Monday, May 31, 2010

Now you can be forgotten

In honor of the release of Justice Oliphant’s report on Mulroney’s inappropriate deals with Schreiber, as relevantly summed up by Dave at the Beaver here, I have republished an old Mulroney picture by FFIB.

Also I guess to honor the fact that we as taxpayers will hopefully not have to waste any more of our money on this unethical politician.

Willy.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Easy Rider Music Tonight





Born to be Wild





Don't Bogart Me




The Pusher


If 6 was 9


The Weight


Ballad of Easy Rider





RIP Dennis Hopper




Here's some of his work.


Here's a interview from 1983 about working with James Dean and acting...

Why the shit hit the fan in India

The now revealed and so called visa row, in India has been going on for a couple years. 

At least  twelve retired officers from the Indian military, police forces and security services have come forward to the Indian press. That had been denied visas to either immigrate to or visit Canada on the grounds that they have been engaging in terrorism, committing acts of espionage or being a former member of an organization that engages in such acts and therefore a danger to the security of Canada and its people.

Some of these retired officers have visited Canada more than once in the past and have children living in the country.

India has a population of over a billion people and I would assume that they have a lot of retired military and security officers, so it was not on the front burner with India’s Minister of State or their press until a week ago when our so called overworked Canadian immigration officers caused the shit to hit the fan,


They refused entry to an Indian security officer who was being sent by the Indian government to review security for the forthcoming G20 meetings or possibly was being sent to see what a billion dollars worth of security would buy. In either case, at that point, the Indian Minister of State stepped in and the Indian media started digging into the stories of others who have been refused in the past.

The Indian Minister of State with as much bluster as is diplomatically acceptable between nations who are trying to work out a trade agreement, called in our High Commissioner in India and gave Canada one week to fix the mess or India would take retaliatory action.


As embarrassing as this is in diplomatic circles, (Harper was just in India trying to work a trade deal), it is quite possibly just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the new rules that have been instituted around the world by this conservative government and its incompetent Minister of Immigration.

This incident, at the least, should result in a parliamentary review, as we as Canadian citizens have not been informed of the changes that are being made, around the world, in our name. It certainly would with our past governments.

Unfortunately, with the Harper Conservatives in charge, our representatives in parliament, or at least the one’s representing the majority of Canadians, will not be able to review those changes, or call in the officials who could reveal the new rules and instructions that they are now working under. 

Oh, the Minister of Immigration might show up, but as we all now know, if he is willing to tell lies to Canadians on national television, you would really have to take anything he said with a grain of salt.




References from PTI and the only media article I can find in Canadian media, The Globe and Mail.


Thursday, May 27, 2010

Trying to make sense of Tony Clements play list

Sometimes I feel like a pinball wizard who is running to standstill or just maybe I’m amazed that it’s not too late. So let’s twist again, further on up the road at Lakeside Park, with some pretty girls. I’ll bring a big meat plow and some store bought bones

Sometimes I miss the point of  these news articles on copyright.



Jason Kenny is a liar pass it on


You can make videos, viral by one watching them so many times that you get sick or by embedding them on a large number of blogs in a short period of time.

So as suggested by StageLeftCC, and the Beave...







Monday, May 17, 2010

Jesus is on that mainline Tell Him what you want



I understand that you could not even get elected as a dog catcher, if you told the voters that you were an atheist, because the majority of Canadians have faith and believe in some sort of god, but there is a big difference between believing in the hereafter and other common christian, muslim or other religious beliefs and believing that Jesus is literally going to come floating down from the sky, with his army of angels behind him, to reclaim his throne on earth, as they literally believe in the CM&A.

And considering what I have read so far about Marci McDonald’s book, the best I can hope for, is that Harper is really just pretending to be a member of this so called conservative, evangelical, ministry, in order to take advantage of a built in base of support that is willing to tithe the Conservative party as often as they do their church.

That still makes him an asshole in my books, just not a religious one.



Sunday, May 16, 2010

A kinder gentler world


Strangely, throughout my life, I have been asked one question more often than any other, and not just from people that I have had some sort of a relationship with, but even from those whom would almost be considered strangers. What would you wish for if you could have anything in the world?

Obviously, I do not believe that these people are necessarily concerned about my wants or wishes, or that they are overly generous or actually have the power to grant me what I would wish for, nor that they have a seemingly obsessive need to know what people would want if they could have anything in the world. Of course I have never fully tested that theory by asking for something that they might possibly be able to provide, say something that they were carrying in their purse or pockets for the last ten years or so, just waiting to give it to someone who wanted it. In hindsight I should probably run an experiment, the next time I am asked the question. I have always wanted a blue sweater, if they were wearing a blue sweater and see if they were willing to part with it.

