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From NY Times
January 22, 2006 Conservative Party in Canada Appears Poised for Election Victory By CLIFFORD KRAUSS TORONTO, Jan. 22 - Unless every national poll here is off, what is perhaps the world's winningest political party is heading toward a humiliating defeat on Monday. Stephen Harper, 46, an economist and social conservative who is writing a history of ice hockey, appears poised to lead his Conservative Party to victory over Prime Minister Paul Martin's Liberal Party, something that seemed highly improbable just a few weeks ago. The Liberals won the last four national elections, governing Canada for 13 years - as the party did for three-quarters of the last century. But whether a Harper victory would represent a seismic shift in a country that has long promoted itself as a beacon of social democracy and frequent critic of American foreign policy remains an open question. If he cannot muster a majority in the House of Commons, Mr. Harper may lead a weak, unstable government opposed by three left-of-center parties represented in Parliament. Mr. Harper - in a campaign largely free of ideology - promised to cut the national sales tax, grant families direct child care for preschoolers and introduce mandatory prison sentences. A longtime member of the House of Commons representing Alberta, he has a conservative record, but he steered clear in recent months of promising major changes to the national health insurance program. The absence of strong ideological overtones would appear to make a Thatcherite-style revolution unlikely, even in the face of a strong Conservative showing. Mr. Harper even noted that judges appointed by Liberal governments and an appointed Senate filled with Liberals would serve as checks on his power. "I'm basically a cautious person," Mr. Harper said in a recent speech. "I believe it's better to light one candle than to promise a million light bulbs." A change in Ottawa would almost certainly bring, at the least, a warming of relations with Washington, which have been strained since the American-led invasion of Iraq and have worsened over a series of recent trade disputes and Canadian moves to soften domestic drug laws. Mr. Harper, while careful not to appear overly supportive of President Bush, has suggested he would reconsider Canada's refusal to join Washington's missile defense program. He has also promised to increase military spending to make a bigger contribution to NATO and peacekeeping operations in places like Haiti and Afghanistan. But he also said recently that he had no intention of sending troops to Iraq. Mr. Martin, a former finance minister and shipping executive, has tried to emphasize the Liberal government's stewardship of the strong national economy, marked by low inflation and unemployment, a strengthening currency and a large federal budget surplus. He has promised to create a national child-care program, expand aid grants to college students and ban handguns. These are not unpopular stances, but the decline of Liberal fortunes is due less to any shift in Canadian public opinion than to two years of federal inquiries documenting an embarrassing party money-laundering and campaign-finance scheme designed to counter separatists after the close 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum. Adding to the Liberals' troubles, in the middle of the campaign federal police investigators announced that they were looking into new reports of possible Liberal government leaks of tax information to friendly investors that spurred a flurry of insider trading. And in Quebec, once a bastion of Liberal support, the party's free fall quickened with the publication of a book documenting accusations that the federal government laundered millions of dollars of illegal aid to a group opposing separatists during the referendum campaign. "Will you tell us, Mr. Martin, how many criminal investigations are going on in your government?" was one of many stinging lines Mr. Harper offered up in four televised debates. "We'll get past the scandals and establish accountability in Ottawa." In recent weeks, the Liberals tried to recover votes with attack advertisements linking Mr. Harper to President Bush, who is unpopular in Canada, and suggestions in speeches that Mr. Harper would attempt to reverse the legalization of same-sex marriage and abortion rights. "A Harper victory will put a smile on George W. Bush's face," one Martin commercial said. "The farthest of the U.S. far right - that's what Stephen Harper means when he says it's time for a change in Canada," Mr. Martin told a rally here. "Well let me tell you, Stephen Harper, the United States is our neighbor, it is not our nation." Various national polls in the final days of the campaign have shown the Conservatives about 10 points ahead of the Liberals, but the Conservatives may still fail to win a majority in the House of Commons. A last-minute seepage of support from the social democratic New Democratic Party to the ruling party might deny the Conservatives a clear victory. Polls at the end of the week showed the Liberals making a modest comeback, but pollsters said it would take a miracle for them to win. Mr. Harper leads a party that only three years ago merged a very conservative Canadian Alliance Party with the much more moderate Progressive Conservative Party, and the coalition is marked by regional differences in social and economic outlook. "There are different factions and backgrounds