Politics
Remember, Canada is not the United States
He who seeks to be Canada’s first President, tries to remind Canadians the Canada is not the United States.
Harper, at his campaign stop in Val d’Or last evening, sought to comfort skittish investors and to distance the campaign debate from the turbulence south of the border. “Today we see more volatility in financial markets due to the crisis in the United States,” said the prime minister. “Remember, Canada is not the United States.
Sadly though Harper then chooses almost the exact same words as the Republican Presidential candidate with which to assure us all is well.
The fundamentals of the Canadian economy are sound.
Source
On the campaign trail in Jacksonville, Florida, the Senator declared this morning that “the fundamentals of our economy are strong,” despite what he described as “tremendous turmoil in our financial markets and Wall Street.”

One can imagine the Harper Government™ having the opinion as Bush spokesman Tony Fratto; “It’s unfortunate that those people will lose their homes, and there are other options,” Fratto said. “You know, they can rent.”
Has Marie Antoinette taught them nothing?
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Harper is…The Bubble Boy
Hiding behind sweater vests and the RCMP, Harper has made it clear he suffers from cantrelatetoaveragecanadian syndrome. This has been shown time and again by his aversion to questions from media, accountability for his actions and an inability to see the 2×4 in his own eye whilst decrying the sliver in a political opponents among other symptoms.
Rallies are off-limits for any member of the public who just shows up. Nobody gets in unless they have been pre-registered by the local riding association. Even local media are asked to sign up in advance.
Anyone wanting to attend an event featuring Harper has to have his or her name vetted by the RCMP, said a source at Conservative campaign headquarters, who would only talk on background yesterday. He said this rule applies even outside the campaign period, so no one – even a staffer not scheduled to be there – can show up unannounced at a Harper speech and expect to be let in.
The Harper campaign keeps a short leash on national and local media, limiting questions and access to local candidates, sometimes calling on RCMP security to block reporters from doing their jobs.
Sure sounds like open and accountable government to me….or not.
Conservatives Rethink Age of Consent

I have said since the beginning of the election that Gilles Duceppe is the only one willing to hit the nail on the head–hard!
He has done so yet again by pointing out that, “The teenagers will be “young meat, let’s not kid ourselves,” he said. “We know there are these kinds of problems in prison, and to send kids there is terrible.”
The Star
Of course Harper is trying to spin it that it is an extreme statement. No it isn’t extreme. Taking a youth putting that youth in a facility where they are certain to be abused, where they are certain to further their criminal knowledge, where they are certain to hone their hate for a society that put them there. That Mr. Harper is what is extreme.
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Conservatives Artfully Dodging Reality

The Conference Board estimates Canada’s cultural sector generated $46-billion, or 3.8 per cent of Canada’s GDP, in 2007. And, according to the Canada Council, in 2003-2004, the sector accounted for an “estimated 600,000 jobs (roughly the same as agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, oil & gas and utilities combined).”
Perhaps Mr. Harper feels there are far too many Canadians employed in Canada and therefore jobs are expendable.
This sums up my thoughts about Harper and his neo-con co-oped Conservative party perfectly;
What’s the idea here? That arts jobs should not exist because artists are naughty and might not vote for Mr. Harper? That Canadians ought not to make money from the wicked arts, but only from virtuous oil? That artists don’t all live in one constituency, so who cares? Or is it that the majority of those arts jobs are located in Ontario and Quebec, and Mr. Harper is peeved at those provinces, and wants to increase his ongoing gutting of Ontario – $20-billion a year of Ontario taxpayers’ money going out, a dribble grudgingly allowed back in – and spank Quebec for being so disobedient as not to appreciate his magnificence? He likes punishing, so maybe the arts-squashing is part of that: Whack the Heartland.
Or is it even worse? Every budding dictatorship begins by muzzling the artists, because they’re a mouthy lot and they don’t line up and salute very easily. Of course, you can always get some tame artists to design the uniforms and flags and the documentary about you, and so forth – the only kind of art you might need – but individual voices must be silenced, because there shall be only One Voice: Our Master’s Voice. Maybe that’s why Mr. Harper began by shutting down funding for our artists abroad. He didn’t like the competition for media space.
Read the full article here
h/t skdadl @breadnroses
Harper misleads on Economy

Just as we don’t want to be governed by the religious beliefs of the New Conservative Party, we should be suspect of their leader’s economic beliefs. The fallout from the bank crisis in the states may only just be beginning. By giving the money industries a free hand we have created economies that are doomed to crash like the foolish man who built his house upon the sand. And just as he lost his home, far too many American’s and Canadians in danger of losing, or have lost, theirs.
On Sunday CBC ran The Great Wall Street Swindle, based on fact and not ‘belief’, the background and presumed effects of this debacle are frightening.
You can watch the 30 minute program here.
That there is more and potentially worse economic fallout to come, may in part explain why Harper disregarded his own rule about set election times and called an election before the full effects of neocon policies can be seen.



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