No, I believe that these people are only asking the question as a means to form some quick judgement of the type of person that they are asking the question to. If you respond that you want a million dollars or a Porsche 911, they will sum you up as an A type personality, who is only out for themselves. Probably a great answer if you were applying for a commissioned sales position, but a poor answer if you were trying to pick a chick up at a Dead concert. If my memory hasn’t failed me, I was first asked this question when I was seventeen and for the past forty-five years I have given the same answer.

I want a kinder, gentler world.

Surprisingly, my answer to the question has received the same response, from the same age groups, of my inquisitors, as I have aged. When younger and even today, early twenty year olds or younger, more often respond with yeah or nod their heads in agreement. While the majority of those in their late twenties through to the mid forties, usually write me and my answer off, as a waste of time. The fifty year olds, somewhat more respectfully replied that I still had a lot to learn about life, at least when I was younger or considering my current age, that I do understand what life is like for them, today. However most of my inquisitors who were either approaching their sixties or well beyond, more often than not, said yeah or nodded their heads.

Not, that this is an agism post and do not take offense if I have painted your age group with too broad a sinister brush. Fortunately, I have met many people of all ages who were much more kinder and gentler than I and wanted the same for the rest of us. It just might be that when we reach a certain age, when we are no longer trying to make our fortune or realize the futility in constantly trying, or we are no longer raising a family, or compromising ourselves daily to keep a job that we can no longer stand, we start to look back at the naivety of our youth, and realize that the world is really not a kind and gentle place for the majority of it’s inhabitants.

Don’t get me wrong, I do not lead a life of a monk, devoting all my wakened hours to benefiting mankind, no, like most of us, I give when I can and feel bad when I can’t. However as I struggled with the getting by, I believed that in the end, things would get better for those of us who were in need. After all, I lived in Canada.

A country that took pride in caring for the weakest amongst us, providing health care for all it’s inhabitants, protection and resources for abused women and children, or assistance for the unemployed or even for those who had given up or were trapped by their addictions. A compassionate country of law and order, with a justice system that concentrated more on rehabilitation than incarceration. A country that rejected bigotry, racism and homophobia. A country that concentrated more on maintaining peace than making war.

A country that was a haven of refuge, with immigration laws that were based more on the social well being of those who were migrating, than our own economic need to approve their acceptance. I took pride that Canada, my country with such a small population, that played such a large role on the world stage. A country that was respected for it’s leadership in attempting to advance humanity throughout the world, be it international humanitarian assistance or environmental protection.

Unfortunately my country is not like that anymore. Of course, we never really, reached the idealistic pinnacle of my self envisioned nirvana, but I always believed, that was the goal or the vision that we as Canadians had for our country and its place in the world. Today, I read and am being told that we are becoming more conservative as a country and when I talk to my colleagues and peers, or even my children, more people seem willing to accept portions of our current government’s arguments: our immigration laws need to changed or that the strategic defunding of women’s rights groups is somehow justified because they have served their purposes or gone to far, or that the proposed changes to our justice system are necessary. They do not necessarily know the full extent of the proposed changes or sadly, maybe some do and they just don’t care. Most, just hear the talking points being delivered by our corporate media and who can argue against safer streets or not having immigrants, only coming here, to take up space in our hospital’s emergency rooms, if those are the only facts that are being presented and the only choices being given.

Controlled messaging targeted at the basic fears and frustrations of the average Canadian, who is just trying to get by, while step by step creating a new vision for Canada. We are becoming more Americanized in our self description. Canada is now described by our government as an economic world leader, a major oil producer and a point of destination for those who would come to take advantage of our free and open society. Oh and we won more Gold medals that any country ever has. We’re  number one, where it counts, now. Sorry I digress in olympian proportions.

By providing more direct-funding to favored or select women’s causes, the government slashes the indirect-funding to the majority of the established independent women’s groups. We are then caught in an argument of semantics verses any factual representation of whether women and children in peril will be better served. We are given examples of a distasteful pardon being awarded to a child molester, as an excuse to harden the rules for all pardons and all paroles going forward and the average Canadian does not have the time nor opportunity to understand the ramifications of the changes or even the differences between paroles and pardons. At a time when serious crime rates continue to decrease, our government is proposing mandatory sentencing and planning to build more prisons. The list of unwarranted changes to our social fabric, trumped up by exaggerated examples, goes on and on as this government tries to change our country to their vision of the new Canada.

