Joanne's Journey

Please see http://www.bluelikeyou.com/ for the next stage of my journey.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Character defamation suit in order?

Check out the rhetoric that the Sun's Michael Den Tandt uses to describe the Prime Minister of Canada:

The crows are coming home to roost for Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and a mangy bunch of birds they are. Will this provoke an election? Not likely. Not yet.

Harper must wake up some mornings and wonder where it all went wrong. Not long ago he was the Iceman, firmly in control of every teensy strand of his government, and seemingly managing it all with aplomb.

With Harper at the helm there were no mistakes. You didn't get charm, but you did get efficiency, intelligence and a ruthless instinct for political combat that made him more winner than loser.

Most Canadians were buying that package, when compared with the alternatives. We weren't warming to the man -- the piranha smile and assassin's eyes make that difficult -- but we were getting used to him. Harper and Stephane Dion, mano a mano? Dion was sure to emerge with two black eyes and his glasses fastened together with Scotch tape...



Assassin's eyes?

Why is it that bloggers need to be so careful, but MSM can say anything they want?


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Sunday, April 06, 2008

These are headlines you only dream of...

Premier will sue the Canadian Press - by the Canadian Press.

Pinch me. I must be dreaming.


* * * *
Update: Pity. (H/T Reid)


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The 'Emotion Police' are at it again

Good grief! Perhaps some of the MSM forgot to publish their formal declaration on how politicians are supposed to convey their emotion. Is there an official, politically-correct, media-endorsed format? You'd almost think so, watching how they sit in judgment like little demagogues deciding whether a particular MP's display of emotion passes their smell-test. (Remember how Helene Guergis couldn't please Don Martin?)

Let's face it. If Stephen Harper had said anything at all during his visit to Auschwitz, it would have been condemned as too trite.

Instead, he chose to keep his emotion as private as possible and left his thoughts in a book of remembrance.

Oh, but that's not good enough for the Star. Instead of showing a photo of the Prime Minister kneeling in respect and prayer, the Red Star displays an image of Harper ranting in Parliament. The inference is that he has plenty to say there, but his lack of public rhetoric in Auschwitz does what? Portray some kind of lack of feeling?

Some emotion is so intense, it cannot be conveyed by words.


But the Toronto Star Inquirer's level of insight is so superficial, that it's not surprising they would pillory the Prime Minister for the way he handled himself at such a profound occasion.

Hunter points out at CBL's that the Globe originally had posted the photo of Harper kneeling, but then changed it. Why?

She suggests that it may be time for all the 'knuckle draggers' to start fighting back.

I'm in.

* * * *
Update: Great advice from Platty regarding how to complain effectively about MSM bias - So, ya wanna dance?


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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

How to call in to talk radio

CP's Alexander Panetta reports that some folks seem a bit incensed by the CPC's offer to coach talk-show callers with party talking points in an effort to counter some of the generally pro-Liberal MSM. Apparently CFRA's Mark Sutcliffe isn't impressed, although he doesn't think they get a 'ton' of callers using the crib sheets.

Actually I had no idea such a service was available, and therefore felt compelled to check it out myself. You go to the main party site, and then click on login to My Campaign, which takes you here.

Then you click on Call Talk Radio, input your postal code and topic you wish to discuss, and Poof! You're taken to a page showing all the talk shows in your immediate area, complete with times and tips on how to call in. The 'talking points' are merely lists of information to highlight Conservative accomplishments and failings of the other parties.

All in all, a fairly innovative and interactive program. It could even be useful to Conservative bloggers.

However, as the site suggests, you need to be prepared to ad-lib it with the show's host if he or she interrupts with some questions. As such, I doubt Joe Blow off the street would be inclined to get much use out of it. I always think it's better to talk from the heart on talk shows.


Liberal party spokesman Daniel Lauzon seems quite outraged:

“This undermines our democracy,” said Liberal party spokesman Daniel Lauzon.

“It's not up for someone in Ottawa to tell someone in Blind River what they should think. . . All we tell our supporters is, 'Speak your mind. Get out there and talk.'

“Never do we dictate messaging.”


My gosh, you'd think Stephen Harper himself arm wrestles every Conservative supporter to the ground and forces a recitation of the party line at gun-point.


More likely Mr. Lauzon is just expressing a sour grapes regret that they didn't think of it first.


* * * *
Update: One of my readers reminded me about that little CBC-gate incident:
Compare it to CBC employees 'telling' MP's what to ask in the HoC:
Which method is more subtle and manipulative? How powerful is a caller to a radio show?
Does it threaten the democratic process in the HoC?


