Thursday, February 16, 2006

Still Waiting

Yep Canadians are still waiting for this......

The time for accountability has arrived.

On January 23rd, Canadians will finally be able to hold the Liberals accountable. Accountable for the stolen money; accountable for the broken trust; accountable for all that did not get done because this government has been totally preoccupied with damage control; lurching from one scandal to another; always trying to avoid the people’s verdict.

For those Canadians seeking accountability, the question is clear: Which party can deliver the change of government that’s needed to ensure political accountability in Ottawa? The change of government that will replace old with new; entitlement with accountability; benefits for some with leadership for all.



Yep which party is that?

At least they kept this promise "
benefits for some"

That sounds about right. Like these folks who have benefited from the 'new' government.




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Whats with the Finger?















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Remember This?

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This was the campaign slogan for the 2004 election.
I think we still have the right to Demand Better don't you.

And look into his eyes, if they are the gateway to the soul
.....brrrr scary.

I wonder if he is one of those 4000 year old Lizard aliens.



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Harpocrite

A BCer In Toronto blogged about a suitable monicker for our new PM and I voted for Harpocrite which would makes his followers Harpocrates. Cause they have to take loyalty oaths to the Great Leader.

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Mr. P3


Another example of the Harper regime planning to implement it's ideology of privatization at all costs is his appointment of Mr. P3 Michael Wilson as Canada's ambassador to the United States.

He is spokesman for the The Canadian Council for Public-Private Partnerships


As he told the Empire Club back in 1987.

Another way that we are getting government out of the way of the private sector is by privatising Crown corporations that are no longer required to meet public policy goals. Privatisation can bring increased vitality to the companies involved as well as to the economy as a whole.

We can stimulate the performance of the economy but we can also insure a greater degree of assurance for those people who are working in those companies. DeHavilland here is probably one of our best examples of success in privatising companies. We've already privatised eight companies, the most recent being TeleGlobe Canada. We're reviewing possible future moves involving such other Crown corporations and Air Canada and Petro-Canada.

In addition to removing government-made obstacles, we've been promoting private-sector growth in a number of ways. One of the first is in the area of investment, so important to creating jobs right across the country. We wanted to make it clear to people both within and outside Canada that Canada welcomes investment and welcomes foreign investment. Our changes to the Foreign Investment Review Agency and the changed mandate for Investment Canada to encourage investment have been very important in the increase of foreign investment coming to Canada in recent months. This little amount of friendliness has gone a long, long way.

Ironically his call for privatization has been the same agenda the Liberals followed, disasterously with the Firearms Registry, the contracting out of DND computer technology and now with their Super National Agency. It the agenda for the Neo Liberal State in Canada regardless of which party is in power. While the Liberals practiced Reinventing Government by stealth the Tories will hasten it as public policy.

Wilson is
Chairman of the Canadian Coalition for Good Governance. Which calls itself THE VOICE OF THE SHAREHOLDER. Which does not mean Joe or Janey Canuck investor but the corporate investment community. The Big buck institutional investors who are promoting P3's.

The Coalition also introduced its first Board of Directors. Chairman: Mike Wilson, President and CEO of UBS Global Asset Management. Other Board members include: Tony Arrell, Chairman and CEO of Burgundy Asset Management; Morgan Eastman, Chief Investment Officer, OPSEU Pension Trust; Emilian Groch, Executive Director, Alberta’s Teachers’ Retirement Fund; Stephen Jarislowsky, Chairman, Jarislowsky Fraser Ltd.; Claude Lamoureux, President and CEO of Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan; Don Reed, President and CEO of Franklin Templeton Investments; and David Beatty, Managing Director, Canadian Coalition for Good Governance.
He sits on the Board of Manulife Canada which reads like a who's who of the right wing buiness lobby,
Canadian Council of Chief Executives (‘‘CCCE’’),formely the BCNI. Which lobbied during his era as Finance Minister for the FTA and NAFTA. Today they call for the direct integration of the Canadian and American economies. They too will have the ear of the new Ambassador as they did during the Mulroney era.

The corporate financial industry in Canada is a veritcally integrated structure a classic old boys network as Manulife shows. It is this industry which benefited most from Michael Wilsons deregulation during the eighties and ninties. His insight was his reward, he has spent the past twenty years as a scion for that same financial industry.

Wilson is not only proud of his role in getting NAFTA through and the GST but is also proud that the Conservatives went further in their cuts to services and the deficit than either Reagan or Thatcher, which resulted in the economic crash that left Paul Martin with a debt and deficit crisis as Finance Minister.

And Martin merely followed the formula that Wilson had already set in place thanks to a bueraucrat named David Dodge, who is now the Head of the Bank of Canada.

