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Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Checkers vs Chess

So, why is the Conservative party having so much difficulty in the last few weeks? I could gnash teeth and find a sack-cloth or I could indulge in a little conspiracy theory. Remember that article by Tom Flanagan? The one where he said Harper's goal wasn't to beat the Liberals but to destroy them? Isn't it possible Harper is doing just that?

When the election was half-way through and Jason Cherniak was pulling out his hair bemoaning the lack of Liberal advertising I suggested in an un-published comment (you chicken, Jason!) that perhaps the Liberal party was trying to save themselves for the future by not spending close to the limit. Given all the speculation about the Liberal debt levels and their inability to fundraise I thought maybe the Liberals had gone into survival mode and were trying to keep the debt down.

Since then the Liberals have gone up, the Conservatives down, the Liberals are spending on ads all over the place and people are once again questioning Harper's campaign. What if it's all a deliberate plan on Harper's part? Think about it, if the Liberals spend the max and lose they are toast for the next ten years. Harper wants to destroy them and what better way than to lure them into a full on punching match at the end of the election? I'm sure Harper will be quite happy with another minority, especially because the Liberals will be totally unable to oppose his agenda. And I'm quite sure that if Dion loses he's out and the Liberals will have another destructive and expensive leadership race and convention. It's a no-lose situation for Harper.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Another example of S.13 stupidity

It seems too many Liberals can't see the forest for the trees. The "trees" being non-liberal thinkers and the "forest" being everyone. You see, if the the bar for S.13 is "contempt" and protected groups include nationality, how then can we talk about the holocaust? Seriously, if you were a German or German-Canadian, how would you feel if you were constantly told it was your people who murdered 6,000,000 Jews, and 6,000,000 others? How do you think other people feel about Germans when they learn this truth? How does a German child feel in class when her people are discussed in that context? Is it likely that some people would feel contempt for Germans given that information?

Or Russians? Do you think the Ukrainian genocide could lead to contempt? Chinese? How about the cultural revolution? English? Ever hear of the potato famine, the penal laws? Do you begin to get the idea? I sure hope so.

25 Rejected Liberal Tips on a Greener Living

  1. Inside, outside, frontside, backside, use your underwear for 4 days!
  2. When buying clothing, if it itches it’s good for you and Gaia.
  3. Take the 100 mile challenge. Sure, that means wormy onions in February but shift happens, you know.
  4. Body hair is beautiful.
  5. After you smoke your ganja you can make the fiber into tie-dye T-shirts for barter.
  6. Ride your bike to work . . . in January . . . in Toronto.
  7. Don’t just sell your car, recycle it! Your financial loss is Gaia’s gain (and the wrecker’s . . .)
  8. Go vegan! The animal exploitation industry is a major contributor to greenhouse gases.
  9. Turn down your thermostat, wear wool. (hold on, what was #8 again?)
  10. Use ethanol! No, wait, use wind power! No, wait, use nuclear! No, wait . . . Aaw, man! Which one doesn’t starve kids, kill birds, or go all “China syndrome” and shift?
  11. Drink water. But not that trendy bottled crap in plastic, no, drink tap water. Unless you’re under a boil water advisory or live on a reserve.
  12. Eat less. Thin is in!
  13. Don’t think too hard, brains use lots of calories.
  14. Get a vasectomy using only natural anesthetics. Seriously. You love the planet, don’t you?
  15. Don’t use antibiotics; they’ll just end up in our water one way or another.
  16. Move to the “big city” and live in a loft with 10 other eco-friendly people. You’re body heat will keep you warm in winter!
  17. Buy only organic food produced by fair trade, unionized labourers. (Not those fascist farmers. They all vote Conservative, you know)
  18. Turn off your computer. Your parents didn’t need one and neither do you.
  19. Turn off your TV. Your Grandparents didn’t need one and neither do you.
  20. Refrain from having children. Sex is ok, just not the kids.
  21. Sign a non-resuscitation order. Why waste energy when you’re gonna die someday anyway?
  22. Body odour is natural. Deodorants are not.
  23. Ride the bus. A lot.
  24. Compost everything. Your Great Grandparents didn’t need a toilet and neither do you.
  25. Finally, consider suicide. One less person poisoning Gaia is the greatest gift of all. (But not until after the election, ok? We need your vote)

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

BC Politics and the Carbon Tax

BC politics are so much fun. I used to support the Socreds but they kinda blew themselves up. Scandals, you know. Then I found the BC Liberals who were, at least, not the NDP. Then the old Socreds took over the Liberals and the Liberals became a right of centre party coalition with the blue Liberals. I was pretty happy. I have parked my vote there ever since.

Not anymore.

Gordon Campbell? What can I say about him other than he is a complete flake. One year he is all over deficit reduction, the next he's the Olympic guy, the next it's homelessness, or the "New Relationship" with aboriginals, and now he's "Mr. Green Jeans". The thing is, he doesn't finish anything he starts, and that may now be a good thing. With the carbon tax coming in to effect in a few weeks and his continued green agenda I have to wonder if this is what I voted for? In many ways I think the BC Liberals are becoming much more like their federal friends and I just can't vote for them. And of course I can't vote for the NDP.