Not to mention that in that case it was the Liberals needing to be fed questions, which doesn't speak well for their integrity, judgment and imagination.

- Especially when the CBC doesn't even know that Bill Casey is an Independent until a reader tells them.

Sheesh!


* * * *
Wednesday Update: Victor Wong says this is old news. Someone should tell Alex Panetta.

Thursday Update: The Chronicle Herald obviously hasn't read Victor's post.

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Monday, February 18, 2008

Oh good grief!

Will someone please just wake me up when this is over?


* * * *
And is this Mercer just trying to be funny and not succeeding at all, or is it actually a not-so-thinly veiled attempt at Liberal propaganda? (Mercer, Star, CP - bad combination)


* * * *

Tuesday Update: Greg Weston may have some insight on the inner machinations of the Liberal Party - Dion signals retreat:

...there is the army of Grits who would back Bob Rae as the party's next leader in the likely event the Liberals lose the election, and Dion walks the plank.

Rae is running for a seat in the March 17 byelections, contests that would be nixed if the Harper government were brought down before then.

Rae is a skilled parliamentarian, and there is no doubt his future leadership prospects would be enhanced by even a few months in the Commons.

This also helps to explain why some of the Grits who would support Michael Ignatieff for the leadership would not be distraught if the plug were pulled on the current Parliament, preferably yesterday.

From his early afflictions of foot-in-mouth, Ignatieff has evolved into a capable, popular politician, and is arguably his party's strongest performer in the Commons.

If an April election spawned a leadership race anytime soon, Iggy would be tough to beat.

When the Liberals who most want an election are those who most want to heave the leader and take over the party, it's little wonder Dion is taking his finger off the button.

So the Rae side wants to wait, while the Iggy side wants to go. The Dion side ('immediate family and delusional friends') seems to be in a constant state of flux.

No wonder, with so many barely-concealed knives.

Blogolitics - Then and now: Liberal Strategist Scott Reid.


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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Maj. General Lewis Mackenzie on the Globe report

Interesting how the Globe story from this morning seems to have disappeared from their home page. It's still available using the search engine or by clicking on the Afghanistan special report link, but it sure isn't getting top billing anymore.

Could it have anything to do with Maj. General (Ret'd.) Lewis Mackenzie's appearance on MDL this evening, not to mention the PM's dismissal of it this afternoon?

Oops!

What is the responsibility of the press concerning 'anonymous' leads and fact-checking?


* * * *

Update: Reader Greg has advised me that the Globe has updated this morning's story under a different headline. There is some mention of Harper's dismissal of the telephone conversation, but they still seem to be sticking by their 'anonymous' source.


Reality Check: Some of Maj. General Mackenzie's inteview has been posted here, but CTV conveniently omitted the following:

"...the media has got to start treating these phony leaks with a little more journalistic integrity and start checking on the facts..."
"...The phone call never happened. The Chief at the time the phone call was alleged to have happened was into about his third rum and coke on the beach in the Dominican Republic..."

"...How far does this guy (Gen. Rick Hillier) have to go from the centre of Ottawa before people stop issuing these phony trial balloons to try and create some tension between the government and the CDS? I don't get it. I've never seen anything like it before in my life!"

Duffy asks about the detainees - "...Why so much secrecy about what's going on in Afghanistan with the Canadian troops?"

Mackenzie replies:

"...Because I venture to say that back in the Netherlands as an example, the people in the government and the opposition aren't hanging onto every word the commander says. If I was the commander in Kandahar right now, in southern Afghanistan, I'd just tell my people to SHUT UP. Why? Because no matter how the sentence comes out, no matter how it's explained to an embedded journalist or a media representative in Kandahar. . . the entrails are going to be dragged out in Ottawa, every word will be analyzed; it will become a Cause Célèbre in Question Period. Commanders have a lot better things to do than that".

"...There are detainees being taken obviously; they're being detained somewhere - and you don't want to get involved in telling the Taliban where or necessarily how many you picked up in a particular operation because that relates to success or failure and all those evaluations..."
"... So I think commanders are getting somewhat pee'd (?) off about how they're being micromanaged and micro-analyzed, and I have a lot of sympathy for them. So the answer was - Don't say anything."

Now compare all that to the little snippet from the CTV report:

"There are detainees being taken, they are being taken somewhere. I think commanders are getting somewhat teed off about how they're being micromanaged and micro-analyzed.

You see how that paragraph was edited with cut and paste methods that almost alter the tone of what Mackenzie was trying to convey? No ellipses to show missing parts of the conversation. And it wasn't even exactly what he said!

