Moved to Newshoggers
A very belated announcement, but I'm now doing my regular blogging at Newshoggers.com, link on the sidebar. This site will remain up for archival purposes only.
A contrarian product of my own contrariness
A very belated announcement, but I'm now doing my regular blogging at Newshoggers.com, link on the sidebar. This site will remain up for archival purposes only.
A couple of interesting juxtaposed headlines for Iqaluit recently. First
Iqaluit sweats in record heat wave
Ice in Frobisher Bay causing headaches for ships, coast guard
Harper isn't ignoring Kadr because he's brown-skinned or a Muslim. He's ignoring him because he doesn't want to upset his hero Bush. The fact that he's brown-skinned and Muslim are just a happy coincidence.
It's what we get for electing a poodle.
Listen John, we already pay good money for hacks like Bill Kristol to pen attack screeds against Obama. You're going to have to do better.
To that end, the article would have to articulate, in concrete terms, how Senator McCain defines victory in Iraq. It would also have to lay out a clear plan for achieving victory — with troops levels, timetables and measures for compelling the Iraqis to cooperate. And it would need to describe the Senator's Afghanistan strategy, spelling out how it meshes with his Iraq plan.
The headlines sounds good:
20% increase in energy efficiency in 12 years, premiers pledge
Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald said the No. 1 issue facing Canadians this winter is rising energy prices, but the targets the premiers have set out are achievable goals.
Well. this sounds like a brilliant way to win "hearts and minds".
"Israeli military officials have identified Hamas's civilian infrastructure in the West Bank as a major source of the Islamic group's popularity, and have begun raiding and shutting down these institutions in cities like Hebron, Nablus and Qalqilyah.
"Last week, troops focused their efforts in Nablus, raiding the city hall and confiscating computers. They also stormed into a shopping mall and posted closure notices on the shop windows. A girls' school and a medical centre were shut down in the city, and a charitable association had its computers impounded and documents seized.
"This policy, officials say, is meant to deny the Islamic group, which is committed to Israel's destruction, the ability to use these institutions as a pipeline by which money is channelled to finance attacks on the Jewish state. But the main goal of this campaign is to stem Hamas's growing popularity in the West Bank, and ensure it does not seize control of the area as it did in Gaza a year ago, when its forces vanquished the more moderate Fatah movement headed by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas...
"In recent months, the army has also closed down an orphanage, a bakery and other institutions in Hebron, which Israel believes are associated with Hamas. In Gaza, meanwhile, Israel and the Islamic group are observing a truce, but this does not pertain to the West Bank where the Israeli military operates freely."
Are they serious? Having Israel attack Hamas orphanages and medical centers is supposed to make Palestinians turn against Hamas?
The Conservative government has appointed Preston Manning, the founder of the Reform party, to the federal science advisory panel.
Manning joins the Council of Canadian Academies, whose mandate is to provide an "independent, expert assessment of the science underlying pressing issues and matters of public interest," according to its website.
The group is supposed to "build public confidence that policy and regulatory decisions are being based on broadly accepted scientific knowledge and evidence."
. . . just not necessarily theirs.
It's not surprising that Harper and Co. are touting the agreement as a major step, particularly given it doesn't really require them to do much. The emissions target is for 2050, without any intermediate targets that they might have to actually work towards meeting while they're in office. Not only that, but their 50% cut in emissions quite notably lacks a quantifiable number to start with. If that wasn't enough stupidity, the G8 also passed this little gem:
G8 leaders also made a separate statement on oil production, calling on oil-rich nations, including Canada, to ramp up production to bring skyrocketing prices back down.
As the Group of Eight summit wrapped up in northern Japan on Wednesday, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said it's a "mathematical certainty" that developing countries will do the brunt of the work in lowering global greenhouse gas emissions.
President George Bush signed off with a defiant farewell over his refusal to accept global climate change targets at his last G8 summit.
As he prepared to fly out from Japan, he told his fellow leaders: "Goodbye from the world's biggest polluter."
It appears that Prime Minister "Yo Harper!" is continuing his Bush-emulating ways, outsourcing food safety to the very companies who are supposed to be regulated, and firing the scientist who stumbled upon the plan.
Confidential documents insecurely posted on the Canadian Food Inspection Agency's computer network laid out sensitive plans to turn over food inspections and labelling to industry and also led to the firing of the scientist who stumbled upon them.