So, who wants my vote?

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The comment too truthful for the Big City Lib

The Big City Hypocrite posted on the Lemire case and in his usual fashion couldn't take the heat in the comments. His little favourite, Ti-Guy, had this to say

Blogger Ti-Guy said...

Who ti-guy? Anyone who is forced to suffer the indignities of a HRC, that's who.

What indignities?

Standard rules of evidence do not apply and the truth may well not be a defence.

What standard rules of evidence?

What standards do apply to quasi-judicial bodies?

How is truth not a defence?

Yes, Ti-Guy, how exactly is truth not a defence? You may not know it but I gave you a perfect example. Unfortunately BCL either couldn't stand seeing his darling demolished or he realized exactly how wide a net you guys are advocating. Just to show you how much of a hypocrite/coward BCL is I'll risk an HRT complaint and re-create my post:

Muhammed married a 6 year old girl named Aeysha. He consummated the marriage when she was 9. Many Muslims believe that, as this was the example of the prophet, it is acceptable for Muslims to do the same (There is dispute as to her age but many Muslims believe the writings that list these ages). To most non-Muslims this would be considered pedophilia.

Under section 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act it is discriminatory to communicate by phone or Internet any material "that is likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt." Stating that some Muslims consider sex with a 9 year old acceptable would be very likely to stir feelings of contempt. Very likely.

So, under section 13 I can now have a complaint lodged against me and I can fully expect to lose despite the fact that everything that I have written above is truthful.

What I really want to know is why BCL deleted my comment, a comment that basically stated the above? Was it because he doesn't like me? Was it because I lied? Or was it because he knows that by hosting that comment he was just as liable to a complaint as I am? Doesn't that seem hypocritical? Well of course it does, but we've come to expect little better from him. So Ti-Guy, maybe you can now ask BCL why truth isn't a defence because he seems to know.

First they came for the neo-Nazis and I said nothing . . .

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Carbon Tax end game

How does a carbon tax not affect gas prices? By not DIRECTLY adding to the price, says Dion. But how do you not add to the price of a litre of gas when you tax the exploration, drilling or digging, & refining of fuel? No matter how much you squawk Dion’s Carbon tax WILL increase the price of gasoline. And food. And electricity. And heating oil. And shipping. And manufacturing. And. And. And.

Of course, we can offset those price increases buying nothing and by not traveling. Say bye bye to the economy. But we'll have such a nice planet!

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

How many responses will it take?

The right to respond? Is that really what the Canadian Islamic Congress Human Rights Complaint against MacLean’s magazine is about? I guess I am terribly confused by those who seem to think such a right exists. I wasn’t aware. So let me see if I have this right:
  1. If I don’t like what MacLean’s writes I have the right to respond and I can force MacLean’s to print that response?
  2. And this right is separate from the multitude of letters to the editor that MacLean’s (and most publications) already publish?
  3. And would this right mean that everyone who is offended has a similar right?
Because the one question that keeps popping in to my head is why these particular offended people get to demand a response? Do they represent all offended Muslims or just themselves? And if it is just themselves does that mean that the next group of offended Muslims can demand the same right using the same tactics? I am just so full of questions on this topic, I mean, how does one go about representing an amorphous community of co-religionists that can’t seem to agree on anything? Is this response only for Sunni Muslims or Shia Muslims? Or Sufis? Or fundamentalists, or moderates? How many responses must Maclean’s publish in order to satisfy all the offended people? I am soooo confused!

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Why I won’t buy a “domestic” vehicle

This is the story of how one company, Chrysler Canada, has lost a customer forever. And with any luck they will lose you, dear reader, as well.

I leased my first ever new vehicle in 2002, a beautiful yellow Mazda Protégé 5. Oh! How wonderful it was! Quick! Versatile! Fun! And it had a 5 speed standard. I was in bliss! 3 months after I leased it I met my wife-to-be. She couldn’t drive standard.

A year after we got married I started a new job much closer to home and I could drive our toy car, an old Volkswagen Beetle. The wife (no names, I am so very scared Kinsella might try to track me down!) needed a better vehicle for her commute. And so the tale of woe began. We went to the local 5-star Jeep dealership and worked out a deal to lease a Liberty. Wifey liked it and I was strangely willing to get rumped by these guys in order to make her happy. The original price “fell through” when the 0% wasn’t available and we were jacked-up an extra $25 a month, but I accepted it because the Jeep made her comfortable traveling all over town to strange, new places. Deal done, we left, leaving the beautiful Mazda behind.

The deal with the Mazda was that Chrysler would buy it out. It was a very popular car then and almost impossible to find a used one in that colour. They called Mazda and got the lease buy-out and worked the deal based on that figure. They also promised to cancel my insurance once the buy-out was complete. They didn’t do either.

A couple of weeks after signing the deal I noticed ICBC had taken my insurance payment for the Mazda. I phoned the dealership to see why my insurance hadn’t been canceled. A week after that I got a call from Mazda Financial asking why I hadn’t made my lease payment. Again I called the dealership. I didn’t get a response on either call but a few days and then I did get a message that the dealership needed to talk to me urgently. It wasn’t about my problems, I found.

