Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Harper Wants to Take Away Canadians' Choices at the Polls

For someone who relentlessly attacks Ignatieff for allegedly being too American (channelling the Birthers to our South no doubt), Harper sure does act mightily un-Canadian.

From Harper's insistence on fixed-election dates modelled on the American 4-year cycle that helps foster US style continuous campaigning, to his refusal to acknowledge that he is not a President, but an MP with little more special status or power than every other MP sitting in Parliament, he has shown time and again his disdain for the Canadian electoral system.

One of Harper's favourite things to do is ignore grey areas. He acts as the uneducated do and pushes to frame all issues as black/white, left/right, with us/against us. This man condescends at every turn, and believes in only two extreme political perspectives: all the way Left, or all the way Right. This again is indicative of his preference to ignore Canadian approaches and in this case embrace the American two party system of Democrat or Republican.

In Canada we have a more robust and nuanced approach to the issues affecting many vastly differing areas of the country. We have seen many major parties come and go, succeed to play on, or merge with others to survive or up their odds. Canadians appreciate a variety of opinions and champion the many legitimate choices we have at the polls. This however, is something that our current Prime Minister seems to reject with gusto. The most recent evidence is a statement made today regarding the inclusion of Green Party leader Elizabeth May in the televised leaders debate. During the last election, Harper moved to exclude the May by threatening to boycott the debate if she was invited to participate. A classy move supporting democracy it was not. This year Harper has gone further, stating that he would be interested in a debate that included only himself and Liberal leader Ignatieff because really, the election is between them, and voters have only two choices.

I don't know about you, but I certainly can't even consider supporting a person who would be as condescending, hateful, exclusionary, and disrespectful as this. And I certainly won't allow us to throw away our multi-party system without a fight. Only a madman bent on power like Harper could.

The quote, as reported by the CBC (http://bit.ly/hR223Q):

« Ce sont les réseaux de télévision qui prendront cette décision [la participation ou non de Mme May]. De notre côté, a précisé M. Harper, je suis ouvert à plusieurs formes de débat, un débat traditionnel qui comprend tout le monde, ou un débat entre moi et Michael Ignatieff, parce qu'en fin de compte, les élections sont à propos de moi et M. Ignatieff. Les électeurs n'ont qu'un choix entre nous deux. »

Saturday, July 03, 2010

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Glimmer Of Hope?

The opinion poll tide is turning in Canada and more and more Canadians are turning their backs on the Conservative Party.

Can this be true? Is it sustainable? Do I dare to hope?

The Globe & Mail published this story today, asking if Canadians will "throw the bums out" if a Spring election was called. Polls show that Conservative support is in a remarkable slide, while Liberal fortunes are on the rise.

Why now? After all the bullying, American-style leadership, right-wing, evangelical, and plain evil that Harper has been bringing us for four years, what has caused people to finally say they've had enough? Proroguing Parliament. Again.

The second time Harper decided to prorogue to stem the loss of political points, he thought that if anyone cared at all, that they'd be on his side. I'll admit that as much as I care and opposed it (the first and second time) I thought the same thing as Steve - if the masses were on his side the first time, eating up lies about how our Parliamentary system works, why would it be any different the second time? I'm as surprised as he is over the public's reaction. And it appears that no amount of politicking around Haiti has reduced the prorogation ire.

I think I will allow myself a sliver of hope that Canadians will sustain their disgust, and will reject another round of Conservative leadership. I do so not only for the good of Parliament, but because I want to believe that Canadians don't hold the same views and perspectives on the world that Harper does.

Besides, I would find it endlessly amusing if Harper's decision to prorogue, a unilateral move he hoped would save his dictatorship, proves to be his undoing.


Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Three Months

It's been three months since my last post. I have been an absentee landlord to my Letters.

Today I try to get back to the habit with a report from a top bureaucrat named Kevin Page. He's a current hero because he's a current thorn in the side of the folks who thought that rampant spending paired with broad tax cuts would bring us prosperity. Well, we have debt. Lots of it. More than Canadians are accustomed to, since normally we have surpluses, and it's more than we can recover from any time soon.

For many months, our Prime Minister and Minster of Finance have been going on at length about how the economy is doing just fine, that the deficit is short-term and temporary, that their stimulus plans will save the day, and that any talk to contrary is an attack on our troops - their usual go-to defence for any attacks on their incompetence and failings.

In order to avoid any further discussion on their aforementioned incompetence, (we can look away from the economy, randomly point in other directions, and find plenty of other issues: torture in the Middle East, or funding cuts to museums and education for example), over the December holiday season Harper decided to prorogue parliament until after Vancouver's Olympic Games (another disaster I won't get into) to allow his MPs to have favourable photo-ops at the Games.