Luc Pomerleau, a biologist with a 20-year "unblemished record" in government, said he was fired last week for "gross misconduct' and breaching security because he sent the documents to his union. Pomerleau, who is a union steward, also was deemed "unreliable," which means he no longer has the security clearance to do his job or to work again in the public service.
She said the incident exposed another embarrassing security breach for the government, but the mistake rested with whomever authorized the documents be put on the server. Coincidentally, the circulation of the document came to light the same the week Maxime Bernier resigned from his position as federal affairs minister, after leaving classified documents in the apartment of former girlfriend Julie Couillard.
Treasury Board is reviewing the government security policy as part of its massive policy review. The new policy, which is being updated to reflect concerns about national security, will tighten rules for sharing classified information, as well how to handle it and destroy it.
Via Panglossian Notes, this story from the Globe and Mail regarding a serious lack of planning and preparation in last year's "sovereignty exercise"
The Canadian Forces have come under fire in an internal report highly critical of military leaders' lack of interest in an Arctic sovereignty protection exercise last August.
. . .
It says Canadian military leaders didn't place a high enough priority on the operation, and it singles out for criticism Canada Command, the military organization given the task of defending this country.
The report says Canada Command failed to issue a set of orders that had been planned to help disseminate instructions on Operation Nanook.
“[It's] a sad testament to the lack of interest in this operation and its associated training events displayed by the superior HQ that directed it to be conducted in the first place.”
The Italian government is about to declare Pompeii a disaster zone, only 1,929 years after the disaster.
Seriously though, for such an archeological treasure to be used as a garbage dump is simply unforgivable.
Never heard of this Prank 3:16 thing, but this particular prank is funny on a couple of levels. Convincing somebody who believes in the Rapture that it has happened and that she's been left behind.
The US has Roe v. Wade. Canada has Dr. Henry Morgentaler. Twenty years ago, he took the fight for abortion rights to the Supreme Court and won. He's now been named to the Order of Canada, a well-deserved and long-postponed honour for this survivour of Auschwitz. His battle has been a long one, and as might be expected, still capable of generating a great deal of controversy.
In 1967, Morgentaler made his debut on the national stage and entered the abortion debate in a dramatic way. He testified before a government committee considering changes to the abortion law, advocating that any woman should have the right to end her pregnancy without risking death.
It was a bold statement. At the time, performing an abortion could land a doctor in jail with a life sentence. Women who had abortions faced imprisonment of up to two years.
Against that backdrop, Morgentaler at first refused requests to end pregnancies. But by 1969, he said he could refuse no longer. He opened an abortion clinic in Montreal and openly began performing abortions illegally — thousands of them. It was no secret; he gave interviews and even allowed TV news crews to film. He viewed the access to abortion as a simple matter of human rights.
Condemnation came quickly and on a variety of fronts. It didn’t take long for his first arrest.
He was subsequently acquitted by a jury. But the Quebec Court of Appeal overturned that acquittal and sentenced him to prison. He served 10 months in Montreal’s Bordeaux Jail.
The law was eventually changed so that a jury acquittal could no longer be overturned on appeal, another piece of Morgentaler's legacy.
There would, of course, be many more arrests, two more jury acquittals (one in Quebec and one in Ontario), at least eight raids on his clinics, one firebombing and huge legal bills.
Father Larre, on the other hand, is probably best known for being convicted in 1992 on two counts of physically abusing children in his care at Bosco Homes in Saskatchewan: slapping and choking a female, and forcing another to take pills to teach her a lesson about drug abuse.
Nine other charges including one of sexual assault were overturned.
In 1998, Larre registered as a psychologist in B.C., but the B.C. College of Psychologists suspended his registration because it felt he posed "an immediate risk to the public."
MP Maurice Vellacott, a Conservative from Saskatchewan who opposes abortion, told the Globe and Mail on Monday that he heard Morgentaler's appointment was not unanimous.
"This is a pretty divisive issue," he said. "I think we can all agree on that, so why would we have the highest honour in the country being issued when there is obviously a strong difference of opinion about it?"
The Harper government said it had nothing to do with the appointment, which was announced by the Governor General’s office on the advice of a high-powered committee.
“The Conservative government is not involved in either deliberations or decisions with respect to which individuals are appointed to the Order of Canada,” said a statement issued Tuesday evening by Dimitri Soudas, a spokesman for Harper.