Elizabeth May



Time to Put the Pieces of the Puzzle in Place

If all the key pieces of Canada’s energy future – the climate crisis, a prosperous economy, labour issues, east-west connectivity, energy efficiency, technological innovation, federal-provincial relations – were jigsaw pieces on our collective family table, it would be worthwhile to find the picture on the box the pieces came in. The cover of the box, [...]

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Posted on 7 June 2013 | 4:32 am

Justin Trudeau



Raising the bar for democracy and transparency

Yes, it's the essential job of opposition leaders to expose the government's failings. But criticism alone is not enough. It's also essential to set high standards and propose fresh ideas to make government better. From the beginning of his leadership campaign, that has been Justin Trudeau's strength -- giving Canadians good reasons to vote FOR him, not just AGAINST the other guy.

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Posted on 17 June 2013 | 8:58 pm

Ezra Levant



Taking down the turbines



Ontario MPP Rick Nicholls speaks with Ezra about the Ontario town taking down its wind turbines.

This report aired on The Source June 18 2013.

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 11:36 pm

Scott's DiaTribes



A longer break then I wanted.

Sorry about the pause in posting, folks, but I am nursing a very sick companion of mine.

My diabetic cat (named Silence) who suddenly started going moderate to heavily hypoglycemic on me last week when he had no business doing so. Vet was afraid he might have keytosis, but it turns out had a combo of things wrong – liver enzymes way out of whack, + a hypothyroid condition (makes cats thin, not fat like it does in humans). We thought those might be under control after a weekend stay at the vets, (and apparently eating like a horse), but as of this AM now has something wrong with [...]


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Posted on 19 June 2013 | 3:15 am

Dawg's Blog



Milking a mouse

Tom Mulcair waved and drove past a security checkpoint yesterday as he has always done. Turned out there was a new RCMP officer at the post who didn’t recognize him. An officer was sent after him, who drove to Tom’s...

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Posted on 14 June 2013 | 1:33 am

Saskboy's Abandoned Stuff



Regina Refuge #StopURdeportations

It’s been a year since a Regina Walmart illegally hired two foreign students, and triggered a drama with them confined to churches granting them sanctuary from the Harper Government’s punitive mean streak. For Immediate Release June 18, 2013 One Year Anniversary: University Students Still in Hiding This week marks one year since two University of […]

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 10:57 pm

Barbara Kay



Barbara Kay: Four rabbis walk into a bar

A new book explains the origins of Jewish comedy

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Posted on 19 June 2013 | 4:01 am

Erich the Green



Energy ire valid but misdirected

People are rightly upset about energy and its costs and risks. Sadly, though, a lot of misinformation keeps circulating, with people pointing fingers in the wrong direction.
The favourite whipping-boy is renewable energy. Columns and letters in this very paper constantly repeat outright false information, from risks to costs to effects.
One constant misstatement is that Ontario’s push for green energy drives electric bill hikes, even though the analyses clearly show it’s actually legacy costs from nuclear power plus overpriced supply contracts with all sources, including supposedly cheap gas and (for a little while, still) coal. Wind is only a tiny sliver of the bill while solar doesn’t even register.
Another myth is the supposed harms or risks of wind turbines. A recent letter vastly exaggerated both, speaking of “millions” of bird deaths when the real figure is in the thousands. Anyone truly concerned about bird deaths would focus on roads, power lines, pesticides, windows, or cats, each of which kills at least a thousand or ten-thousand times as many birds as turbines do. And the idea that it’s dangerous near the CAW’s wind turbine because it might break or fall down is just silly. Any tall thing might drop a piece or fall over, but you have more risk of getting hit by a falling tree or building tile (or lightning!) than any part of a highly-engineered wind turbine. In fact, no bystander has ever been injured or killed by a wind turbine, anywhere in the world. Contrast this with a real risk to your health: the cars CAW members build. (Who can’t name someone injured or killed in a car accident?)
Of course, the biggest change our energy supply needs is a price on carbon pollution, putting all energy sources on a level playing field. Right now, the market is tipped dangerously in favour of fossil fuels, which receive huge government support that dwarfs the piddling subsidies to wind or solar which seem to upset some people. From provincial governments that let tar sands avoid paying full royalties, to the federal government bribing them to clean up their act a little while they increase emissions, to flow-through tax credits for finding more carbon that must stay in the ground while luring limited investment dollars away from new, clean technology, it’s time we stopped shovelling tax money to the most profitable industry in the world. And here’s a number to put that into perspective: these subsidies amount to almost $800 per Canadian per year (according to this IMF report). That’s right, you’re being overtaxed by $800 every year to subsidize fossil fuels. That’s 3 days of income for the average Canadian! This money should be going into a clean energy future, not the deep pockets of dirty energy dinosaurs.

