Archive for March, 2010

Will the real Success in Afghanistan be the Acceptance of a Timely Withdrawal?

Friday, March 26th, 2010

As Operation Moshtarak continues at this very moment it is pertinent to once again draw our attention to the tactics being deployed on the ground in Afghanistan. The spotlight has recently been on the political attempts to bring stable government to the country in the form of President Karzai’s premiership but the foundations of this will truly be built by the military actions of the ISAF. It is this need that has brought about Operation Moshtarak. With time running out before the withdrawal of troops begins, large offensives will be the order of the day in an attempt to create a legacy of stability from which the West-backed Karzai can act.

While it is all too easy to scrutinize and criticize tactics from the safety of our homes, there needs to be a realization of what lies ahead. However, simultaneously, the ISAF forces need to take action and snatch the initiative. Inaction would be just as deadly and allow the Taliban to seize upon this passivity. It is this conflict of ideas, along with numerous other factors, that causes the current situation inside the country to be so precarious.
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New Brunswick Premier Shawn Graham Feels Unfairly Criticized By Media – Welcome to “Democracy”

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Baby Crying

Just when I think I’m stuck for a blog idea, Shawn Graham, bless his little heart, comes out with another gem. On Thursday, what should come on the radio but a story about how New Brunswick’s premier is finding himself under a little bit of media pressure. He feels that the media is giving him a hard time, henpecking him and ignoring the opposition. He’s feeling bruised and battered, and he’d like all those reporters to be a little bit more accommodating.

Mr. Graham has been on a bit of a tear since his government took office, and he now finds himself the least popular premier in Canada. One recent survey put his popularity at 15%, and we are now only seven months away from what might be the most eagerly awaited provincial election in New Brunswick history. In his short time in office, Mr. Graham has managed to tamper with post-secondary education, the health care system, and French immersion. The biggest gaffe, though, was when he broke a major election promise by attempting to sell the provincial power utility. It is this – the proposed sale of NB Power to Hydro Quebec – that might be the final nail in the popularity coffin.
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Yes Canada, We Have “Crazy” Politicians Too

Monday, March 22nd, 2010
Courtesy of Macleans.ca

Courtesy of Macleans.ca

Last week in the United States Congress, Senator Jim Bunning of Kentucky took a lot of guff for stalling the renewal of unemployment benefits for millions of out of work Americans. Bunning was the sole voice of objection to passing the proposal by unanimous consent, and after being asked again to drop his objection shortly before midnight by Oregon Senator Jeff Merkley, the besieged Bunning replied simply, “tough s**t.” After the close of the debate after 12am, Bunning said he was ambushed by Democrats and forced to miss the Kentucky-South Carolina basketball game on account. To which a nation of people worried about putting food on the table this month replied, “Now we know who the real heroes are.”

Bunning made himself a pariah by the media, the picture of a politician out of touch with everyday, normal Americans, which furthered the narrative of a broken governmental system in Washington. If that weren’t bad enough, The Daily Show and others made him a farce, as his fanboy disappointment left many to ponder, “Has this guy never heard of Tivo?”
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Canadians Can Now Stop the Hand-wringing and Can Now Celebrate Our Sporting Victories, But How Large Was Our 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Victory Really?

Thursday, March 11th, 2010
Sidney Crosby Seals Gold Victory For Men's Hockey: Who Cares? Photo: The Star-Ledger

Sidney Crosby Seals Gold Victory For Men's Hockey: Who Cares? Photo: The Star-Ledger

Canadians can now stop the hand-wringing, and finally we can hoist the red and white high towards the clouds, but how large was our Vancouver Olympic victory really? We did win more gold medals than any other country in Winter Olympic history. In terms of sporting success and country size, our victory was actually much larger than most people think. With a population nine times larger than ours (which means a much larger young population base from which to select top athletes) and with significantly larger financial resources, the U.S. won only 11 more medals, and they actually won significantly fewer gold medals than Canada. Put another way, Canada won 0.466666′ gold medals per million people (the medal some people consider the only one worth winning), while the United States won only 0.033333′ gold medals per million people. Yes, the Americans won the most medals, but they did not win 9 times more medals which their population would suggest they should. Furthermore, most of these medals were not the more prestigious gold medal category. When factoring in population and financial considerations, some small countries actually do extremely well in Olympic events, even if the medals won are few in number. So given Canada’s small stature and her gold medal record, even when considering the home-field advantage, we accomplished truly Olympian athletic feats: we actually did more than own the podium.
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Helena Guergis vs. Air Canada, PEI, and Airport Security – an Uncomfortable Diva Moment

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010
Simcoe-Grey MP Helena Guergis.  Photo credit: Canadian Press.

