Feeling a bit nervous that Harper might pull this one off and then what? So I recorded this just in case.
Click on the red bits.
My Vote's for Stephen
The Naked Ventriloquist
Monday, 19 October 2015
Thursday, 15 October 2015
Stephen Harper and My Part in His Downfall (part 6), Voting
Lineup outside the advance polling station last Monday:
I entered about 1pm, got done around 1;35, total time 35 minutes. I was about 25th in the lineup.
They only had enough staff to process one voter at a time. I talked to someone else who had to undergo a 1-hour wait so I can't complain. But I will anyway since there's no reason to have to stand in line that long. There was room for more staff and ballot boxes. The benefits of running an effective election process should seem worth the risk involved in spending a little more every few years. It has been postulated that a difficult voting process favours the conservative vote. I don't know if this is true or not but I do know that the budget is controlled by the Conservative government. Perhaps it's easier for Conservatives to get time off work to come out and vote.
Thursday, 8 October 2015
Stephen Harper and My Part in His Downfall (5), CBC Interview translated
I wanted to
understand the Niqab hysteria that’s being fanned up for the election and I
thought the best way was to go to the source and I let Google lead me to the
below interview with Stephen Harper conducted by a Rosemary Barton. Unfortunately nothing in it made sense to me so
I decided to translate from Politics into a natural language using some
translation freeware I downloaded for the purpose. The translations are in bolded font, after the
relevant answer.
Link to the original piece: http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-election-2105-full-text-of-rosemary-barton-interview-with-stephen-harper-1.3259045
Rosemary Barton: Let's talk about
the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal that you managed to conclude yesterday. Was
there a point throughout those negotiations that were going on for five
years where you began to believe that maybe this isn't going to happen? Was
there a moment where you were doubting that it would happen?
Stephen Harper: Oh look, many times. Many times. I would
say it was really, if I'm frank about it, it was only in the last six, seven,
eight months that I thought 'yeah this is actually really starting to come
together' because there had been a bunch of parties, even before we were a part
of it, that had been sitting around the table for quite a while. So look, it's
come together. I think it's a great thing. It's, as I say, the creation of the
greatest economic partnership in the history of the world. It's going to set
the standard for, not just Asia-Pacific trade, but eventually trade around the
world and it's very important that I think we got a good deal but it's also
very important that we get in through the front door. So we're not, the under
way around, trying to negotiate your way in later would inevitably be very bad
terms.
I need the voters to believe what a rare
and precarious thing this trade deal is so let me mention how it was touch and
go right up to the last minute. The
deal is yet another step in handing our lives over to the corporations and the
outcome of this progression is doubtful.
But I have no other ideas for solving the economic and environmental
problems we face so the main thing is we must not doubt.
RB: Is it impossible
to negotiate a deal later, you've got 11 countries signed on.
SH: I think the answer is yes and no.
Its certainly possible to find a way to get in later, but you will not be
negotiating. You will be accepting whatever terms they're offering you unless
your China or someone that huge who actually has some leverage at a table that
size. But by and large, you're either negotiating your way in later or you're
begging your way in later and you definitely don't want to be in that position.
But independent of that I think we got a very good deal. If you look at the
reaction across the Canadian economy, it's about a unified -- i think we got a
better unified reaction on this than we did on the European Union and that was
pretty unanimous.
As I hinted before, it is crucial to
emphasize how momentous this event is (that I brought about) so let me highlight
that we might not have been a part of this arrangement and how terrible that
would have been!
RB: Let's talk
about what it means for consumers because I know you're talking about the
broader opportunities. It's hard to see what it offers cor Canadians on a daily
basis. And I would argue if you wanted to offer them something concrete you
would have blown up the supply management and said here, here's all the cheap
dairy products you want. So why didn't you do that?
SH: We have a pretty firm position. We've
run many election of making firm commitments to our supply managed farmers and
you have to remember that our rural regions, those family farms are the basis
of the entire, or really the backbone of the entire economy in the region. So
we firmly committed to protecting that and we've done so. This deal will
eliminate upon entry and over the years many tariffs across a range of consumer
goods. Look I think the biggest gains are on the side of our workers and our
exporting businesses. The are going to get tariff free access to an enormous
market and we will be the only G7 country, at least for the foreseeable future,
that has that kind of access in Asia, in the Americas and in Europe. So when
you look at companies that are looking at, big companies especially with what
they call global mandates, Canada will be about the place in the world to do
that business.