You just can't trust MSM.

Please also see The Torch - Afghan detainee delirium.

Wednesday Update: Hillier 'not furious' with PM.

NATO says it will meet Canada's Afghanistan demands - Globe.

CP - MacKay raised prisoner abuse claims with Kandahar governor.

Ivison - Liberal refight the convention.

Friday update - Kandahar mission impossible without combat: Hillier. CTV

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Tuesday, January 15, 2008

What are the ethical obligations of MSM?

H/T to Neo for pointing out this important exposé by the National Post's Jonathan Kay - How Falconer hoodwinked the Toronto Star.

This tendency of MSM to run with a story before thoroughly checking out the facts is nothing new. In fact, Kay admits that the Post itself has been responsible for inaccurate stories, but the difference is in the retraction:

This was a major, major screw-up -- one that deserved a candid mea culpa editor's note of the type this newspaper published after it ran a similarly inaccurate story about Iranian Jews in 2006. Instead, Sunday's quasi-retraction was an exercise in verbal weaseldom. Particularly embarrassing was the fact that the heart of the issue was buried in this virtually unintelligible double-negative: "When Falconer was asked [Saturday] night if [superintendents] were never asked to contribute their views, he replied simply: 'No.'
(Original Star report here; 'retraction' here).

It has become blatantly obvious that most media outlets have some kind of political axe to grind, or at least some kind of agenda. Headlines, news reports and editorials are often torqued accordingly. (As Jonathan Kay points out, the Star's agenda is clearly stated in the 'Atkinson Principles'. So it is no wonder that it generally supports socialist-leaning parties.)

However, we do expect a certain degree of due diligence and honesty when reporting a story. Perhaps we are naive in this expectation. A reporter can make an honest mistake, but shouldn't the editors be overseeing the article, and checking to make sure for example that Star reporter Michele Henry had interviewed a few school board officials to corroborate Falconer's story?


And what about the person who deliberately misleads the reporter in hopes of having the story skewed in their favour? Do they bear any responsibility? eg. Julian Falconer in this case?

Kay seems to feel that Falconer is more culpable than the Star here:

Nor do I see this as an innocent misunderstanding, which is what some people involved suggested to me over the phone. Falconer clearly wanted to sex up his report, and the reaction to it, by portraying the school board as a sort of dark, secretive Magisterium.

As my colleague John Turley-Ewart noted in his critique of Falconer's report last week, the human rights lawyer seems far more interested in riding politically correct hobby horses like bashing Mike Harris and blaming the pathologies of black schools on racism (the word "racialized," a fashionable PC term that roughly translates to "black and presumably oppressed," appears 84 times in the report.) His disgraceful spin job on the Toronto Star only serves to confirm the impression that he is more interested in furthering a political agenda than helping Toronto's schools.

So on a scale of guilt we have Falconer as the worst, followed by the Star's senior editors, followed by the 'hoodwinked' reporter Michele Henry.


The other concern I have about MSM is how they seem to have the ability to be gatekeepers of information. Do they have any obligation to report all major stories, or is it simply that which they deem newsworthy or appropriate to their agenda? Perhaps some journalists could enlighten me here.

For example, letter-writer Chas Wynne of Oakville accuses the media of playing favourites when it comes to the Global-warming debate:

Lorrie Goldstein says we should "Skip the Kyoto snow job" (Jan. 8). Well, Lorrie, we wish we could, but it won't happen. Lorrie's analysis of the Kyoto Accord is spot on, but it is a small light in a wasteland of environmental political correctness. Most media and, consequently, most politicians parrot the man-made global warming mantra that has been driven by the radical environmentalists for years. The result is that, like a giant snowball rushing downhill, it continues to pick up speed and mass that will inevitably result in dim-bulb government policies. We have to wait until the mostly unintended consequences of these policies produce enough political resistance to enable sound environmental policy to be constructed and implemented. It could be quite awhile, but, in the meantime Lorrie, keep pitching.
(I like the snowball metaphor!)


Then we have two stories that have inundated the blogosphere, but are largely ignored by MSM.

The first is CBC-gate or Pablo-gate.

The other is Ezra Levant's fight against the Alberta HRC. (I guess we could throw in Maclean's and Mark Steyn's battle as well.) The National Post has covered the Levant story, but few others.

Why are these stories barely making an appearance in MSM? Do the various media outlets have any obligation to cover them?


The point of today's rumination is wondering whether it's sloppy journalism, naive reporters, biased editors or skillful lobbyists and agenda-drivers mainly responsible for the deficit of honesty in Canadian MSM?