When Dodge moved into the deputy minister's office, he hung a plaque on his door. It read: "Due to current financial constraints, the light at the end of the tunnel will remain off until further notice." It set the tone for his five years in the post-a period of deep, deep budget cuts. When the Liberals came to power in 1993, Dodge intervened to get a reluctant Paul Martin, who coveted the Industry portfolio, to instead take over at Finance. The Tories had abandoned their credo of fiscal restraint; the deficit hit a record $42 billion by the time they were voted out of office. Dodge needed an MP of Martin's stature to get the government back on fiscal track, first of all by reneging on the Liberals' promise to kill the GST.

What Mr. P3 offers Harper is Bay Street credentials he so badly needs now that he is in Ottawa. Oil money got him there, old money will keep him there.

What can we expect from Mr. P3 when he goes to Washington, well this speech from 2003 may give us a clue. It sounds much like the values Paul Martin was spouting during the election. Strangely so. Must be how Finance Ministers think.

Look south to America, look east to Europe, but never forget to look west to China, where the world’s largest and fastest-growing economy is transforming our traditional view of developing and developed nations. For China is both. Yes, most of its 3.1 billion people are incredibly poor compared to North American standards. And yes, Ontario alone does more business with America than China does. But that’s all changing. It’s economy will grow by 7 to 8 per cent this year. And in terms of purchasing-power parity, it is the world’s second largest economy. More important is where China is headed: in the last five years, without much notice by the western media, China has become the low-cost, high-quality production centre of the world.




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Super P3

Harpers announcement that the bueraucrat in charge of the ultimate Canadian P3 boondoogle the Firearms Registry, will now be in charge of contracting out and privatization of the Public Service in Canada. Be afraid, be very afraid.

Under the Liberals plan the President of the Treasury Board announced that the civil service would be combined into one super service centre....uh oh that sounds just like the Firearms registry. Watch for more computer and IT screw ups, outsourcing of jobs, cost over runs and theft and fraud.

Think HRDC cost overruns and Firearms Registry cost over-runs combined because Ms.Maryantonett Flumian was in charge of both. And she was left in charge of the Liberals new super centralized Services Canada, which aims at cutting current public servants and replacing them with contracted out services.
The lack of oversight that HRDC, the Firearms Registry and the DND contracting out operations have suffered from will be now launched on an unprecidented scale under her less then watchful eye.

Now ask yourself did Harper just open the exploding box left for him by the Liberals? Sorta like the one called Adscam that Chretien left Martin.

Or is it a simple case of Conservative ideology dominating good sense; privatization of public services no matter the cost.



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Whining and Dining with the Irvings

Big Oil cries da blues. No, not Exxon or Shell. Our favorite Maritime Capitalist family who stash their cash offshore in the Grand Caymans, the Irvings. Crying the blues the Irving gas and oil monopoly laid off staff in Newfoundland today, six managers, and blamed the government for regulating gas and oil prices.

But wait they are a monopoly, and set the prices since they purchase and refine and distribute the oil and gas. Surely mere government regulation of pump prices can't compare to their control and dominance of the market place. Me thinks the Irivings just want to shift blame for their business practices on someone else. What else would be new with these guys who demand the taxpayers fund their private monopoly.
Iriving Family Compact Blackmails PEI

And they aren't just an oil and gas monopoly they are a media monopoly in the Maritimes too.
Irvings Media Monopoly Denies Free Speech




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Damn Cold


THURSDAY EVENINGTHURSDAY OVERNIGHTFRIDAY MORNINGFRIDAY AFTERNOON
Mainly clearMainly clearMainly sunnyMainly sunny
-29°C-26°C-28°C-10°C
Mainly clearMainly clearMainly sunnyMainly sunny
0%0%0%0%
NE 10 km/hS 5 km/hSW 5 km/hSW 5 km/h
100%37%48%27%

Current Weather


Partly cloudy
-25°C
Partly cloudy


FEELS LIKE -34°C
WIND NW 11 km/h
GUSTS
RELATIVE HUMIDITY 52%
DEWPOINT -32°C
PRESSURE 95.06 kPa
VISIBILITY 11 km
CEILING 2300 ft
Updated : Thursday February 16 2006, 13:00 MST - Edmonton Int'l Airport

Annual Average Temprature

Edmonton Mun., AB, Canada


J F









Maximum -8 -4









Minimum -19 -16









Mean -13 -10












Well ok we have been spoiled. We have not had winter at all this past four months. Usually winter begins on Halloween, first snowfall even if it doesn't last, then slowly fall turns to brrr snowy winter. Well that didn't happen, we had only one week of real cold till now and that was in December for a few days, again mid way through the week. And again it was above zero centigrade then dropped to 20 below. And still no snow. We are as brown here as Lethbridge is which is semi-arid semi-desert.

This last weekend, was it only five days ago, I was wearing a spring coat and it sure as heck was warmer than -3 in fact it was a record 14 above. And now this....which is more like January norms than February. But this too shall pass and this weekend it will be warm again.

