots and demonstrations has increased in recent years. China wishes to show only the face of its skyscrapered cities, not the primitive conditions facing the rural peasantry.

Much like a company which grows at an unsustainable rate, China's economic miracle bubble could burst. With the rise of India as a rapacious buyer of resources, supplies to China could be severely reduced. Also with their more open society, English-speaking workers, and high tech institutions, India is poised to grab much of China's share of world trade.

Another factor is the tougher line that America is taking about the vast counterfeiting of Western goods that occurs in China. Everything from fake Splenda, to Gucci bags, to wall plugs is openly produced in China. There is a rising chorus of complaints over last year's record $202 billion trade deficit with China, President Bush could use the disregard for intellectual property rights as a reason to reduce trade with China. Such a move might also boost his ratings in the polls. China has much to worry about.

Bud Talkinghorn



I received this comment from a friend -- on buying from our own


Well, I for one, have not been putting my foot into a WalMart store in a long time -- especially since I learnt how they squeeze the suppliers so that they simply have to go overseas just to survive. It is a despicable company whose greed overrides patriotism.


Thanks to JK who knows the retail sector very well.




India & Population Control

Today, I read in the NatPost that teachers in one state in India are being asked to choose two students, children, actually (at a very young age) to be sterilized. It sounds horrendous. Yet, what is a severely overpopulated and poor state to do? Perhaps, as in the past, young adults could be offered the option of being sterilized for an attractive monetary consideration? For an education? I don't actually know where various religious groups stand on this but I know that the last time that kind of incentive was suggested (Was it through some branch of the UN?) it was greeted with cries of racism or eugenics, I seem to recall. Alternatives might be later marriages or abstinence.

Our own problem with the young and sex:

In the case of the West, abstinence might improve the quality of the couplings when they finally take place -- anticipation and all that. Michael Coren wrote a thoughtful essay that mentioned the sexual mores among the young in the West -- perhaps how little it means to our young in that sex is simply a physical act with none of emotional connection, even the transcendence, that occurs between two people committed to loving each other for a lifetime. What a pity.

In the West, young adults have so little to look forward to in that area since they learn all from the media and various other sources and they are encouraged to have sex lives at an age when they used to daydream of what it would be like and spend endless hours speculating about it with a friend. Now, they may not know about the diseases or the heartbreak, but they know the mechanics. I sat at a computer in a library a couple of years ago beside a sixteen year old accessing some (pornographic? questionable, at least) photos over the internet. He did not offer to share his find though he looked very sheepish at his little sister when she wanted to see what he had found. Technology has not been an unmitigated blessing in raising children. Both of them should have been out playing some game--involved in sport--or even doing chores for the family.

As I have mentioned before, until children's character and learning are firmly going in the right direction, as a parent, I would oversee the internet webpages they could access for school work and they would work near me so I could prevent the child stalkers from finding them (but I would have been an overprotective mother and fortunately, some child was not forced to endure me). Children are so curious; talk to them about anything they want to know so as to protect them. It would be better, wouldn't it?



Michael Coren: Moms should stay home -- or here, and there are others commenting, as well Feb. 25, 06

This is one excerpt from the comments, but read Coren's full article first.


What do you think?

Is Coren right in saying that motherhood has been rendered a 'hobby' by our society? Do you think that couples believe that opting out of parenthood between 9 and 5 is acceptable and natural?

What of the mothers or fathers who stay home while the other half works? How does society view them? As martyrs, heroes, or a throw-back to a previous generation? Are the stay at homes doing the right thing? If they are, then how can the rest of us rationalize our part-time parenthood?


I vote for mothers remaining at home with young children. Of course, the radical feminists who will criticize Michael Coren do not speak for me. These feminists are simply an offshoot of the party that so generously funded them with other people's tax money. It would help if we educated the young as to what is involved with parenting but the young seldom learn the responsibilities, just the fun part.



Are your jars full? I like this.



Ice Dancing at the Olympics

Ice Dancing Finals with photos by Izzy, Feb 21, 06

Photo: Italians Fusar Poli, Margaglio make mess of their exit after crashing from first to 10 th -- In my humble opinion, it was a display of extremely poor sportsmanship; contrast that with Dubreuil and Lauzon. "U.S. duo moves up as others fall" by Alan Abrahamson, February 20, 2006, LA Times

Fusar Poli had the worst costume, in addition to the worst temper. She and Margaglio, even when they went into their final long program a day or two later, they were neither looking at nor speaking to each other. How delightful to see the response to each other of Marie-France Dubreuil and Patrice Lauzon after her disastrous fall -- supportive and decent, good sports.


She let go of him too early on a complicated twirl and crashed hard to the ice. They fell from fourth to seventh.


Sportsmanship, along with excellence, is what the Olympics should be about, not just winning. Anyway, in Canada before they went to the Olympics, Dubreuil and Lauzon gave the best skate I have ever seen them perform. That, I want to see again on television. Simply superb.

As for the Russians, Navka and Kostomarov, I love their work. Their having to live in Russia is enough for me to want them to win gold; those who live in the West already have gold. Aside from that, they skate divinely. The Russian women's one-piece with legs covered costumes were the the most attractive, in my opinion. Navka looked divine in hers for the skate next to the last one. (short program, I think. It was a print -- mainly aqua in effect.) She is the skater who still suffers headaches from a fall on her head; she deserved gold too for not quitting.

Irena Slutskaya wore the best costume of all, a full body cover in black with a few glitzy explosive shapes--stars maybe--on it. She is wonderful to watch; she has the most delightful smiling face ... and grit as well. A great skater who had a bad night at the end.

Sasha Cohen's skating is superb, despite the final skate--not her best--but she has so much going for her that I suspect she'll survive -- a gorgeous and talented young woman with more years of skating ahead.

Bud: Hello, Comrades ... , Dubai, Daycare

Hello, Comrades, this is your Rogers cable program

The CRTC, after intense opposition, finally disallowed or made it more difficult for al-Jazeera to be shown in Canada. However, the CRTC seems to have no problem accrediting nine Communist Chinese propaganda channels. Nothing that will appear on those "News, opinion, entertainment" channels that is not heavily censored by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Tiannamen Square only happened because the students attacked the noble army, was the official Chinese media line. As some commentator stated, "That is like saying that the European Jews provoked the Nazis into gassing them." These programs' sponsors are the same Communist ideologues, who "sacrificed" 60 million Chinese lives to the insane whims of Chairman Mao. Mind control is the only game in town for these folks. Their control of what the Chinese can see via the internet is almost total, despite the work-arounds by a few. And to capture Chinese sales, Google (along with others) agrees to help them censor it. Now Rogers wants to make a buck by allowing undiluted Communist propaganda to reach our Chinese immigrants, one of our immigrant groups who have provided Canada with real added value.

One of these stations produced a documentary called "Attack America", which glorified the Sept 11 massacre. It was widely aired in China. Once ensconced, how long before that type of blatant message will be beamed into Canadian households? Of course, the initial programs will be air-brushed a bit. The Chinese propaganda machine might be bloody-minded, but it is not stupid. Baby steps before the quickstepping jackboots is a classic technique of all totalitarian regimes. Bloggers must spread word of this new Trojan Horse tactic, before it is too late to ever rescind this CRTC/Rogers decision.

Every dictatorship loves it when the spotlight shifts from them to one of their other despotic brethrern. We can't pay attention to the never-ending atrocities in Darfur because we have to worry about Iraqi civil war, or a nutbar nuclear attack from Iran. The Chinese see this diversion of attention and push their propaganda outreach. They have studied our porous "diversity" edicts and have used them to gain admittance. They have also not missed the move to the left in Latin America. That is another fertile battleground for their influence and propaganda. But we are not a banana republic, which has a Foreign Minister like Bolivia's, who stopped reading books because he found all the wisdom he needed in studying his ancestors' wrinkles. (An unbelievabe but true revelation in the Feb. 24 National Post) Canadians are supposed to be dedicated to the democratic progress. Let's start to prove that by forcing this blatant Communist propaganda off our airways.

© Bud Talkinghorn




Dubya -- over to Dubai

One can only shake one's head, when the news comes out that Dubai, that the United Emirates might take over the running of key American ports. Gee, why not cut out the middle man and just appoint Osama bin Laden to do it? Speaking of the UAE, in the late 90's the CIA could have killed Osama and his chief of staff. However, Clinton cancelled it because Osama was entertaining some Sheiks from the EU. Mustn't disturb that oil pipeline. Dubai has been implicated in sending money to al-Qaeda operatives. Two of the Sept/11 terrorists hailed from there. And America thinks Dubai should run all the major eastern seaboard ports? Insane.

Even Kuwaitis, who were liberated mainly by the U.S. in the first Gulf War, now have a negative opinion of their saviour. And Kuwaiti al-Qaeda members keep getting caught in Iraq. Have they forgotten who tried to invade them? The tears of the world might be a constant, but so is the incredible illogic.

© Bud Talkinghorn



The NDP daycare demand

Jack Layton is terrified that Stephen Harper's daycare vision will prevail over Jack's government-run version. If you want a left-wing government indoctrinating your kids, this is a swell idea. If you think the federal gun registry came in way, way, over cost, but was worth it, you will love the old fed's daycare plan. And won't the ever-rapacious building contractors and lobbyists love it also?