Or all of the above?

* * * *

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Friday, January 11, 2008

Stupid is as stupid does - Updated with another MSM POV

Friday Update: Taxpayers deserve better from their national network - Calgary Herald via National Newswatch.

Why don't we dispose of any pretense, and get the powers that be to name the CBC as the Liberal party's official communication team?

The CBC is unique -- and therefore uniquely accountable to its viewers -- because it is funded by the state. As such, it has a particular mandate to present the Canadian story...

...The CBC ombudsman is apparently looking into the incident, but it isn't likely to be the transparent investigation that is needed to truly serve the public good.

There has been no word of any investigation within the Liberal party.

Yet, all of them remain on the public payroll...

Awesome letter in the Post - Media's silence is shameful by Bill Parish of Ottawa.


Check out Steve Janke's Karlheinz Schreiber Timeline to see why Pablo Rodriguez and any complicit others are on a fool's mission.

Excellent! Let's keep it going.


* * * *

(Original Thursday post)


Adam Radwanski weighs in on Pablogate - She just got caught.

According to Adam, "it's common practice for journalists to use MPs as they try to advance their stories." Apparently, the unfortunate part apparently is that one got caught - Someone who works for a publicly-funded broadcaster.

Adam calls it a stupid question - "For suggesting a really stupid question, the reporter deserves some flack. But for suggesting a question at all, she shouldn't get raked over the coals any more than a whole lot of other reporters."

Instead he puts the onus on the one(s) who actually went ahead and used the questions (in an Ethics committee).

I think Adam is making sense here. Is the person who asks someone to do something shady actually more in the wrong than the person who agrees to the idea and carries it out?

Of course not. Someone in the Liberal party obviously made a stupid, unethical, politically-motivated decision.

Time for Liberal party to step up to the plate and divulge the details. Who was in on this, and how high up the ladder of authority did it go?


SDA - Mr. Carlin: Tear down that wall! - with interesting comments and speculation why we're not hearing much about this from MSM. I guess the CBC will never hire me now.

Speaking of the CBC, check out The Tea Makers - Guest blogger: In the court of the crimson logo.

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Sunday, November 11, 2007

A contrast of Remembrance Day tributes in the media

Good taste.

Bad taste. (i.e. the cartoon; not the Torch)

Apparently the Star didn't learn a thing.

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Friday, November 09, 2007

The not-so-hidden agenda at the Star - Updated

Update: Star front page here (H/T Norman Spector).

More here: PM to Cities - Drop dead. Nice.

* * * *

Really interesting story going on behind the scenes at National Newswatch.

This morning a story from the Toronto Star was posted on National Newswatch with the headline, "PM tells cities to drop dead."

I couldn't believe my eyes! When I clicked on the link the story came up with a different headline - Harper rejects financial aid for cities, as it is now.

I assumed that NNW had gone decidedly to the left.


A short time ago, National Newswatch posted an explanation at the top of the page:

Some people seem to think that NNW tourqued a headline to a Toronto Star story posted this morning. The headline, "PM tells cities to drop dead" was taken directly from the source and not invented by NNW. Please see the headline in Google's cache for the exact headline as it appeared! Pease forward apologies to NNW - you know who you are!

Obviously some people were as shocked as I was, but National Newswatch insists that the original headline was indeed "PM tells cities to drop dead", and proof is provided via a screenshot of the google news link.

So if anyone was upset with National Newswatch this morning, please direct your anger to the Star.

National Newswatch remains one of my favourite resources for current, unbiased news.


* * * *
Update! Steve Janke's onto the trail... We'll get some answers now!

National Newswatch has posted a link showing that the Star has used the "Drop dead" phrase before.

Not very professional, folks.


Unambig weighs in as well.

Caveat - Our 'Professional' Media. Great images. Well done.

Halls of Macadamia - You wanna see leftwing media bias?

SDA - Now you see it...

Meanwhile, back at the polls...


* * * *

Sunday Update: Hooray for Thomas Walkom! - Jonathan Kay.

Kay praises the Star columnist, who has the audacity to state the following:

He may not be giving Toronto everything it wants or needs. But he has not told it to drop dead either.




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Sunday, August 05, 2007

PPG Hissy Fit

CTV's Question Period was quite a snooze today, except that I did get a bit of a chuckle out of the self-obsessed Parliamentary Press Gallery and their total indignation at not being allowed to stay in the hotel lobby where the CPC was holding their caucus meeting in Charlottetown.