Which brings me back to Kevin Page, the Parliamentary Budget Officer in Ottawa. Harper knew that proroguing Parliament would cause all current work in the capital to cease - which means no reports released, no committees meeting, no transparency, etc. But one report did find it's way out of the mess, and that's because Kevin Page wouldn't let it die in prorogument. He has released his budget report showing that the Conservatives, with policies pushed by Harper and Flaherty, have sunk us into an $18.9 billion structural deficit. $18.9 billion. From yearly surpluses to a structural deficit in just a few short years of Harper's reign.

And to stymie any thoughts about this being some kind of Liberal/NDP attack, let's remember that the Parliamentary Budget Officer is a public servant working in a non-partisan office that was created by the Conservatives.

This budget mess is only one of a thousand bad decisions Harper and his Conservatives have made, but it's the one that has, at last, managed to grab a lot of attention and animosity. I hope, with all that Harper has done to damage Canadians here and abroad, our reputation, our government, and even the land itself, that the voting public will finally say we've had enough. Speak with your ballot and to your elected representatives - and do it before it's too late. We're already teetering over the brink.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Use The Lies

The thrust of this Globe & Mail article is to reassure Canadians that we will, in fact, have an H1N1 vaccine before those in other countries - even though we have only just begun clinical trials and have no plan or date for rolling it out.

What is interesting, is that in the sidebar of the article there is a video titled "Swine flu vaccine available in U.S."

And yet the Globe headline, "Canadians will get H1N1 shots faster than others: official" stands, catching unawares those too lazy to read beyond the headline and first paragraph.


Update (15OCT09): More from Reuters about how others are getting shots faster; "Britain to start swine flu vaccination Oct. 21"

Blogs Are Dead

You know it. I know it. This blog has suffered because of it. Why? I'm micro-blogging with the world in the Twitterverse. And Facebook. And Flickr. If you want to, you can follow my tweets here: @LaSpage.

See this old Wired article for proof of the blog's demise.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

2010 Uniblahs

The Olympic uniforms for Team Canada have been revealed! Are they modern? Do they match? Is there any continuity? Do they look like uniforms? No. Those four models could just be a group of people you see any day in town.

Of course, it makes sense that athletes are just given regular street clothes this year since all this cold-weather gear probably won't be seen much by the public. The opening ceremonies are being held indoors where t-shirts will suffice, and parkas and toques will be ridiculous.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Local Top Gear




Too bad the plate isn't on a much nicer car. Like that brand new Gallardo Spyder I saw downtown yesterday...yum!

Friday, September 11, 2009

Debate Reform

Tom Axworthy's think tank has come up with a report and recommendations for how campaign debates should be run in Canada. I'd have to say that I'm on board with most of these recommendations, but I don't know if I can agree to having Gilles blocked from the English language debate. The reason stated in the article (that Quebec Anglophones would be denied access to his debate) is an excellent reason, but mine is selfish - I just love hearing him speak and what he has to say to the other leaders. But the best thing in there would have to be about taking away the power from the insane networks that control who can debate and when. That nonsense last year with Jack and Steve trying to block Liz from the debate? Insane crap. Let's get Elections Canada involved!

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

LeRoi Moore - Not Forgotten

After Dave Matthews Band (DMB) co-founder LeRoi Moore passed away last summer, the band continued their tour and played a video tribute to their fallen saxophonist during encore breaks. The video was set to the beautiful song #34 and I haven't seen it since last year. On September 7th this year, the day that would have been his 48th birthday, DMB presented a new web page dedicated to celebrating LeRoi's memory. The site is fairly extensive and I found the video, so I'm embedding it here. Thanks for the memories LeRoi!


Find more videos like this on LeRoi Moore

McLaren's New 600bhp Supercar

It's called the MP4-12C and isn't scheduled to go on sale until 2011, but the teasers are out and the car is hot.



Facts:
-3.8 litre V8 twin turbo developing 600bhp
-0 to 60mph in 3.4 seconds
-lowest carbon output per hp of any car currently on the market (including hybrids)

A short vid from the BBC here shows some interesting features of this F1 inspired car.

Monday, September 07, 2009

Windmills!!

Brabe and I got entirely too excited about being near these bad boys!

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Gorge!

Post-rain storm a phenomenal, intense double rainbow appeared (that this
pic does not do justice), and post-rainbow the pink sunset ruled the stage
backdrop.

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Overheard In The Office #4

"I can't watch that movie."

"Why not?"

"I can't watch Tom Cruise movies because I'm distracted by his tooth. Every time I see him, all I can think is: tipped lateral incisor!"

Saturday, August 08, 2009

Letter to Brabe #5 / Letter to Wookiee #9

Movits!!






Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings on Letterman last year.