Similar to the eight years of neoconservatism under Bush, the reformers within the new conservative alliance have infiltrated all departments within our government and are destroying the basic societal principles that were established over decades, by previous generations of Canadians and implemented by successive Liberal and Progressive Conservative governments. Meanwhile our current opposition parties, who represent the majority of Canadians in parliament, are caught in a battle to protect the basic role of parliament itself. It is little wonder that most people when poled want the status quo. They do not realize all the changes that are taking place, as it is nearly impossible to believe that in four short years this much damage has been done to our country. 

Harper’s MBA may have been in economics, but his government has not practiced much fiscal conservatism since taking office. Instead, they eliminated the surplus that they had inherited by reducing their revenues, via GST tax cuts and similar to the neoconservative theories of Bush and his gang, they implemented US style deregulation of services and safeguards, including mortgages. Although they had to quickly reverse themselves when the bottom started to fall out the US sub-prime market (a reversal that moved $75 billion in Canadian sub-prime higher risk mortgages from the bank’s books to our country’s balance sheet).

Ironically, the financial meltdown created by the neoconservative deregulation under Bush and the resulting world wide recession has become nothing more than a marketing opportunity to our current Canadian government. Taking full credit for the fiscal and regulatory prowess of previous Canadian governments, Harper has promoted his own stewardship in preventing Canada from being as hard hit as the rest of the developed countries. The so called recovery with the so called massive expenditures that have been made, to build hockey rinks and such across the country, have become more of an advertising vehicle for the governing party, along with everything else they can put their brand on. No, in the end, both the recession and massive deficit that has been created by our so-called economist prime minister will be used to promote his party and at some time in near future will also be used to justify the further elimination of our social safety net. No, this is not an economically focused conservatism. The reformers in power are extreme social conservatives focussed on changing Canada into a harsher society based on an evangelic christian ideology.

Evangelical christians and their ministries may not be portrayed in our media as being identical on both sides of the border, however they are interconnected. Harper’s church is part of the Canadian division of the Christian and Ministry Alliance. The Alliance was one of the first evangelical ministries that, according to its history, started back in 1887 and they have done quite well over the past 100 or so years. This is the ministry of preachers, like Charles Templeton, with his US television broadcasts or his earlier radio campaigns, where the listener was told to lay their hands on the radio and feel the power of God, just after they wrote the cheque of course. Templeton left the Alliance and his faith behind when he returned to Canada. Another former member was David Berg who left the Alliance in the sixties to form the infamous Children of God cult. The cult has evolved into the TFI today. The TFI or The Family International are considered hardcore, end of timers, but when you review the stated beliefs and core values of both groups, there are more similarities than differences.

Similar to all born again evangelicals the Alliance believes that the bible (both old and new testaments) was dictated by the words of god, and that you can only be successful if you learn, believe, follow and live by those words and you can only be saved if you are born again, by accepting Jesus as your true lord, god and saviour. Regardless of whether you are a devout catholic, rabbi, imam or the pope himself, you can only be saved when you are reborn and similar to all evangelicals, the Alliance’s mission or great commission as they sat, is to convert you and everyone else.

Of course they believe they are doing us all a favor here, because also similar to the TFI, the Alliance believes that Jesus will return to start his 1,000 year reign here on earth. We are not talking about Jesus quietly showing up at the local barbeque one weekend. No, members of the Alliance believe that the whole world will witness his return and actually see him floating down from the sky with his army of angels following behind. Being described as a more conservative form of evangelicalism, (assuming that means not 100% crazy) the Alliance does not go on about or describe in detail the rapture on their web sites. Instead they tend to downplay the end of times theme with it’s total destruction as prophesied by the TFI and other groups, whom I guess would be described as the more radical or possibly liberal evangelicals.

Yes, the Alliance has done well in the US and Canada over the last 120 years. They now have over 2,000 churches and 500,000 members in the US and over 400 churches and 120,000 members in Canada. A membership that includes Stephen Harper, Preston Manning, Stockwell Day and other key members of our government’s caucus. There was a time when I would warn people, if they saw an evangelical approaching them on the street, that they should turn and run. A born again, evangelical christian is more persistent, radical and driven in purpose than a smack addict looking for their next fix. Now our country is being run by a cabal of them.
Ideology, whether personally developed through experience, stolen from others or revealed to us from a higher source, plays a role in the daily lives of us all. Although kept under check by Harper since his second day on parliament hill, (on his first he somewhat jokingly said he would not abolish abortion until his second term), his religious ideology is the greatest threat to our country and also his greatest weakness politically. Unfortunately it is also the hardest to expose and attack. Instead our opposition parties are forced in parliament to try and expose small cracks in the reformers wall of ideological secrecy, while being attacked by the reformer’s formidable marketing machine, in a lazy corporate media, that believes politics hasn’t changed in this country. In fact Harper and his cabal are praised by our media as being astute and crafty politicians, while the opposition is described as unorganized, weak or ineffective.

