Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

There Are Great Life Lessons to be Gleaned by Watching Politicians and Reading Political History

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

That’s Wilfrid Laurier from Quebec. He has no future. He does nothing nowadays, but sit in the library, day after day, reading books.
- A journalist commenting in 1884. Wilfrid Laurier became Prime Minister in 1896.

There are great life lessons to be gleaned by watching politicians in action or by reading political history. This should not be surprising, since politicians are recruited from our own society, and they have the same life issues as everyone else. In fact, many issues they grapple with are universal in nature and people around the world also grapple with these same issues in some form.

The foregoing quote underscores a great universal lesson. Success often flows to those with grit and determination who do not let setbacks hold them down. Laurier is just one of many politicians who languished in opposition for years, but through diligence and patience was able to eventually achieve power. Sir John A. Macdonald, Mackenzie King, Abraham Lincoln, and Winston Churchill all experienced major setbacks during their careers, although they are remembered more for their victories and successes. Dalton McGuinty is a recent example: few expected him to be successful, but through discipline, hard work and openness to advice, he was able to bounce back and achieve two back-to-back majorities.
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Canadian Human Rights Commission: Where Did We Go Wrong With Free Speech?

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
S. 13 that CHRC!

S. 13 that CHRC!

Yesterday the Montreal Gazette ran a great piece on free speech pogroms masquerading as legitimate government tribunals. I don’t deny that they were created by proper legislative authorities and passed through proper channels but I will say that general Canadian ignorance and laziness has allowed them to transmogrify in the horrendous apparatus they now are. The article in the Gazette was outstanding, and sadly it echoes much of what I had intended to say, so to avoid plagiarism, I will refer you all to it and echo only this one key point its author so carefully addressed. Canadians are a tolerant bunch. We are, for the most part, proud of our multiethnic nation and proud to live in a tolerant society. As such, when something is called the “Canadian Human Rights Commission” – it sounds good, we like it, and we are suspicious of persons who would be dragged before it. I mean wouldn’t you have to do something obviously intolerant to be brought before one? You would think (read the article then come back to mine).
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Bilingualism in Canada – The Great Language Debate

Saturday, October 24th, 2009
Jean Charest is upset with the Supreme Courts ruling on Bill 104

Jean Charest is upset with the Supreme Court's ruling on Bill 104

Bilingualism in Canada is undeniably one of the most prevalent aspects of our international identity. All of our federal documents are printed in both English and French, despite the fact that only one of our provinces is officially bilingual (and no, it’s not Quebec – only New Brunswick is officially bilingual, meaning the provincial government prints documentation in both languages). Despite all this, language laws have often been a topic of contention within the country and particularly within Quebec. Almost one hundred years after the first language law passed in Quebec, we still find ourselves unable to reach middle ground when it comes to our languages – particularly in the education system. Up until recently, there was a loophole in the Quebecois language laws which allowed parents to send their children to English public school if they had previously attended an English private school. The majority of children in Quebec, however, are required to attend French public school. In 2002, Jean Charest’s government closed the loophole (Bill 104) thus preventing a much larger percentage of students from attending English public school in Quebec. Without the loophole, only students who passed a lengthy assessment of circumstance were granted permission. Yesterday, a disgruntled group of parents who opposed Bill 104 and had taken their displeasure up with the supreme court won a “partial victory” when the supreme court ruled Bill 104 as “unconstitutional and excessive”. Naturally, the Quebecois government is upset, claiming that by allowing a larger minority of children to enroll in the limited English school system in Quebec, the French language is not being preserved.
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Supreme Court of Canada Renders Quebec’s Bill 104 Unconstitutional

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

On October 22 2009, the Supreme Court of Canada judged Quebec’s Bill 104 to be unconstitutional.  The controversial bill was enacted in 2002 by the Quebec ruling party of the day, the Parti Quebecois, and has since been subject of a slew of courts cases, the issue eventually reaching Quebec’s Court of Appeal in 2007, where it ruled against the bill.  Two years later, Justice Louis LeBel of the Supreme Court of Canada has taken a similar stance, calling the bill, “excessive” and giving Quebec a 1 year grace period to address and rectify the situation.

