Sunday, January 31, 2010

Too Many Clowns...


Royson James: City hall race loses some lustre

January 30, 2010
Royson James

TTC chair Adam Giambrone is expected Monday to file his papers seeking election to the city's top job – mayor.
This will essentially close the field of top candidates for the $170,000-a-year job, almost nine months before voting day in late October.
It's a long contest: "Someone who's making a baby tonight could give birth before election day," observes John Laschinger, a perennial campaign manger who has chosen Giambrone as the heir to King David's throne. But the race has already lost some of its lustre.
Laschinger, who managed Miller's two winning campaigns, likes Giambrone's chances – though he's also the poster boy for public anger over abysmal customer service with the TTC.
Giambrone will have to ward off fellow NDPer Joe Pantalone before securing the backing of the Millerites. Pantalone has been Miller's deputy for six years going on seven, and has many IOUs. Then, Giambrone has to eat into the huge lead that Liberal and former deputy premier George Smitherman has accumulated. And he must be mindful of federal backroom Liberal Rocco Rossi on the right flank.
There are others – from Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti, running a kamikaze campaign on the right fringe, to Sarah Thomson, green and inexperienced, pursuing a lost cause. But it starts out as a four-way race that is likely to narrow to a three-way split in September.
Last fall, Miller said two terms were enough and he would be leaving city hall. This unleashed anticipation of a classic clash. We may be getting much less than that.
John Tory, considered a political heavyweight who could draw votes from the ideological right and left, dipped his toes in the water and recoiled, sticking with his drive-home radio gig on CFRB.
Councillor Shelley Carroll, budget chief and Miller backer, had the aura of a credible alternative to the boys. But with Liberal support streaming to Smitherman and Rossi, the loyal party member was squeezed out.
Glen Murray, former Winnipeg mayor, also read the tea leaves and abandoned his bid. Ditto for Councillor Karen Stintz. And it seems Councillor Denzil Minnan-Wong, stunned at Tory's withdrawal, can't recover quickly enough to mount a campaign.
Miller's announced departure raised hopes on several fronts: City hall needed a leader from outside city council with fresh ideas; Toronto could use a city-wide debate on radically different visions of her future; substantial candidates would emerge so that each vision would be led by a competent, credible and experienced leader.
That hope is diminished somewhat.
On the left, we have two candidates in Miller's mould – Pantalone, very experienced but very much from yesterday; Giambrone, extremely green – and management of his ward and of the TTC shows dangerous gaps.
On the other side, Rossi is such an unknown quantity he starts out as a fallback candidate. Can he win over the public? His early foray, with suggestions such as stopping transit expansion, is worrying.
Smitherman, the poll-leading front-runner? Why would he be bold now? He doesn't have a Tory nipping at his heels. And he won't want to anger the "progressives" by contracting out any municipal services.
The man with the "bulldog" rep was just endorsed by a labour union – backed ahead of two labour-loving candidates.
Maybe the carpenters' union is telegraphing something: Expect a different name, same game at city hall.

Royson James usually appears Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.

Email: rjames@thestar.ca

Rabble Rousers Weigh In On Hiati...

...posted on Rabble.ca

January 31, 2010 - 9:14am
(ROYAL BANK) RBC = FAILS BECAUSE IT CHARGES FEES TO transfer money to help the earthquake victims in Haiti. Contact your member of parliament (MPs) and other representatives! I say it again Banks need to stop with these petty fees.

I called customer service to ask if they were waiving fees like Visa and Mastercard did for Haiti relief funds, but the unsympathetic customer service representative said 'No,'. I just don't understand how a bank can make a profit from a tragedy, let alone get away with it.
I immediately moved all my money to a local credit union, and created a Facebook page to raise awareness of RBC's policy (as well as other banks). The page, called "RBC = Fail" and is located HERE:
FACEBOOK GROUP LINK: 
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=276587193177 Printer-friendly version

Comments

NoDifferencePar...rabble-rouser-machine
Member: 16891
Joined: Dec 27 2008
Donors should be asking why their donations have not produced food, water, or medicines to most of those affected in Haiti. Where's the money gone?
conrad yablonski
rabble-rouser
Member: 19209
Joined: Dec 27 2009
Quote:
Where's the money gone?

That's easy-it went to the same half dozen families that have always run the place and always will run the place.
Hell some of them have been interviewed in the media and touted as 'tireless patriots'.

Maysie
moderator
Member: 9938
Joined: Apr 21 2005
A whole bunch o' threads are landing in "introductions" instead of where they belong. Weird.
Moving to national news.
 