Frank Graves of EKOS continues to be attacked by the reformers for suggesting on a political talk show, that the Liberals should start a culture war. The reality is that there has been one going on for the past four years and it is about time that the opposition parties started participating. I am no political strategist, but the best way to expose Harper’s and his government’s religious ideology to a preoccupied public, might be to present the whole litany of policy changes they have made based on their ideology and then attack the new vision of Canada, that his religious ideology is creating. Such a battle plan would require coordination of attacks between the parties in opposition and also a proposed alternative vision(s) for our country. Going back to the status quo is no longer an option.

Unfortunately, I have little faith that our opposition parties would put aside their personal ambitions, for any form of coordination and they will continue to search independently for the one wedge issue that they believe will unite enough Canadians to their cause. A wedge issue that is large enough to warrant a call to the electorate. No, the exposure of Harper’s evangelical ideologies and his plan for a new Christian Canada will have to be exposed by other sources.

Hopefully the release of The Armageddon Factor by Marci McDonald might be the starting point, if it is followed up by media interviews  and discussion on political talk shows. Of course it would still require an alternative vision to be presented at some time prior to the call for election and that is what I have not seen yet from our opposition. Running the next election without an alternative vision for Canada, will net the same results as we have now, or as we all fear a reformer majority. But what would you expect if the electorate is only presented with one argument, the new Canada versus the old Canada.

No, the country has changed and during the next election Canadians will have to be asked the question, what kind of Canada do you want and I do not believe that it would be the vision that Harper is creating, if his true motives are exposed. The question right now, to our opposition parties is what is that alternative. 

For me, I will remain in the minority and answer the question as I always have, I want a kinder, gentler world....


And vote for the party that can best provide me those results.



Monday, May 3, 2010

Stop shooting the messenger

Senator Nancy Ruth is taking a lot of shots around here tonight for warning a group of international development advocates to shut the f--- up about Harpers stance on not funding abortion services in his foreign aid proposal or things could get worse.

However after reviewing Senator Ruth's resume here and re-listening to the audio here, I think that this 68 year old Senator who seemingly has devoted the best part of her life to working for women's rights (I mean she founded LEAF & The Canadian Women's Foundation and more) is truly concerned about a backlash from Harper and his social conservatives. A backlash as she states, that can further harm women's health.

And if this old activist war horse is scared, then every Canadian that believes in a woman's right to control her own body, should be to.

Stop shooting the messenger and pay attention to the message, A message based on insider information.

Harper's government is full of ideological social conservatives who want to move our country back to the fifties.

Thank you for being so honest Senator, even if not intentionally and hey you can say fuck anytime you want to. By the looks of your resume you've earned the right..


From the Star here.

Smoke em if you got em

If you are going to spend up to 2 billion a year on prisons, you better use them. Harper has decided to reintroduce his draconian drug laws, only this time through his new hand picked senate. 

Harper wasn't happy with the changes made by the senate, prior his last prorogation, which killed the first bill. So it's back to the doubling of minimums from 7 to 14, mandatory sentencing and one plant equals a grow-op.

Harper has nothing to loose by reintroducing this bill. This time around the sober second thought will reside in parliament where I fear that the best the Liberals will go for is to roll back to the previous senate ruling. After all you can't be painted soft on crime.

Of course alternatively Ignatieff could propose tougher laws for hard drugs, finally instate decriminalization of marijuana possession and demonstrate that he understands where the problem is.

But hey I've been smoking all weekend.


Canadian Press via Macleans here.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

We are stronger as one, so we are going to stand apart

BASKing in their own light the premiers of BC, Alberta and Saskatchewan have in their words transformed their provinces into a new western partnership.

After a year of ongoing meetings the premieres summed up yesterday's announcement by stating that we are all Canadians and our experiences have taught us that more can be accomplished by working together.
Well except for part about working with the rest of Canada, I guess.


See Globe article here.

I guess Mound was right

Every major global climate record was broken last year and 2024 could be worse, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Tuesday,...