There are hardly any family farms
protected by supply management; they’re mainly very large agribusinesses
nowadays; but it’s a sacred cow to rural voters out West and in Quebec. I’ll also say very quickly that we’re the
only G7 country to get all the access to Asia, the Americas and Europe and
maybe nobody will notice the USA is part of this deal, is part of the G7 and
has the same access.
RB: There has been a
trade deficit though over the past about two years, so what kind of lag time is
reasonable to expect before doing these things. I mean CETA hasn't
even been ratified, we aren't seeing the consequences of it.
You're not seeing the consequences
exactly, but companies on both sides of the ocean are positioning themselves
for the benefits that will create when companies, bigger companies that plan
long term, they start to plan on these things. Look the trade balance is a
complicated thing, I'm not going to into it, but the fact is, our exports,
obviously non energy exports are down in dollars because the falling prices,
but our non energy exports are growing qutie significantly across the
country, they're up about 10 per cent this year, and if you go to companies
like this they will tell you they are seeing that.
We haven’t been experiencing a net
benefit from trade for the past two years of my administration but a lot of
people I prefer not to name right now are just about to start selling whacks of
stuff overseas. Non-energy exports have
been so lame they had nowhere to go but up and that’s good news.
RB: I'm going to
shift gears if I can. Yesterday the federal court of appeals said your
government cannot have a stay on this issue of Zunera Ishaq, the woman
who is willing to reveal her face before the ceremony for citizenship but not
willing. She said yesterday that she believes the government is interfering or
telling her how to dress or live. Why is it OK for the government to tell
Ms. Ishaq how to dress and how to live?
SH: Well look, our position is very simple.
We're an open society and a society of equality and an open
society. Canadians are strongly united around the view that there are
times when you reveal your identity. And of course there's the broader value
question of the men and women we are trying to promote in this country.
Obviously as we've said before this campaign we are going to go ahead with
legislation and the next parliament will debate that. But I think the
legislation is broadly reflective of the large, large majority of Canadians.
I dream of a Canada made up of people
who think the same as me so I’ll obfuscate the contradiction of an open society
forcing people to stop dressing like they used to back home. Plus, the majority of voters feel a bit
weird when they see somebody covered up, like that person is hostile or like
somebody out of Star Trek, so it makes a good demagogic issue to get a few more
people heated up so they'll vote for me.
RB: But, but,
what is the limits then? What a government then tell someone to do? If you're
willing to tell this woman that she can't live her life like this, that she
can't wear this at this ceremony, then where do you put the limits?
SH: Well, this is a Canadian public
ceremony. And certainly, Canadians have a right to establish the basic values
around that ceremony that are reflective of our basic values as a society.
This is a tough question about how far
it is alright to go when telling people what they can wear and when, so I’ll
divert the listener’s attention by talking about the non-issue of a country setting
basic values and use words that seem to refer to freedom and equality but in fact
are about good ordinary Canadians having the right to strip the covering off
someone’s face even if he or she feels desecrated by it.
RB: But a public
service worker, for instance, in the civil service, someone who has a public
position. Should they be allowed to?
SH: That's a matter we're going to examine.
Quebec, as you know, has legislation on this. And we're looking at that
legislation. But as I say, we're a society of openness and of equality and this
is what we want to promote. And look, the vast, vast majority of Canadians
understand our position on this and are behind it. The other parties have made
a decision to make this an issue because they are frankly offside on public
opinion, but that's their choice.
Canadian values demand that we get a
good look at your face or you don’t get to work for us, and right now it’s
looking like a very good election issue.
Just for fun, let me rewrite history so it looks like the controversy is
Mulcair and Trudeau’s fault. That way
it looks like I’m the guy proposing simple inoffensive solutions to the crisis
of there being maybe 15 women in Canada wearing face coverings and it’s that opportunistic scum trying to make election hay out of it.
RB: You haven't
made this an issue?
SH: We're on side with public opinion on
this, and I think Canadians understand this very clearly. It's not by any means
the biggest issue of this campaign. The biggest issue is the economy, but I
think our position is widely understood and supported.
