Capitalism and full-speed-ahead economic growth, fuck the environment and anyone who's not a well-connected insider, and if you have any dissenting thoughts or ideas about any of this, probably best to keep them to yourselves.
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Monday, May 2, 2011
The Beijing Model? The Harper Model? Does it matter what we call it?
Labels:
Armageddon
The lineup at the polling station this morning
All the way around the gym at the local high school, out the door and round the corner.
Had to wait half an hour to vote. Maybe some of the people there got robo-calls directing them to the wrong place or something.
Tell us again how nobody wanted this election, Steve?
Don't go 'way mad, buddy. Just go away.
Related posts:
Had to wait half an hour to vote. Maybe some of the people there got robo-calls directing them to the wrong place or something.
Tell us again how nobody wanted this election, Steve?
Don't go 'way mad, buddy. Just go away.
Related posts:
- The night before the election: what we can expect
- Election, final week: All right, all right. A small measure of hope
- Poll results, wishful thinking and realism
Labels:
#elxn41,
polling,
voting,
waiting time
Sunday, May 1, 2011
The night before the election: what we can expect
Imagine a government that doesn't operate for the benefit of a handful of CEOs and international investors.
A government that cultivates the best in its citizens, that represents everything good and decent and caring about the nation it serves.
A government that recognizes that as humans, we are all fallible, but that as citizens, we have obligations both to one another and to something bigger than ourselves.
A government that values and preserves all the myriad threads that tie us together, that allow us to pool our efforts and act collectively for the greater good.
A government that safeguards our right to disagree with one another, and with the institutions of government itself.
A government that sees us as intelligent thoughtful adults, and speaks to us, with us, and for us accordingly.
A government that aspires to reflect the better angels of our nature.
In return, all that's asked of us is genuine engagement, thoughtful participation, and a commitment to something beyond ourselves: our neighbours, our communities, our society, our country. Both we and the institutions we build share and reflect certain values: democracy, stewardship, transparency, decency, accountability, citizenship, civic engagement, civil society, fundamental freedoms, civil discourse, and mutual support and respect. This is our character. This is who we are.
This isn't some idealistic fantasy. This is something we have a right to expect.
Tomorrow, let's go out and get it.
A government that cultivates the best in its citizens, that represents everything good and decent and caring about the nation it serves.
A government that recognizes that as humans, we are all fallible, but that as citizens, we have obligations both to one another and to something bigger than ourselves.
A government that values and preserves all the myriad threads that tie us together, that allow us to pool our efforts and act collectively for the greater good.
A government that safeguards our right to disagree with one another, and with the institutions of government itself.
A government that sees us as intelligent thoughtful adults, and speaks to us, with us, and for us accordingly.
A government that aspires to reflect the better angels of our nature.
In return, all that's asked of us is genuine engagement, thoughtful participation, and a commitment to something beyond ourselves: our neighbours, our communities, our society, our country. Both we and the institutions we build share and reflect certain values: democracy, stewardship, transparency, decency, accountability, citizenship, civic engagement, civil society, fundamental freedoms, civil discourse, and mutual support and respect. This is our character. This is who we are.
This isn't some idealistic fantasy. This is something we have a right to expect.
Tomorrow, let's go out and get it.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
A question for @davidakin
Word is, you're supposed to be a respected journalist.
OK then. Hypothetical question for you.
OK then. Hypothetical question for you.
Labels:
journalistic ethics,
slime machine,
Sun Media
A little rhetorical aikido for the slimebags at Sun Media
At least I think that's the appropriate analogy. As I understand it, it's one of the gentler martial arts, based on redirecting your opponent's attack and turning the energy back upon him, rather than meeting it head-on.
Labels:
slime machine,
Sun Media
Friday, April 29, 2011
Just another sleaze job from the Toronto Police
The source of Sun Media's latest steaming pile is an unnamed, retired cop.
Poor guy. What with all the unprovoked assaults on handcuffed prisoners, threats of gang rape, and the laff riot his pals must have enjoyed when they ripped a guy's prosthetic leg off and ordered him to hop into the paddy wagon, he must have been feeling left out.
Stay classy, guys.
Related posts:
Poor guy. What with all the unprovoked assaults on handcuffed prisoners, threats of gang rape, and the laff riot his pals must have enjoyed when they ripped a guy's prosthetic leg off and ordered him to hop into the paddy wagon, he must have been feeling left out.
Stay classy, guys.
Related posts:
- What are we paying these people for?
- The Blue Wall is a threat to public safety
- Cops with cameras, or cops on camera? A modest proposal
Labels:
#G20,
asshole cops,
police brutality,
Sun Media
Coyne posts the best tweet of the election
... and in the process, delivers an unanswerable indictment of the depths to which public discourse has been allowed to sink.
Related posts:
Related posts:
- Let's hear from a couple of Sun News Network fans
- @SueAnnLevy in her own words
- Elizabeth May excluded? What Coyne said
- More Sun readers speak ...
- Let's hear from another Sun reader ...
Labels:
#elxn41,
gutter press,
Sun Media
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