Anyway, before the link disappears, go to the CTV Politics site, and click on QP - "Journalists Panel on Conservative Tactics". And just who forms the panel? Well, we have Jane Taber, Jim Travers, Robert Fife and Craig Oliver. All the usual suspects.

No bias there, right?

Fife makes a reference to the use of the RCMP to clear ' half a dozen' (i.e. six) journalists from lobby and set them up in a media centre across the way, as something from 'Vladamir Putin's Russia'.

Travers agrees, saying it felt something like being in Russia before the wall came down...etc.

He talks about the "authoritarian", "controlling" character of the CPC that he doesn't think goes over well with "most Canadians".

Gee, I wonder where he got his statistics from.


And then we have Craig Oliver chiming in with a comment that over the years his view is that the Press Gallery is a reflection of public opinion!!!

"...And I can think of many governments that went down hard, and I think of Martin, I think of Mulroney, I think of Joe Clark who were also very unpopular with the press gallery by the time they were defeated and I think of governments that lasted a long time, like Trudeau and Chretien who a had relatively off and on, but a good relationship with the press."

So there you go, folks. If you want your party to have a long-lasting government in Canada, all you have to do is suck up to the PPG.

No need for democracy. No need for elections.

Canada only needs the Parliamentary Press Gallery.



It just goes on and on. Quite nauseating, but also quite an eye-opener.


* * * *

Related: Sheila Copps on the same subject:

...In a turf war between the prime minister and the media, there is only one winner. And it isn't Harper.

Good grief! They are so used to being coddled and thrown little tidbits that they just don't know how to do anything else but whine and complain when they don't get their way.


Maybe Jim Travers was right with one comment- "I mean, they (Canadians) don't care much about the conditions that we have to do our job in, but..."

You should have just stopped there, Jim.

* * * *
Oops! PPG busted here. It was the hotel! Not the RCMP. (H/T Jad)



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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Travers sinks to new low - With update for the 'mushrooms'

I try really hard to avoid reading James Travers. His columns are so unabashedly biased that I can barely stand to glance at the title. Sandy knows what I'm talking about.

However, today's opinion piece in the red Star ("Human factor transcends dogma in gun debate") is way over the top. In the Record, the same pile of vitriolic rubbish trying to pass for journalism is titled, "Harper turns blind eye to the compassion of gun control", which is what stopped me from glossing over his rhetoric today.

If I am understanding this correctly, Travers' argument is that Stephen Harper doesn't feel the pain of those who have lost loved ones in gun shootings, and the evidence of this is because he is not entertaining the thought of making guns unavailable to legal, law-abiding citizens who properly register and store their guns safely.

This according to Travers, shows Harper to be without empathy for the family and friends of Ephraim Brown and others.

Harper is supposedly too cerebral and doesn't have a heart.


This is so low, I can barely stand to type these words. (Note to self: Switch to decaff.)

I would suggest that it may be more the left-wing, knee-jerk reaction to a call to arms against guns rather than criminals, which is showing more of a lack of empathy. It happens again and again. And it will happen the next time.


Let's get the criminals off the street and keep them off. Make the judicial system more accountable for revolving door courtrooms, bail and light sentences.

But it's just way too easy to blame the guns and feel so smug and self-righteous.


* * * *

Update: Now here is someone James Travers can learn from - Lorrie Goldstein. His column today ("Using avoidance manoeuvres") is one of his best. Lorrie lays it all out without all the partisan rhetoric and camouflage :

..Indeed, in today's politically correct atmosphere, a politician who seriously wants to fight gun crime will be accused of interfering with the judiciary (for demanding judges take into account public concerns about gun violence), of being a racist (for demanding tougher bail and longer sentences since the criminals are disproportionately black), of being a fascist (for demanding the hiring of more cops and building more prisons) and finally, of being a bleeding heart and a spendthrift (for calling for massive new public spending, meaning higher taxes, to bolster public education, strengthen families and help find decent jobs for people jammed into urban ghettoes like Toronto's Jane-Finch).

Now, what are the chances we'll find a politician like that?

Better to treat the public like mushrooms. Keep them in the dark, cover them with manure and tell them "banning handguns" is the answer.



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Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Bigotry: Double standard in Canada?

In today's Post - Vision TV has promised once again to ban broadcasts of Pakistani fundamentalist Israr Ahmad. President and CEO Bill Roberts issued the following statement: "VisionTV profoundly regrets any offence that resulted from Mr. Ahmad's appearances on our network."

While VisionTV did not broadcast Mr. Ahmad's derogatory comments about Jews, or his theories of a worldwide Jewish conspiracy, Mr. Roberts said the decision about whether to allow him on Canadian airwaves should have perhaps taken those views into account.