They discovered they had made a $600 error on the lease buy out and wanted me to make good on it. They weren’t at all interested in the $150 insurance payment I was out or the damage to my credit from missing a lease payment. Well, we had a deal and we agreed to stick to it, I ate the $150 and they ate the $600. Really, what else could they do?

And so, seeing how bad their “5-Star” service really was, I carried on with the lease with a bit of apprehension. But the Liberty was a great truck. It was reliable, fun, safe, everything we wanted. We drove it for four years and were really torn when it came time to return it. We had used 30,000 fewer Ks than the lease allowed and it was immaculate in and out but we had an adoption to spend our money on, a very expensive adoption.

We said goodbye to the Jeep. The dealer took it back and their inspections mentioned no problems with the vehicle. We thought we had moved on and only a week earlier we received a referral for a 4-year old boy from Taiwan. Everything was going so well! Then we received the letters from Chrysler Canada. The first was a notice that they had “lost” our personal information during shipping and they sincerely hoped we didn’t have our identity stolen and our credit ruined. The second was a demand letter for $4000 for “excess wear and tear”. The invoice didn’t detail what that “excess wear and tear” was. I phoned my brother, the car salesman, and he laughed and laughed as he told me how Chrysler and it North American compatriots do business. This, he said, was a scare tactic and soon we’ll receive a phone call telling us that Chrysler will “forgive” the debt if we just lease another vehicle. He’s seen it a hundred times.

What began as a horror story on dealership ethics has ended as a horror story on the culture of North American car manufacture and sales. Aside for the fact that Fords are badly designed, ugly things and GM hasn’t made an interesting car in 30 years, it seems that the concept of customer service and building brand loyalty are foreign to these domestics. I won’t buy a Ford just to save some guy’s job in Oshawa. I want value for my hard-earned money, I want to buy a car because it is a well designed, quality built vehicle. I’ll even pay more for that. It seems to this consumer that, rather than emulate the Japanese, or Germans, the domestic companies would rather bully and trick their way into sales of what I can only see as inferior cars. Maybe if they built cars with the elegant designs of Audi or Mazda, domestic companies wouldn't have to resort to tricks and extortion to get buyers to re-up with them.

Well, this laddie is not for turning, to paraphrase Thatcher, and Chrysler can come see me in court if they really want their money. They can also kiss goodbye any future sales to my family. It's sad because we really like the new 4-door Jeep Renegade and believed Chrysler had some interesting cars, too. They should also know that I will tell everyone I can this little story, like I just did to you, and recommend you never do business with Chrysler Canada either. I think Mazda will be getting a few more sales from me in the future.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Incredibly Selfish Athletes

Tibet. I've never been especially worked up over Tibet because the types that do get worked up are the same that get worked up over EVERYTHING. I hope I was just being a little more discerning. But with the recent violence in Tibet and some reading on the Interweb I am a little more supportive of the protests against China and especially the torch relay.

What I am also getting a little more intolerant of is the whining of athletes. Catriona Le May Doan on leaders considering boycotting the opening ceromonies

"Well too bad for them"

Funny. She goes on to say "The Olympics are about the athletes, who train their entire life to represent their country. This has become a platform for political situations."

Let's break down that sentence.

"Who train their entire life to represent their country"

There are two things there I think need clarifying. First, they train their entire life. OK. Do they do it all by themselves? Do they pay for it themselves? Or do they EXPECT and DEMAND that Canada support them? Well, it’s the latter. We pay them and they, or at least that twit Le May, Doan expects us to pay and shut up.

Second, Catriona states that these athletes “represent their country”. And that’s why we pay them, I guess. Still, if they represent us should we not, through our elected representatives, have a say in how they represent us? If we are embarrassed by their participation in an event we should, at the very least, be able to state our displeasure by removing our REAL REPRESENTATIVES from the opening ceremonies.

Ms. Le May Doan should be a little more grateful for the tax dollars that supported her in her when she needed it. She should understand that Canada is at these Olympics, not just the athletes. She should be frickin’ thankful we don’t just pull out of the whole sordid thing.

Finally, maybe we shouldn’t wrap our national pride up in selfish athletes. Maybe we should make the Olympics an individual event without nations. Maybe that would both get us off the hook for these self-serving ingrates and remove politics at the same time. Think on that Catriona.

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Christy Clark: Ignorance Kills

Christy Clark, wife of Liberal Party organizer Mark Marrisen and afternoon talk show host on Vancouver's CKNW, is an ignorant . . . well, I'll let you finish that sentence.

This afternoon Clark interviewed a woman from the Canadian Cancer Society who wants "cosmetic" pesticides banned in BC. And she sees that as the first step towards the banning of all pesticide use in Canada. A caller, an older sounding gentleman, strongly supported the use of DDT despite Rachel Carson and, as Clark stated, "99% of scientists". Clark compared this man to global warming skeptics and commiserated with her guest as to the ignorance of this poor sod. Too bad he's right.