People have a natural level of
discomfort with others dressing so strangely and I’m going to exploit that to
the tits. It’s not the biggest real
issue but being so visual it means some voters will apprehend it better than complex economic matters.
RB: But if you look
at the niqab, which, OK, it's a court decision it's not something
that you've timed, the barbaric cultural practices tip line, there are people
who believe that this is in some way encouraging anti Muslim sentiment. We've
seen instances in the past week two women who have been attacked, not even
for wearing niqbs, hijabs.
SH: As you know our party has a
whole series of very strong policies. We're the party that really has brought
in strong policies to crack down on crime in this country. It is important that
violent crime and violence against people be appropriately counted and
punished, we've brought in a whole series of measures to do that. Priorities
going forward in this parliament are additional measures in the areas of
drunk driving, life means life, and people who commit certain heinous
acts actually serve a life sentence for their crimes.
True, in my quest for another term I’ve
remorselessly set the fires of xenophobia burning in people’s hearts but I
won’t address that right now; maybe in my memoirs. The stupidity of sticking people in jail is popular among my core
electorate so I’ll mention that rather than answer the question.
RB: But what do you
say to these women or to these people who are doing this to these women who may
be interpreting, falsely perhaps, that it's happening during the election
campaign as some sort of anti-Muslim feeling that is out there?
SH: Look, I don't think you can use that
kind of thing to discredit legitimate political debate. Violence against women
is unacceptable, which is why our government has brought forward laws to
crack down on violence.
I’ve whipped up this sentiment and some
people are physically afraid because of it.
You seem to be demanding that I adhere to some standard of decency and
that makes me feel oppressed. Anyway I
can’t help what people do. Not my
problem.
RB: Let's just turn
to broader questions about where you're at and where you're going. We're in the
last two weeks here. You've been doing this for ten years, it will be ten years
next February, is that correct?
SH: Yep, I think so.
I’ve counted every fucking day but I’ll
pretend to be vague on the subject, since I’m too deeply immersed in the
problems of our time to look at fucking calendars every five minutes.
RB: What do you have
left to do? Why do you still want this job at this stage?
SH: Well look, I've got, I tell
people it's the best job in the best country in the world. But we are in a time
of considerable global economic turmoil and I guess that's been the story of
the world for the last seven years. But the fact is we have renewed turbulence
with more faces of the debt crisis in Europe, we've seen some turmoil, and
we've seen some markets crashing in Asia. We've had the drops in global energy
and commodities prices. We've come out of this global economic turmoil in
pretty good circumstances. I think that we have in this country a tremendous
opportunity to now solidify the gains that we've made. We have the best
economic fundamentals of really any significant developed country. And we have
a great era ahead of us if we do what we want to do which is keep lowering
taxes for people, keep making investments in people's lives and families, in a
way that is sustainable. I think we've got an opportunity to really launch this
country into many decades of prosperity and I want to see that story through.
I tell everybody what to do and nobody
tells me what to do. I’m having the
time of my life. In order to keep on
having it, I’ll say how chaotic and scary the world is so voters think I’m the
only one who can manage it (having survived 9 years, 10 months and half of a
day without getting caught).
RB: Is that the fire
in your belly? That's what makes you want to do four more years?
SH: The economy is the biggest
thing I want to do. There is a pretty fundamental choice here. The other
parties, as you know, they are proposing a different track. They're proposing
that now is the time, I don't think they propose to do differently than us,
they just purpose to spend tens of billions of dollars more on the same things.
We know you can't do that unless you run permanent deficits and you start
raising taxes.
[at this point the freeware seemed to
bog down and my power supply fan made grinding sounds. Puffs of smoke started drifting out of the
back of my desktop so I ctrl-alt-del’d the process and started again at the
next question]
RB: The Liberals are
going to run deficits for three years, and you ran deficits for six.
SH: Let me come to that in a second,
cause I think the numbers actually don't know show that. The numbers show
you're going to launch into a permanent deficit if you do that. You can't
afford the kind of increased spending they're talking about out of thin air.