© Bud Talkinghorn

February 24, 2006

Stephen Harper is turning out to be

an unpredictable, yet decisive, prime minister only two weeks into the job. He makes decisions quickly; they just aren't always the decisions everyone expects.

It is a bit of a shock to the system -- that is, to the public service, the media and the opposition parties -- to have a leader who answers, rather than avoids, direct questions, whose priorities have a shelf-life longer than one week and who knows where he is going. In other words, to have actual leadership.

From Susan Riley, The Ottawa Citizen, February 24, 2006 -- via RC and thanks.

China e-Lobby: News of the Day (February 24)

So much is of interest on this site. On FHTR, scroll down to related items which were posted earlier today. It is time to get serious about what the Liberals/CRTC decided to allow into Canada, nine TV channels all under the control of Xinhua, which is the control for the Chinese government news. If Chinese come to Canada, the object is that they should fit in here, not be pummelled with news from China telling them how to think. Enough, already. There is more to be taken care of related to $$$ and triads which have entered Canada; still, ending this Chinese propaganda in Canada would be a start.

What kind of mind?

Bamiyan Buddha & Askariya, Samarra: Before & After











Not Politicized: Justice, IRB, China-CRTC-Rogers TV, Cuba, Ports, Cartoons, Etc

Police arrest two men in St. John's sex ring, may widen case beyond Newfoundland -- Prostitution, teen porn ring produces 35 charges -- "Mehnad Mahmoud Shablak, 30, and Shawn James Newman, 32, face more than 30 charges in connection with what police have dubbed Operation Rescue." Brian Callahan, The Telegram, February 24, 2006




The Real Cuba: Since the days of Pierre Trudeau, Canadians have idealized Cuba as a beleaguered socialist utopia. As this insider shows, the truth is very different



No! No! No!

Rogers to offer China's propaganda package -- "A decision from the CRTC (Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission) on whether the channels should be allowed to broadcast unedited is pending." Joel Chipkar, Special to the Financial Post, February 24, 2006


[. . . . ] The fundamental news source for these nine channels is the Xinhua News Agency, dubbed "the World's Biggest Propaganda Agency" by Reporters Without Borders (RSF). [. . . . ]




How Western companies are selling their souls for a piece of the massive Chinese market -- Yes, Master Steve Maich, February 20, 2006


[....] Chris Smith, the Republican representative from New Jersey who chairs the congressional subcommittee on human rights, has been one of the industry's most ardent critics, and is sponsoring a draft bill that would require Web companies to establish a code of conduct for operating in repressive regimes, prohibiting them from facilitating unreasonable censorship or co-operating in the abuse of human rights. But getting companies to reverse themselves may prove more easily said than done. China's trade deals with Canada, the U.S. and the European Union give it enormous bargaining power whenever talk turns to sanctions and restrictions, and with every year of supercharged economic growth, its clout increases. [....]


.... Several Canadian companies, including Montreal engineering giant SNC-Lavalin, Acres International, Hydro-Québec and Dominion Bridge Inc., have been involved in various aspects of the Three Gorges endeavour, many of them backed by taxpayer money through Export Development Canada and the Canadian International Development Agency. But, as the project steamed ahead in the mid-1990s, and "Team Canada" trade missions trudged across the Chinese countryside promoting closer ties, few stopped to consider the forced evacuation of roughly two million people living in low-lying areas to be flooded by the dam.





Stop 9 Chinese TVs from broadcasting propaganda in Canada Joan Quain and M.Makina, Between Heaven and Earth

Related Links:

How China's Propaganda Machine Works
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/7/3/134334.shtml

China Controls the People by Keeping Them Ignorant
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/7/7/133353.shtml

How China's Propaganda Machine Tries to Fool the World
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/7/8/133729.shtml



Communist Spy TV: Phoenix television rises -- Liu Changle--one of China's biggest tycoons Tony Wong, February 19, 2006


Many people in Chinese communities claim that Liu Changle's real identity is a spy from the Chinese military. It wouldn't be surprising as four Phoenix TV employees were charged with stealing military secrets in the US last year. Read more on this (at the end) and Phoenix TV's role in inciting hatred against Falun Gong in the excerpt below from The Real Story of China's Jiang Zemin - Chapter 13

[....] Liu Changle, CEO of the Hong Kong-based Phoenix Satellite Television, was (or is) an undercover agent under the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the People's Liberation Army. [3]

[....] It is an open secret that this state controlled TV is a mouthpiece for the Chinese Communist Party but it’s much more than that—it is yet another Chinese espionage network operating in our own backyard! So we get two in one—great glossy package Liu! Please let’s not be so naïve. It’s time for Rogers to allow homegrown New Tang Dynasty TV on the Canadian airwaves for true balanced reporting.

[Related links on that website]

Four arrests linked to Chinese spy ring
CI Centre: See Related Articles towards the end
Epoch Times: Coming to Canada: China Spy TV?





Bolivian Foreign Minister, David Choquehuanca, touts health benefits of cocaine plant AFP, February 24, 2006


[. . . . ] has confessed to having stopped reading books since he discovered his Aymara heritage and claims to get his knowledge from reading the wrinkles of his ancestors. [. . . . ]





Justice Rothstein


Rothstein's 7 rules to intellectual success -- address at Oxford University last June.



For more information on the Government’s reformed process to fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Justice John Major



For the full dossier being provided to members of the Ad Hoc Committee to Review a Nominee for the Supreme Court of Canada


Osgoode Professors on Supreme Court Appointment Process



New Canadian Supreme Court Nominee Ruled Against Same Sex Benefits John-Henry Westen


[....] Prime Minister Harper has previously stressed that he was looking to nominate a judge who strictly interpreted the law rather than an activist who would make new laws.

[....] REAL Women notes that in the two-year period that former Prime Minister Paul Martin and his Minister of Justice, Irwin Cotler, were in power, the following individuals were given judicial appointments:

- Michael Brown, Mr. Cotler's executive assistant and policy advisor;
- Yves de Montigny, Mr. Cotler's Chief of Staff;
- Randall Echlin, the Legal Counsel to the Ontario Liberal Party;
- Rosalie Abella, (appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada), wife of Mr. Cotler's close friend, Irving Abella;
- Marsha Erb, Alberta Liberal fundraiser, a close personal friend of Cotler's former Cabinet colleague, Anne McLellan;
- John J. Gill, Co-chair of the 2004 Alberta federal Liberal campaign;
- Vital Ouellette, an unsuccessful Alberta provincial Liberal candidate in 1997 and 2000 elections;
- Bryan Mahoney, federal Liberal candidate who lost twice to federal Conservative MP Myron Thompson;
- Edmond Blanchard, former Liberal New Brunswick Minister of Finance [. . . . ]


Of course, Canadian justice is NOT POLITICIZED!



Just as the Immigration & Refugee Board is NOT POLITICIZED!

Refugee Board stacked with Liberals. How can you tell?
#1133 - Thu Sep 02 2004


The Immigration and Refugee Board is stacked with Liberal Party patronage appointees -- amateurs who know nothing about immigration, crime, sociology, psychology, history, police-work, justice, law, common sense, gangs, logic, the public's appetite for being murdered, or most anything else. As I said, they are Liberal Party patronage appointees.

So stories like this, below, happen all the time. Repeatedly. Over and over. It's the Homer Simpson school of refugee management. It's liberal, it's Canadian. Go Canada.

Sri Lankan gangster gets to stay
Judge fears 'hardship' for son of man caught with AK-47
Stewart Bell
National Post [. . . . ]



Making Canada a terrorist haven -- Sri lankan gangster gets to stay -- Judge fears 'hardship' for son of man caught with AK-47 Stewart Bell, National Post, September 02, 2004, Posted by Al Gordon on 09:06:04 2004/09/02


[. . . . ] Although the judge said Sanththijesvaran Kathiravelu, 31, was convicted of a serious crime and was a member of AK-Kannan, an ethnic Tamil gang responsible for killings, assaults, extortion and drug trafficking, he ruled he should not be deported for the time being.

Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) member Egya Sangmuah wrote in his decision that since his arrest, Kathiravelu has married and fathered a son in Canada, and takes his family to the mall and cinema. Deporting him would cause undue hardship to the family, he ruled. [. . . . ]





Team Graham -- the list -- Even though there are only 25 Conservative cabinet ministers, the Liberals will have 41 critics and 38 associate critics in the upcoming session of Parliament Romeo St. Martin, PoliticsWatch, February 22, 2006




Lou Dobbs transcript -- "White House Refuses to Back Down on UAE Ports Deal; Jon Corzine Speaks Out on Port Deal ... " also, trade deficit with China, etc.


The trade deficit is a function of a lot of different factors. Most economists well till you, right, left or center, Republican or Democrat, it's mostly the macroeconomic issues including our low savings rate, their high savings rate.

We have a zero savings rate among households and they have a 50 percent savings rate.

DOBBS: We have to talk about the fact that the savings rate is low because this country is borrowing so much capital to support our runaway imports which is an $800 billion lost opportunity for this country every year. [. . . . ]


The bill always comes due. Would it be possible to severely curtail the offer of credit to young people? They are in debt before they even start their adult lives. Bad move!



