2008-05-05

ruling like a king

and tasking the real sovereign's representative. anyway, where better to send the GG than out of reach of canadian media during Quebec's quadricentenial? is he worried she'll say something unscripted and inconvenient to his political ideals?
PRIME MINISTER HARPER ANNOUNCES STATE VISIT TO FRANCE BY THE GOVERNOR GENERAL

May 4, 2008
Ottawa, Ontario

Prime Minister Stephen Harper today announced that Her Excellency the Right Honourable Michaëlle Jean, Governor General of Canada, will represent Canada on an official visit to France from May 6 to 10, 2008.

The Governor General will travel to France to highlight the 400th anniversary of the founding of Québec City and participate in celebrations commemorating Victory in Europe Day, May 8, 1945. The Governor General will visit Paris, Ouistreham, Bény-sur-Mer, La Rochelle and Bordeaux.

This visit will provide an opportunity to highlight both the historic ties that unite the two countries and their common values, which include respect for freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law.

France is an important partner on the international stage. 2008 is a significant year for the bilateral relationship, with the 400th anniversary of the founding of Québec City, but also Canada's hosting of the Francophonie Summit and the Canada-European Union Summit, coinciding with France's presidency of the European Union. The Prime Minister's Office - Communications

royal visit

harper seems to be wading (ahem) pretty deep into provincial jurisdiction here...
PRIME MINISTER STEPHEN HARPER TOURS FLOODED AREAS IN NEW BRUNSWICK

May 2, 2008
Ottawa, Ontario

Prime Minister Stephen Harper today was joined by New Brunswick Premier Shawn Graham and Veterans Affairs Minister Greg Thompson to view some of the worst-hit flooded areas in the St. John River valley. The Prime Minister saw firsthand the flood-ravaged region from the air aboard a Department of National Defence Griffon helicopter. The Prime Minister also made stops at Maugerville and Edmunston N.B., two of the hardest-hit communities, where he met with flood victims and volunteers.

"The combination of heavy rains and melting snow have created some of the worst flooding Fredericton, Maugerville, St. Anne, Edmunston and other communities in this region have seen in thirty years," Prime Minister Harper said. "Hundreds of families have been forced to leave their homes and scores of houses and businesses have been inundated by the near-record floodwaters. This is a very difficult situation, and our Government is working closely with local and provincial authorities to minimize the damage, monitor the continuing threat, and provide shelter and support for flood victims."

Federal government support for the flood response and relief effort so far includes:

  • Tents, heaters, tables, chairs, off-road vehicles and an engineer barge from CFB Gagetown.
  • Rescue craft and landing barges and crews from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and the Coast Guard.
  • Pollution monitoring and meteorological data from Environment Canada, including Dash-8 aircraft from Transport Canada for pollution monitoring.
  • National Emergency Stockpile System (NESS) depot in Ottawa put on stand-by.

    "Fortunately the river did not crest at record levels in this region as had been feared," noted the Prime Minister. "But the threat remains high for the Saint John region in the south and we are monitoring the situation closely."
    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
  • Time to Stop PMs from Ruling Like Kings

    Stephen Harper has taken the government to a 'new level of centralized command and control,' he's the latest in a line of prime ministers to pull power to the centre. The shift, however, has so profoundly redefined the roles and relationships of Parliament, cabinet, political parties and public servants that Donald Savoie, a leading scholar on public administration, argues it's time for a public debate over what they should be.

    http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=42acc6a7-2523-42ff-8b27-5abeb908f633&k=64398&p=1

    2008-05-04

    Good racket to be in, if you have no morals

    Once upon a time in a village, a man appeared and announced to the villagers that he would buy monkeys for $10 each.

    The villagers seeing that there were many monkeys around, went out to the forest, and started catching them. The man bought thousands at $10, and as supply started to diminish, the villagers stopped their effort.

    He further announced that he would now buy at $20. This renewed the efforts of the villagers and they started catching monkeys again.