Published as my Root Issues column in the Barrie Examiner under the title "Renewable energy always a favourite whipping boy".
Erich Jacoby-Hawkins is a director of Living Green and the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation

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Posted on 13 June 2013 | 3:49 pm

Five Feet of Fury



If only BBC game show presenters were allowed to get married oh wait…

Ten bucks says many of these stories are as true as the ones about priests, but who isn’t thrilled to see the anti-Catholic BBC getting a chug of its own poison?

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 4:07 pm

A Blog By James Curran



Keep Calm and Bergeron

Enough said.

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 3:01 am

Buckdog



Since Brad Wall Is On A Roll ... He Should Ask Stephen Harper To Come Clean With Canadians About The Duffy/Wright Affair...


Progressive Bloggers  

Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall is on a roll. His challenge of Justin Trudeau's speaking fees (while sitting as an MP) garnered lots of attention. Enough attention that Mr. Trudeau has since reconsidered his original stance.

So .. Premier Wall .. you're on a roll. Pick up the phone and call your old friend, the Prime Minister.

Ask him how Nigel Wright's 'cheque' went from being an 'honourable act' to requiring his rapid departure from the PMO.

Surely Canadians have a right to know what happens with our tax money ... you know the wages paid to Duffy ... Wright ... and even Harper himself. 

Go on .. phone him .. the number is 1-800-622-6232 ....

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Posted on 17 June 2013 | 5:30 am

Mark Steyn



Headline News

United Kingdom Beheading of the Day

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 2:00 pm

Fight the Power



The System




What Does Surveillance Mean To You.

by "Ann Arky"

As originally posted on: annarky's blog.
June 11, 2013


We got the usual "shock- horror" from our millionaire two-faced politicians about the latest revelations on surveillance, revelations about what we all know is going on all the time by all governments. However, don't expect the state to abandon any of its hi-tec ability to snoop on us no matter which bunch get into power. Spying, snooping has been part of the state apparatus since the first state came into being. As a matter of fact it probably took a lot of spying and snooping to bring it into existence. After "questions have been asked in the House" and the subject matter debated, don't expect to see black bags over those CCTVs, nor to hear about GCHQ unplugging all those black-boxes. No, there will be waffle and blurb and then things will go on as before, with your every e-mail, text, phone call, internet visit and visit into town, monitored, sifted and stored for further analysis. If we want rid of the snoopers we have to get rid of the state and all its repugnant apparatus.

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 11:32 am

Andrew Coyne



Andrew Coyne: Tories shouldn’t fold to provincial pressure on Jobs Grant

Rather than fold its tent in the face of provincial opposition, the government should step up, and fund the whole of the government share of the grant itself

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 12:47 am

Blazing Cat Fur



France: Report - Moderate Muslims Arrested In Murder Of Gay Youth

The murder dates to July 2011, when the body of Laurent Julien was found.  NB -Google translate.

A young gay murder in Nîmes in 2011: 10 people arrested

"Ten people are being heard for the needs of an investigation into a murder committed two years ago. A young gay Nimes was found buried in the Nîmes garrigue 3 July 2011 after disappearing during the Pentecost Feria."

Source not officially confirmed, the people heard in the context of this case belong to a movement that can take even a radical traditionalist of Islam."

Via Midi Libre and FD

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 2:06 pm

Driving The Porcelain Bus



The Harper Government's War On Science - an excellent chronology

From Science Blogs - The Canadian War On Science: A Long Unexaggerated, Devastating Chronological Indictment by John Dupuis.

Excerpt:
This is a brief chronology of the current Conservative Canadian government’s long campaign to undermine evidence-based scientific, environmental and technical decision-making. It is a government that is beholden to big business, particularly big oil, and that makes every attempt to shape public policy to that end. It is a government that fundamentally doesn’t believe in science. It is a government that is more interested in keeping its corporate masters happy than in protecting the environment.