If Clark had just a touch of professionalism she might have researched pesticide use in Canada before the show and she just might have found out that DDT is the best hope for millions of African children in the fight against malaria. Or she could have asked her husband what Liberal MP Belinda Stronach is up to these days. Clark's is an example of the utter ignorance behind the resistance to DDT and the indirect cause of death for over 3,000 African children each day.

Maybe the management of CKNW will see fit to remove this moron from the airwaves.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Which story will they tell this time?

What part of no does the BC Human Rights Tribunal not understand? These guys have acccepted a case regarding Sikhs, turbans, and hardhats, despite the ruling of the Supreme Court that bona fide safety concerns trump religious rights. I know that a recent mediation between Sikh longshoremen and the Port of Vancouver allowed a compromise where Sikhs don't work in areas requiring hard hats, but at what point does accommodation become favouritism? We know from several sources that Sikhs can and do wear modified turbans with helmets, that there is no prohibition in the Sikh religion against wearing helmets (despite a lie from another recent complainant), and that the turban is not a symbol of the Sikh religion. How much more clear cut can this be?

Frankly, I do believe that the state imposes too many restrictions on Canadians in the name of safety. If someone wants to do something stupid, well, the Darwin Awards await. But if the State is going to legislate safety, exemptions based on religion and especially falsehoods spread by religious groups to gain special status, should be disallowed.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Death to the Infidels!!

Yeah! Death to the non-believers! How dare they not join in our protest! Death to those who didn't turn off their lights!

I'm not kidding. It appears that the recent Earth Hour debacle has enraged the greenies to the point that they are seriously pissed with anyone who dares not participate in their hour of non-power. Worse, they are showering conservative blogs with a crap-storm of intolerant, bigoted posts displaying a zealotry not seen since Spain took the Auto de fe to new levels.

From Cjunk:
Thanks Paul, you've added one more Christian to the list of people for whom I'll being going out of my way to ruin their Xmas season next year. After all, I don't believe in the baby Jesus, and apparently it's ok to just sh*t all over people when you don't believe what they do. Thanks again, you contemptuous dick!


So, for my poor greenie friends: Get over yourself! We are under no obligation to worship at your altar just because the TV news says we should. We don't have to turn off our lights to appease your wrathful earth god. We do not have to believe as you do. Please, if you feel a temptation to burn us non-believers at the stake, or chop our heads off in a cheesy video, remember that you are supposed to be the enlightened, progressive, tolerant left. Protest is a right, a right the right rarely uses. If we chose to ignore your orgy of self-righteousness and "awareness raising", or protest it with a Christmas display of massive proportion, we do so because we have the absolute right to do so. Forced conversions, though you may be sorely tempted, are just wrong.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

I sure hope it was the Greens . . .

This is ridiculous

If people cannot express political views with the tolerance of their neighbors then we are in real trouble as a society. And this I know of what I speak. I work in an environment that can only be described as very left wing and I am very uncomfortable expressing my political views despite the fact that most of my co-workers have no such compunction. The fact is leftist views are acceptable in public conversation and conservative views are not. I do have to admit that many of the people I work with are the type of people I think we need on both sides of the political divide: Tolerant, accepting, & open-minded. I don't expect them to convert to my way nor do they expect I will to theirs, and I can be friends with them because politics is only one small part of our daily life. Despite that, many of the people I come into contact with on a daily basis assume I must think like they do and make it clear that any who do not are, well, stupid, racist, bigoted, selfish, uneducated, small-minded, or evil. I kid you not, "evil". And that is why I do not let most people know of my conservative leanings. Perhaps the problem is my own cowardice, but I won't take all the blame. The left has taken civil discourse and reduced it to us-against-them, and I am them.

My bet? My hope, really, is that the perpetrators of the attacks in Willowdale are extreme-leftists unhappy with those right wing Liberals. If not I will be ashamed to call myself a conservative.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

A tradtition of lying?

I am sure I am treading on thin ice, and I fully expect the howls of "racist" and "bigot" to follow, but I have to ask if lying is an integral part of the Sikh religion? Two recent cases have only reinforced my opinion that religious Sikhs see no problem lying to non-Sikhs. The first, and most recent example, involves the motorcyclist in Ontario trying to fight his $110 fine for riding without a helmet. The Ontario Human Rights Commission argued "the provincial helmet law discriminates against Badesha because it violates his constitutional rights". One can only assume it was his right to religious freedom that they based that argument upon. But the turban is NOT a symbol of religious Sikhism (unless it is convenient for Sikhs).

In Canada Sikhs claim the turban is a religious requirement and expect exemptions. In France, under their new religious symbols law, the The Sikhs "insist that the turbans their men and boys wear over their uncut hair are not religious symbols but essential to their dignity" as the traditional way of keeping their religiously-mandated uncut hair neat and tidy.

So which is it? Well, from Wikipedia the five symbols of faith are: Kesh (uncut hair), Kanga (wooden comb), Kaccha (specially-designed underwear), Kara (Iron bracelet), & Kirpan (strapped sword). Please note that the Turban is not listed as a religious requirement. Representing it as such is a lie. Thankfully, the judge in the Ontario case ruled against Mr. Badesha.