    Soon the supply diminished even further and people started going back to their farms. The offer increased to $25 each and the supply of monkeys became so little that it was an effort to even see a monkey, let alone catch it!

    The man now announced that he would buy monkeys at $50! However, since he had to go to the city on some business, his assistant would now buy on behalf of him. In the absence of the man, the assistant told the villagers. 'Look at all these monkeys in the big cage that the man has collected. I will sell them to you at $35 and when the man returns from the city, you can sell them to him for $50 each.'

    The villagers rounded up all of their savings and bought all the monkeys. Then they never saw the man nor his assistant again, only monkeys everywhere!



    Now you have a better understanding of how the stock market works.

    2008-05-02

    Stop junk mail

    http://www.ambysoft.com/ideas/reduceJunkMail.html

    Only YOU can prevent deforesting for flyers!

    we're gonna need the BFG for this one

    It's worse than i thought.
    All this time I've been optimistic, thinking society is finally coming to its senses. Meanwhile, Christian fanatics have been multiplying quietly in the sidelines like cockroaches in a closet, and with the internet, somebody finally opened the door. What a mess.

    ---------- Forwarded message ----------


    http://www.godtube.com/view_video.php?viewkey=1b5bd6e3e034d00b4f73

    2008-04-22

    neo-con process manual

    step 1: ride the wave of disgust fueled by the previous government's inquiry into the twice-previous government's mismanagment of keeping the country together.
    step 2: clamp down, hard, on all party members and what can say (to who, when and where).
    step 3: run national campaign over budget, then compensate by breaking (sorry, "reinterpreting") election law.
    step 4: rename the previous government's accountability bill, sneak in a few nasty changes, and tout as own.
    step 5: run into problems with Elections Canada? if stonewalling fails, launch personal credibility attacks and/or distracting lawsuits.
    step 6: run into problems with public support? if smearing the opposition fails, return the favours of a few reporters (whose professional ethics may be questioned) who have been friendly to the party - handpick them for a secret by-invitation-only press conference. attack the personal credibility of any challengers.
    step 7: have the house leader declare this "a positive step in transparency."

    http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080422/ad_scheme_080422?s_name=&no_ads=

    2008-04-21

    Beware of cultural undertows

    Canadian Islamic Congress launches human rights complaints against Maclean's
    http://www.macleans.ca/article.jsp?content=20071130_111821_7448

    Scope and mandate for Human Rights Commissions need to be revisited - pronto.

    2008-04-16

    forever a pair

    Huh. I just noticed how I usually use two labels together: polirant (no good that the neo-cons are up to) and integrity (the minimum standard I hold a government to).

    some of the sheen is finally wearing off

    http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/04/15/rcmp-tories.html?ref=rss

    Pfah. The Conservatives - what a sorry bunch of crooks. What a disgrace how their banana-republic, dictatorial, above-the-law attitude has led the federal parties into lawsuits!

    Let's play spot the differences

    Canada's Chief of Defence Staff, Gen Rick Hillier, announced his retirement yesterday. Some conflict about the announcements that came through by email today:

    From the CDS' email to all DND and the CF (emphasis added):

    "I have chosen to retire from the Canadian Forces and end my tenure as your Chief of the Defence Staff in July of this year. [...] I will continue to serve as your CDS until relieved of my duties by my successor, to be named in due course by our Prime Minister."
    From the Prime Minister's [propaganda] Office (emphasis added):
    "Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued the following statement on the planned retirement of General Rick Hillier as Chief of the Defence Staff:"
    What's wrong with this? On the one hand, we have a surprise announcement (as far as timing goes, anyway) from the CDS, saying he has "chosen" to retire. On the other hand, we have the PM's communications office saying it was a "planned" retirement. But, if it was planned (at least by the PM's office), and the PM is responsible for naming the successor, shouldn't they already know who the successor will be? I suspect this is yet another example of the PMO (Propaganda Minister's Office) trying to colour the facts in their favour.