and points of view in the Conservative coalition," noted Desmond Morton, a McGill University historian. It will not be easy to manage the factions, he said. "Can Harper control his own ideological instincts or clothe them in language and concepts that most Canadians tolerate?" Mr. Morton asked. Mr. Harper's greatest success has so far been his surprising breakthrough in Quebec, a socially liberal province that has rejected the Conservatives in the last several elections by taking votes away from both the Liberals and separatist Bloc Quebecois. The Bloc had been hoping to attract better than 50 percent of the vote, which would have been an enormous symbolic victory heading into an expected third sovereignty referendum in the next five years. Polls now show the Bloc falling quite short of a majority, to the relief of federalist forces that have been in retreat the last two years due to the Liberal scandals. €¢ Copyright 2006The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top |
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No longer poised... the Conservatives here in America are eating it up
i'm su "See!!! The Canadians want to be "morally and ethically superior too!!" God bless 'em... we may even save some room for 'em in heaven!" Kev |
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"kevnbro" > wrote in message
oups.com... > No longer poised... the Conservatives here in America are eating it up > i'm su > > "See!!! The Canadians want to be "morally and ethically superior > too!!" God bless 'em... we may even save some room for 'em in heaven!" > Kev > Canada has been morally and ethically superior to America for decades. With this election they may be on the way to changing that. And, as anyone who pays attention knows, the main reason the conservatives won is the disgust over the terrible corruption that has happened under the liberals. -- Peter Aitken |
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kevnbro a écrit :
> No longer poised... the Conservatives here in America are eating it up i'm su My guess is they have no idea what a minority government means because of the one party system in the US. It works like this. Harper cannot get a majority of votes in the House to enshrine his objectionable views as law, so he has to make an alliance with another party to get at least 154 votes. The only party that can give him that is the Bloc québécois (a party whose reason to exist is to defend Québec while it prepares for separation) which is, by and large, social democrat. The Bloc was the official opposition for two years back in the early days of the Chrétien government, and was probably the best opposition party ever. Harper will not be able to dictate any terms of alliance. It will be the Bloc that will do that, and so there goes the consie dream. To rule he must compromise and we know how consies see compromise as failure :-) Harper's dilemna is that there will be no turning back the civil definition of marriage, there will be no abolishing abortion or building up the military for service in Iraq or any of those other caveman ideas espoused by the right. Down the drain, all those fine promises he made to George last time they were canoodling at the bathhouse. He will be lucky if he gets a budget through (that's what killed Clark in 1980). Also, if he makes Clark's mistake of behaving as though he has a majority, he will be eliminated in the inevitable next election. Basically, the Conservatives are being humiliated, as is just and correct. They badly needed a slap upside the haid to bring them back down to reality and to them, although they don't say it, this is worse than losing the erection :-) > "See!!! The Canadians want to be "morally and ethically superior too!!" Satire. Good one :-) We didn't lie to start a war so I think we are already morally and ethically superior :-) |
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Peter Aitken wrote:
> Canada has been morally and ethically superior to America for decades. With > this election they may be on the way to changing that. > > And, as anyone who pays attention knows, the main reason the conservatives > won is the disgust over the terrible corruption that has happened under the > liberals. While we did a little bend to the right, it is only enough for a minority government, not enough for Harper to do anything stupid like joining Bush in his unjustified invasion of Iraq. It really hurt to put an X next to the name of the Conservative candidate but I was ****ed off by years of Liberals at the trough. We paid millions for an inquiry to find out who was responsible for $100 being paid to pro Liberal advertising company. It cleared Martin, but those responsible never went to jail. No one was even charged. The last straw for me was the proposal of a hand gun ban. The only problem with hand guns in this country is a bunch of west Indian gangs in Toronto running around shooting each other. They got rid of the previous police chief because he wasn't suitably culturally sensitive and replaced him with a PC lackie. Martin lost my the little bit of faith I had in him when he said that legally registered handguns in this country were just a break-in away from being used by criminals. I had to shake my head over that extensive coverage of the fire arms instructor who has been charged with unsafe storage of his handguns. He had them in a case so strong that it took the thieves two days to break into it. Sounds pretty safe to me. The PC crowd wonders how a guy can get a permit to keep restricted firearms in a neighbourhood that is dangerously rife with gangs. I wonder how a neighbourhood can be so unsafe and not be subject to increased police activity. |