Simcoe-Grey MP Helena Guergis. Photo credit: Canadian Press.

Flying can be stressful, and I suppose that being an MP is stressful as well. While most of us have experienced the former, few have the opportunity to live through the latter. In late February, Helena Guergis had the misfortune of experiencing both.

For those of you who were caught up in the Olympics and missed the news, Helena Guergis, MP for Simcoe-Grey, apparently threw a diva fit at the Charlottetown airport on February 19. The incident became public when someone sent an anonymous letter describing the tantrum to Liberal MP Wayne Easter.

According to the letter, Ms. Guergis and her aide arrived very late for an Air Canada flight. While clearing security, her footwear set off an alarm so security staff asked that she remove it. In response, Ms. Guergis allegedly removed her boots, chucked them in a bin, swore, and then declared PEI a hellhole (or shithole, depending on the source). After abusing the staff but still clearing security, she ordered her aide to fetch her boots for her. She then discovered that the glass doors leading to the tarmac were locked. She reportedly beat on the doors and tried to force her way out. Of course, the whole time the plane was being held for her. She finally boarded and left the hellhole behind.
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Canada’s ‘Own the Podium’ Program Yields Golden Dividends at Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games

Saturday, March 6th, 2010
Team Canada wins gold in Women's Hockey (photo: AP)

Team Canada wins gold in Women's Hockey (photo: AP)

The Vancouver 2010 Olympics are now over, with the nation receiving a classic showdown of hockey supremacy in the form of the men’s gold medal game between arch rivals Canada and the United States to top things off.

A little more than a week ago, with the medal count looking very different than it did at the end of the Games, Canada’s much trumpeted and controversial ‘Own The Podium’ campaign was enduring a litany of criticisms that it had failed to produce the Olympic hardware that it was specifically designed for.

‘Arrogance,’ many said, ‘unrealistic,’ ‘overreaching,’ ‘doomed to failure,’ were among the chants coming from both domestic and international skeptics for whom the program was a contentious and decidedly un-Canadian effort to dare secure more medals for this country at a Winter Olympics than ever before.
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In the Realm of Canadian Federal and Provincial Politics, it Does Appear to be True That Nice Guys Come in Last

Saturday, March 6th, 2010
Machiavelli: Tutoring Canadian Politicians. Photo Credit: Din Merican

Machiavelli: Tutoring Canadian Politicians. Photo Credit: Din Merican

“Great men are almost always bad men.”
- Lord Acton

Fortune is a woman, and if you wish to conquer her, you must beat and coerce her. And she always smiles upon the
young man, because he commands her with the greatest audacity.

The Prince
By Niccolo Machiavelli

Because the great English historian had written extensively about liberty and federalism, it should not be surprising that Prime Minister Trudeau had read Lord Acton’s work. And because Machiavelli had written his political books in the early part of the 16th century, it should not be surprising that his work contained sexist and offensive passages such as the foregoing one. What might surprise some readers is the fact that Pierre Trudeau and other prominent political and military leaders have consulted Machiavelli’s books throughout the centuries for their sage advice.
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Feds Sell Provinces to World Trade Organization Under Cover of “Buy American”

Monday, March 1st, 2010
Photo from www.draplin.com

Photo from www.draplin.com

Seemingly lost amidst the Olympic shuffle last week was an announcement by the Harper government on reaching an agreement with the United States that allowed for Canadian exceptions to the highly contentious “Buy American” regulations. The regulations, imposed last-year by the U.S. government, blocked Canadian manufacturers from bidding on almost $800-billion worth of contracts tied to stimulus spending by the U.S. government.

Given the high-profile nature of the spat and the political capital such an agreement should generate, it seems strange that the Harper government would downplay the announcement by burying it amidst Olympic fever. A closer look at the details of the agreement, however, indicate why this might be the case.
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Another Oil War? United Kingdom Versus Latin America: Oil Discovered off Falklands

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Oil Rig

Oil has been discovered in the waters around the Falklands. This has revived the decades-old conflict between Argentina and the United Kingdom, both of which claim the islands – and this time the rest of Latin America is united behind Argentina. Will we see the developed world unite behind England?

Given the realities of peak oil, finding more is a good thing. However, as oil becomes more and more precious as the supply dwindles – and as foolish Western governments have failed to prepare for – the potential for conflict becomes very high indeed. The United States has a massive military presence in the Middle East to protect its “national interests” there, and the United Kingdom is likely to take the same view of any oil discovered anywhere they can make any sort of claim to.
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