Category: Reader Tips

Reader Tips

What’s good for the dinosaur…
A reader advises that Liberal candidate Andrew Telegdi “has plagiarized a chart listing the local all-candidates debates from the rival Conservative campaign. What’s the clue? The number to call for more information on the debates is 888-8300 – the campaign office of Ajmer Mandur the CPC candidate”
Well plagarize is a strong word. Let’s give the Telegdi campaign the benefit of the doubt and call them lazy.
The Infozone is noticing that the third party advertisers have waited for the final week of the campaign unload their guns on the issues.
January 17th Scandalpalooza! – or – another bad day to be a Liberal
A very good piece by Tim Denton – here’s a teaser;

Those of us who were born in the era of nation states have no innate sense of what it is like to have no control over one’s legal and constitutional environment. I can imagine that kids born in Canada after the 1982 Constitution are accustomed to the ground rules changing suddenly. Gay marriage, polygamy: all can be introduced easily when the apropriate agents of change decide it is time. Just run a challenge up to the Supreme Court based on the support of the Legal Education Action Fund and presto! there is no further basis for refusing a man several wives, or to run a swingers’ bar, but every reason to confiscate handguns from the law-abiding. Just ask the Court!

Add your own in the comments!

Reader Tips

Peaktalk, on the media backlash against Paul Martin.
Blackrod on the old holdouts.
Michael Ignatieff’s secret life.
A piece on
Alan Cutler. If you haven’t already, I strongly urge you to read this older one at the Western Standard from the “Libranos” issue.
Linda Williamson has noticed Paul Martin’s penchant for labelling millions of us as UnCanadian;

The sickening thing is that Martin is telling voters that his opponents — and by extension, the millions now considering voting for them — represent un- Canadian, “far-right,” anti-democratic, anti-woman, anti-gay, anti-human- rights and (gasp!) American views. And that the only Canadian way to stop the onslaught is to back a party that will make a drastic change to our Constitution by removing the limited power of Parliament to overrule the courts.

Add your own in the comments, or send a trackback.
Update: For those following the ongoing subliminal messaging at the Liberal Party website, this morning it features holes in the ground, surrounded by mud.
holes.jpg
It’s a quagmire.

Reader Tips

And quick links.
The Taxpayers Federation have been blogging up a storm lately. A good resource for other bloggers, too – add them to your blogroll.
The Liberals corner the widow and orphans vote.

“I have an idea, Mr. Prime Minister… propose a Heroes Fund like they’ve had in the States for years. Like the one that the NDP proposed last year and we rejected. “

Or maybe not.

“I would give everything in the world to have my son back,” said Schiemann. “I would say to the prime minister, keep your $250,000, keep your $25 million (and use it) so this doesn’t happen again.”

When the New York Times and the Washington Post, both pillars of the liberal media establishment, take notice of how anti-American Canadian politics has become, you’ve touched a political nerve.”
India is dumping Kyoto.
Again, thanks to everyone who took time to send tips – wish I could use more, but just getting through email each day is a daunting task! (There are over 1,000 visits an hour here at peak traffic, to give you an idea.) If you don’t get a response, it’s because I simply don’t have the time to answer them all.
Don’t forget the other great bloggers out there just itching to feature your story – and they might have more time to deal with it!
Speaking of which – here’s one from a reader who wishes to remain anonymous;

Today the Ottawa District Labour Council and Shawn McKenney(sp?) of the NDP made a complaint to the CRTC about election bias at CFRA am radio. This station has not been toeing the Liberal line but instead has been interviewing all party contenders and giving quite balanced coverage of the election. The station has Lowell Green, Steve Madely, Michael Harris, Rob Snow and other talk show hosts who inform the public on all kinds of issues and is perhaps the only station that actually doesn’t pillory the Conservatives regularly. […] I only heard of the complaint on Michael Harris show…

A reader provides the link to this Sun column by Harris.
The email address of the Ottawa & District Labour Council is odlc@ottawalabour.org

Teaching Halliburton A Thing Or Two

From Northwestern University Press: Paul Martin & Companies;

Using Paul Martin’s business dealings as an example, Alain Deneault presents the Martin case as a symptom of a world-wide crisis of public ethics; demonstrates that it is part of a lawless global culture that increasingly allows the world’s largest financial transactions to escape all forms of control, regulation, and contribution to the wealth of nations; and spells out what this means for all of us.

Speaking of which…

(click for larger version)

Oh, what the heck! For old times’ sake this one too…

Those Bush/Cheney neo-cons only wish they had it so good.

Reader Tips

So many of you have sent on this David Frum piece in the National Post, I just figured everyone had read it. In case you haven’t, here’s a teaser;

If there is any problem in Toronto, the Mayor insists, it is traceable to the United States: “The U.S. is exporting its problem of violence to the streets of Toronto,” David Miller complained on Dec. 27.