    2008-04-15

    conservative secrets

    Insightful response from a socio-political junkie law clerk friend of mine:

    Sorry it took so long to get back to you.
    In addition to everything else that "conservatives" have in common, one
    strand is a belief in the need for secrecy. And this manifests in many
    forms. Conservatives tend to be more religious, for example, and so tend to
    believe in universal "mysteries." Conservatives tend to be stricter in
    terms of crime and punishment (both at home and on the society-wide basis),
    which includes as part of the approach a fundamental belief that authority
    (god, state, or leadership) really should not be questioned. To me, there
    is a direct relationship between this mindset and the themes discussed in
    the article (which, I should say -- and I am sure you picked up on this --
    is the same charge constantly leveled at the Bush administration). It
    comes down to a belief that those in power have certain knowledge that is
    special and out of reach except on a need-to-know basis.
    I should also add that American conservatives (Republicans) have hit on a
    very easy lever with which to deflect or diminish criticism of this
    ultra-secrecy: simply claim that disclosing the information would either
    directly undermine national security in a time of war, OR that disclosing
    the information would be the equivalent of weakening the special powers of
    the executive, which cannot be allowed to happen because this is a time of
    war and the executive needs to be all-powerful to confront the "enemy of
    the 21st century." In other words, we have power and we will be secretive,
    and if you challenge that, you are undermining national security: you are a
    traitor.
    Can you say "slippery slope"?
    My second point flows from the maxim that all politics is local. The
    article mentions that the Harper government denied that a conversation
    occurred between the prime minister and the president of Mexico, whereas
    the Mexican government released a detailed summary of the conversation in
    question. This merely reflects political considerations unique to each
    country. My bet is that there was nothing to be gained by the Canadian
    government admitting that the conversation happened, whereas the Mexican
    authorities are always trying to convince Mexicans that they matter, that
    their leaders are on an equal footing with foreign leaders, and so on. In
    other words, it benefits Mexican politicians to "tell all" when it comes to
    talking to foreign leaders. Not so, the reverse.
    SPQR aeternum!

    Subject: curious to know what you make of this:

    PUBLICATION: The Toronto Star
    DATE: 2008.04.07
    EDITION: Ont
    ILLUSTRATION: Allauddin Khan AP file photo Canadians have an
    interest in what isgoing on in Afghanistan, says assistant federal
    information commissioner Suzanne Legault. ;
    BYLINE: Richard Brennan
    SOURCE: Toronto Star
    COPYRIGHT: © 2008 Torstar Corporation
    Government keeps public in the dark, critics warn; Canadians denied
    information to which they are entitled