Unionist
\,,/ rabble-rouser-l33t \,,/
Member: 12323
Joined: Dec 11 2005
Difficult to understand this issue. Which fees did VISA and Mastercard waive? What transfers via RBC is the OP referring to? Transfers from Canadian accounts to private accounts in Haiti? What about the other banks? And like NDPP, I'm more concerned about what the donations are producing than if someone is getting a commission along the way.

Fidel
\,,/ rabble-rouser-l33t \,,/
Member: 6594
Joined: Apr 29 2004
NDP consumer protection critic Glenn Thibeault says: Every cent of each donation SHOULD go to the cardholder’s chosen charity.
Quote:
“The fact that they may take in millions more in times of crisis is downright deplorable.”
Capital One is the sole credit card provider which, through its “No Hassle Giving Site,” waives all transaction costs for holders of its Visa or MasterCard cards.
I've been thinking of dropping VISA for another card anyway. Now's my chance to switch to a card company with a few scruples when it comes to not profiting from misery in one of Uncle Sam's client states.

Anything About Abolishing Jihads, Suicide Bomers, Etc.

Mauritanian imams intiate ban on female genital mutiliation
January 28, 2010
Human rights campaigners got a boost this week as a group of Muslim clerics and scholars declared a religious decree against female genital mutilation in Mauritania.

Good News For Auto Workers In Windsor, Detroit,,,

Doesn't Come In Enviro Green

WANT. ONE.

In Gunmetal Grey
 

This Planet Plying Catch Up With Rest Of Universe?

The Operative Word Is "Talking."

This akin to people telling you what they would do if they won the lottery...the odds are the same when the liberals talk.

Liberals finally talking policy

January 31, 2010
Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff has confounded everyone with his no-nonsense approach to politics over the past week. Conscious of the visceral distaste so many Canadians feel about Prime Minister Stephen Harper's calculated cynicism and the declining health of our parliamentary democracy, the Liberals have displayed a welcome sense of political maturity and substantive policy-making.
Starting last Monday, on the day Parliament was originally due to reconvene, the Liberals unveiled a daily volley of policy statements – critiques of government actions balanced by constructive alternative approaches:
On economic recovery and job creation, the Liberals have shown they are more in touch with the reality of the great recession and a jobless recovery. Ignatieff's concrete proposals to stimulate private sector investment are promising, and his focus on youth unemployment is a badly needed reminder that our young people are paying a heavy price for the downturn.
On accountability and governance reform, Ignatieff highlighted the usurpation of power that has characterized the Prime Minister's Office under Conservative rule. He has also made a commitment to curtail the prime ministerial powers to fire or refuse to reappoint qualified watchdogs who provided independent oversight of the RCMP, the military and our nuclear facilities.
On the proroguing of Parliament, the Liberals have proposed strict new rules to constrain the Prime Minister's manoeuvring room, so as to avoid a repetition of Harper's abuse of process when shutting down debate late last month and avoiding a confidence vote in 2008.
Many of these ideas are embryonic, but they highlight a welcome effort by Ignatieff. After a year at the helm where he seemed distracted by tactics, he is now rolling up his sleeves on substance. He is engaging in debate. And he is making constructive proposals – as we have been urging him to do for some time on this page, and as many progressive thinkers have been suggesting in a series of articles published on the page opposite and online (thestar.com/topic/liberalthoughts).
As the Liberals prepare for their scheduled policy conference in late March in Montreal, they can build on the preparatory work done this past week.
To be sure, there is more work to be done – on deficit reduction, for example, where the Liberals continue to run from the reality of tax hikes. Still, it is a good start. It will serve the Liberals – and all Canadians – in good stead when the Prime Minister finally shows up in Parliament on March 3.

Canadian Version Of The Grassy Knoll Theory

How the Harperites ambushed the rights agency

By Haroon Siddiqui
Sun Jan 31 2010
The proroguing of Parlia-ment we understand. Also Stephen Harper's emasculation of independent institutions. And his firing/silencing/demonization of critics, like labelling Jack Layton "Taliban Jack" for saying in 2006 (as argued in this space as well) that NATO had messed up so badly in Afghanistan it could no longer win, and the only way out was political reconciliation, which is what Barack Obama has decided and Ottawa has signed on to.

Freedom Of Information...