I think you’ll have an idea where Frum goes with this one.
Reality checking the Paul Martin policy towards China: “Whether or not Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party are “scary” is something Canadians will decide for themselves, but the prospect of Prime Minister Martin’s re-election is absolutely terrifying.
Earnscliffe finally makes an appearance in the campaign – represented by a suitcase of cash. If you don’t know who Earnscliffe is, perform this SDA search for background.
Pascal Bighetty, chief of the Mathias Colomb First Nation raises the prospect of Indian terrorism. His “warning” has the ring of an “or else” about it.
Add your own in the comments.

Reader Tips

If you’re finding it hard to keep track, here’s a site with a list of the RCMP investigations into the Liberal government and civil service over the past three years – all 33 of them.
Via At Maggie’s Farm this observation on gun control from John Lott;

You don’t have to live next to the United States to see how hard it is to stop criminals from getting guns. The easy part is getting law-abiding citizens to disarm; the hard part is getting the guns from criminals. Drug gangs that are firing guns in places like Toronto seem to have little trouble getting the drugs that they sell and it should not be surprising that they can get the weapons they need as well.
The experiences in the U.K. and Australia, two island nations whose borders are much easier to monitor, should also give Canadian gun controllers some pause. The British government banned handguns in 1997 but recently reported that gun crime in England and Wales nearly doubled in the four years from 1998-99 to 2002-03.

Lots more there to debunk our fondest Canadian mythologies about the US crime rate.
The world’s leading consensus builder on climate change – George Bush.
Saskatchewan people – Working together to prevent crime!

Reader Tips

Canadian Sentinel raises conflict of interest questions about Gomery appointee Raymond Garneau.
CTV’s Craig Oliver blames John Gomery for the rise of separatism in Quebec.
Share your predictions at Cjunkpundit.
China E-Lobby has initiated a “Canada file” – “…anything caught in the daily fish for news involves Canada and Communist China, we’re moving it to the top or near-top of the News of the Day.”
Jerry Aldini;

“Hey, when’s the last time you heard someone say, “You know what the problem is with this country? It’s that kids don’t have enough government-funded, structured learning before kindergarten!”

Drop your own in the comments.

Christmas Day Reader Tips

And still, 187 people checked in here in the last hour.
Though admittedly, I popped out to do a small hand lettering job this afternoon, so who am I to question how people choose to spend Christmas day?
So, if you’re all truly that bored or just wearing off the turkey, and you find something good out there while surfing that you think others might enjoy, drop a link in the comments.
Update – Ask, and ye shall receive… this is a good one. Move over, beer and popcorn – meet “Olivia Chow Chow”. (screenshot)
Stephen Taylor has lots, lots more.

Lighter Fare

My Kingdom for a camera!

Look, up in the sky. It’s a bird, it’s a plane! No! It’s Separatist Chicken, and it’s after Prime Minister Paul Martin.
When Martin arrived at a Christmas reception Thursday at a restaurant in Gatineau, Que., he was greeted by a fowl sight – someone dressed as a chicken. The chicken held up a sign in French that read “Martin – debate,” an obvious shot at Martin’s refusal to debate Bloc Quebecois Leader Gilles Duceppe on federalism.

Thanks to “Ottawa Core”, we have the evidence!
Kathy Shaidle has a few words for five new readers.
J. Kelly Nestruck’s Actual Conversation With An Intelligent Torontonian who Lives in Cabbagetown This Evening.. I think he’s being generous.
This is a guy I could grow to like.
And from the comments, “steve” has the quote of the day;

“Layton, Harper and Duceppe have become so close they’re thinking of making a cowboy movie together.”

With Christmas approaching, I’d like to lighten things up. If you have other items of “lighter fare”, short jokes, funny blog posts etc. to share in the comments, feel welcome.

Reader Tips

It’s been a busy week, and I’ve only been able to scratch the surface of the many, many you’ve sent in. .
2005 Awards for the year’s worst reporting!
Canada Free Press;

Now it makes sense why four years ago, Canadian Steamship Lines International, a CSL subsidiary, entered into a deal with Shanghai based Jiangnan Shipyards to build two bulk cargo vessels-at $45- million per ship.

The CBC has been forced to withdraw a Harper bashing cartoon.
Senior government officials went into panic mode last fall after 46 top-secret cabinet documents went missing.”
This incident is a couple weeks old, but it’s worth a chuckle.

“Sometimes election campaigns can travel to so many cities and towns in a day it gets hard to remember what time it is or where you are. But Prime Minister Paul Martin appeared to forget what country he was in yesterday. During a series of interviews with Chinese media organizations, Mr. Martin attempted to explain to the interviewer how important the Chinese Canadian community is to the country. In fact, he announced that Canada has geographically moved its borders to be closer to them. “What we really are saying is we’re a major Asian country,” Mr. Martin told Omni TV, to roars of laughter from the Canadian media watching the interview.”