    Canadians are increasingly being kept in the dark by the federal government
    and its agencies on matters ranging from the war in Afghanistan to the most
    routine information, experts say.
    Critics are alarmed at the growing trend to deny basic information that
    Canadians are entitled to, especially in the two years since the
    Conservative government came to power with a promise to be open and
    accountable.
    Suzanne Legault, assistant federal information commissioner, says that
    government and its institutions have to "move from disclosing information
    on a need-to-know basis to disclosing information on the right-to-know
    basis."
    Legault said the John Manley-led panel report into the Afghanistan mission
    "hit the nail on the head when it said the government has to understand
    that Canadians have an interest in what is going on in Afghanistan and
    various issues that the government is tackling."
    "The government has to do a better job at disclosing information," she told
    the Star last week.
    Former Ontario Liberal MPP Sean Conway, who spent 28 years in politics
    before leaving in 2003, said the simple truth is that Canadians have a
    right to know.
    "It is one of the assumptions of a democratic society that its citizens are
    going to be provided with timely, relevant and understandable information,"
    said Conway, a former cabinet minister and now special adviser at Queen's
    University.
    Conway said when governments frustrate that flow of information "they are
    doing something quite destructive to one of the key pillars of democratic
    society."
    During its more than two years in power, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's
    Conservative government has often been criticized for being unnecessarily
    secretive.
    Just recently, Harper's aides refused to confirm whether the Prime Minister
    talked with Mexican President Felipe Calderon. But Mexican officials
    released a page-long news release not only confirming the two leaders spoke
    but providing highlights of the topics they discussed.
    Meanwhile, Legault said Canadian should not have to resort to using the
    Access to Information Act to get information that should be readily
    available.
    "The Access to Information Act should only kick in as an exception. It
    should not be the norm," Legault said.
    "The norm should be that we proactively disclose information."
    Legault noted that complaints filed under the Access to Information Act
    have doubled in the past year, to 2,164 from 1,050. But she is quick to
    point out that 70 institutions, including the Canadian Broadcasting
    Corporation, are now subject to the act, as a result of changes included in
    the Conservative's Accountability Act.
    Legault said the Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada is
    investigating additional layers of approval needed before information is
    released that are creeping into the process, as well as the routine
    applications for extensions.
    Critics say the access to information act is also proving to be less and
    less useful.
    National security and other exemptions are cited to deny the release of
    information. And even when Canadians are lucky enough to pierce the wall of
    secrecy, the information is either so heavily edited that it is virtually
    useless, or is so dated because of delays that it's no longer timely.
    The Conservative government promised during the last election campaign that
    it would be more accountable and transparent in the wake of the Liberal
    sponsorship scandal.
    Recent stories by The Canadian Press show the lengths the government or its
    agencies will go to restrict information.
    The national wire service found that government refused to release
    information on compensation paid to Afghan civilians or their families for
    accidental deaths or injuries.
    The Canadian Press' access to information request was returned almost
    entirely censored.
    The agency also discovered through another access to information request
    that the RCMP is now refusing to release information on the use of Tasers
    that must be recorded each time an officer draws the electronic weapon.
    The information - such as whether the person on whom the Taser was used was
    armed or injured - used to be released, but the national police force
    unilaterally decided to stop.
    Taser report forms obtained under the Access to Information Act show the
    Mounties have used the weapons more than 4,000 times since introducing them
    seven years ago.
    "In the last 15 years, as governments advertise great openness often
    through legislated mandate like freedom of information and other such
    policies, ... citizens get less information," Conway said.
    On Parliament Hill, access to Harper and his cabinet has been so restricted
    that it's a standing joke among reporters. The Hill Times recently carried
    a story on how Harper goes to great lengths to avoid reporters by taking
    the freight elevator and slipping out the back door.
    Harper runs a very tightly controlled government where MPs are expected to
    toe the line and where permission must be granted in many cases before they
    are allowed to talk to reporters.
    Conway said he has been struck by Harper's reluctance to make himself
    available.
    "Mr. Harper, now Prime Minister for over two years, has certainly made no
    bones of his desire to run a highly centralized government and ... intends
    to give the Canadian public such information as he thinks they should have
    at that particular time."
    With files from Bruce Campion-Smith and Tonda MacCharles









    2008-04-14

    Greenwashing exposed at Enbridge

    Submitted a small rant to Enbridge today. They're our natural gas supplier, and they've been promoting their eBill service as "Easy. Convenient. Environmentally friendly." Pfah.
    MAKE EBILLS ECOFRIENDLY
    Your marketing people may claim that your new (since end of January) ebill format is more visually appealing, but it's anything but "environmentally friendly." In fact, it is unnecessarily wasteful of resources and abusive of my pocketbook.
    -- Cut the eBill down to two pages so it can be printed on a single sheet, double-sided. I can save paper AND storage space in my filing cabinet that way.
    -- Also, remove the colour backdrop - it looks fancy, but it burns through my ink like there's no tomorrow!
    If not, I'm going to cancel eBill and have the fancy printing and mailing done at YOUR cost!
    I think everybody should wake up from the matrix and take the time to call a spade a spade - and take back some control!