Seniors must be told of class action suit: court

January - 30 - 2010 Reporter: Jack Respond
Seniors in nursing homes and hospitals across Alberta must be notified about a class action lawsuit that contends they may have been overcharged for accommodation, a Court of Queen’s Bench judge has ruled. etails of the litigation against the provincial government must be sent to those seniors or their representatives and posted on the Alberta Health [...]


Come On Michael...If It Wasn't For Inequities There Would Be No Columnists...


...media would only report the facts not opinions.

Clooney, Jolie personify inequality in the world


Canadians are a generous and compassionate people. Just like the British, Australians and Europeans. Even as generous as Americans who, in spite of what some of their neighbours would like to believe, are some of the most giving people in human history.
Private campaigns in these countries raise enormous amounts of money for numerous causes and tragedies and all of these societies, including the U.S., donate large chunks of their tax revenue to help foreigners in need. It’s worth remembering this each time someone beats up on our culture and way of life.
It’s worth contrasting, too, with certain wealthy states that do relatively little for others and even for their own people. Such as the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia, where foreign aid and foreign relief is generally seen as some sort of irrelevance. None of these nations has done very much for Haiti and even when other Muslim countries suffer, they are painfully slow and sometimes apparently indifferent. Because we’re supposed to believe that all values are the same, however, this fact tends to slip under the ideological carpet.
In the West, there is genuine goodness but there are also some glaring inconsistencies. There is something nauseating, for example, about obscenely wealthy celebrities who are paid $20 million for a few months’ work on a movie telling working people to donate chunks of their income to the latest cause. What the likes of George Clooney and Angelina Jolie fail to realize is that they personify unfairness and inequality in the world.
The same system that pays an actor for a minute’s labour what it pays a nurse for a year’s effort also allows North Americans to spend more on diets than Africans do on food. The nurse isn’t to blame, but leftist actors telling others what to do certainly are. Equally repugnant is what that great moral philosopher Johnny Rotten of the Sex Pistols referred to as “holidays in other people’s misery.”
Vacations in Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Mexico and the rest are only available and affordable because of the poverty in which the staff in the hotels and resorts are forced to live. The response tends to be that without tourism these people would be even worse off. Actually tourism is a substitute for investment and industry and allows us to exploit.
Haiti is a massive problem, and of course it’s glorious that we are helping. But some of the tears we’ve seen on television don’t quite convince. We may care very much, but normal people cry for those they know and love personally. This isn’t callousness but human nature. So weeping on demand and false emotion is using Haiti’s pain rather than trying to lessen it.
Most vile of all, though, must be Venezuela’s increasingly fascistic and insane leader Hugo Chavez. He blamed the earthquake on the United States and claimed that the CIA is working on an earthquake machine.
Oddly enough this evil nonsense did not receive the same coverage and condemnation as Pat Robertson’s fatuous statement about God’s punishment. Hugo obviously needs a better publicist — perhaps he should ask one of his millionaire American movie star friends (see above) for some advice.

Read Michael Coren’s new blog at canoe.ca/corenscomment

Reality From Behind Prison Walls

Myths of the Quiet Revolution 
Conrad Black:

Last month, I wrote a column about the state of Quebec, in which I urged nationalists to stop griping about the past and learn to appreciate their province's earned status in one of the most successful countries in the world. MORE...

PETA Comes Out A Winner...

The Implication Is Victims Have No Rights

Senator: Jacques Demers Offside on Tory Tough on Crime Agenda?
 

"I believe in rehabilitation. I will not send a boy of 14 or 16 years to be assaulted in prison." H/T BCL

How Long Before MSM Gets The Scent...

...I guess it depends on whether it is a quiet news day but it is posted on National Newswatch 
 
THE BUBLE'S BURST 


THE clean-cut image of crooning smoothie Michael Bublé is blown today as he's revealed as a vain, foul- mouthed braggart who craves sex, cannabis and CAKES round the clock.  MORE...




...but I am as "guilty" as them I guess!

Is It Treason To Carry A Pencil?

A Double Short..TO GO

  This revolution in attitudes is good news to many who feel they are barely tolerated not only by the servers but by the clientele...

Where did café culture go?