The producer was apparently "distracted" by family matters, including his daughter's upcoming wedding.

"So the show was pulled and another show was put in its place, but it ended up being a show that also included him [Mr. Ahmad]."

(Maybe the producer should have taken some time off instead of accidentally allowing a purveyor of hate propaganda to have airtime in Canada? Just a thought.)


One of Mr. Ahmad's followers is, according to the Post, "Qayyum Abdul Jamal, who was arrested last summer for allegedly belonging to a Canadian terrorist group accused of plotting truck bombings in downtown Toronto."


Vision promises to set up a new task force to review standards and procedures.

Sounds like a start, but if you read today's editorial in the Post (Hateful Vision), you will see that the whole organization could use a good shaking up to put some balance in its obvious left-wing agenda. The Post points out a double standard in Vision and in our society in general when it come to bigotry:

While we accept that the July 21 broadcast was an accident, the incident fed into existing complaints about the network. Since its inception, VisionTV has shown a pronounced liberal bias. Evangelists have had to pay hefty sums to get their shows on the network -- and even then, they have appeared late at night or very early in the morning. Meanwhile, the channel's own original programming has been dominated by schismatic Catholics (those who favour female ordination, for instance) and United Churchers who question the divinity of Christ or who favour gay marriage.

Canadians also are understandably upset that Mr. Ahmad appeared on VisionTV in the first place. Our society (rightly) has zero-tolerance for traditional Archie Bunker-style racism, anti-Semitism and homophobia. Yet when the same hatred spews forth from someone speaking Arabic or Urdu, the instinct of some liberal Canadians is to permit it (or at least look the other way) in the name of cultural sensitivity.

This relativism comes across as hypocrisy. As you read this, an Albertan youth pastor is facing human rights charges because he disparaged gay activists in a letter to a Red Deer newspaper. What message does it send to this country that such a man must be shut up, while a Muslim who foresees the "total extermination" of Jews has been permitted to preach on a television network available in eight million Canadian households?

Meanwhile, CBC reports that B'Nai Brith Canada has asked Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion to "remove new star candidate Jocelyn Coulon from an upcoming byelection in Montreal's Outremont riding because of his past stance on Israel" (H/T National Newswatch). Apparently Coulon has a "well-documented anti-Israel bias, which is supposedly "out of step with current Liberal policy".

Coulon insists he is merely a "proponent of healthy debate" when he writes such things as feeling that the international community should not isolate Hamas; that it is committed to fighting corruption and helping people.

The Gazette reports that MoOse Moghrabi, legal counsel for B'nai Brith's Quebec region has grave concerns about Coulon:

"His hostile attitude toward Israel, his anti-U.S. rhetoric and his calls to end the isolation of a government controlled by Hamas, a terrorist group banned in Canada, ought to disqualify him as a candidate for the Liberal Party.

"Surely, the Liberals cannot continue to countenance having an individual with such biased views as their point person on foreign policy issues."


Considering that Outremont has a considerable Jewish population, it should make for an interesting byelection.

* * * *

Related: Mark Peters - The hypocrisy of political correctness.

Jack picks up this post at Jack's Newswatch - Daily Blogger.

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Sunday, July 15, 2007

CTV Interview goes horribly wrong

Robert Fife tried his best to play up the corruption side of the Afghanistan debate, but Mirwais Nahzat, a spokesperson for Afghanistan Peace Ambassadors, just wouldn't play the game (H/T to Joel).

He kept dropping the ball, by suggesting that perhaps the media was painting too much of a one-sided picture, and that Canada was actually doing good things in Afghanistan, and that we should be patient and keep the faith.

Someone clearly messed up at CTV.

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Monday, July 09, 2007

Yellow Ribbons, Red Ribbons, No Ribbons

The City of Cornwall, Ontario seems to be embroiled in their own little debate about using Yellow Ribbon decals to show support for the troops.

Coun. Elaine MacDonald said emergency services like police, fire and ambulance have to be impartial, and that could be jeopardized if the vehicles are bearing a message that evokes a strong reaction.

And even if the council does vote in favour of the motion, there is some confusion over just what colour should be used.


Meanwhile, I came across an interesting article in the Edmonton Journal by Paula Simons (I'm Seeing Red over Yellow Ribbons Supporting Troops). The subtitle is, "City of Edmonton has no business importing Bush's toxic political baggage".