    2008-04-12

    Drop the penny, support Bill C-531

    Sent this to my MP, the Honourable Gordon O'Connor:
    Sir,
    I fully support the withdrawal of the one cent coin ("penny") from circulation. The good people in your department could calculate the exact numbers for you, but purchasing power of the dollar today is less than one-twentyfifth over the past 130 years or so; it therefore doesn't make any sense to continue squandering financial and environmental resources to support its production and distribution. No sense throwing good money after bad, so to speak.
    The rounding method proposed for section 8 subsection 2 is reasonable. The resistance from the Royal Canadian Mint (and their spin doctors' attempts to control the damage the results of their November study inflicted upon them) is understandable, and the nostalgic value of the penny should be acknowledged, but as will all things, there comes a time when we must let go. The time has come to recognize that the penny has become obsolete, merely a heavy, expensive reminder of days gone by when you could actually buy something with it.
    The only logical alternative would be to enact a "new canadian dollar" worth ten of today's dollars. Then the penny would be worth a dime, and worth fighting for.

    Sincerely,

    post-existence

    In the end, nobody goes to a heaven or a hell except in the hearts and minds of those whose lives they've touched.

    Heaven being that place in our hearts where we preserve the memories of loved ones who have moved on; hell is that place where we shackle our spirits to memories of those who have crossed us.

    religion and the survival of mankind

    Humanity is blessed with enough different religions, each effective to varying degrees against any particular threat, that, on the whole, allows it (humanity) to survive any and all threats to its existence. The power they (religions) will enjoy will ebb and flow over time in response to perceived threats. Meanwhile, the conflicts between them are necessary to keep mankind's skills, wits and swords sharp and groups cohesive; ready to fight for a common objective, if ill-aimed and (generally) misunderstood.

    Religion, in that sense, is the ideological codification of knowledge and the ritualization of survival tips and tricks that have enabled the tribe/race/species to perpetuate itself thus far, and that, ultimately, allow it to carry its part of the greater Knowledge so that one day, It can all be put together again.

    head shaker

    ugh.
    Dems vs Republicans today, ballers/crips tomorrow.
    The future is in great hands alright!

    http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/15851207/detail.html

    2008-04-07

    oil prices

    mmm... is it time we adopt the gold standard again? or some other more stable commodity? apparently the authority of the US dollar is being threatened.
    Iran to OPEC: Stop selling Oil in US Dollars
    Monday, 2008-04-07

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is urging OPEC members to form a joint bank and stop pricing oil trades in U.S. dollars.

    According to the Iranian government's Web site, Ahmadinejad told OPEC Secretary General Abdalla Salem el-Badri the cartel "should establish a joint bank as well as having joint currency."

    Oil is priced in U.S. dollars on the world market, and the currency's depreciation has concerned producers because it has contributed to rising crude prices and eroded the value of their dollar reserves.

    Iran has repeatedly urged OPEC members to shift sales away from dollar. But Iran's proposal to trade oil in a basket of currencies is not supported by enough OPEC members, which include staunch U.S. allies such as leading producer Saudi Arabia.