Old-school coffee lovers are trying to reclaim the once-sociable culture of the café

There's a battle brewing in my erstwhile Toronto neighbourhood, which I revisited on a recent trip home from my base in England. And I literally mean brewing – in the organic, fair-trade, slow-roasted Colombian sense.
It's no secret that urbanites everywhere like their coffee. It propels us to work, fuels social interaction during the day and occasionally keeps us up at night. So perhaps it's no surprise that the past few years have seen an explosion in the number of coffee houses in cities like Toronto. I'm not talking about the Starbucks invasion of neighbourhoods across the continent, but independent, brand-free cafés, the sort of places that are furnished with carefully selected thrift-shop finds, decorated by local artists and frequented by cardigan-wearing grad students and graphic designers who like their double iced frappuccinos large and their wireless on the house.
Sounds like a slice of modern urban paradise, doesn't it? All those freelance hipsters lounging around in vintage corduroys, sipping lavender chai tea and nibbling on wheat-free scones while uploading photos of last night's jam session onto Facebook. Seriously, dudes, what could be cooler?
Well, therein lies the problem. Unlike in, say, Vienna, where café-going typically involves heated intellectual debates over endless cups of Kaffee mit Schlag , the “third wave” coffee houses in Canada's largest city are attracting an increasing number of people who colonize them as work spaces. Call them home offices away from home, cafés cum study carrels. Ostensibly, they are public spaces, but they feel private sector.
Of course, Toronto isn't Vienna, but a growing number of café owners and old-school coffee lovers there are nonetheless resisting the MacBook-toting crowd. Their aim? To reclaim the once-sociable culture of the café in a society that worships Wi-Fi.
Melanie Janisse opened her café, Zoots, just over a year ago in Toronto's west end. In addition to serving traditional French-roasted grinds and home-baked brioche, she provided patrons with free Internet service and computer outlets. Customers came in droves. But soon she noticed something disconcerting.
“As more people plugged in, the energy of the café began to sink,” she says. “People would turn up, buy a $2 tea, hunker down and sit there for five or six hours not buying anything or talking to anyone. It really started to bug me.”
So Janisse covered over the power outlets with duct tape.
The move didn't win her much affection from laptop-addicted locals, a few of whom tried to peel back the tape, picked public fights when they were asked not to and complained bitterly about the café in the blogosphere. As they saw it, Janisse's no-plug-in policy discriminated against students and writers.
But according to Janisse, it was also a key to her ultimate success. “We're packed all the time now,” she says. “People take the board games out of the drawers, they play chess, they write in notebooks. They talk about art. It's great. I'm providing an environment for people who want to breathe air, not a haven for some jerk in skinny jeans who wants to slouch over his e-mail all day.”
In spite of Janisse's strong words, she is actually relatively neutral in the wireless war gripping the city's café culture. While Zoots still allows people to surf as long as their battery permits, other popular indie outfits like Manic Coffee, b Espresso Bar and Sam James Coffee Bar don't provide wireless in an effort to encourage, as one Manic employee put it, “the enjoyment of loving coffee.”
It's no wonder. Not only does wireless encourage café patrons to pay more attention to their screens than the people around them, it doesn't do much for business. David Ginsberg, the owner of White Squirrel Coffee Shop on Toronto's Queen Street West, says that providing Wi-Fi, as he does, is basically a loss leader. “The seats don't generate any revenue. The business is all in the takeout. But 90 per cent of people who come in to sit down have a laptop. Why fight it?”
While free wireless might seem like a democratic perk of urban gentrification in the electronic age, critics regard it as a sign of our fragmented, over-mediated, workaholic culture.
Take my friend John, who, out of fear of inspiring a local java fatwa against him, doesn't want his real name used. Although he is a sophisticated, self-employed urbanite, John prefers, when it comes to coffee breaks, to kick it old school. Unlike so many people today, John actually goes to his local café in order to relax, chat and drink coffee. For him, the espresso bar is a place to forget about work rather than focus on it.
“I go in and I want to clear my head [but] there's all these people working on computers. It's like a library. You feel like you have to tiptoe around. If you have a conversation, people glare at you. Last time I was in I saw a friend of mine and he was wearing earplugs. I wasn't sure if I should talk to him or not. In a café!”
John says that the groovy new cafés, with their sombre, study-hall atmosphere, give him anxiety attacks. He now prefers cafés “run by old Italian guys” because at least these places encourage what he calls “real-life social networking.”
While I have been known to avail myself of free wireless in indie cafés from time to time, I see John's point. When we begin to treat cafés and eateries like technology-operation centres, our culture loses something important: the public meeting space.
So from now on, I'm leaving my laptop at home and taking a book to read with my organic double soy latte.
But that won't stop proprietors like Ginsberg from giving the rest of the people what they want. “I'm not running a coffee house in Greenwich Village in the sixties,” he shrugs. “This is 2010. People want to be on their computers. What are you going to do?”