The second case involved Laibar Singh, the paralyzed failed refugee claimant who keeps defying Canada Border Services' attempts to deport him. Mr. Singh came to Canada on a forged passport, claimed refugee status, had some sort of medical problem (different Sikh leaders give differing stories, aneurysm, stroke, whichever sounds worse on that day I presume), and became partially paralyzed. His refugee claim was denied and he was scheduled for deportation. Since then he has claimed sanctuary in the temple in Abbotsford, been arrested when he left sanctuary to go to the hospital, been released on bond, promptly re-entered sanctuary defying his bond conditions, and forfeited that bond on Monday when he failed to present himself to CBS as required.

His supporters have variously claimed they will pay his medical bills if allowed to stay in Canada, a bill over $500,000 so far, and then claimed that raising a $50,000 bond was an onerous imposition (Harsha Walia in interview with Bill Good on CKNW, sorry no link) and refused suggestions that they pay his bills in an Indian hospital, which would be cheaper for equivalent care. They have claimed he cannot get proper medical support in India and then silenced a supporter who found differently on a recent trip to India. All in all it is one lie after another.

These two cases demonstrate a real difficulty with truthiness in the Sikh community and it bothers me. It doesn't bother me that Sikhs wear turbans in the army or the RCMP and this isn't about that, it is about institutional lying to gain benefit at the expense of Canadian society. These people depend on the anti-racist groups silencing any dissent, any opposition, by calling them racist. We must not allow that, we must seek the truth, not just what benefits an insular community at odds with Canadian society and Canadian laws.

UPDATE

More lies here. Quote: "Badesha's religion forbids him from putting on anything over his turban while outside his house." Really? Do the reporters ever fact check? Look at the Wikipedia article I posted, under the History section. What's that you see? Why yes, it's a SIKH HELMET. I guess Sikhs can wear a helmet when it suits them.

Oh, And the Supreme Court has ruled that requiring Sikhs to wear hardhats does not discriminate if the requirement is a bona fide safety issue. Are there any Sikh soldiers? Do no Sikhs work in construction? How about Sikh Firefighters? Despite this ruling many provincial HRCs and arbitration councils still find in favour of Sikh clamimants. Sorta puts the boots to the whole "the court can over-rule the HRC" argument, doesn't it? We have a solid precedent setting rulling and it is ignored!

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

The UN says . . .

Isn't it wonderful how our many friends on the left bring up "international law" and the UN on regular basis in their arguments? Usually it is in support of their own agenda and often flies in the face of reality. How delicious then that one of the left's pet projects just got hoisted on that petard:

"The head of the United Nations drug control board put the federal government on notice yesterday to rein in provincial and other health authorities deemed to be flouting international treaties aimed at combating illicit drug use."

The UN is asking Canada to uphold their international treaty obligations by closing the Vancouver Safe Injection Site. I wonder how long it will take the usual suspect groups to demand the closure of InSite? I wonder . . .

Friday, February 29, 2008

More Cadman

I'm not going to bother linking all over the place on this, I'm just going to say I am extremely disappointed that the best the Conservatives can come up with is a bit of obfuscation and admitting that an unspecified offer was made.

Paying people to vote is wrong. Offering any kind of assistance in exchange for a vote is wrong. And if Mike Duffy is correct and Cadman voted for the Liberal budget because he was concerned he'd lose his HoC life insurance, that is wrong also. What the hell is with politicians that they can no longer tell right from wrong? I expect nothing from our "nuanced" "shades of gray" Liberals as they have shown time and again that ethics and policy are not what drive them, only power. But please, if I can't vote clean Conservative and I won't chance dirty Liberals, and I can't stomach socialists no matter how clean, and the Greens are just plain flaky, and Christian Heritage scares me, what do I do? Short of suicide, any suggestions?

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Cadman as wake up call

I got up this morning, had a nice nice cup of coffee and then went to work. I think I should have stayed in bed.

Who the hell is the brain surgeon that thought offering Chuck Cadman a million dollar life insurance policy in exchange for a vote against a Liberal budget was a good idea? Cadman's loss of the Conservative nomination was embarrassing enough but this is utterly disgusting. Cadman was a Reformer and maybe some people in the current Conservative Party of Canada had better remember why Reform was so successful in the West. We must not allow the corruption, dirty tricks, and unethical behaviour of the old PCs (or the Liberals, for that matter) to creep back in to this party. I, for one, want a clean government, one that wins or loses based on policy and on effective communication of that policy. Frankly, the communication strategy of the CPC leaves me frustrated but I will allow that maybe I'm just not the master strategist and the CPC knows something I don't. What I won't allow is this kind of crude bribery. If this is the new CPC I will look somewhere else to vote.

Clean this mess up, now.

A quick update:

I read Jeff Jedras' post and aside from the hypocritical criticism of vote buying I was especially shocked that the pride some Liberal supporters take in their party's ability to do this kind of disgusting crap with finesse. I responded to one comment and re-post it below.

"...as they might have not been so dumb as to crudely offer money. Geez just because the Tories have a proclivity for being ham-handed and dumb doesn't make it the industry standard.