No Safe Harbor From Politics Feb. 22, 06


[. . . . ] Our MBA president also knows that it's just the parent company, Dubai Ports World, that's domiciled in the UAE. The company that will actually manage the ports is Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co., a venerable British firm whose personnel already manage the ports in New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, New Orleans and Miami. Dubai Ports World is merely buying the P&O, for $6.8 billion.

So it's really just a matter of who owns the port management company's capital — not whether we'll have al-Qaida-friendly Arab overseers calling the shots. Security will still be handled, as it always has, by the U.S. government. [. . . . ]




By giving these politicians an extra year in office, McGuinty is undermining local democracy and making it even easier for out-of-touch "career" municipal politicians to remain in power long past their due date (as many already have). .... he's already planning to give councillors more authority and more taxation powers, through his City of Toronto Act.



Prime Minister announces appointment of new Clerk of the Privy Council and Secretary to the Cabinet, Mr. Kevin G. Lynch, Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund, from Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Ph.D., Economics, McMaster University February 21, 2006



Danish Cartoons: Manipulation or Capitulation? -- Translated from the French: Caricatures danoises : l’intolérable manipulation face à l’inacceptable capitulation Feb. 23, 06, Excellent summary: via CCD


[....] The use of inflammatory fake images has been a well-known strategy to whip up the Middle East into a frenzy. One notorious example is of course the fake footage by French State Television France 2 cameraman Talal Abou Ramah purporting to show the alleged death of a Palestinian child at the beginning of the second Intifada, shown on French TV on September 30, 2000, and redistributed worldwide, to predictable results: an exacerbation of anger and violence in the Palestinian territories, whipped into a murderous frenzy by a conveniently made-up "martyr." [....]

A noteworthy analysis of this situation was published by Olivier Roy in Le Monde on February 9, 2006: "The Arab regimes have always tried to use European immigration as a useful diaspora which they can mobilize for national causes. The Maghreb countries consider that even the second French-born generations automatically retain their parents' nationality. Their Consulates act as arbitrators in case of religious tensions, and campaigned heavily to control the elections to the CFCM (Conseil Français du Culte Musulman, the representative body of French Muslims.) [....]


Search: The manipulation campaign was crowned by the scandalous statement by Mr. Ihsanoglu , May Allah accept our commitment , Political and trade consequences , The staged broadcast of young Mohamed Al-Dura's alleged death

February 23, 2006

Thursday Quick Tour

Liberal Justices? Perish the thought.

Ted Byfield: Liberal interpretation of justice -- Lawyers in red dresses badly need to be taken down a peg Ted Byfield, Feb. 19, 06

Three protections, replied Harper. Most of the Senate, the whole senior bureaucracy, and almost all the judges were Liberal appointees. It was by including the judges that Harper was deemed to have made his grave error. To suggest there could be a political bias in the appointment of Canadian judges is, well, unthinkable.

It's on occasions like this that I'm glad I subscribe to REALity, the bi-monthly publication of REAL Women of Canada.

In its January/February edition, they give a sampling of appointees to the courts. When Irwin Cotler was Liberal minister of justice, the following became judges:
[....]


The list makes Harper's point.



Ruling raises doubts on escort law -- Freed Calgary man believed city sanctioned prostitution: verdict Sarah McGinnis, with files from Sarah Chapman, Calgary Herald, February 22, 2006

The owner of a rival city escort service said the judge's decision will allow her to conduct business with more confidence.

"This is fantastic," said Carol, who owns The Sweetest Taboo and refused to give her last name or age. "This is going to allow me to be a little more confident about running my business.

"I feel like we're doing nothing wrong in this industry. There are a lot of lonely, lonely people who need company."


How can anyone choose to make money from prostitution? How can we not do everything to protect our children from this? And they call this needing "company"?



Pentagon papers offer insight into al-Qa'eda's hidden world of terror By Anton La Guardia, (Filed: 22/02/2006) via newsbeat1

It could be any employment contract setting out salary, paid holidays, home leave and grievance procedures - except in this case the employer is al-Qa'eda and the recruit's job is "carrying out jihad".

By signing the contract, the recruit commits himself to al-Qa'eda's objectives: "Support God's religion, establishment of Islamic rule, and restoration of the Islamic Caliphate, God willing."


[. . . . ] The contract is one of thousands of documents captured by US forces, mostly in Afghanistan and Iraq during the past four years of the "global war on terror", and stored on a Pentagon database known as Harmony.

An initial sample of 28 have been declassified and published by the Combating Terrorism Centre (CTC), part of the US Military Academy at West Point, with the promise of many more to come. [. . . . ]




Cultivating Criminals Kate

Bang on! Also, the comments lead to relevant articles.

Aboriginal women pushing up birth rates via JM, as is the following.

Hiding the truth about native schooling
February 20, 2006

The road to a better life for Canada's Aboriginal people begins with a good education. But the scant evidence available indicates that they are still failing at school. After decades of wrangling among Aboriginal leaders and federal and provincial governments about what to do, and after so many billions of taxpayer dollars spent, why has there been so little improvement?............

[Hiding the truth about native schooling]

Posted by JM at February 20, 2006 07:16 AM



My Comments:

Actually, in the interest of "achieving success", "student retention" or "keeping students in school" so they graduate, and other phrases that cover a less positive reality, we have been fooling ourselves. Students who barely graduate from highschool at a level 5 (On a scale of 1 to 5 with #1 the top level), for example, are not educated to a high school diploma level, if the diploma is to have any meaning at all.

One reason is that, in the interests of their social development which involves remaining with the same class as their age group, we have allowed students who cannot--or can barely--read, to enter high school where the teenage pressures of physical, social and emotional development are rampant. School runs a poor second to other interests. Having entered high school handicapped, the poor readers remain that way; only it gets worse and more confusing. I do not have an answer, other than that we must ensure all students can read before they graduate. Ability to read is the key to learning--from written materials anyway--so we must demand students have this ability after four or five years of their education, or stop their movement until they can. That goes for native children and all the rest. The problem is not confined to native schools but it may have been better hidden for varying reasons in the reserve schools.

Granted, there are some fine students who will become educated whatever the situation and wherever they live, on reserve or off, but there are too many others, (because adults mean well in being too kind) who are helped along in various ways; yet they leave school under-educated (but socially engineered to "right thought"). It is not a kindness to the children to help them like that. After they leave high school, will it matter in a few years whether they were schooled with their age group or that they have the tools to learn for their lives?

I vote for a little less kindness and a lot more realistic assessment, followed by corrective measures as soon as the problem is discovered. One idea
that I have heard of (It worked but there may have been a more homogeneous student population.) had all teachers teach reading at the same time of day and students moved to where they were placed by testing. Those who needed even more help were assigned a special teacher, but that would mean ending (or sharing resources with?) the aides in the situation where classes have six or more special needs students who also need interventionists. Perhaps we expect too much of the system and it is not feasible nor fixable?





White-collar crime on upswing in Canada - experts Paul Marck, Edmonton Journal via newsbeat1

“The eyes of regulators are now focused on corruption in corporate accounting,” Spink said.

[....] Among its findings were that 55 per cent of Canadian companies surveyed reported being victims of economic crime in 2004, a nine-per-cent increase from the year before.

An audience member said that Canadian courts seem to have a “catch and release” policy, giving light sentences to white-collar crooks.

What was that time-limit on prosecution passed by the Liberal government -- something that would prevent those who profited from the sponsorship fund from going to jail? (I forget the details.) How convenient. Protecting the crooks before leaving office.


Open drug use, sales end -- Skeptics say crackdown will simply relocate addicts Matthew Ramsey, The Province, Published: Wednesday, February 22, 20, via Jacksnewswatch.info

[....] The primary objective of the city's Four Pillars program -- to treat addiction as a health, not a criminal, issue -- has had "unanticipated consequences," Rolls said.

"There seems to be an increasing sense of empowerment or entitlement [for users to inject and smoke freely].

"Harm reduction has to be for the whole community. It can't be just for the drug user." [. . . . ]




In Canada? In Combermere? Not far from Ottawa?

Terror Camp in Combermere, Ontario and Other Locations in Canada Canadian Sentinel, Feb. 20, 06 via Defense Watch an article posted on Free Republic -- related: Weekly Standard via Jack's Newswatch

Continuing my investigation, I've come across information on a specific location inside of Canada of a Jamaat ul Fuqra (JuF) "jamaat", a rural community of Islamists appparently training in terrorism. [. . . . ]




The whole "politically incorrect" truth about Islam's violent teachings, bloody history, backward culture, and morally depraved founder



Shotgun: The REAL reason the Emerson appointment was troubling -- with comments and The REAL reason the Emerson appointment was troubling D.J. McGuire, China e-Lobby, Feb. 22, 06

David Emerson was no ordinary Liberal. He was a minister in a Cabinet that repeatedly drove the anti-Communist, pro-China-democracy community to apoplexy. In particular was the concern of the ChiComs worming their way into Canada's bountiful natural resources - including Albertan oil (fourth item, Edmonton Sun) and Saskatchewan's oil and uranium (Globe and Mail) - and Canadian held resources abroad (BBC). Emerson, as Industry Minister, appeared unfazed by this (Wall Street Journal via Pittsburgh Post-Gazette).