Click the link for the details.

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Posted on 23 May 2013 | 12:16 am

Just Right



Justin Trudeau shamed into refunding charities he ripped off.

Justin Trudeau says he’ll compensate any charitable group that paid him a hefty speaking fee to participate in fundraising events.
Only two days ago he was refusing to refund any part of his fee.

Excellent work, Jason Kenney!


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Posted on 19 June 2013 | 2:24 am

Peace, order and good government, eh?



Friday night blues blogging

Good evening. This is the Heritage Blues Orchestra with Get Right Church....

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Posted on 15 June 2013 | 12:03 am

Green Party of Canada



Elizabeth May stands against oil exploration on Sable Island National Park Reserve

OTTAWA - Despite attempts to expedite the passage of Bill S-15 before summer recess, Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, MP Saanich-Gulf Islands, has blocked a motion for unanimous consent that would have bypassed the normal legislative process and allowed for oil and gas development in the newly created Sable Island National Park Reserve.

"During negotiations and in the Environment Committee, I made it clear that I could not support this Bill as it is written; it opens the door to oil exploration on Sable Island and sets a dangerous precedent for the rest of our National Parks," said May. "I am disappointed that all other parties were apparently willing to speed this Bill through the House without proper scrutiny, but I am unwilling to take that step."

Bill S-15, an Act to amend the Canada National Parks Act and the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Accord Implementation Act and to make consequential amendments to the Canada Shipping Act 2001, would, among other things, establish Sable Island as a National Park Reserve, a move that the Green Party enthusiastically supports.

Unfortunately, Bill S-15 also enshrines the ability of Exxon-Mobil to conduct oil and gas exploration activities on Sable Island itself, in addition to drilling and fracking beneath the island using directional drilling. Further, power to make regulations regarding these activities rests solely with the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board, an organization with an explicit mandate to promote oil and gas development.

"It is disturbing that we would hand off decision making authority over Sable Island to an organization with such an atrocious record as the CNSOPB, and I've yet to see any indication that either the government of Canada or Nova-Scotia ever even asked Exxon Mobil to forgo its oil and gas licenses above ground or underground on Sable Island," said Elizabeth May. "We can and we must do better. If that means we wait a little longer in order to get this legislation right and provide genuine protection for Sable Island, I have no choice but to try. Unless there is a prorogation, the Bill will be here for us to debate in the Fall."

-30-

Media Contact:
Kathleen O'Hara
kathleen.ohara@greenparty.ca
613-400-8444

 

Elizabeth May stands against oil exploration on Sable Island National Park Reserve

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 2:20 pm

eaves.ca



Policy-Making in a Big Data World

For those interested I appeared on The Agenda with Steve Paikin the other week talking about Big Data and policy making. There was a good discussion with a cast of character that included (not counting myself): Kenneth Cukier, the Data Editor for The Economist and author of “Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work, [...]

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 7:20 am

Bold Colours



More Obama admin corruption? Color me camelcoat.

Ah, Friday. Not that I’ve been busy here at BoldColors.net or any my other haunts writing my usual plethora of well-thought-out scathing rebukes of left-wing idiocity, and need a weekend off. Actually I’ve been doing other things this week (which earned me a weekend off with my pal Jack Daniels and possibly some beer and [...]

The post More Obama admin corruption? Color me camelcoat. appeared first on BoldColors.NET.


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Posted on 7 June 2013 | 6:51 pm

Scott McKay, L'Assomption



25 000 $ pour l'école Franklin Hill

Hebdo Rive Nord - Le député de Repentigny, Scott McKay, a annoncé le vendredi 7 juin, au nom de la ministre de l’Éducation, du Loisir et du Sport, Marie Malavoy, l’attribution d’une aide financière de 25 000 $ pour l’embellissement de la cour de l'école Franklin Hill de Repentigny.

« Cette aide gouvernementale finance à plus de 26 % un projet d’aménagement de terrain de soccer avec îlots de verdure à l’école primaire Franklin Hill, située rue Basile-

en lire plus


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Posted on 10 June 2013 | 7:01 pm

Stephen Taylor - a blog on Canadian politics



Dave Rutherford to run for mayor of Calgary?