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![]() Peter Aitken wrote: > Canada has been morally and ethically superior to America for decades. With > this election they may be on the way to changing that. > > And, as anyone who pays attention knows, the main reason the conservatives > won is the disgust over the terrible corruption that has happened under the > liberals. > Peter Aitken Are you saying that, "even when under a corrupt liberal government, Canada was "morally and ethically superior to America"? And that now that there is a conservative government, that may change? Maybe I don't see your point, you're basically saying there was "terrible corruption" under the liberals and although superior (to the U.S) morally and ethically, there's the possibility that under a conservative government, there's the chance that you no longer will be. So are you saying, you may go from corrupt to corrupt and if so, how does that make you morally and ethically superior? Kev |
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kevnbro a écrit :
> Peter Aitken wrote: > > > Canada has been morally and ethically superior to America for decades. With > > this election they may be on the way to changing that. > > > > And, as anyone who pays attention knows, the main reason the conservatives > > won is the disgust over the terrible corruption that has happened underthe > > liberals. > > > Peter Aitken > > Are you saying that, "even when under a corrupt liberal government, > Canada was "morally and ethically superior to America"? And that now > that there is a conservative government, that may change? > Maybe I don't see your point, you're basically saying there was > "terrible corruption" under the liberals and although superior (to the > U.S) morally and ethically, there's the possibility that under a > conservative government, there's the chance that you no longer will be. > So are you saying, you may go from corrupt to corrupt and if so, how > does that make you morally and ethically superior? On November 15 2005, the former leader of what became the Conservative party quoted Lord Acton: "Mr. Speaker, the power consolidated in the Prime Minister's Office would be a dream for anyone who wants total power. The Prime Minister can and does appoint the Governor General who is also the commander in chief of the armed forces, all lieutenant governors, senators, Supreme Court judges, Federal Court judges, the cabinet, key positions on regulatory agencies and the heads of major boards and commissions. That is a dream for anyone who is seeking power. "Lord Acton said that power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Therefore, it is no surprise that judgment is corrupted when one has that much power. I am not even putting a moral tinge to it, just judgment itself." The Conservatives are now in the Prime Minister's office, and if they don't see the irony in being avowed Christians seeking to become absolutely corrupt, well...to quote the Joker: What this town needs is an enema! |
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kevnbro wrote:
> Are you saying that, "even when under a corrupt liberal government, > Canada was "morally and ethically superior to America"? And that now > that there is a conservative government, that may change? > Maybe I don't see your point, you're basically saying there was > "terrible corruption" under the liberals and although superior (to the > U.S) morally and ethically, there's the possibility that under a > conservative government, there's the chance that you no longer will be. > So are you saying, you may go from corrupt to corrupt and if so, how > does that make you morally and ethically superior? Kev Perhaps it is a matter of scale. We had a lot of political patronage and money being paid for work that wasn't done. It pales in comparison to launching an invasion on a foreign country on the basis of faulty information, especially when more accurate intelligence was repressed, and the awarding of huge untendered contracts to a company formerly run by the VP to repair damage from a war before it stars. |
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>Satire. Good one :-) We didn't lie to start a war so I think we are already morally and ethically superior :-)
Hey... "We" didn't start any war... our president did! ![]() Nor do I claim to be superior to anyone in anyway (proclaiming superiority is pharisaic) but I will say that polls show that the majority of Americans currently dissaprove of the war in Iraq, feel they were mislead into this war and no longer trust our government; I think that speaks volumes for the American mind-set when it comes to ethics. Kev |
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kevnbro a écrit :
> >Satire. Good one :-) We didn't lie to start a war so I think we are already morally and > >ethically superior :-) > > Hey... "We" didn't start any war... our president did! ![]() > Nor do I claim to be superior to anyone in anyway (proclaiming > superiority is pharisaic) but I will say that polls show that the > majority of Americans currently dissaprove of the war in Iraq, feel > they were mislead into this war and no longer trust our government; I > think that speaks volumes for the American mind-set when it comes to > ethics. Kev And how many innocent people have died getting there? We stayed out of it entirely. No innocent people in Iraq were killed as a result of Canadian participation, because there was no such participation. Pointing out a fact is hardly pharisaic. It may however be jejune :-) |