The concern is whether the Harper government will support the pro-democracy community in China.

ET comment on what Harper should do:

1) I think that we, in Canada, have to make it more publicly known how, and why, we lack a Canadian investor class. And - how and why we ought to start, immediately, to develop such a class.

2)The result of such a lack - is our complete dependency on foreign investment. I don't think that it is enough protection for us, to insist that these foreign investors abide by our, or international rules. We must develop our own investor class. [.... there is much more. ]



Book: An Army of Davids: How Markets and Technology Empower Ordinary People to Beat Big Media, Big Government, and other Goliaths (ISBN: 1-59555-054-2, $24.99 U.S., Nelson Current) will publish March 7, 2006.
But you can pre-order it now!

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?path=ASIN/1595550542&link_code=as2&camp=1789&tag=wwwviolentkicom&creative=9325

via newsbeat1



Pajamas Media in Barcelona February 21, 2006 8:52 AM

Three video interviews from last weekend’s Intelligence Summit are now up at WMD Files: former intelligence agent and Arabic expert Bill Tierney, who translated the Saddam tapes; former CIA director James Woolsey; and Richard Miniter, author of the book Shadow War.


Video Interviews from the Intel Summit PJ Media in Washington DC, February 22, 2006



Memory Lane:

Oil for Food Scandal -- the Canadian Connection old but interesting because of weapons of mass destruction.

Search: Wlyonmackenzie , rbacon , "Why is Harper silent on this. Why is the NDP silent on this." , "If you want an insight into Strong and Martin click on the "Earth Charter's Unholy Ark and think back to ... " , netsurfer , styky , "This could end up in Criminal charges because the Bank controlled 25% or about 20B in funds from Hussien and most of the money went to buy weapons." , Splendor Sine Occasu , Desmarais-Powercorp-Liberal connection , his affialiates did the manufacturing of the Candu's , Pakistan , Pakistani scientist A.Q. Khan , "16 cylinders of uranium hexafluoride gas — a critical ingredient for uranium enrichment for weapons — had gone missing from Pakistan's leading nuclear lab, the Khan Research Laboratories"[url]http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,145633,00.html[/url]
and it was on Fox Report [then].



'If he hadn't been Jewish, he wouldn't have been murdered' -- in Paris! By Assaf Uni, Haaretz Correspondent, 20/02/2006

PARIS - The mother of Ilan Halimi, the 23-year-old Parisian Jew who was abducted, tortured and murdered by a gang in a suburb of the capital, accuses the police of missteps that led to her son's death.

She revealed to Haaretz Sunday that the police told the family to ignore the gang's attempts to contact them for five critical days, after which Ilan was found near death outside the city. She also accuses the police of ignoring the anti-Semitic motivation in the case in order not to alienate Muslims. [. . . . ]




John Thompson of the Mackenzie Institute: The Cartoon Jihad January, 2006

John Thompson is President of the Mackenzie Institute which studies political instability and terrorism.

Table of Contents:

[Introduction] [The Manufactured Crisis] [The Unleashed Campaign] [Contrast: Piss Christ and Rushdie] [Islam's Treatment of Other Religions] [Freedom of speech and Western vitality] [Appendix A--The Cartoons]

Forward

In 15 years with the Mackenzie Institute, there are only two times that I have been genuinely angry. A mail bomb, harassment from supporters of various terrorist groups, and sundry other episodes might have left me peevish and irritable, but real anger has only been experienced twice. The first time was in 1993, when the Ontario Human Rights Commission mused aloud about suspending the principle of the presumption of innocence when accusations of racism had been made. The second concerns the casual attitude so many Westerners have toward freedom of speech with regard to the Cartoon Jihad launched against the Danish Jyllands-Posten newspaper.

The very foundations of our liberal-democratic culture, the core values of Western civilization, are too important to treat casually. [....]

February 22, 2006

Bud: The West will not be blackmailed into silence

This should have been posted yesterday. Sorry, Bud. NJC


The tag-team demonstrations against the cartoons continues unabated. Just this week, it was Libya's turn to try to burn down an embassy--Italy's this time. Irony must be absent in the Islamic world if they can't see the vast contradiction of violence used to defend Islam's supposed peacefulness. It is amusing to see how the demonstrations have managed to shift away from offending newspapers to include anti-semitism, anti-Christianity, and invariably, anti- Americanism. In Nigeria there have been 11 churches burnt down and over 50 Christians killed. These victims couldn't have picked out Denamark on a map, yet they were fodder for the homocidal rages of their Muslim neighbours.

But of course, these "spontaneous" street riots are highly orchestrated by dictatorial governments and Islamic extremists. During the burning of the Danish Embassy in Beirut, almost a third of the people arrested were Syrians. Hezbollah supporters made up the greater part of the rest. The worst part of this is how easily these friends of al-Qaeda can whip the people into a frenzy. There is frightening mindlessness underlying this rage. Despite our largesse with aid to these failed states, they still hate the West for their plight. God, forbid they should take any responsibility for this state of affairs. There is so little logic behind these continuing riots that any dialogue mid-point position seems impossible.

Unfortunately, these hysterical demonstrations only highlight the intrinsic danger of a religion that is supremist in theology. The murderous attacks on Christians stretches around the globe --from Indonesia, to Iraq, to Pakistan. Saudi Arabia doesn't even allow infidels to visit Mecca. Can you image the universal outrage Muslims would feel if they were told they were forbidden to visit The Vatican or Westminister Abbey? The Muslim world is very adroit at wanting to have their cake and eat it too. Robert Fulford had it right in his National Post column (Sat. Feb. 18) when he flatly stated that he has no respect for Islam. To begin with, its treatment of women offends him as a humanist. That is not his only complaint. He is simply echoing what the majority of Canadians feel, but most Canadians have been silenced by political correctness (and the cult of multicult) from expressing it. Well, the liberal elites who champion multiculturalism and every homosexual demand should consider that there are no gay parades in Islamic countries. Persecution, torture and death are the fate of most gays there. Fulford cannot abide the hypocrisy inherent in Islam. When the Jews won the war of 1948, the Islamic countries retaliated by expelling hundreds of thousands of native-born Jews. Israel took them in. That was not the case with the Palestinians. Jordan, which did allow Arafat and his PLO to settle in their country in the early 70's, had to use the army to drive them into Lebanon after they tried to take over the country.

I don't want to turn this into a book, so will not go into the vast intolerance that is at the heart of many Islamic societies. However, there is one recent story that illustrates this. A Muslim cleric has raised a million dollar reward for anyone who kills the Danish cartoonist, who created the "blasphemous" cartoons. His rationale was that if America can put a reward on Osama's head, why not an Islamic reward on a cartoonist's as well. The equation between a mass murderer of innocents world-wide and a cartoonist basically says it all. Any rabbi, minister, or priest who propose assassination for any reason would be immediately defrocked. But this cleric is probably worshipped for his "principled" stand. The face of our cultural enemy has been nakedly exposed; yet that twisted logic behind the cleric's threat is not even acknowledged by many Muslims. It might be wise for Muslims to remember that their own religion (and Christianity's) was prrceived to be blasphemous to the earlier religions.

The West is finally awaking to the threat of radical Islam, which reaches deep into the giant pool of immigrants in the West. The polls--taken after the London tube bombings--showing the disgust that Muslim-Britons hold for their adopted country, could be reproduced in most Western countries. The mindless arson in France spoke more forcefully that even a poll could do. The unstated, but implicit aim of Islam is to deter through fear any criticism of its beliefs. Condemning the wretched state of women in their countries is blasphemy. Ditto, oppression of homosexuals and almost any belief that contradicts the state's official brand of Islam. Their lack of condemnation of the situation in Darfur (Hey, they're only blacks) shows their commitment to universal brotherhood and peace. In fact, everytime the UN tries to criticize a Muslim atrocity, the other thugocracies stand shoulder to shoulder with the "Arab League" to oppose the resolution. If Islam really is a religion of peace and brotherhood, why hasn't the Arab League agreed to send their troops to defend the people of Darfur? Those who live in glass houses .... Mohammed's followers spread their faith by the sword in the past; now they are doing it again through global intimidation and terrorism.

Despite the bloodshed and arson, the Islamic world has done the West a favour. The same insane rhetoric seen on the "Arab street" is festering in a muted form among some in our societies. Now we can see it clearly and the backlash has begun.

What the demonstraters don't realize is that their chances of emigrating to Europe will be severely limited. Denmark, Sweden, France, Germany, and even England have introduced laws (some draconian) making Muslim immigration much more difficult. Read Lawrence Solomon's article in The National Post (Friday, Feb. 17, 06, FP19) for some of the steps European nations are taking. The sub-heading says it succinctly: "Muslim immigrants will be expelled from Europe unless they reverse the growing perception of them as a social threat." North America may be forced to shut the door too. Caught out will be the the true moderate Muslims, who are planning to flee their increasingly retrograde states. Also, in some cases, the Western aid handouts which prop up many of these Islamic regimes will be reduced and tourism revenues--well, forget about it. It is time for them to step back and realize their actions present the mailed fist of fanatical intolerance. We defeated that ideology in WW11. It was an enormous sacrifice, but one that was necessary to our democratic way of life. We will do that again, if necessary.