Will popular former radio take on Naheed Nenshi this fall in the Calgary mayoral election?…

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Posted on 10 June 2013 | 1:59 pm

Let Freedom Rain



Parents: don't send your sons to St. George's School in Vancouver

At the ripe old age of 62, I experienced my first blush with ageism, sexism, mockery and verbal insults from the senior staff of the two stores at the exclusive St. Georgre's boy's school as clerk last spring. During the 2 1/2 month tenure, so bullied was I that my voluntary resignation completed two weeks before the school's generous benefits program kicked in.

Granted, I was not the greatest first-time clothing store clerk. I had anxiety issues causing me to sweat and go blank when confronted with stressful situations. The executive staff had every right to castigate my work methods and try to get me to be more smooth, more confident and less nervous. That's part of work life.

What wasn't right was that my supervisors, especially a young woman of minority descent, ridiculed me at every opportunity even and maybe especially when it was not warranted. It was a personal vendetta and it was meant to intimidate. My boss once told me that she had to fire a man who went home and killed his kids. So skeptical was I, at the soonest opportunity that I Googled her first name and words that would have yielded results. Nothing came up. I figured it was just a veiled threat to demonstrate her handiwork should I fall short of her expectations.

And fall I did. I was singled out for derision, especially when it came to reproaching me loudly in front of other staff and even customers.

Don't get me wrong. I liked the job. I became a part of the senior store where I spent my days walking around, checking prices and sizes. Even though my boss required us to keep moving and not relax at any time - something especially hard for older folks - I felt some private ownership of the product and took pride in fitting new students as best I could.

But the abuse from my superiors soon degraded into all-out bullying. "Jim, load the 40 boxes this way. Oh you should've loaded them that direction. Do it again." On one of my last days, "Hey Jim, you missed a spot on the mirror." "Who did this? Which one is responsible??" "Who would ever find you attractive?" "Hurry up!!" "I'm not working with him anymore!!!!" "Why is this shirt in the wrong size category??" And on and on and on. (Curious to know why a person with a degree is still working in a store. Curiously, she also works part-time on a crisis prevention line!!!)

My co-workers were horrified for me. They tried to get me to fight back but how would I feel about myself if I argued with a young minority woman? A minority woman who hated her heritage; she would only date Caucasian boys. A woman who spent the first hour or so of the day talking on the phone with her aunt and the rest of the day sitting in the change room. A woman who bragged about laughing at a person with a mental disability. As you can see, this was not a healthy situation for anyone.

But here's where it all gets a little more sick. The taunting and bullying became so offensive, not only was I more and more unsure of myself, I became sullen and quiet in my home life. My anxiety rose to a level where I could not communicate with others. The anxiety became panic attacks. The panic attacks led to a deep depression. My GP (whose son goes to St. George's) noticed the change and suggested I get help from a psychiatrist.

So, here I am almost a year later, unable to communicate with others, holed up in my rented condo. My savings have run out and I'm about to embark on a life of homelessness. I don't often leave my residence and I talk to few people. I can no longer work and have had to apply for early pension, even though I've only contributed to CPP for only a few years.

What is going on at St. George's is a crime. The turnover at the stores is staggering. It seems few can escape the wrath of the boss and her supervisor. I thought about suing but that would require my co-workers to make statements; I like those people too much to put them through that. Also, I would have to find previous workers to also make statements; they seem to have vanished.

A lawyer agreed to take my case but she charges $350 an hour. Can't do that. The only thing I can do is to advise you all to consider carefully about sending your son to this school. Is this the environment you want him to witness and think is acceptable? I doubt it.

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 4:43 pm

Accidental Deliberations



Monday Morning Links

Miscellaneous material for your Monday reading.

- Thomas Walkom, Dan Leger and Michael Harris write about the sketchy surveillance programs in place on both sides of the 49th parallel. But there may be an opportunity to make common cause with the 1% in criticizing constant intrusion on personal privacy, as both the U.S. and the U.K. have been caught using their data interception capability to spy on businesses and international allies.

- In any event, one can safely say that this is not the time when a smart government would introduce blanket secrecy for 11 government agencies. But since few would accuse the Harper Cons of being particularly smart, that's exactly what they're doing.