Yeah, the Liberals are much more discreet in their offers of "comfy fur". All one need do is look at the Blonde Bimbo becoming the Minister of "complex files".

What was offered to Cadman is utterly disgusting but I think we Conservatives can handle it without too much advice from the party of Shawinigate and Adscam. In fact, I am kind of tickled that such skullduggery is so foreign to us new Conservatives that we don't have the skill to do it with Liberal finesse and nuance. I am also very proud that a Reformer stuck to his ethics in the face of his own death and told the bastards to get the hell out. That's the kind of party I supported in Reform, something I don't thing many Liberal MPs would have had the balls to do. If we need to clean up some of the old guard, we will. We've done it once already.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

A Liberal finally gets it!!!

It's a funny thing how history shapes politics. Canada is such a huge country that the experience of someone in BC or Alberta is totally disconnected from the experience of Ontario or Newfoundland. My dad tells me how his family, a prominent family in the coastal pulp and paper industry in the early to mid 20th century, were very strong Liberal supporters. And he tells me how Trudeau changed that. We have known the utter disdain of Eastern Canadian politicians, the bigoted slurs towards Western rednecks, and the corruption and greed in both the Liberal and Progressive Conservative. Where we voted PC in '88 we just couldn't stomach the corruption of Mulroney and his coterie, nor his pandering to Quebec interests despite a strong Western base of MPs. We tossed him. The Liberals have never seemed to understand that the death of the PCs wasn't brought on by Reform, and it wasn't necessarily policy based, it was mostly a reaction to the rot, the pork barrel, the patronage, and the disdain with which Eastern politicians treated the grass roots in the West. We rebuilt a party from the bottom up because of that. That's why I am still proud to support the new Conservative Party.

It looks like the Liberals may finally get it. At least one has:

"The problem is, we rushed into a leadership race after the election defeat without ever really acknowledging the deep rot that has set into the Liberal Party, let alone doing anything to fix it. We created this rot, this sickness through years of Chretien/Martin civil war, preceded by years of Turner/Chretien civil war, going back who knows how many generations. A rot worsened by years of majority government with noses bellied-up to the trough, by self-important organizers that put winning and position before policy and what's right, by a deep sense of entitlement, by a bloated party machine dependent on big corporate donations."

Sure, he's not espousing Conservative policy and that's fine with me, I think we need policy choice. We certainly need an alternative to the Conservatives that is principled and clean. As I have often mused, I could support a clean Liberal Party under someone like Ignatieff or Manley. I'm not an ideological conservative so much as I want to vote for someone who does what they say they will do and won't line their own pockets while doing it. Maybe the Liberal Party will reform now that guys like Jeff have their blinders off.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Why you can't trust Liberals

Ok, easy answer: Because they lie.

The Big City Lib has posted on domestic terrorism and tags it ", ". Those are interesting tags for a post on domestic terrorism. From them one could assume that Christian terrorists are among of the leading terror groups in North America. That would be a bad assumption.

Below is a map from BCL's own research site. As you can see, it lists very few "abortion related" attacks in the US. It lists 6 attacks despite giving it its own category.

When we compare that to common "lefty" causes like the environment or animal rights we get this:

Environment or animal rights don't get their own category so I had to filter by the two main groups, the Animal Liberation Front (ALF), and the Earth Liberation Front (ELF). Total incidents for these two groups? 70. Yup 7-0. But "environmentalist" doesn't have its own tag. "Animal Rights" doesn't have its own tag. But "Abortion Related" does. Hmmmm.

I'd spend more time drilling down on the data, maybe grouping "leftist" groups and "rightist" groups, but I think I've made my point. Do you think BCL will change his tags?

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Bathroom Humour

I don't usually hang around in washrooms whipping out my cell phone camera but when I saw this on the wall of the stall I was, uh, using, I couldn't help but snap a pic:

I know I'm not the first person to photograph a swastika in a toilet but I think mine has some artistic merit, and even a point. Whereas Kinsella's swastika was apparently unopposed in its statement, mine was defaced by someone not so much supportive of Nazi symbology. Then I read the little diatribe next to the defaced swatika:

"If it wasn't for you racist whores there wouldn't be no fucking wars"

Sure, it's not the most eloquent argument against racism but hey, it's a toilet. And considering its company:

It's almost Shakespeare.

The point? Maybe if Warren had left his find in the toilet, where it belonged, others might have exercised their free expression rights and crapped all over it. After all, it was written in secret, in a bathroom, by a coward too afraid to express those views in public. Society's denunciation is the best way to deal with this. When I see a swastika on the street or in a newspaper, unopposed, I'll worry. Until then I'll happily let the closet Nazis vent by scrawling on the wall in a crapper.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Liberal Military "Policy" (Updated, and updated, when will Dion have a "Final" position??

There is a lot of criticism, much of it deserved, regarding the Conservatives' messaging on Afghanistan. Why are we there? Are we doing anything good? Are our soldiers dying for nothing? After the Manley report I hope that those questions can be answered in a thoughtful and straight forward manner. I doubt they will be, though. You see, this has become a political football between the Liberals and the Conservatives. A football that was kicked off by the Libs, but now they want to take their ball and go home. Well maybe not, but they certainly want to play without any linemen.