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"Dave Smith" > wrote in message
... > kevnbro wrote: > >> Are you saying that, "even when under a corrupt liberal government, >> Canada was "morally and ethically superior to America"? And that now >> that there is a conservative government, that may change? >> Maybe I don't see your point, you're basically saying there was >> "terrible corruption" under the liberals and although superior (to the >> U.S) morally and ethically, there's the possibility that under a >> conservative government, there's the chance that you no longer will be. >> So are you saying, you may go from corrupt to corrupt and if so, how >> does that make you morally and ethically superior? Kev > > Perhaps it is a matter of scale. We had a lot of political patronage and > money > being paid for work that wasn't done. It pales in comparison to launching > an > invasion on a foreign country on the basis of faulty information, > especially when > more accurate intelligence was repressed, and the awarding of huge > untendered > contracts to a company formerly run by the VP to repair damage from a war > before > it stars. > The corruption under the liberal government was of course wrong, but it is just the counterpart to the Abramoff scandal and the way corporations have bought most of the government in the US. But these things pale in comparison to more serious matters. Compared to the US, how many countries has Canada invaded illegally and without justification? How many innocent noncombatants has it killed? How many of its own citizens has it killed and maimed? How many people has it tortured and killed in prisons? How much illegal spying on its own citizens has it conducted? Get it? Peter -- Peter Aitken Visit my recipe and kitchen myths page at www.pgacon.com/cooking.htm > |
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> We paid millions for an inquiry to find out who was responsible for
> $100 being paid to pro Liberal advertising company. It cleared Martin, but > those responsible never went to jail. No one was even charged. The actual amount diverted has yet to be established. The overall money involved was 250$ million but a substantial amount of that appears to have been spent properly and on legitimate projects. So, what Harper succeeded in doing was to force an election before Canadians realized that the amount that was actually being discussed was much less than they could imagine and that they could possibly start forgiving the liberals (of Chrétien, not Martin as none of the money was dispensed under his administration) for doing exactly what they wanted them to do in the first place. What Canadians are upset about is not that Québec was encouraged to stay in Canada, but that it wasn't out of love...they had to pay for it. And it's not like the Parti québécois benefitted financially by it either. It's like trying to date a woman and then realizing that her husband expects payment for that. Well, boo hoo. Personally I fail to see what the complaint is. Those who wanted this got what they wanted. The part that were kickbacks, I agree that those should be prosecuted, but not all sponsorship transfers were criminal. I've been dealing with these files for over two years now. Quite a bit of it was as innocuous as any other sponsorship. What must also be noted is that the entire program was created under Joe Clark. So perhaps the Conservatives have some share of responsibility for it, except that Clark has dissociated himself from Harper, thank the gods. |
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![]() alsandor wrote: > And how many innocent people have died getting there? We stayed out of > it entirely. No innocent people in Iraq were killed as a result of > Canadian participation, because there was no such participation. > > Pointing out a fact is hardly pharisaic. It may however be jejune :-) I don't deny that many innocent people have died because of our government's decision to go to war in Iraq; that however has little or nothing to do with the morality of the masses in the U.S. as we had no vote in the matter. I will say that Americans will take aggressive actions toward anyone who crosses our borders and murders 2,700 of our citizens and you might be surprised what Canada would've chosen to do had it been 2,700 of you. Not being an American citizen, you're in no position to judge. Kev |
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Peter Aitken a écrit :
> Compared to the US, how many countries has Canada > invaded illegally and without justification? Afghanistan. In fact, we still have troops there. > How many innocent noncombatants > has it killed? Hard to tell. Obviously much less than the US as we do not tend to think of ourselves as a god's gift to mankind. > How many of its own citizens has it killed and maimed? How > many people has it tortured and killed in prisons? How much illegal spying > on its own citizens has it conducted? Well, that last one is currently under investigation. We know of at least six Canadian citizens who were, based on the colour of their skin and with the approval of the RCMP, transferred by US customs to Syria where they were detained and tortured. As it turns out, the one whose name appears on the investigation, Maher Arar, was determined to be innocent of any wrongdoing and this was known by our secret services BEFORE he was deported to Syria. So there is no overwhelming reason to believe that the others are not similarly innocent. And the fact that we don't think of ourselves as a target for terrorists fails to fuel a climate where repressive fascistic ideas are given credence. In a climate of paranoia, we must always remember one of Hitler's primary rules: people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one (excerpt from the OSS profile on Hitler). |