And At The Winter Quarters Of Barnum And Bailey We Have...

Dalton McGuinty's legacy could be a big bill: Snobelen

There comes a time when premiers and prime ministers start to think about their legacy. Generally this is not good for your wallet.
  
The next time I run into Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty, I will address him as “Braveheart” and paint his face green.

Boondoggle backlash: Blizzard

Did you hear the one about the nurse, the lawyer and the gay former mayor of Winnipeg?


A Message To Kyle Ray...

 
City Council

You are ultimately responsible..you are elected, and paid, to control the beauracracy, to act in the best interest of the citizens when by-laws are put forward, to ensure that city employees serve the citizens, etc.

Toronto - the city fun forgot: Granatstein

Rules, rules, enough with the darn rules on everything from skating to plastic bags
It became crystal clear the fun police and the nervous nellies had won when, last fall, the city demanded seniors get a permit to walk in the park.
But that’s just one sign of a city where it’s “rules gone wild.”
Where the regulations and legalese governing everything people in this city can do is actually choking off the fun and livability of Toronto.
Where police officers make OT whistling Dixie, and protecting a hole.
“There’s a culture of fear here,” Coun. Kyle Rae said of City Hall. “There’s no independent personal responsibility ... the lawyers who feed on the minutia of our lives have won.”
It’s bureaucrats who are proving their worth with every new bylaw, he said.
As a family, we’ve bashed our head up against Toronto’s wall of rules again and again.
Public skating at Don Mills Arena is a torturous experience, where you’re not allowed to watch the Zamboni from the players’ bench, you can’t take pictures of your kid taking his first steps on the ice, you can’t use any sort of learn-to-skate device.
But, at Victoria Village Arena, another city rink, it’s no problem.
Just last week my son and my father were denied entry to parent-tot skating at York Mills Arena because there weren’t enough minders for the number of skaters.
Let’s contrast that with life in Calgary, where we visit every year. We skate at the Olympic Oval, some of the best ice in Canada.
There, you can use learn-to-skate devices, you can even push your baby around in a stroller.
Pictures? Fire away!
And the Zamboni is cheered by the kids. This Christmas, Santa rode on the great ice resurfacing machine, waving to the tykes.
The list of rules at Toronto’s outdoor ice pads must have been drawn up by the law firm of Expand, Expound and Frustrate. Every word is worth extra. Every rule devised earns a bonus.
Early in the morning
In response, I take my son skating first thing in the morning, before anyone else, so we can actually have fun.
I guess we better give kudos to city staff for not locking the kids out of the rinks in off hours.
On the slopes, the rules in Toronto swamp Calgary, too. In Toronto, no boots on the ski hills/former garbage dump (I understand why — but it’s the bunny hill). In Calgary, at Canada Olympic Park, parents run down the hill alongside their giggling kids.
As the National Post’s Peter Kuitenbrouwer noted about the city’s ban on skating on frozen ponds, including Grenadier Pond at High Park, bureaucrats in Toronto leap ahead with rules before common sense has a chance to poke its head out.
And then there’s the rules on plastic bags. Mayoralty candidate Rocco Rossi turned it into a stand-up comedy shtick, where the city demands stores sell for 5¢ something that costs them less than a penny, “a product with the highest profit margin in the store ... while sharing in none of the proceeds” — and is prepared to spend millions to enforce it!
“Most companies usually find there’s gold in going green, but frankly, in this case, all Toronto taxpayers can see is red,” Rossi said.
He called the bag tax a symbol council is fiscally foolish.
I see it as rules crazy as well.
Meanwhile, the city does nothing to enforce its on-leash and off-leash areas in parks, leading to fury among residents whose kids are uncomfortable around dogs they don’t know.
Those are the rules.
Enough already.
It’s time for our city workers and city leaders to let it be.
We assume when we skate out on to a frozen pond there may be some risk. We know not to jump in front of a Zamboni.
We’ve been trained that plastic bags — an item recycled again and again by most — should be reduced.
So, take some of the chains off, already. Let us have fun.
rob.granatstein@sunmedia.ca

A Normal Day?

  

3 stabbed at karaoke bar

Three men were stabbed early Friday after two friends came to the aid of one embroiled in an argument at a north Scarborough karaoke club.

A man was on his way to the bank when he was kidnapped, pistol-whipped, cut up and robbed by a group of thugs in the city’s northwest end, police said Saturday.

Driver shot in west end

A man was shot in the finger while sitting in his car in the city's west end Friday, police said.