    http://macedoniaonline.eu/content/view/693/52/

    rights shmights

    The thing that bothers me most, is that the public doesn't seem to care, that they almost seem relieved of being able to delegate their fundamental democratic authority to people working in some neogothic tower with secret passageways and exits. Meanwhile, people are busying themselves with meaningless stuff like redecorating, installing big screen HDTVs, bigger fancier cars, and Hollywood starlets leading the craze of self-destruction.
    The Toronto Star, 2008.04.07, page A13
    COPYRIGHT: 2008 Torstar Corporation
    Government keeps public in the dark, critics warn; Canadians denied information to which they are entitled
    Canadians are increasingly being kept in the dark by the federal government and its agencies on matters ranging from the war in Afghanistan to the most routine information, experts say.
    Critics are alarmed at the growing trend to deny basic information that Canadians are entitled to, especially in the two years since the Conservative government came to power with a promise to be open and accountable.
    Suzanne Legault, assistant federal information commissioner, says that government and its institutions have to “move from disclosing information on a need-to-know basis to disclosing information on the right-to-know basis.”
    Legault said the John Manley-led panel report into the Afghanistan mission “hit the nail on the head when it said the government has to understand that Canadians have an interest in what is going on in Afghanistan and various issues that the government is tackling.”
    “The government has to do a better job at disclosing information” she told the Star last week.
    Former Ontario Liberal MPP Sean Conway, who spent 28 years in politics before leaving in 2003, said the simple truth is that Canadians have a right to know.
    “It is one of the assumptions of a democratic society that its citizens are going to be provided with timely, relevant and understandable information” said Conway, a former cabinet minister and now special adviser at Queen’s University.
    Conway said when governments frustrate that flow of information “they are doing something quite destructive to one of the key pillars of democratic society.
    During its more than two years in power, Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservative government has often been criticized for being unnecessarily secretive.
    Just recently, Harper’s aides refused to confirm whether the Prime Minister talked with Mexican President Felipe Calderon. But Mexican officials released a page-long news release not only confirming the two leaders spoke but providing highlights of the topics they discussed.
    Meanwhile, Legault said Canadian should not have to resort to using the Access to Information Act to get information that should be readily available.
    “The Access to Information Act should only kick in as an exception. It should not be the norm” Legault said.
    “The norm should be that we proactively disclose information.”
    Legault noted that complaints filed under the Access to Information Act have doubled in the past year, to 2,164 from 1,050. But she is quick to point out that 70 institutions, including the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, are now subject to the act, as a result of changes included in the Conservative’s Accountability Act.
    Legault said the Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada is investigating additional layers of approval needed before information is released that are creeping into the process, as well as the routine applications for extensions.
    Critics say the access to information act is also proving to be less and less useful.
    National security and other exemptions are cited to deny the release of information. And even when Canadians are lucky enough to pierce the wall of secrecy, the information is either so heavily edited that it is virtually useless, or is so dated because of delays that it’s no longer timely.
    The Conservative government promised during the last election campaign that it would be more accountable and transparent in the wake of the Liberal sponsorship scandal.
    Recent stories by The Canadian Press show the lengths the government or its agencies will go to restrict information.
    The national wire service found that government refused to release information on compensation paid to Afghan civilians or their families for accidental deaths or injuries.
    The Canadian Press’ access to information request was returned almost entirely censored.
    The agency also discovered through another access to information request that the RCMP is now refusing to release information on the use of Tasers that must be recorded each time an officer draws the electronic weapon.
    The information - such as whether the person on whom the Taser was used was armed or injured - used to be released, but the national police force unilaterally decided to stop.
    Taser report forms obtained under the Access to Information Act show the Mounties have used the weapons more than 4,000 times since introducing them seven years ago.
    “In the last 15 years, as governments advertise great openness often through legislated mandate like freedom of information and other such policies, ... citizens get less information” Conway said.
    On Parliament Hill, access to Harper and his cabinet has been so restricted that it’s a standing joke among reporters. The Hill Times recently carried a story on how Harper goes to great lengths to avoid reporters by taking the freight elevator and slipping out the back door.
    Harper runs a very tightly controlled government where MPs are expected to toe the line and where permission must be granted in many cases before they are allowed to talk to reporters.
    Conway said he has been struck by Harper’s reluctance to make himself available.
    “Mr. Harper, now Prime Minister for over two years, has certainly made no bones of his desire to run a highly centralized government and ... intends to give the Canadian public such information as he thinks they should have at that particular time.”
    With files from Bruce Campion-Smith and Tonda MacCharles
    Why should Canadians allow HIM (or anyone, for that matter) to decide when we're ready for the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?