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![]() "kevnbro" > wrote in message oups.com... > > Peter Aitken wrote: > >> Canada has been morally and ethically superior to America for decades. >> With >> this election they may be on the way to changing that. >> >> And, as anyone who pays attention knows, the main reason the >> conservatives >> won is the disgust over the terrible corruption that has happened under >> the >> liberals. > >> Peter Aitken > > > Are you saying that, "even when under a corrupt liberal government, > Canada was "morally and ethically superior to America"? And that now > that there is a conservative government, that may change? > Maybe I don't see your point, you're basically saying there was > "terrible corruption" under the liberals and although superior (to the > U.S) morally and ethically, there's the possibility that under a > conservative government, there's the chance that you no longer will be. > So are you saying, you may go from corrupt to corrupt and if so, how > does that make you morally and ethically superior? Kev > Well, Canada didn't invade a sovereign country, and justify the action using an endlessly evolving set of lies. |
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kevnbro a écrit :
> I don't deny that many innocent people have died because of our > government's decision to go to war in Iraq; that however has little or > nothing to do with the morality of the masses in the U.S. as we had no > vote in the matter. Of course you did. You could have turfed Bush out of the oval orifice in 2004 but you didn't. > I will say that Americans will take aggressive actions toward anyone > who crosses our borders and murders 2,700 of our citizens and you might > be surprised what Canada would've chosen to do had it been 2,700 of > you. I don't follow that. > Not being an American citizen, you're in no position to judge. Being human means I'm in a position to express concern. I can repeat the facts. I do not judge. |
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The Wolf wrote:
> Conservative Party in Canada Appears Poised for Election Victory > Another idiot for the plonk file. -- If televison's a babysitter, the Internet is a drunk librarian who won't shut up. -- Dorothy Gambrell (http://catandgirl.com) |
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"kevnbro" > wrote in message
oups.com... > > alsandor wrote: >> And how many innocent people have died getting there? We stayed out of >> it entirely. No innocent people in Iraq were killed as a result of >> Canadian participation, because there was no such participation. >> >> Pointing out a fact is hardly pharisaic. It may however be jejune :-) > > I don't deny that many innocent people have died because of our > government's decision to go to war in Iraq; that however has little or > nothing to do with the morality of the masses in the U.S. as we had no > vote in the matter. You *could* say that when the masses elected Nookular Boy the first time, they couldn't have known that he'd invade another country. But, 54% elected him the second time, knowing full well that he was a loose cannon. Does 54% qualify as "the masses"? If not, what's the magic number? > I will say that Americans will take aggressive actions toward anyone > who crosses our borders and murders 2,700 of our citizens... Got any thoughts on when we might take the aforementioned aggressive action against the people responsible for 9/11? |
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Doug Kanter a écrit :
> Well, Canada didn't invade a sovereign country, and justify the action using > an endlessly evolving set of lies. Canada did participate in the invasion of Afghanistan, as part of a NATO sanctioned operation and is still there. George invoked article 5 of the NATO Treaty, the mutual codefense agreement. So, one could say it was sanctioned by more than the US but whether it was "legal" is an entirely different matter. I would say not. |
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alsandor wrote:
> kevnbro a écrit : > [snip] > > I will say that Americans will take aggressive actions toward anyone > > who crosses our borders and murders 2,700 of our citizens and you might > > be surprised what Canada would've chosen to do had it been 2,700 of > > you. > > I don't follow that. > [snip] That's probably a reference to the destruction of the World Trade Center. You may not be familiar with the notion that the U.S. government may do whatever it wants around the world as long as it mouths the phrase "nine-eleven" while it's doing it. It's the idea of a minority here in the U.S., but unfortunately it's the minority led by Dick Cheney. -aem |
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>You *could* say that when the masses elected Nookular Boy the first time,