HOW Is The Big Question...

Canada outlines greenhouse gas reduction targets

The Canadian Press
 
Updated: Sat. Jan. 30 2010 4:27 PM ET
CALGARY — Canada has formally notified the United Nations that it has embraced the Copenhagen Accord and will cut its carbon emissions by 17 per cent by 2020 from 2005 levels.
Federal Environment Minister Jim Prentice says it was the federal government's plan all along to align its position with that of the United States.
Prentice has said that the first step towards a binding international treaty on climate change is for countries to outline their own emission-reduction targets before the UN's official deadline of Jan. 31.
He says that although reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 17 per cent will be challenging, he believes it is attainable.
Prentice says there's still work to do on getting carbon emitters, including China and the United States, to agree to a binding treaty on climate change.
He warns that it took years to translate the now outdated Kyoto Accord into a treaty after it was initially developed.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Talking To The Taliban...


...Weren't we one of the first to recommend this solution?

Anyone Think Rhetoric Will Stop The Plane From Crashing?

There Seems To Be More To The Hatia Tragedy...

...than telethons, twitter, texting, and tears.

The Militarization Of Emergency Aid To Haiti
Contributed by NAUWATCH on Tuesday, January 19 at 13:12 (377 reads)
The Militarization of Emergency Aid to Haiti: Is it a Humanitarian Operation or an Invasion?
by Michel Chossudovsky
Haiti has a longstanding history of US military intervention and occupation going back to the beginning of the 20th Century. US interventionism has contributed to the destruction of Haiti's national economy and the impoverishment of its population.
The devastating earthquake is presented to World public opinion as the sole cause of the country's predicament.
A country has been destroyed, its infrastructure demolished. Its people precipitated into abysmal poverty and despair.
Haiti's history, its colonial past have been erased.
The US military has come to the rescue of an impoverished Nation. What is its Mandate?
Is it a Humanitarian Operation or an Invasion?
Read More » (554 words)  |

International Politics
 Column: Canada's Haiti: The Dirty Past And The Dirty Future
Contributed by Robin Mathews on Thursday, January 21 at 10:40 (521 reads)
Michael Chossudovsky talks of the militarization of "aid" to Haiti.  Aid will go to Haiti, and the people will be helped back to their status as exploited slave labour for the profit of foreign corporations - and U.S. policy for the region.
Read More » (881 words) 

TerroristsShould Be Tried In Military Courts...

...and those found guilty should die before a firing squad. That is the reality and consequences of waging war.

Cirque du Jihad: Coming to a federal court near you?

By Michelle Malkin  •  January 29, 2010 03:08 AM 
 

What % Of Our Tax $$$ Go To Items Other Than Health And Safety Of Our Citizens


'What was the level of taxation in 1776 that caused the U.S. to declare its independence?'

Lorne Gunter writes:
I will always recall his answer: "the equivalent today of about 5% to 7% of their income."

What?

Today, in Canada, all levels of government, through all their taxes, can confiscate as much as half or more of a taxpayer's income, in total. Income taxes, pension claw-backs, the GST, gasoline excise taxes, import duties and tariffs, estate taxes, property taxes, capital gains and on and on and on.

And yet, like the abused spouse rushing back to an abuser, many Canadians continue to sing the praises of ever bigger and bigger government. They rush to it in any crisis looking to be saved, whether through "free" health care during times of personal crisis or through auto company bailouts that demonstrate solidarity with distant workers in distant communities during times of global crisis.

Were John Adams or Ben Franklin or Thomas Jefferson to show up in today's world, he would immediately be calling for his fellow citizens to take up their muskets and throw off their tyrants.

# Kathy Shaidle

Sign Of The Time Or A Fluke

To consider this a trend we would have to see a huge increase in the failures of Suishi Bars in North America.

Fordzilla vs. Japan

It may not be a giant radioactive lizard, but Ford is stomping all over Japan's auto industry.

By Thomas Mucha
Published: January 30, 2010 09:40 ET

A Possible Model For TTC And Other Canadian Service Industries

Peter Foster: Capitalist triumph
 
Posted: January 29, 2010, 8:09 PM by NP Editor Filed under: Peter Foster,Russia,McDonald's
 
Moscow McDonald’s keeps growing with the simple political  strategy: Serve the customer
By Peter Foster
O n its first anniversary, on Jan. 31, 1991, Moscow McDonald’s had to cancel its celebration due to political turmoil. Its single massive, glittering restaurant on Pushkin Square was operating under nightmare circumstances. The USSR was disintegrating, its economy about to implode amidst hyperinflation. From the Kremlin, just a couple of kilometers down the uncleared black-ice sidewalks of Gorky Street, the winds of a renewed Cold War and anti-business sentiment were blowing. On its 20th anniversary, tomorrow, McDonald’s Russian operation stands as a spectacular success, a monument to persistence and an astonishing corporate organization.