And we think this would take us off course just at about a time when we've
positioned this country well for future growth. But look on the question of
deficits, this economy is growing. We already have a balanced budget. We had a
balanced budget last year. The auditor general has said that. If we're going to
be the kind of country that goes into deficit even when the economy is growing.
we return to deficit, that is a recipe for permanent deficit. Look, once
you loose the anchor of a balanced budget, you're always under pressure to just
spend more and not cover it.
Everybody thinks chartered accountants
are smart and they always talk about ‘the numbers’ so I’ll do the same and hope
nobody notices that there are no particular numbers I’m talking about. Plus I’ll look smart and my voters are so
impressed by my superiority they don’t notice that I only care about people who
are making money and don’t really give a damn about anybody who doesn’t fit so
well into our modern economy. And I’d
better reinforce the point about my financial management; that’s why I’ll talk
about our balanced budget even though that was achieved by selling General
Motors at a loss.
RB: But why
are three deficits permanent and six deficits are not?
SH: They're not three. Nothing is going
to magically balance the budget after three years. When you increase spending
to that level, what you're going to do, if you eventually try to fix it, you're
going to a combination of tax hikes, ongoing borrowing or of cuts. In the
Liberal platform there is a line item, even in the Liberal platform that
doesn't add up, there is a line item of $6.5 billion of undefined cuts.
Your point is very logical and that’s
why I won’t answer it.
RB: Well they might
decide to cut some of your boutique tax credits to make other choices.
SH: Well that's a kind of policy they
are running on — let's raise taxes in families. Those are tax benefits,
we've been able to do a bunch of things: income splitting for families and
seniors, universal child care benefits, TFSAs, fitness credits, the RESP
enhancements. These are all good things for Canadians, for the middle class. I
know they want to take them away. But I think that's the wrong choice for
Canadians. They are going to take them away, and replace them with a bunch of
things that aren't actually paid for. We know where the previous Liberal
government led us with that, and that was eventually to big tax hike and
bunch of benefit cuts.
A few people benefited from the tax cuts
and as it happens they vote Conservative.
If you have a low income it’s perfectly obvious that you won’t benefit
from tax credits and you won't vote Conservative anyway unless you're an idiot. Again, not my
problem.
RB: Do you have any
regrets from the four years, and if there is anything there would inform you
going forward. And in 2011 it was something about intelligence in Iraq, what is
it now?
SH: You know, I always say I have the
entire press gallery to tell me all the things I'm doing wrong. But look, I
think the biggest lesson of the past few years is that we really don't know
what's coming in terms of the global economy. We have seen more unexpected
surprises, mostly negative in the past few years, than any analysts would have
seen coming and we keep getting surprises. And I think that speaks to why
we need a plan that's based on solid fundamentals, that's based on
balancing our budget, keeping taxes down, keeping down and containing our
expenditures and programs, based on opening our markets and training
people, investing in infrastructure. But doing that in a way that is
sustainable. We will inevitably be hit by big surprises and if we have to
make big adjustments we don't want to be in a bad situation already. We ran an
enormous big stimulus program in 08-09, we ran one of the biggest in the
world, we got it out of the door fastest, and we said we would make it
temporary because we were able to do all that because we were already in
surplus and our debt levels were low. Other countries found themselves already
in debt so they found themselves in higher deficits and now they can get out of
it because they are paying interest. We don't want to be back in that situation
we wants strong economic fundamentals for whatever unexpected things
face us.
Because of the previous Liberal government we entered the
2008 recession with a low debt load and because in the early 2000’s the
Liberals over my protest refused to let the banks make the same investments
that nearly sunk the United States and European banks and insurance companies,
we entered those days of crisis (which are unique to my premiership and never
beset any other government in the history of the world) in good shape to roll
out a stimulus package which we only undertook under pressure from the Liberals
and the NDP who had a better read on the financial crisis than I did at the
time. We’ve got a bunch of
inconsequential ideas to implement in the future and this has been a wonderful
opportunity to bypass the media and sell them to the Canadian public. It’s been a pleasure dodging your questions. Thank you.
Tuesday, 22 September 2015
Stephen Harper and My Part in His Downfall (4), The Leader's Debate Sept 18
The
Leaders had a debate on Thursday. I
copied a transcript (courtesy of http://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/tale-of-the-tape-transcript-of-the-globe-debate-on-the-economy/)
into Word so I could do highlighting, word-finds etc and study it.