Just what mindset I'm talking about here is summed up by Mark Steyn, who said, "You talk to some Muslims, and in the same breath, they claim Jews were behind the Sept. 11 massacre, yet it was also a great victory for Islam."

© Bud Talkinghorn

Quick Notes: Ports, Security, Banking, Memory Lanes, Etc.

“Sex” is a biological term, and biologists and life-scientists all over the world use the words “sex,” or “sexual” only with reference to plant or animal behaviour that has reproductive potential. Feb. 14, 06



There is going to be questioning of the nominees for the Supreme Court; the following may be of interest.

Memory Lane:

News Junkie Canada, Sept. 14, 03

The Supreme Court
Judicial Impartiality as Practiced in Canada


Bad Link: Gremlin spotted. Funny how this happens
" target=_blank JUDGES PARTY WITH HOMOSEXUAL ACTIVISTS

If you right click / copy shortcut, you will get a link with something added. Remove the part at the end with "br" in it so the link is as follows:

Correct link:
http://www.realwomenca.com/newsletter/2003_july_aug/article_4.html


If there is anyone left in Canada who still believes that our judges are fair and impartial on the homosexual issue, they should know about an event that took place during Gay Pride Week in Toronto. [....]


Possibly of current interest at the above link are these; search:

Yasir Arafat and the politics of denial
by Robert Fulford, The National Post, Sept. 13, 03

Networks
It Helps to Travel in the Right Circles: Paul Martin



Maurice Strong, one member of the entourage of our Governor General Adrienne Clarkson for her circum-polar trip compliments of the Canadian taxpayers, helped Paul Martin get his start with Canadian Steamships Line.

Immigration, Refugees, refugee and human-rights lobby groups
Deported Iranian admits he lied by Stewart Bell, National Post, Sept. 13, 03. [ Mansour Ahani , human rights activists ]

Dyane Adam, our Commissioner of Official Languages

Her most recent works include "Official Languages in the Canadian Sport System: Getting a Second Wind!" (2003), "Official Languages and Immigration: Obstacles and Opportunities for Immigrants and Communities" (2002) and "French on the Internet: Key to the Canadian Identity and the Knowledge of Economy" (2002).

Aboriginal Languages

Update: Adrienne’s Junket [ Peter Adams of the Makivik Corp. in Kuujjuaq and Fibbie Tatti, the Languages Commissioner of the Northwest Territories , strategies for preserving Aboriginal languages and the development of Aboriginal language curricula in other jurisdictions in Canada ]



This experience led to her participation in a tour of Russia in 1990 during which she spoke on issues related to the development of educational curricula for Aboriginal students and on strategies for preserving Aboriginal languages.


End of Memory Lane


The lessons of school choice Rebecca Hagelin, February 21, 2006, ProudToBeCanadian.ca



Choosing how your children are educated should be as routine in America as the ability to choose your neighborhood, your church, and your place of employment.

It stuns me that in 2006, the vast majority of students in failing schools are still trapped there. [. . . . ]




Department of Finance: The Economic and Fiscal Update 2005
Chapter 4
Private Sector Five-Year Economic and Fiscal Projections
Highlights




[....] Risks to the fiscal projection for 2005–06
Fiscal projections are inherently uncertain. Annex 1 provides an overview of the three key sources of uncertainty in the projections. This section reviews the key near-term risks to the 2005–06 budgetary outcome. [....]

A more detailed exploration of the key risks and uncertainties in the fiscal forecast is one of a number of recommendations made by Dr. Tim O’Neill in his report on the forecasting practices of the Department of Finance. The recommendations in the report and the actions taken by the Government are detailed below. [. . . . ]


Search:
Review of Canadian Federal Fiscal Forecasting: Processes and Systems
Recommendation Action [and] Action
The Need for Transparency
Improving Accuracy & Timeliness of Data
Fiscal Rules—Options
Possible Institutional Changes



No French? No service! -- Francophones are the "target population" Global National, February 21, 2006



Marc Bisson, the Executive Director of the Centre de Santé communautaire de L'estrie, where Ravary was refused service, defends his clinic's policy. Bisson says it's part of the centre's mandate to target the local French population. [....]

The clinic was established 15 years ago specifically to treat the nearly 10,000 Francophones in the small Ontario community [Cornwall], although everyone in the greater community helps fund it.

It turns out the Ontario provincial government agrees with the clinic's exclusive policy.


Search: George Smitherman, Ontario's Health Minister



Privacy: Who is protected? Who is helped?

Justice left to fly blind -- Censorship helped rapist attack more women Licia Corbella, February 21, 2006



Today is the day Alain Joseph Ducap's 23-year, 13-day sentence was supposed to expire.

Instead, even though the 46-year-old serial rapist refused all treatment behind bars, he was granted day parole and [. . . . ]




The new faces at the Salvation Army's Gateway homeless shelter are middle-aged white men who just can't keep up with the rent Mark Bonokoski, Feb. 21, 06

This is sad; we need a method whereby we may help ourselves and our fellows at the same time. One suggestion: With an aging population who sometimes need help for small jobs or errands, why not have a registry of workers who will be able to earn a day's or a week's work helping by doing odd jobs or whatever needs to be done, depending upon their skills. Have a website where a person may list skills which fit a need. Some jobs are not onerous but help is needed. Give the individual a respectable wage (maybe even a decent meal) and some dignity. A city registry? Keep it local. Maybe a fellow has a car and would drive an elderly person around for appointments, groceries and other necessities, help carry groceries or whatever.




MacKay = Pettigrew = Surrender Posted by Al Gordon on 19:02:31 2006/02/21 -- Re cartoons, Ezra Levant, Dept. of Foreign Affairs, etc.



Victims 1st were asked if they believed in Christ, infant, teen among dead



HonestReporting.com Media Critiques



The "Pragmatist" of Hamas
How moderate is the new Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority?

Guardian Promotes Apartheid Slur
The Guardian publishes a lengthy two-part feature comparing Israel to apartheid South Africa.

Offensive Cartoons
Media Apologize For Offending Muslims While Ignoring Anti-Semitic Cartoons

Media Coverage of Hamas
Most major media responsible in reporting victory of Hamas

Hamas - Bullets and Ballot Boxes
As Hamas looks for votes in the Palestinian elections, has the media whitewashed the real manifesto?

Media U-Turn on Sharon?
Has the media undergone a dramatic conversion to support for Ariel Sharon?



US Ports

I just heard that Pres. Bush will veto any attempt to stop the seaport deal. On the surface, it seems foolhardy. Why would he do that? See what Chertoff says ... but ...


Congressmen threaten probe of U.S, seaports deal Audrey Hudson, Feb. 20, 06



The classified deal would let Dubai Ports World (DPW) of the United Arab Emirates run ports in New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New Orleans and Miami. London-based Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co., which had been running the six ports, was bought last week by the government-owned DPW.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican who appeared on "Fox News Sunday" with Mr. Bayh, called the deal "tone-deaf politically at this point in our history" and agreed that "we certainly should investigate it." [. . . . ]


Search: Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff



Ehrlich seeks to delay Arab deal on port S.A. Miller and Jon Ward, WashTimes, Feb. 21, 06



[....] Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley slammed Mr. Bush for approving DPW's acquisition of London-based Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co., the port operator. [....]




Book: Joseph A. Klein: Global Deception: The UN's Stealth Assault on America's Freedom



More on ports: Hong Kong tycoon, ports, control of shipping, Panama, et cetera

Search:

Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HKSB)
Cheung Kong (or Choong Kong)

There is more in the above post.


Memory Lane: This post has some related items of tangential or more pressing interest: Frost Hits the Rhubarb, week of July 10, 05

Subheadings and some items that may be worth checking:

Bud Talkinghorn: UK Muslim Terrorists, CBC's Bias, Pro-Commie T-Shirts

Emergency Preparedness, SCO, David Warren, Doug Fisher: SSM 'Inside job' & Stephen Harper [ Cutting out the US ]

UN Security Council Expansion, Van Gogh's Killer: No Remorse, Kyoto, Alberta: Time to Exit? [ U.N. can't agree on expanding Security Council , Kyoto floundering ... ]

Islam, Jihad, Terror & Pakistan's Jamaatis [ London: The Pakistani Connection . Wahhabi ]

Why Terrorism Works, International Banking & More

EU: Intel vs AMD Antitrust, Listing Oil Rig--Gulf of Mexico, Listing Freedom--Internet CONTROL!