- And speaking of the Cons' mostly incompetent government, Barrie McKenna provides a first look at the reviews of the job grant program advertised with tens of millions of public dollars this spring long before it actually existed:
Ottawa’s $900-million job grant scheme is a windfall for companies that already train workers, opens few new opportunities for the unskilled and saps funds from existing government efforts, according to a new report.

The program is “deeply flawed public policy” and should be scrapped, say the authors of a report to be released Monday by the Mowat Centre at the University of Toronto and the Caledon Institute of Social Policy.
- Sixth Estate points out that even if Stephen Harper had some great commitment to avoiding election fraud (pause for laughter), he'd risk losing his majority just by addressing the questionable election campaigns of his current caucus.

- Finally, Jason Mogus laments the gap in sophistication between conservative and progressive messaging. But while I'll readily agree on the importance of offering a well-thought-out message, I do think there's a larger issue worth mentioning as well: progressive politics work best when based on popular involvement rather than the mere repetition of themes we expect from the right, meaning that it isn't enough to buy the theory that talking point discipline is the answer.

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Posted on 17 June 2013 | 2:05 pm

What Do I Know Grit



Keep Calm and Bergeron

Enough said.

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 3:01 am

Small Dead Animals



The Sound Of Settled Science

Via WUWT; "the analysis shows that ocean temperatures and Arctic sea-ice cover were relatively unimportant factors in causing the extra Greenland melt."...

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 2:26 pm

Le blog politique de Claude Dupras



Le milieu des affaires et la politique

On dit que la politique et les affaires ne vont pas ensemble, que diriger une ville n’est pas comme diriger une grande entreprise. Il y a du vrai dans ces affirmations. Pourtant le milliardaire Michael Bloomberg a été élu et réélu maire de New York et, selon l’avis de tous les observateurs, il fait une job du tonnerre.

À Montréal, le monde des affaires recherche un candidat à la mairie pour l’élection de novembre prochain. Il lève le nez sur les candidats actuels, particulièrement sur Denis Coderre, trop populiste à son goût. Comme si se réclamer du peuple, de ses aspirations profondes et de sa défense contre les torts qu’il subit est inacceptable. Peut-être pour certains individus du monde des affaires qui ne comprennent rien aux préoccupations de tous les Montréalais, mais pas pour un gars qui a toujours démontré sa sensibilité envers ses concitoyens comme l'était jadis l’ex-« p’tit gars de Ste-Marie », le célèbre maire Camilien Houde.

Certains, plus politiques, veulent un maire à tendance séparatiste alors que d’autres le veulent fédéraliste. Ils oublient que diriger et administrer la ville de Montréal n’a rien à voir avec les aspirations nationales des Québécoises et Québécois. Dans le passé, certains ont accusé Jean Drapeau d’être un nationaliste farouche et pour d’autres, il était un fédéraliste convaincu. En aucun moment, durant les 30 ans qu’il a été maire, pouvons-nous lui reprocher d’avoir poser un geste favorisant un côté au détriment l’autre. Il était un homme cultivé, visionnaire, dynamique, persuasif, travailleur et un super ambassadeur pour Montréal. L’Expo67, les JO de 1976, le métro et la ville souterraine ne sont que quelques-unes de ses réalisations qui ont fait de Montréal une ville moderne. C’est le type de maire dont a besoin aujourd’hui.

En fait, les arguments pour ou contre un candidat du milieu des affaires ou d’un populiste ou d’un fédéraliste ou d’un séparatiste ne tiennent pas.

Montréal traverse une période difficile, particulièrement en rapport avec une observation rigoureuse de la justice et de la morale dans les faits et gestes de son administration. La commission Charbonneau qui enquête sur la construction a démasqué une série de combinaisons malhonnêtes entre hauts fonctionnaires, ingénieurs municipaux, entrepreneurs de construction, ingénieurs-conseils et personnages politiques. Manque d’éthique professionnelle, magouille, tricherie, vol, crime organisé…. tout y a passé. Une vraie honte.