Oh, boy. There's a tip-off right there. But wait, there's more:

...This is a controversial engagement, and plenty of thoughtful Edmontonians disagree with it. In the midst of all the contention, it is inappropriate to use city vehicles, paid for and fuelled by municipal tax dollars, for propaganda purposes...
Propaganda?


...But now, the yellow ribbon has become inextricably linked with American patriotism and an unquestioning faith in the policies of George W. Bush and the war in Iraq. Why import such toxic political baggage to Canada?
(You forgot the word 'lockstep', Paula.)

...We don't need to import divisive American icons to show our support for our troops. We can do it our own Canadian way, with thought, respect and pragmatic purpose.
(So, it's really about the fear of us looking too much like those rotten Americans, I guess.)


Anyway, it's a scary insight into how a liberal mind works.


* * * *

Update: VICTORY!!!!!

Well, partial victory anyway. Official statement here.

Et tu, Chairman Ken?

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Monday, May 14, 2007

Red Rag Op-Ed

This morning's misguided, misinformed Record editorial, "Signal to Whistleblowers" brings me one step closer to canceling my subscription. (Sorry, you'll have to hunt for the editorial because their links are pathetic.)

John Monaghan, a former temporary worker at Environment Canada, was arrested in his workplace Wednesday and led away in handcuffs while his co-workers looked on. Police alleged he had committed a breach of trust under the Criminal Code. He was released from custody a short time later.

Federal Environment Minister John Baird stated plainly that the arrest was meant to be a signal to other government employees that leaks of information will not be tolerated.

Well-meaning, conscientious whistleblowers, it would seem, are not welcome in our federal bureaucracy...



Conscientious? Well-meaning?? Pull-eeze!!!!


The writer not only gets the facts wrong with the reference to "John" Monaghan, instead of Jeffrey (sheesh!), but also glorifies his actions with the label "whistleblower".

The Record isn't the first to do this, but whistleblower conveys an almost martyr-like quality of integrity. It implies courage and risk to self in the face of obvious evil and corruption. Allan Cutler was such a whistleblower.

Jeffrey Monaghan allegedly violated the terms of his security clearance by leaking details of a secret government draft regarding proposed environmental legislation which he did not personally agree with.

"The complaint about the leak came from the department's deputy minister, Michael Horgan, said (Environment Canada spokeswoman Lynn) Brunette."


The information contained in the document would have been made public in due course in any event. This was not a case of brown envelopes of cash being handed over in restaurants. There was no cover-up.

Wikipedia
defines Whistleblower as:

"...an employee, former employee, or member of an organization, especially a business or government agency, who reports misconduct to people or entities that have the power and presumed willingness to take corrective action. Generally the misconduct is a violation of law, rule, regulation and/or a direct threat to public interest — fraud, health, safety violations, and corruption are just a few examples..."


Even with the most generous of interpretations, it would be difficult to see the alleged actions of Jeffrey Monaghan as being an example of the above. The Government doesn't expect to achieve Kyoto targets on time? That is the crime? Does the Record seriously believe that the Liberals would actually be able to reach those targets in time without disrupting the whole Canadian economy?

By calling Jeffery Monaghan an alleged "Whistleblower", the Record does a disservice to the real heroes like Allan Cutler.


This editorial isn't just biased - It is an appalling example of irresponsible, shoddy journalism.


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Update: Meanwhile, Steve Janke asks, Didn't Jeff Monaghan admit to being an anarchist?

More from Ezra Levant, H/T National Newswatch.

Tuesday Update: Or was the problem the result of using temps?


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Saturday, May 12, 2007

The Tale of Two Jeffreys

I've been neglecting federal politics lately - partly due to bewilderment as to what the heck is going on there in Ottawa. The plummeting polls for the Conservatives are not inspiring either.

However, Karen Redman waved a scarlet flag in my face yesterday with her opening salvo of diatribe in Question Period. Fridays are typically the domain of the "B-team", and yesterday was no exception on the part of the opposition.

Here's the transcript from Hansard (without the annoying sound of a whiny voice for your reading pleasure):

Hon. Karen Redman (Kitchener Centre, Lib.):

Mr. Speaker, what we have seen in the last two days is a government ruling by fear and intimidation. The Minister of the Environment admitted yesterday that the bogus arrest of Jeffrey Monaghan would send the right message to public servants.

However, what about the leaks by his own staff and the leaks by Jeffrey Kroeker, now the director of communications for the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs? Where were the handcuffs for him?

Why does the government want to send a chill through the public service?