The Word file if you want to try the same thing is at https://archive.org/details/LeadersDebateSept182015TranscriptPerMacLeans
It was quickly obvious that each candidate
had mantras to be repeated more or less frequently.
I think this is usual in all such presentations. There would be plenty to learn from seeing
them in an organized heap so I copied them into a spreadsheet with a column
for each of the speakers so I could present them here separately.
The criterion of selection was
nothing more than that an item should have a certain quality to it. It’s hard to define exactly what that quality
is. Incantatory repetition is part of it,
also a certain air of being intended to paralyze the mind and numb the senses, lastly each nugget should bear a disconnection with objective reality, a
saying-nothing about the world. They are
statements that don’t have to be either true or significant in order to
work. For example, Mr. Harper comes back
again and again to what a risky and unstable world economy we’re living in
but that is a vacuous statement. Any
unplanned free economy would always be unstable and appear on the brink of
collapse. That’s what happens when
people are free to spend their money as they like, innit?
I’m going to do another post about the BS
items. Just pointing out that the
current list will have some overlap with it.
I will not impose any more comments on the
material, except to note that Stephen Harper not once but twice says ‘Let me
just correct the facts.’ This gives me a picture of being back in school with Mr. Harper as the teacher with a
ruler in his hand and a bunch of misbehaving Facts standing in line with their
hands extended, waiting for correction.
If any that I missed are posted in the comments I'll revise accordingly and credit the discoverer.
If any that I missed are posted in the comments I'll revise accordingly and credit the discoverer.
Nuggets from Justin Trudeau
- Mr. Harper has not only the worst growth record on jobs -
the worst job creation record since World War II; he has the worst record on
economic growth since the Great Depression
- He has the worst job creation rate since World War II, he
has the worst growth rate of any Prime Minister since the Great Depression
- That's not what Mr. Harper has delivered. He has the worst
record on growth since R.B. Bennett in the depths of the Great Depression
- Mr. Harper talks about growth but he hasn't been able to
get it done for ten years. He has the worst growth record in 80 years of any
Prime Minister.
- What we need - because Mr. Harper has been unable to
deliver it, having the worst growth record of any Prime Minister since the
depths of the Great Depression - is a plan to grow the economy.
- We have low growth, you have the worst job creation record
since World War II of any Prime Minister, and that's what Canadians are
feeling.
and from Thomas Mulcair
- Mr. Harper put all of his eggs into one basket, and then he dropped the basket. Four hundred thousand well-paid manufacturing jobs lost on his watch
- Mr. Harper put all of his eggs into one basket, and then he dropped the basket. Four hundred thousand well-paid manufacturing jobs lost on his watch
-
Mr. Trudeau is proposing to dump tens of billions of dollars in new debt on the
backs of future generations
- We want to drop the taxes of Canada's small and
medium-sized businesses because they create 80 percent of new jobs in this
country
-
Mr. Harper has dropped the taxes of Canada's largest corporations by tens of
billions of dollars. If that was such a good idea to create jobs, how come we
lost 400,000 well-paid manufacturing jobs?
- I'm tired of watching successive Liberal and Conservative
governments dump these massive ecological, economic, and social debts on the
backs of future generations
- Stop leaving this massive ecological debt to - on the
backs of future generations
- the old Liberal approach of leaving tens of billions of
dollars in debt on the backs of future generation(s).
- We've lost 400,000 well-paid manufacturing jobs on Mr.
Harper's watch.
- our small and medium sized businesses create 80 percent of
the new jobs in this country
- I come from a family of ten kids.
- I don't want to do like Mr. Trudeau, leave a massive debt
on the backs of future generations
- It's something that reflects exactly how I've been as a
public administrator. I've been in public life for over 35 years.
- We don't want to leave more billions on the backs of
future generations.
- With their short-term approach, leaving tens of billions
of dollars on the backs of future generations.
- I do come from a very large family and times sometimes
were tough, but I've seen what it is when people work together and they hold
together.