Add your own in the comments.

Reader Tips

A story that asks for more looking into? Costco employee claims he was fired over KofC lesbian hall rental.
China E-Lobby: The decision by Canada’s ruling Liberal Party to give the pro-Communist National Congress of Chinese Canadians $12.5 million in compensation dedicated for victims of Canada’s 19th Century Chinese head tax

.
I’m sure they’ll spend it wisely.
Adam Yoshida: fixing bayonets!
Bush’s approval rating is rising fairly signficantly. Which is why you haven’t heard about it. And why the successful Iraq election story was about the 8th item in on the CTV National last night – just behind a polar bear story.
Meanwhile, Canada’s approval rating is dropping in the US. Well, we finally got them to notice us, eh?
Hong Kong is baffled. Free trade protests? Who can conceive of such a thing?
*Guess Who’s Coming to Iftar* – A meal to remember with Hezbollah. MIchael Totten in the LA Weekly.
You know the drill!
.

Reader Tips

A few items caught in passing –
M.K. Braatanflies to High Level, Alberta;

“When I checked in my luggage I asked to bring on my laptop bag with me as a carry-on, and they said ‘Sorry, there isn’t room for that on the plane.’ Uh oh.”

Yes Candace, it is going to be a long campaign.
The UN Money For Smog Program ramps up, with Maurice Strong, Power Corp and the developing nation of China – of course – as leading beneficiaries.
Bob Tarantino debaffles polling;

When the different group of people asked on Day 10 provide a different answer than the group of people asked on Day 1, brows get furrowed and talk of “momentum” fills the air.

An NDP supporter finally gets the attention he deserves. Apparently, this …

… wasn’t working for him.
Add your own in the comments.

Quick Links And Reader Tips

I’m heading out on vacation tomorrow (be back the 12th) and I’ve got a busy day of errands, so unfortunately can’t do justice to the many, many links readers have sent. A few picked at random will start you off, though.
China ELobby has a Canadian angle on Tibetan mining interests.
10 Most Fascinating People of the blogosphere, at Right Wing News.
Everything you wanted to know about Liberal scandals, and then some. They’re looking for volunteers. Who wouldn’t? Keeping track of the Liberals is a full time job.
Adscam: some get a curfew, some get their job back, some get a Costa Rican ambassadorship.
John Rosenthal onAP-Ipsos polling and why Americans aren’t French, after all.
And lots of stuff at Newsbeat1. As usual!
Drop your own in the comments.

Reader Tips, Quick Links

This is kind of cute.
Lots of comments today about the “BOOOOOOOOO” heard round B.C. Place Stadium.
With all the yackity yack about the “absurdity” of linking the LIberal Party with organized crime (however you choose to define it) this link offers a few archived articles on the topic, including this quote from September 2000;

“For the first time in this country, we are seeing signs of criminal organizations that are so sophisticated that they actually are focusing on destabilizing certain aspects of our society,” said Commissioner Zaccardelli. The commissioner is a 30-year veteran of the RCMP who was previously the force’s deputy commissioner in charge of the fight against organized crime.
“That’s a real threat to us. There are criminal organizations that target this destabilization of our parliamentary system.”

Well, I guess this helps explain why Liberal bloggers continue to struggle for both traffic and influence…

However, on-line advertising may play less of a role in this election. With Internet ad sales booming right now, the home pages of some web portals, such as Yahoo Canada, are being booked months in advance, ad buyers say.
Meanwhile, the Liberals are putting less of a focus on getting their message out through political blogs in this campaign. “That was a factor in the last election and, frankly, of limited value,” Mr. MacKinnon said. “We think it’s overvalued and overrated. What you have there is the most opinionated people in the country. So you’re not changing any minds.”

I guess he doesn’t know about the phone call I got last week…
Add your own in the comments.

Reader Tips

Sunday I wrap up at the dog show (hopefully before noon) and travel the 6 hours home – and we’re expecting “weather”, so don’t expect much in the way of new posts until Monday.
And at that, I have a lot of work to cram in before the weekend.
So, it’s a reader tips post, and open thread.

Reader Tips

No time for surfing tonight, so it’s a reader tips day – you know the drill.
Also, I’m scheduled to be on the The World Tonight with Rob Breakenridge (770 am, I think) here in Calgary at 8ish pm local time.
You can listen live here.

Gettin’ Out Of Dodge

I’m leaving for Calgary today for the weekend, so it’s a quick reader tips post. Drop your finds in the comments or send a trackback. I will be checking in from time to time, but blogging will be light until Monday.
A good opportunity to exand your blog horizons – check out the sites on the blogroll!

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