Thanks Gary...

 


You MUST, MUST Read The Comments...

which are an excellent example of the banter that used to take place in the Legion halls of Canada before political correctness, sensitivity, diversity, etc.
 
Full Comment letters file: Rude replies from our readers
Posted: January 30, 2010, 11:00 AM by NP Editor
Full Comment gets lots of letters. Occasionally someone likes us. More often letter-writers don't. We don't take this to mean more people dislike us than like us, just that angry people are usually more motivated to share their thoughts.  Some of the messages are really rude, some make no sense at all. Here's a sample, pretty much as they arrived, though last names have been omitted (in those cases where they were provided). One note: Many writers assume that because I'm the editor of Full Comment, I must write everything that appears. Not so. I don't think I wrote any of the articles credited to me below. Just so you know.
On the death of women's studies (which I didn't write): Honest to god Kelly, you have to be the most useless columnist in this country.  Nice "column" today.  Did it take you all day yesterday to come with that TURD of an analogy. What school did you graduate from, just curious?  I can't imagine the sequence of events that led to you getting a prominent gig, you're so entirely superfical and overtly biased- to the point of a child- it's amazing. Keep up the crap contributions to Canadian journalism.  You're a disgrace, SERIOUSLY.

Toronto In Cold Weather Alert....Importing Warming From Copenhagen

Rex Murphy: So, whatever happened to Copenhagen?

Q. How was the Copenhagen climate conference like the Medieval Warm Period? A. They both may be seen to disappear when it serves a noble...


Is Your Financial Future Tied To ManuLife



National Post exclusive: The drama behind Manulife's closed boardroom doors

Source

Politics Brings Together Strange Bedfellows...

...but they all have one thing thing in common; Feeding At The Public Trough.  


Kudos To Oakdale Golf & Country Club

Golf club, Jane-Finch neighbours drive for the green

Image
Sat Jan 30 2010 (3)
On a bitterly cold morning above a strip mall at the corner of Jane and Finch, they trade their sweaters and jeans for strapless dresses and sequins.

Pontification By The Media And Beauracrats...

TTC 's great election overhaul

I asked TTC chairman Adam Giambrone at last Wednesday’s unveiling of his mayoralty platform, er new focus on customer service, why it’s taken him nearly four years in the job to recognize that the customer comes first. 

The TTC’s failure to communicate: Editorial

A conversion on the road to Damascus is better than no conversion at all, so we applaud the TTC for promising this week to do better by its customers.

...while the taxpayer zeros in on the problem:
sue ann you are correct in alot of what you say. The problem is with council and no existant leadership. management do not do their jobs so why should the floor sweeper?
You are correct it is tough to terminate a union worker. You have to have a pretty good case such as theft. By the time the termination getsx through the provincial labour Board the employee is hired back with back pay.
However, we can and should terminate any non union "manager" who is not supervising our employees as they are paid to do.
Lets start there, Then lets take the union grievances and make them stick to their contractual obligations.
As for council the way the race looks its going to be staus quo at city hall....sad to say
Jeff, January 30th 2010, 3:49pm

Friday, January 29, 2010

I Didn't Know That "Islamic Fundamentalists" Have Read A Primer On Negotiating...


...written by Al Capone, Meyer Lansky, Fank Nitti, et al.