In the province already currently possessing the most restrictive language policies in the country, Bill 104 eliminated the last hope for Anglophones in Quebec to obtain English language education without being subjected to a long and trying process for determining ‘eligibility’ for this right. As a result, a group of 25 families took part in this case to argue for their children’s right to an education in the English language.  As such, the ruling in this case is only a partial victory.  Quebec’s debatable language laws still stand minus Bill 104. Anglophone Canadians and others who express an interest in English instruction are now back to the unenviable and astonishing position of attempting to enrol in English language schools through legal loopholes.  It also leaves the 25 families, and many others, besides in a minimum of a yearlong limbo awaiting the new legislation to take its place.
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Carleton Hires Terrorist, or: Carleton Fires Long-Term Professor Over Unproven Allegations, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying…

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

In 1980, a synagogue in Paris’s 16th arrondissement was bombed in a terrorist attack. Blamed on the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-Special Operation, it killed three Frenchmen and an Israeli woman, while wounding twenty others. (The French Prime Minster at the time of the attack, Raymond Barre, made a comment to the effect that the bomb was targeting Jews and instead killed innocent Frenchmen…)

In 2008, Hassan Diab, a Canadian university professor of Lebanese birth, was arrested in connection with the bombings. He had taught courses at the University of Ottawa and at the time was a sociology professor at Carleton. After his arrest he was released on bail with special conditions that would allow him to continue to teach. His extradition to France is currently working its way through the courts, and has been described by a judge as ‘far from a sure thing’.
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York University Students Back to School as CUPE 3903 Strike Ends

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

The York University Labour Disputes Resolution Act, 2009 has been passed by the Ontario legislature and received Royal Assent. As a result, the Executive Committee of Senate declares that the disruption of academic activities that began on November 6, 2008 has ended. Courses and other academic activities that were suspended at the outset of a strike by CUPE 3903 will resume on Monday, February 2.
Its about time.
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NDP Delays Legislation to End York University Strike

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

As reported by Michael Sheps, MPPs were summoned to Queen’s Park today in order to attempt to pass a bill that would immediately send York University strikers back to work and resume classes for 50,000 students. The strike will soon enter its 82nd day, and both York and CUPE 3903 union representatives are at a deadlock.

The back-to-work legislation could have ended the strike at York University, but the NDP’s eight members voted against early passage, arguing that an end to the 11-week-old labour dispute should not be forced by the government. They argued that the bargaining process should still be given a chance.

So what happens next?
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Back to Work Legislation for CUPE, Ending the York University Strike?

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

Ontario’s premier, Dalton McGuinty, will soon announce plans to legislate the CUPE 3903 workers – who have been striking since November - back to work. The government is hoping students will be back in class by next week.
MPPs have been called to Queen’s Park in order to pass a bill sending the strikers back to work and they will be meeting Sunday, January 24th, at 1:00 pm.
The mediator has stated that there is no hope of the two sides agreeing on anything and this appears like it is the only solution. Finally, the interests of the students will be considered and placed above those interests of the striking workers who have threatened the educations of 50,000 students with their strike.
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CUPE Local 3903 and York University's Long Drawn Strike: A Degradation to Education

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009
York University Picket Line

York University Picket Line

Since the start of November, students at York University in North York, Ontario have been sitting at the edge of their seats awaiting their classes to resume after a strike began with the re-negotiation of the Teaching Assistants (TA’s), Graduate Assistants (GA’s) and contract faculty contracts. The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) started a strike after local 3903’s demands were not met by York Administration. The first semester has already been thrown out, exams could not be held, classes could not be finished, and students were given high hopes that after the holidays, classes would resume for the second semester.

Negotiations resumed on January 5th after the winter holidays with high hopes. A vote for their last offer was requested by York Administration, only to be denied by CUPE’s bargaining team to be brought to its members on January 7th. With York Administration and CUPE local 3903 butting heads, we are shown yet again that the value of education will always be undermined by the pursuit of profitability. As York University Administration continues to prove to us that it is no better than any corporation losing the trust of its consumers for the better good of maximum profits, we seem to be losing our hope in any kind of organization. Sure, it was easy to accept the fact that the gas companies were sky rocketing the prices of our fuel while brandishing a false 2% profit; that the big-three automobile companies dropped all kinds of innovation to save a few million dollars by not updating its factories to include the mass production of the electric car or the hydro-powered car – and thus probably sending them into oblivion; that the heads of banks in the U.S. cared less about the billions given to them by the government and wasting valuable tax payers’ money than the spa treatments they took as soon as the cheque cleared. Hell it was even easy to accept the fact that most charitable organizations only end up giving (maybe) 10 cents to every dollar given to them to those who need it. But when even those in charge of educating the future leaders of our world care less about resuming education promised to 50,000 students than the money they raised for their 50th anniversary celebrations (an estimated $180 Million), we know we have come to a very sad time.
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