[Search: Will the UN run the Internet? , Houlin Zhao, director of the ITU's Telecommunication Standardization Bureau , Zhao, a former government official in China's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications , ICANN, ITU, UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) and WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) , Industry Department and Team Canada Missions , Hackers]

The "T" Word & The Reality, "Muscle"=Subsidy, "Investments"=?, Team Canada Trade Missions, Border-Security [ Search: Trade and Industry--Team Canada Missions:]

Updated: Dear Anne, I am a minority of one & I don't give a rat's *** . . . -- Emergency Preparedness

[ Search: David Harris, "Former CSIS honcho calls for limits on immigrants" , The Chinese are very active in Africa , La Francophonie , Canadian International Development Agency , Canada Trade Missions Team Canada Missions -- Copy of material distributed by the Prime Minister's Office in 1994 -- Team Canada Participants http://www.tcm-mec.gc.ca/1994_participants-en.asp ]

Bud: Muslims -- A Lightbulb Goes Off -- Terrorists in Canada! -- Raskolnikov: the Left & Aboriginals

CBC, Terrorists & Heroin, PQ & Nfld-Lab & 'Development', 'Helping' Foundation & UN, Adscam-Fraser Inst., ACOA-Pop. 'Deals' & 'Plans'

[ The blueprint for the Pacific Ring can be found in Agenda 21, a U.N. policy document , U.N. Agenda 21 and Sustainable Medicine , ACOA -- Investment -- ACOA trade missions -- Population . The Quebec connection to Newfoundland/Labrador "Development" and Innu Treaty deal , Al-Qaida nukes already in U.S. -- Terrorists, bombs smuggled across Mexico border by MS-13 gangsters http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=45203 ]

Link to this [ 9/11 and the mob Judi McLeod, journalist and David Hawkins, forensic accountant, July 11, 05 ]

When the world is too much with us . . .

Podcasting, Agent Orange, Coincidence? The Inukshuk, Publication Ban & A Trip Down Memory Lane via BC Rail and Grow Ops

[ Search: "New Scandal: RCMP and PCO" , Publication Bans and Memories , A trip down memory lane along BC's rail lines and grow ops ]

Ostrich, Ahenakew, Agents of Vengeance, "What does the soul of a people sound like?" [Do we need "Agents of Vengeance"? , Lileks ]


More Memory Lane:

From Liberal kickbacks to a Virtual GRIT? By David Hawkins, January 7, 2006

Search:

a kickback culture
off-book scams
UN Global Compact, UN Oil-for-Food and Kyoto Accord
Paul Martin has been appointed Vice-Chairman of the UN Global Compact
Canadian depopulationist, Maurice Strong.
Virtual GRIT ('Global Racketeering Income Trust'),
Lansdowne Technologies
CAI Private Equity Group
"Virtual Floating Matrix"
income trusts

End of Memory Lane





Chavez, the darling of the left!



Chavez is looking at changing Venezuela's constitution so he can prolong his presidency and run for another term in 2012. ....
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4731742.stm
WallysWorld, 2/21/2006


Mayor of London Says Hands Off Venezuela -- That's "Red Ken" to some Feb 20, 2006, By: Ken Livingstone - Morning Star



BofA nears settlement on money-laundering probe The Business Journal, Feb. 20, 06



Bank of America Corp. is close to settling an investigation of money laundering from South America, Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau told Bloomberg news agency in an interview.

[....] Morgenthau said the BofA probe grew out of leads developed in the prosecution of Beacon Hill Services Corp., which was convicted in February 2004 of operating as an unlicensed money transmitter. [. . . . ]




Rocket attack against Jerusalem thwarted -- Terror leader says more missiles on way to 'bring hell' to Israelis Aaron Klein, Feb. 21,06



JERUSALEM – Marking what many here are calling a major escalation in Palestinian terrorism, security officials announced yesterday they captured a rocket launcher and several mortar shells intended for attack against a Jerusalem neighborhood [. . . . ]

February 21, 2006

Potpourri

Probe into alleged income-trust leak may widen circle of those in the know Dean Beeby, Feb. 19, 06 -- via here , from CNEWS Forum, Anne_mcm, 2/19/2006


OTTAWA (CP) - An internal Finance Department probe into the alleged leak of confidential income-trust policy exonerates senior staff - but also suggests the circle of those potentially in the know may have been wider than previously reported.

[....] Goodale has already indicated he gave advance word of his decision to then-prime minister Paul Martin, who shared it with three aides, and to two cabinet ministers, one of whom - John McCallum - has said that he also shared it with aides.

A spokesman for the Bank of Canada said the RCMP has not interviewed any of the bank's staff.

[....] The Mounties remain tight-lipped about the investigation, which is being handled by one of the RCMP's newly created integrated market enforcement teams [IMET].[. . . . ]





Refugees 'bought' way into country, court told -- Immigration scam -- Woon Lam (Bill) Wong, Liu Wai Keung, Yves Bourbonnais, an Immigration and Refugee Board judge, $10,000


[....] New details of the bribery scandal that led to the laying of 278 charges against 11 Montrealers in 2001 -- including Yves Bourbonnais, an Immigration and Refugee Board judge -- were revealed yesterday in Quebec Superior Court at a pre-sentencing hearing for Liu. [....]

Wong, a prominent businessman and president of Montreal's Chinese Chamber of Commerce, is serving a three-year prison term after admitting to 16 charges in 2004.

Meanwhile, Mr. Bourbonnais is to go on trial on Sept. 12 on 97 charges, including breach of trust, defrauding the government and obstruction of justice. [....]




$1.4-billion Canadian radios fail troops -- Duct tape has come in handy; thanks, Red Green.


Copps? Arbour? LeBlanc? Ignatieff? Liberals casting about for a leader

Ex-Premiers tend not to become Prime Ministers so ex-Premier McKenna's chances are not judged very high; so much depends upon his strength with the powerful who have chosen Canada's PM for the last forty years or so. Think about it.

Dominic LeBlanc's name thrown into mix of possible Grit contenders, Kate Malloy and F. Abbas Rana, February 20th, 2006


Four-term Liberal MP Dominic LeBlanc could enter the race for the leadership of the Liberal Party. But the larger Grit plotting continues. [....]



China's new money covet yachts built with Canadian know-how -- Boat builders seek partnerships with B.C. engineers, designers Wency Leung, CanWest, Feb. 21,06


[....] Boat builders in China want to partner with B.C. engineers, since Canada is known for producing high-quality yachts, according to Seaforth Marine Group Inc. of Maple Ridge, B.C.. The company provides engineering and consulting for a factory outside of Shanghai.

[....] Mr. Erdevicki said he is designing production-line leisure boats for two clients, who aim to build the boats in China. [....]


Why not try to keep the work in Canada? Would a partnership involving ownership by those who build the boats here in Canada be possible to keep the knowledge and jobs in Canada? You know what will happen; once the Chinese have acquired the design and finishing expertise, the jobs will be in China. So will the designer's job.



China hunts abroad for academic talent Feb 18, 2006, Pallavi Aiyar


[....] In this latest bid to raise the country's global prestige, Chinese universities backed by massive injections of governmental funding are spending billions of dollars to attract top foreign-educated and overseas-born Chinese, building cutting-edge research centers, partnering with the world's best educational institutions, and developing new programs taught in the international lingua franca - English.

Under a central government program started in 1998 called the 985 Project [. . . . ]

As a result of its improved pay scales, the Guanghua school currently boasts some 50 "returned scholars" (Chinese nationals who return to the mainland after studying abroad) and more than half of the faculty hold foreign PhDs. "These are not PhDs from any old university," said Zhang, himself a DPhil from Oxford. "We only look at Ivy League or Oxbridge-educated talent." [....]

Zhang said, "We still suffer from too much governmental control and have little leeway to implement reforms without cumbersome permissions and procedures." Chinese universities are unable, for example, to develop new programs or curricula without prior governmental approval. "To do something good and experimental invariably means violating government rules," rued Zhang. He added that university presidents in China remain government appointees and are rarely academics. [....]


Would government appointees also apply to UNBSJ's Beijing Concord Project at the Concord College of Sino Canada in Beijing China (BCCSC)? I have posted on that project within the last month or so.



Terence Corcoran: Self-censorship -- what a sell-out -- re: media treatment of Google-China-censorship vs the media disinclination to publish the cartoons that might raise Muslim ire. The West trumpets free speech but self-censorship is alive and well in the media. NatPost, Feb. 21, 06



The World Is Nuts. , a quote from the Lowell Green radio talk show


[. . . . ] No wonder people think the CTV is “right-wing” simply by virtue of the fact that it’s not state-owned. Over the past few years, it’s become almost generally accepted in this country that profit is bad. Personally responsibility is bad. Competition is bad. Not having a social program to help you with your basic life is bad. Corporations are bad. Tax cuts are bad. Morals and values are bad. And government is good—the more government, the better. That’s what the liberal-left calls “progress”. That’s “progressive”.


More here: Audio Video Vault




There He Goes Again.... FrontPageMagazine.com February 21, 2006


[....] In a Washington Post op-ed yesterday entitled “Don’t Punish the Palestinians,” America’s Worst Ex-President declared it was morally and strategically wrong to withhold funds from the Palestinian Authority’s new government, led by Hamas.

