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Saturday, March 9, 2013
Mayor Stupid plays grabass with @ThomsonTO. Fuckwits rush to excuse it | #TOpoli
Well, maybe he was so fucked up he thought he was coaching football or something. Football players do that, don't they?
Ed Keenan and Ivor Tossell have already weighed in on this, so not much to add to their analysis, but I have one question for the "Ford Nation" deadheads rushing to the mayor's support:
You think you'd be able to get away with this shit? Yeah, I know the guy's apparently Teflon-coated, and no matter what the left-wing conspiracy throws at him, he manages to skate, but why don't you try pulling some of his shit? You know -- scream drunken obscenities at women at hockey games, flip the bird at women in traffic, call women "wastes of skin," blow off female integrity commissioners and ombudsmen, or grab their asses in public ... and see if you can walk away without a scratch.
All we can do, really, is hunker down and ride out the next year and a half while trying not to be distracted by the daily embarrassments. What else is there to do?
Related posts:
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Aw, what the hey. Time to play 'Let's hear from another Sun reader' again!
Yeah, well. I hesitate to direct traffic that way by linking to it, but the screen grab's above.
Rest of it continues in the same vein -- sexism, racism, homophobia, and fat-shaming union members, mixed in with the occasional smirking Jack Layton rub-and-tug reference or equally witty and creative reference to Olivia as "chow-chow."
Ah, the Toronto Sun. Not only spewing hatred, ignorance and belligerent stupidity, but providing a home for it from their toothless, badly-tattooed "readers" as well.
Related posts:
- Once again, let's hear from a few Sun readers
- Once again, time to play ... Let's hear from another Sun reader!
- Let's hear from another Sun reader ...
Monday, November 26, 2012
Conflict of interest, Mayor Stupid, and the Globe's stunning incoherence
There was a short-lived meme on Twitter recently, riffing on the Teutonic gift for coining words that have no exact English equivalent, but nevertheless capture meanings beautifully. "Schadenfreude" is one of the best examples. (I'm trying not to indulge at the moment.)
So I'm left wondering whether there's a German expression for times when reprehensible people appear to do the right thing, albeit for questionable reasons and in contexts which make the rightness of their actions suspect.
As we all know by now, Judge Charles Hackland, ruling in the conflict of interest proceedings brought against Rob Ford, has ruled that Mayor Stupid must be removed from office. No surprise at the finding, although there was a fair bit of energy backing the prediction that the court would somehow find a way not to apply the maximum penalty.
However, it's the reaction of our supposed Newspaper of RecordTM that begs further examination. As the pinstriped pamphleteers of Front Street argue:
Mr. Ford didn’t want to play by the rules. Not the ones he didn’t like, anyway, such as those governing conflict of interest.
Well, no argument there, although it's not as if the observation first came to life in the Front Street drawing room over brandy and cigars. Pious and paternalistic, but essentially correct. But it's what comes after that triggers the WTF:
The country’s biggest city gave him a strong mandate to reduce costs and attack what Mr. Ford described as a culture of entitlement at City Hall. He has even had some success.
Um ... what?
[Slim Pickens voice]
Did you say "Attack a Culture of Entitlement?"
[/Slim Pickens voice]
Is there anyone who embodies that more than Mayor Stupid and Brother Dumbfuck? A pair of guys who think they can flout the rules and blow off the consequences whenever they feel like it because … because ... shut the fuck up, OK? Taxpayers taxpayers taxpayers, subways subways subways, mandate, drool, release the trolls.
Let's review: here's a guy who thinks he's entitled to
- Phone Andy Byford and demand to know where his bus is
- Abuse and demean public servants
- Ignore the rules whenever they don't conform to his own sense of what's right
- Demand that city staff fix the road in front of his family business
- Blow off his official responsibilities to go coach football, and use public resources to do it
And that's just off the top of my head.
But let's move on, and compare that to the Globe's support for their charming ideological brethren in Ottawa, and ...
- electoral fraud
- robocalls
- naked attacks on dissent
- instructions for disrupting parliamentary committees
- secret "free-trade" deals
- Mordor
- embarrassment and damage to Canada's international reputation.
These are the people, mind, whom the Globe endorses as a way of "finding new ways to protect Parliament."
Are you fucking kidding me?
(But never mind all that just now -- is there a trend we might not be catching? Like, omigaaaawd ... )
In the continuing train wreck otherwise known as the Wente Clusterfuck, it's easy to lose sight of our National Fishwrap's many other acts of civic and linguistic vandalism. While this little corner isn't fit to polish Carol Wainio's flatware, perhaps this one little bit of paint on the cave wall might merit a footnote.
Related posts:
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Carol Wainio and a couple more Wente-isms: Nothing to see here
Here and here.
Second one even picks apart the correction, or clarification, or whatever the fudging mechanism the Globe's using is called.
Uh-huh.
Well, I guess if the Sun's betting its saleability on Sue Ann Levy, we shouldn't be that surprised if the corporate meat puppets on Front Street are having similar thoughts.