Hon. Peter Van Loan (Leader of the Government in the House of Commons and Minister for Democratic Reform, CPC):

Mr. Speaker, I will not to comment on the specific investigation into the criminal matter to which the member for Kitchener Centre refers. However, I will quote her leader on the general subject of that investigation and he said:

—"I will never encourage this kind of behaviour...For the principle, I think civil servants must respect the secrecy of their role."

I would like to know why the member is asking that question when her own leader looks at that kind of behaviour and condemns it as inappropriate. Why can the Liberal Party and the Liberal leader not hold the same position on any issue for more than 24 hours?



Good question, Peter. I was wondering the same thing. Why would Karen Redman attempt to contradict her own leader with her innuendo that the government was out of line to come down hard on a government worker who defied laws of confidentiality?

I admit the handcuff spectacle was a bit much, but we can't allow public servants to take matters into their own hands and decide when government platforms should be released to the public.


How is that different from the situation of the 'other' Jeffrey? I think Stephen Taylor said it best in his response to Calgary Grit in the comments section of his excellent post, "Whistleblower Stomped by Unaccountable Senate":


"...we know that what Monaghan did was an arrestable offense. You don't know that what Kroeker did was "illegal". They are two different situations. Monaghan was a bureaucrat and Kroeker is a Senate staffer. Kroeker blew the whistle, Monaghan was serving his own agenda. And besides, any researcher could have picked up the phone and found out the cost of a hotel room in Dubai. I could have blown the whistle. You could have blown the whistle..."


Kroeker may have embarrassed his boss, Senator Breton, by contradicting her earlier statement, but the two incidents are just not comparable in terms of severity and breach of trust.

If civil servants were allowed to announce any government policy ahead of time, fueled by their own particular political view, we would have chaos! Wow, just what Mr. Monaghan seems to be so preoccupied with.

Sandy has also done a great job fisking the Globe's Bill Curry and Alex Dobrota for the same illogical comparison - MSM on the Anarchist and the Aide.

Perhaps if certain members of the Liberal party and the liberal media were a bit more truthful, the Canadian public would be better able to assess the antics in Ottawa (and maybe those polls would start going back up for the CPC).

At the very least, the Chief Whip of the LPC should listen to the wisdom of her leader and chill out.


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Update: Steve Janke shares some insight about Jeffrey Monaghan. It seems young Jeff might have it in for Harper.

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Tuesday, April 10, 2007

What is a 'Tory'?

Just nosing around in National Newswatch this morning when I came upon this article by the Star's totally unbiased Tonda MacCharles.

One headline caught my eye - "Tory secrets go for $6.48 on eBay". The article then proceeds to explain how a Star employee got a hold of a laptop containing "secrets" left by a Canadian Alliance party organizer from back in 2003.

In these days of identity theft, this type of thing is inexcusable to be sure.

But it was the title that intrigued me. The term Tory is thrown around so casually now, that it seems to encompass a whole range of ideologies. I mean, if anyone from the Canadian Alliance was considered to be a Tory, how do we differentiate from the now defunct PC Party of Canada?

Surely Ms. MacCharles wasn't actually intending to cast aspersions on the current party in government, was she?

No, never. Not the Star!


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Update: Right on Course - The Toronto Star: Invading People's Privacy...

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Sunday, March 04, 2007

Editorializing the news

Am I just getting paranoid, or is there some blatant bias going on here?

Now please keep in mind that the following article in listed in the Toronto Sun under News; not Comment or opinion: Sikh MP battles 'smear campaign'. Reporter Ajit Jain tells us of the brave face that "the youngest Liberal MP" Navdeep Bains is putting on in spite of Stephen Harper's apparent bullying tactics.

This is the paragraph you need to read very carefully:

We all know how Harper got up in the House of Commons and started reading from a report in the Vancouver Sun that the Liberals were opposed to extending life of two sunset clauses in the Anti-Terrorism Act to protect Darshan Singh Saini, Bains' father-in-law, who reportedly is on the RCMP list of potential witnesses in the ongoing Air India criminal investigation.


Is that really what the article reported? Or did Kim Bolan simply list some facts, and let the reader draw his or her own conclusion?

We don't even know exactly what spin the PM was planning to put on the article anyway, because he was shouted down by an obviously well-orchestrated howling chorus of self-serving, sanctimonious Liberals. However, I don't see Reporter Jain mentioning that little tidbit.

So, if you're outraged about this, please consider voicing your opinion.

Letters to the editor can be sent to: editor@tor.sunpub.com


Monday Update: Rachel Giese's column (Harper's a Bad Boy) is even worse, but at least it's an opinion column. She's obviously anti-Harper and pro-Gore. Hard to take first thing in the morning.

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