[....] Jimmy Carter had no problem cutting off funding to America’s historic ally and the Middle East’s only democracy ten years ago, but today he demands American taxpayers and Israeli government officials pony up for jihadists. This reflects Carter’s pro-Islamic history. As head of the heavily Saudi-financed Carter Center, the former president has ghostwritten speeches for Yasser Arafat. He even called a secret summit with Hamas leaders in Cairo in the mid-90s to ask if they would strengthen Arafat’s PA government. (Hamas cancelled on him at the last minute.) [. . . . ]


That's the ex-President who allowed the ones Castro sprung from jail to flee to the US; remember the Marielitos. How can it be ethical for an ex-President to accept money from the Saudis, to write for Arafat, then to offer opinions on foreign policy that affect Israel and the Palestinian Authority? Carter is part of a group that includes former ambassadors (maybe others) who returned from Saudi Arabia and then were highly remunerated by the Saudis for work they would not have had, if they had not had previous connections to Saudi Arabia's government ... which, incidentally, happens to fund Wahhabi schools and jihadis / jihadi regimes. Sounds like a quid pro quo to me.



September 2005

Taliban militia takes control of South Waziristan, Pakistan South Asia Tribune, 14/9/2005, URL: http://www.india-defence.com/reports/348


That peace, as is now turning out, is purely on the terms of Taliban and its armed fighters, who have reorganized and emerged as the de facto rulers of the area. Some 60 notable Maliks and elders of the region, who collaborated with the US and Pakistan Army, have been shot dead in the last 18 months.

The groups, led by trained Taliban commanders have taken physical control. New offices have been opened all over the Agency to recruit youngsters and fighters for 'jihad' inside Afghanistan, Kashmir and against the Pakistan Army.

It is thus no surprise that attacks against government installations have now become a routine affair. ....

[....] None of the tribal sources wanted to be named due to fear of persecution. Armed with heavy weapons, the Taliban patrol the streets of Wana and other towns to ensure that no music is played and only the religious and inspirational cassettes and CDs are sold, as was the case in parts of Afghanistan during the Taliban regime.


I just read somewhere that Pakistan's General Purvez Musharraf may lose his position as unrest rises.





The Taliban's bloody foothold in Pakistan Syed Saleem Shahzad, Feb. 8, 06 -- Syed Saleem Shahzad is Bureau Chief, Pakistan Asia Times Online.

[. . . . ] The Taliban and their supporters plant roadside bombs on the routes used by the Pakistani paramilitary forces, and virtually every day one or two vehicles are blown up. This measure is aimed to keep the security forces away from the actual tribal areas of Waziristan. In short, the writ of the Pakistani political agent (the central government's representative) barely extends beyond Miramshah Bazaar and Wana Bazaar (the official headquarters). Everywhere else, the Taliban are calling the shots.

Asia Times Online has viewed a video disc released by the Taliban that illustrates their control in North Waziristan. [. . . . ]

The video also includes the "official" announcement of the establishment of an Islamic state in Waziristan [. . . . ]


Lengthy, worth reading




Afghan opium: License to kill Pierre-Arnaud Chouvy, Feb. 1, 06
Pierre-Arnaud Chouvy is a geographer and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique research fellow, and produces www.geopium.org

[.... The] global prohibition of opium and certain other drugs has largely failed, in spite of, or maybe because of, more than 30 years of the "war on drugs" launched in 1971 by the administration of US president Richard Nixon.

[....] In such a context, where both interdiction and development have failed to solve the "opium problem" in Afghanistan, because interdiction without development amounts to further deteriorating the livelihoods of opium farmers, and alternative development is far from having been implemented with adequate economic means and political determination, a rather new, but unrealistic, proposal has emerged: the licensing of Afghan opium for production of pharmaceutical morphine.

It is alternative livelihoods that must be promoted, in a way that counter-narcotics objectives are mainstreamed into national development strategies and programs, if the causes of opium-poppy cultivation are to be addressed and illicit opium production eventually curtailed. [....]


Worth reading

Subheadings:

Supply and demand of opioid analgesics
Indian licit vs Afghan illicit opium production
Shortcomings of opium licensing in Afghanistan

There was a meeting of the World Bank in London during the first week of Feb. to tackle development issues for Afghanistan, particularly, "how to deal with Afghanistan's opium fields, which last year produced about 4,200 tonnes of raw opium." What was the outcome?


Superbug passed to people by pets -- Maybe it's revenge for this.

February 20, 2006

Quick Notes

Thanks to those who know I love kittens and send photos.






Pakistani Capital Sealed Against Protests -- "ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Pakistani security forces arrested hundreds of Islamic hard-liners, virtually sealed off the capital and used gunfire and tear gas Sunday to quell protests over the Prophet Muhammad cartoons that were banned after a wave of deadly riots." Matthew Pennington, AP, Feb 19, 06 -- via Anne_mcm: "Twelve-year-old Amar Ahmed joined the protest, carrying a sign reading, "O Allah, give me courage to kill the blasphemer." ", 2/19/2006

[. . . . ] Hundreds of Muslims burned a church in the southern city of Sukkur. No worshippers were inside at the time, but one person was hurt afterward when police fired tear gas.

Local police chief Akbar Arian said the riot was not sparked by the cartoons but by allegations that a local Christian had burned pages of Islam's holy book, the Quran — another sign of the heightened sectarian tensions in this overwhelmingly Muslim nation.

[. . . . ] In Istanbul, tens of thousands joined a protest organized by the Islamic Felicity Party, whose leaders shouted over loudspeakers that the crowd symbolized the anger of the world's 1.5 billion Muslims and urged them to "resist oppression." Protesters chanted slogans against Denmark, Israel and the United States.

Ethem Erkovan, a 47-year-old participant, who held a banner in one hand and his daughter in the other, accused Western nations of maligning Islam. "They are the ones who are trying to depict the expanding Islamic community as terrorists, though all we want is peace," he said.


Well, logic and tolerance win again.

Obviously, "Twelve-year-old Amar Ahmed" quoted above was ... not serious? just trying to be part of the crowd? exaggerating? stupid? taught this in school and at home? ignorant but well-trained in hatred? ... Just what would Muslims have us believe?



Moderates: They ARE out there - they just don't get the press that the extremists get...

LONDON: Finally, moderate voices rose above the din of extremist rhetoric to have themselves heard as thousands of ordinary Muslims — angry and embarrassed by the controversy over Prophet Muhammed's cartoons — held a massive rally in Trafalgar Square, central London, on Saturday against "incitement'' in the name of religion.

Protesters, waving placards in support of free speech, denounced the extremists who had raised inflammatory slogans during a march here last week against the controversial cartoons.

"We do not fear debate or criticism,'' said one banner echoing the mood at the rally ....
posted by buck2thrice, 2/20/2006


Muslim cartoon row timeline -- The BBC News website outlines key events in the escalating row over the publication of cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad.

There is a lengthy list.



Publish or perish! or "What the Muhammad cartoons portray" by Martin Asser, BBC, Feb. 9, 06

Unfortunately, before the discussion mentioned below may take place, those who do not tolerate satiric cartoons will have to kill us; certainly they expect us to self-censor for them, so there is not much choice. (My personal response is more in the order of "Get thee behind me, Satan, and push!" -- but that is not politically correct in this climate of fear of Muslim madness.)


[. . . . ] Muslim writer Ziauddin Sardar likens them to anti-Semitic images published in Europe in the 1920s and 30s, with Muslims being demonised as violent, backward and fanatical.

"Freedom of expression is not about doing whatever we want to do because we can do it," he wrote in the Independent on Sunday.

"It is about creating an open marketplace for ideas and debate where all, including the marginalised, can take part as equals."


Related stories on that site:

Rioters' hidden motives
Divisions and inconsistencies
Contradiction in Arab views
Editors face mixed fates
Danish Muslims divided
Q&A: Cartoons row
Viewpoints: Cartoon row
Damage control
BBC's dilemma over cartoons




Taiwan hunts drug ring pals of BC English tutor February 09 2006


Taiwanese authorities are planning to work with Canada to dismantle a Vancouver-based drug trafficking operation they say was run by an English language tutor from B.C. who is now facing trial before a court in Taipei.



‘Crooked’ bankers stash loot in Richmond and Vancouver February 09 2006, By Mata Press Service


The bankers and their wives ran companies with names like Top Honest Holdings Limited. But the businesses they were doing were anything but honest, allege American investigators.

Now a US grand jury has indicted two former Bank of China managers and their wives over a complex scheme to defraud the state-owned Chinese bank of US$485 million (C$556 million). [. . . . ]

[....] The group bought at least three houses in Richmond while stashing large amounts of cash into accounts at the Royal Bank Canada branch on Ackroyd Road in Richmond and the Vancouver area branches of the Hongkong Shanghai Banking Corporation and the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

[....] via Vancouver using false identities. [....]

[....] following criminal checks, [Stanley] Ho gained entry into the Canadian gaming world by teaming up with a B.C. computer whiz to develop a virtual casino, called DrHo.com.

DrHo.com is based in Antigua with technology designed by Vancouver-based Eyeball.com Network Inc. Gamblers play poker, blackjack, roulette and a host of other games in real time with live dealers.
[....]


[....] Ho and his connections are listed in numerous classified intelligence files, including a RCMP Asian Organized Crime Roster.[....]