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Sunday, November 18, 2012
Wente, the Gelber, and the Globe: more quality control from Carol Wainio
Another persuasive argument from Carol Wainio, who, beyond providing a stellar illustration of the value of independent academia, is making a convincing case for herself as a national treasure.
In her latest post, Prof. Wainio takes issue with the participation of disgraced Globe columnist Margaret Wente on the jury for the Gelber Prize — a supposedly prestigious award presented by the Gelber Foundation and the University of Toronto's Munk School for Global Affairs. With all this academic and financial star power, one would think academic integrity would be a prerequisite for all involved. As Prof. Wainio argues:
Don’t universities take strong public standards against plagiarism? What would the University of Toronto or The Munk School (partners in the award) do with students who engaged in these practices?
Having documented repeated instances of, at the very least, sloppy attribution or "originality problems" from Wente, it's entirely in order for Prof. Wainio to be raising such a question. She goes on, however, to compare another column from Wente to recent work from Walter Russell Mead and fellow Globe columnist Gary Mason, and to note Wente's evident "efficiency" in using the same material for two columns two weeks apart.
Well, we can't fault Wente for her embrace of the 3 Rs. But, as Prof. Wainio points out:
Are these as serious as past instances? No. But they do reflect a kind of practice, a habit, and dare one say, a kind of entitlement. Given all that, and what was pretty universally described as the dreadful way Ms. Wente and her editors dealt with the more serious instances, one has to wonder why the Gelber Prize, the University of Toronto and the Munk School chose to rely so heavily on jurors associated with that particular newspaper ...
I've already pointed out the invaluable work Prof. Wainio does in providing the quality control that the senior editors of the Globe apparently refuse to do. It's particularly salient in this case, given both Wente and Mead's professed disdain for the kind of free and independent inquiry supposedly ensured by the institution of academic tenure, but it's even more valuable for the context it provides. Since it's clear that we're not going to get any critical analysis of Wente's, er, "work" from the Globe, Prof. Wainio's observations are essential as a reality check. They give readers the information they need in order to understand what they're getting from Wente.
And moreover, they put a rather jarring spotlight on the ideological and managerial decisions being taken in the executive suites on Front Street. It's not as if the warnings aren't there; while I'm not rushing to embrace the National Putz, Chris Selley raised several questions about the Globe's handling of the Wente scandal and its implications for the Gelber Prize in another essay late last week:
The Globe didn’t seem bothered about being seen to do anything, and I think it wound up leaving a widespread impression that it did nothing ... Maybe some principles are worth bending if sticking to them upsets the official Canadian chattering class hierarchy in which Margaret Wente plays house contrarian.
Nothing new about the smug, oblivious attitude the Globe appears to be taking toward this, or its condescending dismissal of mere "bloggers." It goes hand-in-hand with Wente's cringe-inducing poor-me non-apology in September.
What's left, however, are lingering questions about the Globe's credibility — questions which only grow more insistent the longer the Front Street brain trust tries to pretend they're not there.
(For even better takes on this, please read thwap and Sixth Estate.)
Related posts:
- Carol Wainio rips Terence Corcoran and Margaret Wente a new one
- This Is Why We Can’t Have Nice Newspapers
- The real issue here is that, even after all of the flaccid apologies, the Globe is doubling down on upholding an editorial regime which gives its tacit approval to this sort of behaviour ...
- Did anybody see where Margaret Wente?
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Hey, Lone Pine Resources Inc. — sue this
NAFTA challenge launched over Quebec fracking ban - The Globe and Mail: "Energy firm Lone Pine Resources Inc. is taking on Quebec’s fracking moratorium, saying it violates the firm’s rights under the North American free-trade agreement and demanding more than $250-million in compensation."
'via Blog this'
Y'see, that's the great thing about "free trade." We get sued for "lost profits" when we try to protect our drinking water.
And the Chinese deal Harper's pushing? Shhh. It's a secret. Everything about it is a secret. Even Diane Francis is shitting on it, for Chrissakes.
Guy's not only letting foreign corporations fuck us over, he's handing out souvenir bags at the door.
Makes you feel all warm and fuzzy inside, doesn't it.
Related posts:
- The Ethical Oil Spokespuppet Smear
- Electro-Motive: Foreign corporation takes Canadian tax dollars, fucks over Canadian workers | #cdnpoli
- Lawrence Martin on Harper's proto-fascism | #cdnpoli
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Media culpa: The Globe and Mail: Driving home a point about plagiarism
Media culpa: The Globe and Mail: Driving home a point about plagiarism:
'via Blog this'
Carol Wainio: doing more for quality control than the entire Front Street management team.
Either they don't get it or they're wilfully blind. Either way, not a confidence-builder.
Related posts:
'via Blog this'
Carol Wainio: doing more for quality control than the entire Front Street management team.
Either they don't get it or they're wilfully blind. Either way, not a confidence-builder.
Related posts:
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