Le prochain maire doit donc être solide, fort, irréprochable tout en étant un très bon administrateur afin que Montréal puisse corriger son tir et assurer que son développement futur soit bien fait. Face à une telle situation, il ne pourra, de toute évidence, être seul. La qualité des membres de son équipe devient donc de prime importance, plus qu’à la normale. Ce sont tous ces individus qu’il nous faudra regarder, analyser, peser, sous-peser et apprécier. Le candidat à la mairie fera-t-il (elle) un bon maire pour le Montréal d’aujourd’hui et de demain ? A-t-il (elle) avec lui (elle) l’équipe capable de l’aider à sortir Montréal du bourbier dans lequel il est enlisé ? Peuvent-ils ensemble propulser Montréal vers l’avenir qui doit être le sien, soit celle d’une grande métropole bien administrée qui progresse et où il fait bon vivre ?

À ce jour, Louise Harel, Richard Bergeron, Denis Coderre sont sur les rangs pour la mairie. D’autres noms circulent et viennent particulièrement du milieu des affaires, tels Mélanie Roy et Marcel Coté. Mélanie Roy est inconnue des Montréalaises et Montréalais. Quant à Marcel Coté, il est peu connu de la population malgré qu’il, depuis plus de 40 ans, dirige avec succès SECOR, son cabinet indépendant de services-conseils en gestion stratégique du Canada. Ses conseils ont toujours été fort appréciés par des personnages politiques de toutes allégeances. Sa réputation professionnelle est solide.

A mon avis, Côté pourrait faire un bon maire. Mais peut-il être élu ? Voilà la question. La politique étant un commerce d’images et d’illusions, saura-t-il comment s’y prendre en période électorale pour atteindre le cœur des électeurs montréalais. Une politique ABC (Anyone But Coderre), comme se plait à répéter le milieu des affaires, ne sera pas suffisante. Sur ce point, j’ai l’impression que Denis Coderre a une bonne marge d’avance.

Il y a aussi la question nationale. Une bonne partie de la population de l’est de Montréal est à tendance séparatiste et ce vote est crucial pour assurer l’élection. Les fortes positions fédéralistes exprimées par Côté dans le passé ne peuvent plaire à ces électeurs, nonobstant toutes ses qualités. Pour réussir, il devra trouver un appui fort et sérieux dans ce milieu sous la forme d’un candidat important et acceptable à qui il aura assuré un haut poste dans son administration. La rumeur veut que Louise Harel, ex-ministre péquiste et chef de Vision Montréal, pourrait jouer ce rôle. En date d’aujourd’hui, elle nie vouloir se plier à une telle combine. Si ce n’est pas elle, ce devra être une autre personne. C’est possible, mais pas facile.

Quant au fait que Coderre soit un ancien député fédéraliste, il s’en tire relativement bien auprès des péquistes puisque ses qualités de populiste atténuent beaucoup les sentiments anti-fédéralistes contre lui. Mais pour lui aussi la partie n’est pas gagnée.

La prochaine élection municipale de Montréal s’avère très intéressante. À suivre…

Claude Dupras

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Posted on 12 June 2013 | 2:02 pm

Mind of Dan



Global carbon emissions and sinks since 1750


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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 8:43 pm

Dr Roy's Thoughts



Brent Rathgeber Independent MP

Brent Rathgeber stood up for his convictions and gave a rebuke to the Conservative party. The party would be wise to listen. Changing the sunshine list to over $444000 is ridiculous. It would really cover almost no one. The number should be reduced to $120000. It is the people's money/ let them see how it is spent. Mp's and senators expenses should also be published. The Tories seem to be in a funk. It is time for brave new policy initiates to move forward. May I suggest a flat tax! The free trade deals need to move ahead and we need to bring down interprovincial trade barriers. Senator Lebretton's proposals on the senate seem very reasonable. The Tories need to move forward and be as transparent as possible~

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Posted on 6 June 2013 | 11:31 am

Warren Kinsella



Harper’s PMO: busted

Quote: The Prime Minister’s office sent information yesterday to The Advance regarding a money-losing speech Liberal leader Justin Trudeau made in Barrie in 2007. On Monday, PMO communications officer Erica Meekes sent The Advance details of an engagement that netted Trudeau a $10,000 fee, but left Georgian College with a $4,118 shortfall. The information was [...]

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 12:56 pm

Parti Vert Du Canada



Elizabeth May stands against oil exploration on Sable Island National Park Reserve

OTTAWA - Despite attempts to expedite the passage of Bill S-15 before summer recess, Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, MP Saanich-Gulf Islands, has blocked a motion for unanimous consent that would have bypassed the normal legislative process and allowed for oil and gas development in the newly created Sable Island National Park Reserve.