There is more. Wasn't Li Ka-shing fortunate to have sold his shares in CIBC before all this? (if my memory serves)



Courts, Louise Arbour Suggested as Liberal Leader

Liberal insiders want UN's top human rights fighter to clean up the party. David Beers, Feb. 17, 06
-- via CNEWS Forum


Former Canadian Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour, head of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, is seen to carry the iron-clad credibility the Liberals need in a post-Gomery world. Sources say a "Draft Arbour" campaign is in the exploratory stage and gaining momentum. [. . . . ]

Arbour's fans among Liberals point to her stellar resume, including 27 honorary doctorates, and say she is comfortable, even charismatic, in the glare of the spotlight. In the works is a made-for-television movie Hunt For Justice, which tells the story of her quest to indict Bosnian war criminals. [. . . . ]


Not everyone is so enthralled with that idea:

robmik43, 2/19/2006: nothing like an activist judge, to represent the Liberal party.

quebec1, 2/19/2006: Remember the Kinston pen 4 women? [more in a link below] Male guards had to establish order and security there after the female guards were harrassed, intimidated, violently attacked, had urine and feces thrown at them, ... shall I go on? [.... Make a guess as to which ones Arbour sided with. Easy.]

quebec1, 2/19/2006: on Kosovo, Milosovic, and Arbour's actions. http://www.geocities.com/cpa_blacktown_02/20000115arboblac.htm

Anne_mcm, 2/19/2006: "She is another Liberal lawyer from Quebec among a line of lawyers from Quebec that have been Prime Ministers. What is wrong with this picture. "

More on Louise Arbour here: Joining the Supremes -- Pro-family Canadians brace themselves as liberal jurist LOUISE ARBOUR ascends to the nation's highest court, Tim Bloedow, The Interim, August, 1999 -- via Anne_mcm, Feb. 19, 06


... [Louise Arbour] a darling of Canada's liberal legal establishment, which, along with the mainstream media ...

Others, however, see Arbour as a threat to the integrity of the judiciary in Canada. She is a "reckless" woman who acts as though she is "above the law, above the constitution, and above the (International Criminal) Tribunal," Gwen Landolt told The Interim.

In other words, "she fits right in," said Landolt, a lawyer and the national vice-president of REAL Women. "She's just a left-wing politician sitting in the court."

.... She has long been a favourite among the liberal political and legal elite, but especially since her controversial 1996 appointment as the lead prosecuter at the United Nations' International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Considering the aggressive trend towards globalism in many Western nations today, this experience will probably top her portfolio for years to come. Arbour is a strong proponent of the UN's latest experiment in expanding its judicial power: the 1998 development of an agreement to establish a International Criminal Court. [. . . . ]


Search:
Kingston Penitentiary for women
feminist outrage at the way Kingston Penintentiary guards treated female prisoners following a riot in the prison.
Arbour's blatant disregard for Canada's Constitution in accepting the appointment
Allan Rock had to pass three orders-in-council
Senator Anne Cools
reputation for being openly political
openly lobbied in favour of the International Criminal Court [which is important for the timing]
Larry Taman, an NDP appointee
equal treatment for married couples and common-law partners

This article is worth reading if you want to review the plans that, IMHO, have been in the works for years and how justices and members of Liberal governments have been gerrymandering to realize their globalization plans.



Lenient to a fault -- Should criminals do no time at all? In a speech last week, Judge John Reilly pitched the idea of sending only the worst offenders, such as Karla Homolka, to jail while reforming other criminals by educating them about the damage they've done.

PM Harper: Supreme Court nominee to face questions from Parliamentarians Feb. 20, 06

“The Supreme Court is a vital institution that belongs to all Canadians,” said the Prime Minister. “I believe the public deserves to know more about the individuals appointed to serve there, and the method by which they are appointed. A public hearing is an unprecedented step in this direction,” he continued. “It will bring more openness and accountability to the process of appointing people to our nation’s highest court.”

The hearing by the Ad Hoc Committee to Review a Nominee for the Supreme Court of Canada is an interim process designed to fill the vacancy left by the retirement of Justice John Major. Full details of a process to fill future vacancies will be announced at a future date.





Olympics Skating: Have the daring lifts gone too far, dangerously so?

Canadian duo tumbles to sixth place after fall -- Spill filled day: Dubreuil's injury may prevent pair from continuing Dan Barnes, CanWest, Feb. 20, 06


"This is something that's never happened before. Her hand slipped," said a concerned Lauzon. "Maybe it's because there was too much [force] in the rotation. I just hope Marie is fine. She fell really hard on [her hip]."


Also tumbled: Federica Faiella and Massimo Scali / Barbara Fusar Poli and Maurizio Margaglio ["For perhaps 30 seconds they glared at one another, making nary a move toward consolation nor any sympathetic sound"]


During their routine, Dubreuil was in a rotational lift with her back to her partner and her arms extended behind her, and with her hands wrapped around Lauzon's arm. Her fingers came apart, she fell out of the lift, and bounced to the ice on her hip then onto her back.

Canadians Patrice Lauzon and Marie-France Dubreuil -- Olympic ice dancing -- Dubreuil is nursing a painful hip bruise and is questionable for Monday's free skate.

The path seems to be clear for the reigning world champions, Russians Tatiana Navka and Roman Kostomarov. The duo is in first place overall. [. . . . ]



Mr. Blackwell, you're wanted at Palavela, where the skating costumes are awful -- I agree, and the music last night for ice dancing was mostly awful. Latin America produces much better music than that.

On being asked to donate to our Olympic athletes -- intimidated into giving, really Lydia Lovric, February 20, 2006

My solution is to just say No, if I don't wish to give to any charity but obviously, that is not "nice". Ye Gods!

Injured U.S. soldier, widow win $102.6 million judgment for Afghanistan attack -- re: Khan -- Sgt. Speer

Legal challenge to pipeline review returns to court as hearing reveal aboriginals split -- legal efforts to derail the whole process Bob Weber, CP, Feb. 19, 2006


[. . . . ] The pipeline would cross their traditional lands, so the Dene Tha have asked for a judicial stay of hearings by the Joint Review Panel until their voice is heard.

They have also asked the Federal Court to rule that Alberta sections of the pipeline should be included in the review and not hived off to provincial regulators.




Free Speech

In defence of the Western Standard -- More here and here


Update link: Go and live in Saudi Arabia, mad mullahs -- Saira Khan, loudmouth star of The Apprentice, tells Deirdre Fernand that young Muslim women like her are the true voice of British Islam and they are sick of the bearded extremists giving them all a bad name Sunday Times, Feb. 19, 06


Mark Bonokoski: Grandfatherly A. Murray Coursey 'is looking for friendly, young ladies' to be his pen pals. Serious inquiries only for a serial pedophile -- "Meet A. Murray Coursey of Toronto, a serial pedophile presently residing at the Warkworth Institution, a federal pen just south of Campbellford, Ont." Feb. 19, 06


"Jihad" Training Inside the U.S. - Interview with Former Terrorists Northeast Intelligence Network


16 February 2006: A 16-minute interview with three former terrorists, including one from Dearborn, Michigan, MUST be seen by anyone who doubts that Muslims inside the U.S. are training for "jihad" against the U.S. and other Western countries.

[....] Walid Shoebat, Ibrahim Abdullah
(born and raised in Dearborn, Michigan) and Zak Anani
, as recorded in a 16 minute interview broadcast on Comcast News with host Greg Coy on the recent January 2006 CN8 News program: "Your Morning" [. . . . ]




The Click That Broke a Government's Grip Philip P. Pan, WashPost, Feb. 19, 06


BEIJING -- The top editors of the China Youth Daily were meeting in a conference room last August when their cell phones started buzzing quietly with text messages. One after another, they discreetly read the notes. Then they traded nervous glances.

Colleagues were informing them that a senior editor in the room, Li Datong, had done something astonishing. Just before the meeting, Li had posted a blistering letter on the newspaper's computer system attacking the Communist Party's propaganda czars and a plan by the editor in chief to dock reporters' pay if their stories upset party officials. [....]



A thousand bad ideas Peter Foster, Feb. 17, 06

Book Review: Peter Tertzakian, a Calgary-based economist: A Thousand Barrels a Second


[....] Moreover, according to Mr. Tertzakian, there are no technological "magic bullets" in sight. "Free-market forces are not strong enough to catalyze rapid change in energy because it takes so much capital."

[....] The solution? "[S]oftening up the nation's defences against lifestyle changes are key to solving our energy problems," Mr. Tertzakian declares. This will require a number of Orwellian techniques. Governments will issue a "rally cry" while "social pressures" will be brought to bear on all those wicked enough to drive SUVs. It worked for tobacco, he writes, so why not for Escalades and Hummers?

[....] The luckiest country on Earth? China. Because it has "a golden opportunity to engineer a society that does not fully experience the level of oil addiction that we have known in the West." Perhaps Mr. Tertzakian might also have a look at China's experience with social engineering in the past century.

He declares that, "Those nations that implement intelligent and visionary policies soon will be much better positioned to take advantage of the next period of robust economic growth." [....]

The leftist solution to everything ... central planning.



Crossing floor furor much ado about nothing Chantal Hebert, Feb. 15, 2006


[....] The only way for an MP who crosses the floor to avoid the judgment of his/her constituents is to bail out of politics.

[....] one of the side risks of making party switching as unpalatable as possible is to make it even less likely that MPs will be inclined to hold their ground on issues of principle. [. . . . ]




Good Night All