Stay On Top Of Stephen's Attempt To Lower Our Debt

The Debt Clock
 
Peter Shawn Taylor: Waterloo's train to nowhere
Posted: January 29, 2010, 8:00 AM by NP Editor
Today is the day the taps are supposed to be shut off. Prime Minister Stephen Harper has promised that his government’s massive $40-billion stimulus plan — with its $12-billion in infrastructure spending and $8-billion for housing — will come to an end now. Whatever hasn’t been allocated yet gets taken off the table. With the spending orgy done, Ottawa claims it will now turn its focus to getting the federal budget back in the black. Some observers see Harper’s appointment of fiscal conservative Stockwell Day to the Treasury Board as a sign the party is well and truly over. We’ll see. Since the Tories have spent the past year as the most spendthrift government this country has ever seen, it seems a big ask for Ottawa to revert to tightwad status overnight. Of course the biggest problem with going from spending to cutting is that it’s far more enjoyable for politicians to make voters happy than it is to disappoint them. And even before the economic crisis the Tories were rather liberal when it came to spending on favoured demographics.
The Chopping Block: Time to pop the SODA
Posted: January 28, 2010, 7:45 PM by NP Editor Filed under: budget,The Chopping Block,Southern Ontario Development Agency
On The Chopping Block: The Southern Ontario Development Agency Budget saving to 2014: $900-million The goal of The Chopping Block is to find at least $20-billion in annual spending cuts from the federal budget and identify any other expenditure items that would save taxpayers money and reduce future increases in Canada’s national debt. Stockwell Day, as new head of the Treasury Board, is reportedly charged by Prime Minister Stephen Harper to lead the belt tightening and ultimately eliminate the deficit. It’s a big job. This is not the time for another ritual “expenditure review” process in which bureaucrats go through the motions of reviewing multi-billion cash transfer machines and hold up teensy items from obsolete and redundant programs for elimination. We will not get anywhere looking for hundreds of $4-million savings on copying costs and ancient subsidies for chicken coop bailing wire. This calls for real cuts in real programs with real money flowing through them. And so we begin The Chopping Block series with a straightforward proposal to instantly take $1-billion out of Ottawa’s spending. The looming fiscal mess is the perfect time to pop the SODA— the Southern Ontario Development Agency.

Elected Officials Above The Law?

And they will not face any sanctions or punishment. 

Councillors and lawsuits

Fri Jan 29 2010
 

Bowing to public outrage and the political calendar, which designates this an election year, Toronto City Council has backed away from its indefensible decision to pay the legal costs of Councillor Adrian Heaps. It helped that Heaps announced he didn't want the money.

Pity he didn't say that last month when fellow councillors ignored the advice of the city solicitor and voted 21-4 to reimburse Heaps for legal expenses resulting from a libel suit launched by a candidate he defeated in the 2006 municipal elections. Heaps settled out of court at a cost of $20,000. Council agreed to cover both the settlement and his legal fees for a total of $65,680.

MORE

Is It Time For A Telethon For Canadian Altruists?

A lesson in hardball for altruists

by Carol Goar

Welfare reviewed by those who know

By Sima Dini
Thu Jan 28 2010
 
This week marks the beginning of "the people's review of social assistance," a process led by 20 social assistance recipients to identify what's wrong with the current system and to make recommendations to change and enhance the way...

Don Martin: Stephen Harper on the road to Damascus
Posted: January 28, 2010, 5:07 PM by NP Editor
When she's not slinging cocktails as Ottawa's favorite bartender to MPs of all parties, parliamentary staff and the odd thirsty journalist, Julie McCarthy fundraises for a small African village. In the last four years, she's raised $8,000 from an annual golf tournament and auction, enough to pipe clean water to 110 crowded houses in an dusty corner of rural Kenya. She exemplifies what Prime Minister Stephen Harper means when he insists a little money can deliver a big improvement to the wretched lives of women and children in Africa.

 

If Police Took Similar Action With A Driver They Would Be Accussed Of Profiling...

Fiorito: The cops came and took my gun

Image
Fri Jan 29 2010 (0)
A pounding at the door the other morning; my windows rattled. I was upstairs at work. 

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Go Get Them Gail!



CANOE

Why Gail Shea is used to getting pie in her face‎ - 
Federal Fisheries Minister Gail Shea has taken pies in the face before for good causes. She's also thrown them. But the pie that was pushed into her face ...
Globe and Mail (blog) - 296 related articles »

Anything Can Happen Over Three Years...


...and The Toronto Maple Leafs could win the Stanley Cup!

Life According To Jobs



Lament For Pens, Pencils, Paper...

No Reason To Stop Giving....


Haiti food aid falls short, much of it stolen by thugs


PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Street vendors openly sell U.S.-donated rice by the cupful from bags marked "not for resale." At a homeless camp, a young woman told of thieves who tried to sell her own food back to her. 27 January

About Me

My photo
I lean to the right but I still have a heart and if I have a mission it is to respond to attacks on people not available to protect themselves and to point out the hypocrisy of the left at every opportunity.MY MAJOR GOAL IS HIGHLIGHT THE HYPOCRISY AND STUPIDITY OF THE LEFTISTS ON TORONTO CITY COUNCIL. Last word: In the final analysis this blog is a relief valve for my rants/raves.

Blog Archive