What Stephane Dion has proposed is the absolutely perfect example of Liberal "nuance" and "compromise". No one would be really happy with it; the Cons want to stay and fight, the NDP and the Bloc want our soldiers home now. Under Dion our soldiers can stay, just not fight. Sure, they can defend themselves but there will be no "search and destroy" missions. That's like saying the quarterback can throw the ball down field but the receivers can't cross the line of scrimmage. The quarterback is gonna get sacked, bad.

The problem with a political compromise is that war is not politics. The enemy is rarely willing to compromise even if you are. Worse than that, when politics becomes the driver behind combat operations we get Bosnia all over again. The Rules of Engagement were so bad in Bosnia that, literally, a soldier could not fire his weapon at someone about to throw a grenade because the threat, though imminent wasn't actual, and he couldn't shoot the attacker afterwards because the threat, the grenade, was gone. He could try to shoot the grenade but shooting the thrower was considered revenge and not self defense.

"Even if a fighter pulled a pin from a grenade, argued one, the ROE proscribed any use of force until it was actually thrown. "And even then the threat is the grenade,” he said. “We can't even shoot the person. We have to shoot the grenade" From page 94

The Liberals propose we do somethings similar, we cannot engage the enemy unless he engages us, giving him the advantage of picking when an where to fight. We cannot search him out giving him freedom of movement and safety when not attacking. They propose we concentrate on training and redevelopment, both of which they must know depend on security first. They want us to believe that we can be humanitarian peace keepers in a war zone. The sad thing is, they know it's not possible. Ignatieff and Rae both know that, their own MPs have stood up and said it is wrong. But it is popular and that's all that matters when politics is the driver.

Lewis MacKenzie has seen this before and he says that Liberal plan would endanger our soldiers. This is the core of the problem. The Liberals, having sent our troops into combat, now wish to switch sides for political gain. They want to use our soldiers to win votes. This isn't new for them. Jean Chretien canned a much needed helicopter deal for just those purposes. The Liberals neglected our military so badly they sent them into a desert war wearing green camouflage. Liberals have no love of the military except as a way of scoring points.

Now, having sent our soldiers into combat, the Liberals want to betray them and their sacrifice. A soldier will fight when and where he is told to but he expects that his political masters will at least let him try to win. Liberal "nuance" won't let him.

Update

Dion has thrown "nuance" to the wind. With the glaringly bad "end to combat" nowhere to be found the Liberals have adopted a resolution that basically parrots the Conservatives. Thank you Mr. Ignatieff.

Upperdate

Lewis MacKenzie thinks that the Liberal motion is just a sop to get Dion through to an election where, should he win, he can implement his real policy. Jason Cherniak says it's all lies, but his own post contradicts that when he writes:

Just because Stéphane Dion is not choosing Afghanistan as the election issue, it does not mean that Afghanistan will not motivate his decision on whether to force an election over the budget. Indeed, it is at that point that we will learn whether he really wants to end the combat mission. The exact words of a wishy-washy Parliamentary motion are all but meaningless. An attempt to change the Government of Canada, however, would be telling.

Upperdater

Stephane Dion has "clarified" his position once again. It seems that he didn't say what he said, that we are all too stupid to understand what he says, and if he says it differently we'll finally get what he said. Unless you're Jason Cherniak, and then you're totally plugged in to Dion's brain. The problem is Denis Coderre and Keith Martin aren't as plugged in as Cherniak

And another General, this one serving in Afghanistan, says Dion's "position" is untenable. Perhaps we should just say that it's poorly thought out, politically driven crap. Or maybe we can paraphrase Vladimir Putin and say that Dion's position is just " . . . detritus excavated from someone's nostril and smeared across bits of paper."

(Reading Putin shows why pacifism is a really bad idea these days . . .)



Wednesday, February 13, 2008

In support of Kurt Westergaard


For Kurt Westergaard. Because murder is not part of Western civil discourse. Because one religion should not dictate to others. Because free speech is the most valuable right we have.

(The scary thing is, I hesitated to publish this for fear some whacko would hunt me down and kill me. Because of that, especially.)

Friday, February 08, 2008

The Shark looked up . . .

. . . And saw Warren Kinsella. Today has been one helluva of day for our heroic battler against old men and mouth-breathing trogs. First he posted about his disagreement with Jonathan Kay and his recent article, at the bottom of which he solicited responses, both supportive and not so much. Then he posted several of those responses, including Jason Cherniak's sad story of childhood woe. Soon after he posted a not-so-supportive e-mail from an anonymous person. So what does Warren do? He takes the e-mail of the sender, harvests the IP address, and tracks it back to the Privy Council Office. Now, before you let that bit of sleuthing impress you, any 14 year old script kiddie can do that. The real issue is that Warren just cannot accept that anyone can disagree with him and, well, still be human. This person had to be tracked down and exposed! And then he posts this:

from the blog of some rightist Einstein who labours under the appellation "Free Born Canuck," and declines to let anyone know his true identity (like most of them, because it means Mom and Dad will rescind their computer privileges), responding to my post that sent Messrs. Kay, Steyn, Levant and the Anti-Muslim Phalangists into spit-flecked apoplexy:

"Is there not some fearful symmetry here that the symbol that killed 600,000 jews is now an inverse symbol for the virtues of limited speech?"