"During negotiations and in the Environment Committee, I made it clear that I could not support this Bill as it is written; it opens the door to oil exploration on Sable Island and sets a dangerous precedent for the rest of our National Parks," said May. "I am disappointed that all other parties were apparently willing to speed this Bill through the House without proper scrutiny, but I am unwilling to take that step."

Bill S-15, an Act to amend the Canada National Parks Act and the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Accord Implementation Act and to make consequential amendments to the Canada Shipping Act 2001, would, among other things, establish Sable Island as a National Park Reserve, a move that the Green Party enthusiastically supports.

Unfortunately, Bill S-15 also enshrines the ability of Exxon-Mobil to conduct oil and gas exploration activities on Sable Island itself, in addition to drilling and fracking beneath the island using directional drilling. Further, power to make regulations regarding these activities rests solely with the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board, an organization with an explicit mandate to promote oil and gas development.

"It is disturbing that we would hand off decision making authority over Sable Island to an organization with such an atrocious record as the CNSOPB, and I've yet to see any indication that either the government of Canada or Nova-Scotia ever even asked Exxon Mobil to forgo its oil and gas licenses above ground or underground on Sable Island," said Elizabeth May. "We can and we must do better. If that means we wait a little longer in order to get this legislation right and provide genuine protection for Sable Island, I have no choice but to try. Unless there is a prorogation, the Bill will be here for us to debate in the Fall."

-30-

Media Contact:
Kathleen O'Hara
kathleen.ohara@greenparty.ca
613-400-8444

 

Elizabeth May stands against oil exploration on Sable Island National Park Reserve

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 2:20 pm

No Dogs or Anglophones



Quebec Cleaning Up Corruption Mess

Applebaum arrest pictures
The old maxim tells us that it's always darkest before the dawn and with Monday's arrest of the interim mayor of Montreal Michael Applebaum, it doesn't seem that it can get much darker.

What surprised me about the arrest was not that it happened, but rather how it happened.
The mayor was woken early this morning, arrested and driven down to the police headquarters with reporters tipped off and the car hauling him in conveniently stopping before going into the police garage, providing a photo-op that is the modern version of the perp-walk.

That disrespectful treatment is reserved for those arrests that police are most proud of and so without knowing any of the details, I can only conclude that the police have Applebaum dead to rights.

That Quebec is the most corrupt province in Canada is certainly proven beyond any reasonable doubt but the logical conclusion that Quebecers are the most dishonest people in Canada doesn't follow.

I know that I'll be offering an unpopular view today, but I cannot in good conscious listen to the ROC gleefully gloat without defending the good people of Quebec who are by and large humiliated and furious at those that betrayed the public trust.

If guillotining was permitted, there would no doubt be an enraged mob marching on city hall, shouting "Off with their heads!"
I wouldn't recommend that any of the crooks who will face corruption trials choose to be tried before a jury. Quebecers are just itching to get revenge and no defense, no matter how robust, will save any of these bums from being convicted.

And so I am going to say that Quebec is well on its way to rehabilitation and I daresay that within a few short years it will be one of the least corrupt places in North America.
Yup....I mean it.

Like a drug addict who has to fall to the lowest point before seeking help, Quebec has certainly hit rock bottom and it is here where we can collectively decide to wallow in our own mess or clean up our act for good.

Quebec and Quebecers have chosen. Corruption will soon end, believe me.

Now regular readers know I spend a fair amount of time in New York City and hardly a visit goes by where I don't read a news story of some new public official arrested for corruption in a state where dishonest politicians are legend and where corruption has been part and parcel of the political process forever.
The corruption is so pervasive that dozens of members of the State legislature, both Democrat and Republican have been arrested over the last decade.
Things never seem to change and currently there is a new crop of  legislators facing indictment;
"The state of New York's legislature, whose dysfunction has long proved a spectator sport, added a new chapter Wednesday as public-corruption investigations that have touched five officials in the past month brought seven more elected officials into public scrutiny" Link
"The latest, former Democratic state Sen. Shirley Huntley, was sentenced Thursday to spend a year and a day in prison for stealing $88,000 from a charity she controlled. A day earlier, a federal judge had unsealed records showing that Huntley last year secretly recorded conversations with seven other elected officials she suspected of corruption.
Among them were Malcolm Smith and John Sampson, both former Democratic leaders of the Senate who have already been indicted.
"It's a culture of corruption, there's no question about it," said Seymour Lachman, a former Democratic state senator. "It's very sad that you have at this point in New York state, the Empire State, more corrupt officials than any other state."
Read:  How New York Became One Of The Most Corrupt States
By the way, if Shirley Huntley got one year in jail for stealing $88,000, I can only imagine what our Quebec crooks would get for stealing millions....but I digress.