>they couldn't have known that he'd invade another country. But, 54% elected >him the second time, knowing full well that he was a loose cannon. Does 54% >qualify as "the masses"? If not, what's the magic number? Yes, Bush was elected to a second term by a narrow majority margin (or so we were told) but it wasn't a bloodlust that got him re-elected. During his second term he very cunningly (more than likely Cheney's idea as G.W is too stupid to pull this off himself) used the "moral authority" and "moral clarity" cards which were aces-in-the-hole. When you're dealing with a country that claims a 70%-75% christianity rate, convincing them that you have "God on your side", is a guarantee of vast support, (not too mention his admins. assault on *** marriage). Even with such a hand, his battle for re-election was no cake-walk. You also have to understand that a very large number of our elderly still remember WWII and the importance of supporting the president during a time of war- keep in mind also the "you're either with us or against us" strategy the GOP used to garner support; basically saying without actually saying it, "if you don't support me and my war you may as well be a terrorist yourself".( His people knew what they were doing.) So criticize the American people all you want but know that our history will be the ultimate judge and I don't think it's going to be too kind to this administration. K |
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Default User a écrit :
> The Wolf wrote: > > > Conservative Party in Canada Appears Poised for Election Victory > > > Another idiot for the plonk file. You've just figured that one out? Been abroad, have you? :-) |
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![]() "kevnbro" > wrote in message ups.com... > >You *could* say that when the masses elected Nookular Boy the first time, >>they couldn't have known that he'd invade another country. But, 54% >>elected >>him the second time, knowing full well that he was a loose cannon. Does >>54% >>qualify as "the masses"? If not, what's the magic number? > > Yes, Bush was elected to a second term by a narrow majority margin (or > so we were told) but it wasn't a bloodlust that got him re-elected. > During his second term he very cunningly (more than likely Cheney's > idea as G.W is too stupid to pull this off himself) used the "moral > authority" and "moral clarity" cards which were aces-in-the-hole. When > you're dealing with a country that claims a 70%-75% christianity rate, > convincing them that you have "God on your side", is a guarantee of > vast support, (not too mention his admins. assault on *** marriage). > Even with such a hand, his battle for re-election was no cake-walk. > You also have to understand that a very large number of our elderly > still remember WWII and the importance of supporting the president > during a time of war- keep in mind also the "you're either with us or > against us" strategy the GOP used to garner support; basically saying > without actually saying it, "if you don't support me and my war you may > as well be a terrorist yourself".( His people knew what they were > doing.) > So criticize the American people all you want but know that our > history will be the ultimate judge and I don't think it's going to be > too kind to this administration. K > A school counselor I'm acquainted with once said that throwing more and more money at schools was pointless, to an extent, because about half the population will always be moderate or below average in intellect. Not too far from the 54%. |
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"Never anonymous Bud" > wrote in message
... > > > I now remember why I quit using this group more than a year ago. > > Off-topic bullshit, and cliquish users. > > Bye-bye... Expanding this thread in my news reader, I see 23 messages so far. If I collapse the thread, I see just one message - the original. How many do YOU see if you collapse the thread? |
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aem a écrit :
> > > I will say that Americans will take aggressive actions toward anyone > > > who crosses our borders and murders 2,700 of our citizens and you might > > > be surprised what Canada would've chosen to do had it been 2,700 of > > > you. > > > > I don't follow that. > > That's probably a reference to the destruction of the World Trade > Center. You may not be familiar with the notion that the U.S. > government may do whatever it wants around the world as long as it > mouths the phrase "nine-eleven" while it's doing it. It's the idea of > a minority here in the U.S., but unfortunately it's the minority led by > Dick Cheney. Ok, I missed the allusion. Guess I don't live in constant recollection of a single event as justification for breaches of treaties and aggressive militarism, all of which will of course, if it hasn't started already, come back to bite the US on the ass. For one thing, the crippling debt that BWB is saddling all US citizens with should be considered when deciding whether to impeach him for fraud or not. I realize that this Cheney led minority has an ideological stranglehold on the expression of truth, but all it takes is one to shout loud enough to be heard over the buzz of rhethoric. http://alsandor.net/5.jpg |
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alsandor wrote:
> > I realize that this Cheney led minority has an ideological stranglehold > on the expression of truth, but all it takes is one to shout loud > enough to be heard over the buzz of rhethoric. > Gee, I really really wish that were true. Here in the U.S. one would have to shout loud enough to be heard over the whipped (or owned) media and over the 5-4 decisions of the Supreme Court. Former President Jimmy Carter has participated in elections oversight around the world for decades. He has said many times that he believes that Gore won the 2000 election. Even he has not been heard. -aem |
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alsandor wrote:
> And how many innocent people have died getting there? We stayed out of > it entirely. No innocent people in Iraq were killed as a result of > Canadian participation, because there was no such participation. > > Pointing out a fact is hardly pharisaic. It may however be jejune :-) Not on the ground in Iraq this time. There was Canadian participation in the UN mandated Gulf War. Canadian ships are still working in the gulf, and there are Canadians fighting alongside American troops in Afghanistan. |
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kevnbro a écrit :
> keep in mind also the "you're either with us or > against us" strategy the GOP used to garner support; basically saying > without actually saying it, "if you don't support me and my war you may > as well be a terrorist yourself".( His people knew what they were > doing.) That only works if you tacitly agree to buy in to the Big Lie. Silence comes at a price, and when you realize that it's too high to pay, it's too late. Remember the Stuttgart Confession, attributed to Pastor Martin Niemoller: When they came for the communists, I remained silent; I was not a communist. When they locked up the social democrats, I remained silent; I was not a social democrat. When they came for the trade unionists, I did not speak out; I was not a trade unionist. When they came for the Jews, I did not speak out; I was not a Jew. When they came for me, there was no one left to speak out. |
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kevnbro wrote:
> I don't deny that many innocent people have died because of our > government's decision to go to war in Iraq; that however has little or > nothing to do with the morality of the masses in the U.S. as we had no > vote in the matter. You voted the Shrub to a second term. Maybe it wasn't you personally, and maybe it wasn't a landslide, but after leading you into that war he was re-elected. > I will say that Americans will take aggressive actions toward anyone > who crosses our borders and murders 2,700 of our citizens and you might > be surprised what Canada would've chosen to do had it been 2,700 of > you. > Not being an American citizen, you're in no position to judge. Kev The people who crossed your borders were not Iraqis, and there was no link between them and Saddam. They were Saudis, your good buddies in the middle east. |
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aem a écrit :
> alsandor wrote: > > > I realize that this Cheney led minority has an ideological stranglehold > > on the expression of truth, but all it takes is one to shout loud > > enough to be heard over the buzz of rhethoric. > > Gee, I really really wish that were true. Here in the U.S. one would > have to shout loud enough to be heard over the whipped (or owned) media > and over the 5-4 decisions of the Supreme Court. Former President > Jimmy Carter has participated in elections oversight around the world > for decades. He has said many times that he believes that Gore won the > 2000 election. Even he has not been heard. -aem Obviously you heard him (and so did I, but I can't do anything about it from here, except offer moral and ethical support :-) ). Others must have. You need to find them. What better medium is there than this one? |
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![]() "aem" > wrote in message oups.com... > alsandor wrote: >> >> I realize that this Cheney led minority has an ideological stranglehold >> on the expression of truth, but all it takes is one to shout loud >> enough to be heard over the buzz of rhethoric. >> > Gee, I really really wish that were true. Here in the U.S. one would > have to shout loud enough to be heard over the whipped (or owned) media > and over the 5-4 decisions of the Supreme Court. Former President > Jimmy Carter has participated in elections oversight around the world > for decades. He has said many times that he believes that Gore won the > 2000 election. Even he has not been heard. -aem > Yeah, but he's not a manly man like Nookular Boy, because he "let" that hostage thing happen in Iran. However, beheaded hostages in Iraq are somehow not the fault of Nookular Boy. |
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>Former President
> Jimmy Carter has participated in elections oversight around the world > for decades. He has said many times that he believes that Gore won the > 2000 election. Even he has not been heard. -aem He's had a few things to say and soon we'll be hearing it from his son. http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_ho...s/3689378.html |
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On 2006-01-24, kevnbro > wrote:
> No longer poised... the Conservatives here in America are eating it up > i'm su > > "See!!! The Canadians want to be "morally and ethically superior > too!!" God bless 'em... we may even save some room for 'em in heaven!" > Kev But, only if they send money! ![]() nb |
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On 2006-01-24, kevnbro > wrote:
> they were mislead into this war and no longer trust our government; I > think that speaks volumes for the American mind-set when it comes to > ethics. I seem to recall the American people being pretty damn gung ho in favor of war on Iraq, specially after 9/11. The volumes spoken about the American mind set is of its overwhelming stupidity. nb ....traitor in the eyes of American mind-set |
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The Wolf wrote:
> From NY Times > > > > January 22, 2006 > > Conservative Party in Canada Appears Poised for Election Victory yeah, but what did they make for supper? What does this have to do with RFC anyway? |
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Dave Smith a écrit :
> alsandor wrote: > > > And how many innocent people have died getting there? We stayed out of > > it entirely. No innocent people in Iraq were killed as a result of > > Canadian participation, because there was no such participation. > > > > Pointing out a fact is hardly pharisaic. It may however be jejune :-) > > Not on the ground in Iraq this time. There was Canadian participation in the UN > mandated Gulf War. Canadian ships are still working in the gulf, and there are > Canadians fighting alongside American troops in Afghanistan. On March 27 2003, the CBC revealed that 31 Canadian military personnel were serving in Iraq attached to British and US military units and that it had been confirmed by the British that some of the 31 (the number was not revealed) were in combat. Conversely, the US and British military personnel attached to Canadian Forces were NOT sent into battle. However, this was done without the permission of the Canadian government. The debate in the House on whether Canada was at war or not was inconclusive. Certainly, the Canadian government never ordered troops into combat against Iraqis. We have enough problems with Denmark and their completely ludicrous claims to Hans Island :-) |
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"kevnbro" > wrote in message
oups.com... > > alsandor wrote: >> And how many innocent people have died getting there? We stayed out of >> it entirely. No innocent people in Iraq were killed as a result of >> Canadian participation, because there was no such participation. >> >> Pointing out a fact is hardly pharisaic. It may however be jejune :-) > > I don't deny that many innocent people have died because of our > government's decision to go to war in Iraq; that however has little or > nothing to do with the morality of the masses in the U.S. as we had no > vote in the matter. Americans elected Bush (sort of) and overwhelmingly supported the goivernment's actions, at least back then. In any case I am not talking about individual morality but the morality the society as a whole including its government. > I will say that Americans will take aggressive actions toward anyone > who crosses our borders and murders 2,700 of our citizens As indeed should be done - but Iraq had nothing whatsoever to do with that attack. Hence the immorality of an unjustified and illegal invasion. >Which had and you might > be surprised what Canada would've chosen to do had it been 2,700 of > you. > Not being an American citizen, you're in no position to judge. Kev I beg your pardon? Where did you get that idea? In any case it's a stupid idea - that one cannot judge the actions of a country unless one is a citizen. If you really believe that then you would have to agree that Americans had no right to judge Saddam's regime. Do you believe that? -- Peter Aitken |
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"aem" > wrote in message
oups.com... > alsandor wrote: >> >> I realize that this Cheney led minority has an ideological stranglehold >> on the expression of truth, but all it takes is one to shout loud >> enough to be heard over the buzz of rhethoric. >> > Gee, I really really wish that were true. Here in the U.S. one would > have to shout loud enough to be heard over the whipped (or owned) media > and over the 5-4 decisions of the Supreme Court. Former President > Jimmy Carter has participated in elections oversight around the world > for decades. He has said many times that he believes that Gore won the > 2000 election. Even he has not been heard. -aem > Not to beat a dead horse, but the recounts in Florida showed that Gore did in fact win the 2000 election. -- Peter Aitken |
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alsandor wrote:
> > However, this was done without the permission of the Canadian > government. The debate in the House on whether Canada was at war or > not was inconclusive. Certainly, the Canadian government never ordered > troops into combat against Iraqis. We have enough problems with > Denmark and their completely ludicrous claims to Hans Island :-) > Maybe you can trade them [the Danes] Québec? It would be a "win win" situation for everybody! Best regards, Bob |
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zxcvbob wrote:
> alsandor wrote: > > > > However, this was done without the permission of the Canadian > > government. The debate in the House on whether Canada was at war or > > not was inconclusive. Certainly, the Canadian government never ordered > > troops into combat against Iraqis. We have enough problems with > > Denmark and their completely ludicrous claims to Hans Island :-) > > > > Maybe you can trade them [the Danes] Québec? It would be a "win win" > situation for everybody! I have close ties to Denmark. I wouldn't want to do that to them. :-) |
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