There you go. Along with some wince-inducing purple prose, the latest Far Right Free Speech Poster Boy (FRFSPB, for short) informs us that: (a) "600,000 jews," quote unquote, were killed in the Holocaust, and (b) the swastika is the banner under which those of us who favour reasonable limitations on expression - say, hate propaganda and violent pornography - now march. ( The swastika. In Canada. On those who oppose hate ...oh, you get it.)

And people ask me why Liberals like me win elections so often.


Does anyone really wonder why people want to remain anonymous when dealing with Warren? Really? Because I have to wonder why anyone would want to conduct any discourse with him when he obviously cannot distinguish between private and public and has so little regard for other opinions. I mean, not only can you not disagree with Warren, Warren will go out of his way to mis-characterize your comments (see the misprint in the example above, 600,000 should be 6,000,000 which Warren kindly distorts to mean the guy is a holocaust denier instead of a bad "zero" counter. God forbid someone should make an error!). Good lord, if you criticize someone on Warren's side he will write the most flattering bit of fellatio and then condemn you to hell for uttering a bad word about them. See Warren's latest shot at Ezra Levant, or his vomit inducing support of Richard Warman. But most disgusting is his obvious hypocrisy. Warren must have an IQ above room temp yet he can't seem to tell the difference between an HRC witch hunt and a libel case. Somehow, if there is any way to write something with a bit of spin or distortion to make another look bad, Warren will do it. And that is the real answer to Warren's question, "And people ask me why Liberals like me win elections so often?" The Liberals win so often because they're a bunch of liars, crooks, hypocrites who will say, write, or do ANYTHING to win.

Me, I'd rather have my self-respect.

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

What certain Liberals have forgotten

The Winnipeg General Strike of 1919, note the very relevant sign

I've been having some fun over at Cherniak's place. Sometimes I wonder how someone as willfully obtuse as Mr. Cherniak passed the Bar. . .

So here's a list of wars, rebellions and civil disobedience movements that somehow changed the way rights were recognized in Canada, BT (Before Trudeau, the year zero that Liberals believe all Human Rights began.):


That's all the time I have for now, but that should make a basic case that rights are not derived from pieces of paper but through the willingness of people to defend those rights, sometimes with violence.

Sunday, February 03, 2008

One more post on Free Speech

It has been quite the whirlwind of posts from both the left and right on the need either to restrict free speech or to allow it unfettered. It's pretty obvious I am in the latter group. And no, that doesn't mean I support neo-Nazi ideology.

Some of the worst arguments in favour of restricting free speech appear on the blogs of the Big City Lib and Jason Cherniak. Both seem to think that a law that makes it illegal to say or publish something that is "likely" to expose a group to hate or contempt is a good thing. Of course, defining "likely" is difficult, and BCL seems to think that getting nasty e-mails meets the threshold of this law. While it is certainly easy to turn away from the persecution of neo-Nazis under this law, it is the principle that is important, not the target. I will state for the record that I have no sympathy for, nor common ideology with, Nazis. Still, I fear that preventing these people from stating their views is dangerous. It is dangerous not because their ideas have merit but because it is the first step towards muzzling others. In fact it was only the first step. The second step was to go after people with firmly held religious beliefs.

Chris Kempling was fined by his union for writing a letter to the editor of his local newspaper that stated his religious beliefs regarding homosexuality. He was invited to testify before a Parliamentary Committed in regards to Bill C-38 and his union again took disciplinary action against him. Only the intervention of NDP MP Bill Siksay and CPC MP Vic Toews ended that bit of oppression. At no time did Kempling advocate violence or hatred, only his religious beliefs which are explicitly protected under the Charter. Kempling's attempts to seek redress in the courts have all failed.

Hugh Owen was convicted by the Saskatchewan Human Right Commission for inciting hatred against homosexuals. His crime: Publishing an ad with references to Bible verses that condemn homosexuality. He didn't even quote them, just referenced them. Thankfully, that case has since been reversed on appeal, but the fact remains that a Tribunal found that the Bible was hate literature.

The third step is attempting to muzzle mainstream journalists for writings that offend.

I could go on with examples but I think my point is clear. What isn't clear is why our centre-left friends are so concerned about this kind of speech. I can only offer this explanation: They don't trust us. They don't trust that the average Canadian can see through specious arguments regarding world Jewry and the Zionist conspiracies. They don't trust us not to lynch gays because a Bible verse says homosexuality is wrong. They don't even trust us not to spend our money on "Beer and Popcorn" when our children have needs. It goes even further. Reading "progressive" blogs it becomes evident that we who do not believe as they do are backward, uneducated, and easily swayed. That we have been convinced to support other politicians than they do is evidence. It is because of our shortcomings that these elite feel that we need protection from words that might sway us, or influence us away from their truth. Simply, we are too stupid to be trusted with free speech.

Sunday, January 27, 2008