- I come out of provincial politics. I know that it's part of my job, if I become
Prime Minister, to sit down regularly with the provincial Premiers
- When I was the Minister in Quebec, Mr. Walmsley, I lowered
greenhouse gas production in our province every year
- I used to be chair of the Quebec Professions Board. I've
got a lot of experience on this.
and from Stephen Harper
- We are living in a very challenged global economy. We have
enormous economic instability out there
- Living in a very unstable global economic environment
- We're in a fragile global economy
- You know, we heard the same, old story from the NDP on
this.
- In their platform yesterday, they put in a bunch of tax
increases
- This is the same story we had in Alberta when the NDP came
to office
- Move the energy sector or the Canadian economy
forward ... in a challenged global economy
- Running a deficit is not the kind of protection our
economy needs right now. We're in an unstable global economy
- Is the same, old NDP playbook. We saw it in British
Columbia, we saw it in Ontario, we're seeing it in Alberta.
- The reality of the NDP plan wherever
it has been tried. And when we are in a fragile...
- The same story we had in Alberta when
the NDP came to office.
- Let me just correct the facts.
- Around the world where there have been all of these
financial and other crashes
- How do we in this unstable global economy continue to
protect that going forward?
- The
kind of reckless approach that these two parties...
- Tax increases on ordinary Canadian families who pay low
taxes, or permanent deficits. These are risks we cannot afford and they're not
good for homeowners.
- Seen this NDP playbook everywhere.
- That's what we had with the NDP in power in Ontario.
That's what we had with the NDP in power in British Columbia, and we're seeing
exactly the same story here in Alberta
- In an unstable global economy we have ...
- Look, the, the whole essence of Mr. Mulcair's plan is that
he says he will balance the budget through tax hikes. That's what the NDP's
tried everywhere. They left Ontario in a massive deficit, they left British
Columbia...
- Manitoba is in a massive deficit. Alberta's deficit got
larger since they took office. The former Saskatchewan Auditor General says
they left Saskatchewan in a deficit
- In this unstable global economy, that is an
important guarantee.
-
Not a risk you or ... our economy in this fragile ... economic
environment...
-
Let me correct the facts.
- Why would we return to deficits now when we have an
unstable global economy
- A terribly unstable
and risky global economy.
- Seven years in a row with
nothing but economic crises around the world.
- This fragile global economy.
- Significant risks and significant challenges.
Wednesday, 2 September 2015
Stephen Harper and My Part in his Downfall (3): Information Sharing
I don't know how much there is to this theory but here goes anyway.
The first section of the Act lets these government departments send your
information to each other if they think that will combat terrorism. I found it hard to visualize what's wrong with
these 16 departments sharing info with each other. After all, it's all
the government, right?
Personal information include data about the 'race, colour, religion,
marital status, education, financial transactions, fingerprints, personal
opinions, and others' opinions, of an individual.' This is a select list
from the Privacy Act.
At this point it began to seem a bit funny to think of all these details
being passed around, unless the Anti-Terrorism Act included enforceable
controls on what happens to information after it leaves a department but as
far as I can find, it doesn't.
Part 4 of this section of the Act seems to contain the only rules covering this subject.
“4. Information sharing under this Act is to be guided by the following
principles:
.
b) respect for caveats on and originator control over shared information
is consistent
with effective and responsible information sharing;”
I can't follow the grammar of this, if you reword it the same idea goes:
“This is a principle: respect for caveats is consistent with
responsible and effective information sharing.”
Even then it doesn't quite add up to anything.
From what I've read, 'caveats' means something like a note attached to a
file saying whether its accuracy might be dubious because it was procured through
gossip, hearsay, torture, weak evidence, etc.
If that's correct, shouldn't the principle read "Caveats must be
attached to any information distributed and the respective files must not be
handed on to a third institution without permission of the originator.”?
That's more long winded but maybe Mr. Harper or a friend could fix it
up.
Instead the clause just says Respect for Caveats is consistent with
Responsible Sharing etc. It doesn't go one to say 'All information must
be shared responsibly etc.’, eg.
It's just another way of saying that respect for caveats doesn't contradict responsible sharing, i.e. it's just defining a concept by saying
what is not excluded from it. It doesn't even say what is included in the
concept of responsible sharing or that responsible sharing is a good thing.