At any rate, I bring up the New York State corruption situation because quite frankly there really hasn't been enough public outrage to force politicians to clean up their act and so as you can imagine, corruption persists.
I imagine that I'll be reading about more crooked New York politicians for the foreseeable future because nothing will change with the apathetic attitude demonstrated by the public. They don't really seem to care and in fact regularly re-elect politicians that have less than clean hands.
Today the name of ex-mayor Rudolph Giuliani is being bandied about for a possible presidential run, yet serious accusations about his judgement in his personal and professional life don't seem to bother voters. Read a damning piece about his honesty.

But this lack of interest by the public is most certainly not the case here in Quebec. The public and voters in particular, are royally pissed.
There isn't a chance in Hell of  forgiving those who cheated and stole, the public is in no mood to be charitable.
The demand to root out, arrest and prosecute those who cheated taxpayers remains the number one issue of all Quebecers, transcending all political, religious, race and language lines.
If Applebaum and Saulie Zajdel (a counselor arrested along with Applebaum) are eventually convicted of corruption, there won't be an ounce of support for them in the Jewish community. Already waves of humiliation are rocking the community over the arrests.
The same goes for the Italian community, the Francophone and Anglophone community as well as the Black community, all deeply hurt and humiliated at the dishonor brought upon them by the alleged crooks.

In this province, unlike New York, those convicted or even accused of corruption become toxic and untouchable.
Already many of those who testified at the Charbonneau commission and who received immunity for candidly describing their illegal involvement in corruption are feeling the wrath of an unsympathetic public. One by one, they are being pushed out by their employers who no longer want to be associated with them. And good luck finding a new job, because for potential employers, these people are radioactive.

In 2009 a reluctant Premier Charest did in fact set Quebec on the road to redemption.
The creation of the Charbonneau Commission and more importantly UPAC (Permanent Anti-Corruption Unit) whose raison d'etre is described by its commander;
"Our job is to prevent, investigate and verify in the fight against crimes related to corruption, collusion and fraud in the awarding and execution of public contracts. "-Robert Lafrenière
The key in all this is the word 'permanent' where Quebec is the only province to have such a high-powered full-time anti-corruption unit in force.
During the Charbonneau hearings, one theme that was oft repeated by many of the slimy crooks who testified, was that corruption virtually ceased with the creation of the UPAC unit back in 2009.

With corruption on everybody's mind, Quebecers will be monitoring how their money is being spent very closely.
Concerned citizens , along with UPAC will be placing the fear of God in those tempted to graft.

Unlike the drug trade, corruption is not a zero-sum game.
When one drug dealer is arrested, another promptly takes his place, but when someone is arrested for corruption, it is like shaving your legs, where the next batch of hair grows back finer and more slowly.

Next year will see the beginning of the many trials of the alleged thieves and I can only hope that if and when they are found guilty, that the judge throws the book at them.

In the meantime the hardest part is over, admitting to a problem and embarking on the cure. It is manifestly apparent that Quebecers want to be corruption free and ordinary citizens themselves are showing those in power that they mean business.
No longer will town council meetings be sterile affairs, sparsely attended by a complacent public. People will ask questions and demand transparency, which is of course, the key to eliminating corruption.

If you are one of those who believe that Quebecers are inherently more dishonest than Canadians, you are probably one that believes in other negative stereotypes.
Calling Quebecers a gang of thieves is no different than saying the same about Blacks, Jews or Italians, where not many would dare say so out loud.

This dark period of arrests is the beginning of the end of systemic corruption in Quebec, because honest Quebecers will tolerate nothing less.

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Posted on 18 June 2013 | 2:03 am