Which bodes ill for farmers and this province, which is part of the Palliser Plain, an area across the Canadian and American prairies that suffered from the great drought that coincided with the Great Depression .

In the years between 1857 and 1860, both the British and Canadian Governments sent expeditions across the Prairies to assess the suitability of the region for agricultural settlement. Capt. John Palliser's report and that of Henry Youle Hind both concluded that a portion of the southern prairie adjacent to the U.S. border, an area which became known as “Palliser's Triangle,” and less widely as “The Great North American Desert,” was too dry for successful agricultural settlement. These conclusions were later used by cattle interests to encourage the national government to sell or lease large tracks of land to them at very favourable prices, and to delay the incursion of farm settlement onto land in southern Alberta.

Already folks up north around Grand Prairie and Fort McMurray are reporting seeing more dirt drifts blowing across the roads which should have been snow drifts. Which means that if we have no ground water from snow, we will have parched drought conditions. Which brings with it the ravages of locusts in the south of the province and a plague of grasshoppers in the north. We have already had disasters grass fire conditions in the south of the province, fires normally found in further south climates like the hills of Orange County in LA.

Crews put out Alta grass fire
CARSELAND, Alta. -- A rare winter grass fire fuelled by gusty winds and tinder dry conditions in southern Alberta briefly forced 400 Carseland residents from their homes Thursday.


These may be good times for us urban dwellers so accustomed to frigid winters we plan our holidays to Hawaii around them, but to farmers, and to the ecology of the prairies this aspect of global warming and climate change is unwelcome and could portend a disaster in the making.

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Devastating Dry Spells: Drought on the Prairies

Blowing dust, swarms of grasshoppers, and not enough hay to feed the starving livestock. For Prairie farmers, drought can be disastrous. But it's not just the farmers who suffer — a severe drought in Western Canada can hurt the entire Canadian economy. From the devastating dustbowl years of the Great Depression to some of the more recent Prairie dry spells, CBC Archives explores the history of drought in Western Canada.



Climate Futures: A Buyer’s Guide

No…the title is not about “green tags” or stock picks. It’s about figuring out how the majority of US citizens who simply “don’t buy it”…”it” being the risk posed by climate change to personal health, to all of earth’s living systems, and to our children’s future…will sit up and pay attention to the management of climate risk.

What would it take to explode the opinion leader's heads enough to reveal the invisible to them? The Dustbowl years of the 1930’s provide a fair analogy. Just prior to when that historic drought set in, a very large segment of the US’ population lived on farms: at least 45%. Markets for agricultural products were booming, trees were removed from the most productive farmlands, slash-and-burn style, and prairie soils were ploughed from fence to fence. The most erodable hillsides were laid bare. Along came extended drought and the nation’s food basket crumbled. Farm losses were severe; and, unemployment, and population shifts amplified stock market volatility (a point often overlooked by economists who see the Great Depression solely in economic terms). Rural population loss from the Dust Bowl states continues to this day. An oversimplification, granted, but not a gross mischaracterization.

In the several decades following the Dust Bowl, huge Federal programs were established to make farming on the Great Plains and Midwest lands sustainable. Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) participants helped reestablish “windbreaks” of trees and were responsible for the replanting of large tracts of forests. Just as important, the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service ASCS), and Soil Conservation Service (SCS) were established and funded by Congress. Because of these three government efforts, soil loss from wind erosion was gradually reduced. When the rains returned almost a decade after the start of the drought, modern industrialized farming practices were developed in lock step with conservation practices. The wind rows are still there. This process, come to think of it, is not that different that what is going on right now in China!

What sort of large scale changes could set off a similar reaction in US governance with regard to climate change? Is there really any chance of that happening soon, what with most climate change impact scenarios being on the scale of half to full century? Yes there is.




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Helicopters and Guns

Again imitation is the highest form of flattery. The Tories now plan to shut down the Gun Registry imitating Jean Chretiens cancellation of the multi million dollar helicopter purchase promised by Mulroney. Cause of course like Jean, Stephen promised. And like Jean's mistake it's going to cost us money, more money than leaving it. Yep these guys are the same as the last guys. Who did you vote for?


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Ottawa Conservative Lobbyist Heaven

The Dan Report says that Reynolds Joins Law Firm Known for Lobbying which means he will be joining ex-Harper aide, Geoff Norquay as a lobbyist Ottawa's Revolving Door

But they aren't the only ones as Greg Weston of the Sun reports. They are in good company. In fact a veritable avalanche of lobbyists has appeared in the last month says Weston;

The change of government has also spawned an old game of musical chairs. Ordinarily, the office of the federal lobbyist watchdog might register a few dozen changes in the industry each month. But a review of federal records shows a staggering 824 changes to the lobbyist register in the last 30 days.According to the industry’s newsletter, The Lobby Monitor, more than 300 of those are new registrations.

Just another broken Tory promise.


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