So if the security police overhear somebody gossiping about you and that
gossip, who wanted revenge because you called Animal Control about their dog
crapping in your rosebushes, says they heard you say you were so pissed off at
your tax bill you were going to join Al Qaeda tomorrow, your alleged words
could be put into a file without a note saying the words came via a nosy
neighbour with their ear at your window; you could as a result, under other parts of this
Act, be put on a list and not know about it, not be allowed to take a plane
anywhere in Canada, and be at risk of having electronic bracelets put on your
ankles and your computer's hard drive confiscated, and no government personnel
would have violated any of the principles in this Act.
I was going to do more but I’m out of time and a day late anyway. I'll be back.
Tuesday, 25 August 2015
Stephen Harper and My Part in his Downfall (2)
Bill C-51 was enacted earlier this year with the apparent
intention of giving the federal government more power to stop terrorism while
balancing that power with a respect for civil liberties. Since there haven’t been any terrorist acts
in Canada for years it would seem the government is doing a good job with the
powers they have already, so I don’t know why they wanted more. According to the papers the opposition
proposed more than 100 amendments to the bill, of which the Conservatives
accepted none but introduced four that they came up with themselves.
This Act allows government organizations, if they have files
on you, to share them with each other, lets the government ground people who
they suspect might be planning terrorism, without telling them,
lets the government apply to judges to impose recognizances on possible
terrorists and make them wear electronic bracelets etc, criminalizes any
communication that promotes terrorism and allows the government to confiscate
written or electronic materials that promote terrorism, allows witnesses to give evidence against
suspected terrorists without being identified or cross examined, allows the
Canadian Security Intelligence Service to do James Bond type stuff (rather than
being a mere intelligence agency), while letting them get warrants to set
aside the Canadian Constitution (temporarily), allows the government to appeal any
decision at any stage made by a judge in an immigration case if they don’t like
the decision, while the right of the non-citizen to appeal is still restricted
to matters of general importance, and allows the government to present
information to a judge that that non-citizen is doesn't know about and so cannot
contradict or challenge. Seems
innocuous enough but in fact it’s been a controversial subject.
A couple of fair and balanced reviews of the legislation by legal experts.
Lists are fun, so here's the Federal agencies who can hand your information around.
Department of Citizenship and Immigration
Department of Finance
Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development
Department of Health
Department of National Defence
Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
Department of Transport
Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada
Public Health Agency of CanadaRoyal Canadian Mounted Police
A couple of fair and balanced reviews of the legislation by legal experts.
Craig Forcese and Kent Roach
Clayton Ruby and Nader R. Hasan
https://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/monitor/bill-c-51-legal-primerLists are fun, so here's the Federal agencies who can hand your information around.
Canada
Border Services Agency
Canada
Revenue Agency
Canadian
Armed Forces
Canadian Food Inspection Agency
Canadian Food Inspection Agency
Canadian
Nuclear Safety Commission
Canadian Security Intelligence Service
Communications
Security EstablishmentCanadian Security Intelligence Service
Department of Citizenship and Immigration
Department of Finance
Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development
Department of Health
Department of National Defence
Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
Department of Transport
Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada
Public Health Agency of CanadaRoyal Canadian Mounted Police
Monday, 17 August 2015
Stephen Harper and My Part in his Downfall (1)
Some people imply that Stephen Harper is a potential tyrant who only feels happy at moments of destroying forests, kneecapping his opponents, converting the atmosphere to carbon dioxide, or crushing the democratic rights of poor people. This is almost certainly true but we can't be sure unless we look at the evidence, rather than leaping to conclusions. It's time to take an objective, neutral look at this monster in human form and let the facts speak for themselves.
Since everybody else is busy campaigning that leaves only me. I will post the results of my investigations, or something or other,every week every now and then until the election and that's my promise to you. Here's Part 1, next one's due on Tuesday the 25th.
I'm going to start with
I was going to start with the Security bill, figuring that one way to approach the man was to see how he was reflected in his legislation. But the bill isn't a very revelatory document and it'll take more than a day of note taking to make sense of it and my brain needs time to recover anyway. Bye for now.
Since everybody else is busy campaigning that leaves only me. I will post the results of my investigations, or something or other,
I was going to start with the Security bill, figuring that one way to approach the man was to see how he was reflected in his legislation. But the bill isn't a very revelatory document and it'll take more than a day of note taking to make sense of it and my brain needs time to recover anyway. Bye for now.
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