Sunday, November 30, 2008

OTTAWA

OTTAWA — The NDP says it may pursue criminal charges after the Conservatives covertly listened in, taped and distributed audio of a closed-door NDP strategy session.
NDP Leader Jack Layton can be heard on the tapes boasting to his caucus that he had prepared scenarios to bring down the government with the help of the Bloc Quebecois before the Conservatives issued their recent economic statement.
The caucus talks took place Saturday and a recording of the meeting was delivered to the media on Sunday by Prime Minister Stephen Harper's staff.
In response, NDP MP Thomas Mulcair said the government is panicking and desperate to change the channel on its economic management and may have committed what could be an illegal act.
New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton speaks during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa November 20, 2008. (Chris Wattie/REUTERS)
Mr. Mulcair said his party is looking into “the application of the Criminal Code,” in the taping.
As for the substance of the call, Mr. Mulcair said the talks with the Bloc were perfectly normal consultations between parties in a minority government. They began only after the government's economic update was delivered last Thursday, he said.
And Mr. Mulcair pointed as an example to consultations that took place between Mr. Layton, Mr. Harper and the Bloc's Gilles Duceppe in September 2004 when the Liberals were freshly installed as a minority government.
Mr. Harper, who was leader of the Opposition at that time, held lengthy discussions with Mr. Layton and Mr. Duceppe aimed at supplanting Paul Martin's Liberal government without an election in the fall of 2004.
Those talks did not invoke a coalition, but rather revolved around replacing the elected Liberal minority with a Conservative government led by Mr. Harper and supported by the New Democrats and Bloc on an issue-by-issue basis.
During Saturday's conference call, Mr. Layton also is heard saying it doesn't matter what the policy issues are, they just need to defeat the Harper minority. He says he hopes a lasting coalition can be built that will survive two or three years in government.
NDP spokesman Brad Lavigne said the Conservatives are merely trying to deflect attention from the government losing the confidence of the House of Commons.
A spokesman for the Prime Minister's Office said there was nothing unethical about covertly listening in to the private NDP deliberations, taping those discussions and releasing them to the media.
An unidentified Tory was “invited” to participate in the call, said PMO spokesman Dimitri Soudas.
“Maybe the invitation was meant for the Bloc, and they accidentally invited us. We were invited. When you get invited somewhere you have the opportunity to choose to participate or not participate.”

Summary: A private meeting held by the NDP was taped by the Conservitives and released to the media. Now the NDP want to press charges.

1. Why do you think that the Conservitives did this?
2. Do you think that the NDP should press charges?
3. How do you think the Conservitives will benefit by knowing what the NDP were discussing?

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Arrest in Afghan acid attack

Afghan police have arrested 10 Taliban militants involved in an acid attack this month against 15 girls and teachers walking to school in southern Afghanistan, a provincial governor said Tuesday.
"Several" of the arrested militants have confessed to taking part in the acid attack, said Kandahar Gov. Rahmatullah Raufi. He declined to be more precise.
High-ranking Taliban fighters paid the militants a total of $2,000 to carry out the attack, Raufi said. The attackers came from Pakistan but were Afghan nationals, said Doud Doud, an Interior Ministry official.
The attackers squirted the acid from water bottles onto three groups of students and teachers walking to school in Kandahar city on Nov. 12. Several girls suffered burns to the face and were hospitalized. One teenager couldn't open her eyes days after the attack, which drew condemnation from around the world.
After the investigation is complete, the accused will be tried in open court, said Raufi.
One of the victims, a teacher named Nuskaal who was burned through her burqa, called Tuesday for a harsh punishment for the attackers.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

McGuinty worries auto sector rescue would drive deficit higher

McGuinty worries auto sector rescue would drive deficit higher

KEITH LESLIE
The Canadian Press
November 22, 2008 at 12:22 PM EST
TORONTO — As governments in Canada and the United States consider rescue packages for the struggling auto industry, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty warned Saturday that giving taxpayers' money to support the sector could drive the province's deficit into dangerous territory.
Ontario already had to revise its budget forecasts for this year to eliminate an expected surplus and instead post a $500-million deficit.
With mayors from 22 Ontario communities pressing the province to help save the industry, auto dealers begging for help and the automakers looking for cash, Mr. McGuinty said the demands on his government are only increasing as the economic times get worse.
“The auto sector demand alone could cause our deficit to dramatically balloon,” Mr. McGuinty said after a speech to a Liberal policy conference.

“When it comes to the deficit, some people say ‘Well, what difference does it make?' Well, it makes a big difference. If we get caught with a major structural deficit, it becomes difficult if not impossible to get out of it.”
With more than 400,000 Ontario jobs at stake, Mr. McGuinty spoke about the “economic and social value” of the auto sector, making it clear the province intends to offer financial aid, even if it means adding more red ink to the books.
“We've got to balance public support and what that means in terms of costs and the absence of support — the failure of the industry — and what that means in terms of costs,” he told reporters.
“It makes for a real challenge for us.”
Analysts warned Friday that General Motors could soon be forced to seek bankruptcy protection if a U.S. government bailout package isn't worked out soon, saying the auto giant could run out of cash before January.
Federal Industry Minister Tony Clement and Ontario Economic Development Minister Michael Bryant visits to Detroit and Washington this week helped give a clearer picture of the situation the automakers face in the United States, Mr. McGuinty said.
“It was an opportunity for them to get a sense — even if they didn't get all the meetings that would have liked — they got a feeling for how things are unfolding there, which is very helpful to us.”
Mr. McGuinty cautioned the auto companies that provincial support would not be automatic, and said taxpayers want to know the companies and unions have a strategy to get out of the current mess.
“I think Ontarians are bringing both goodwill and a healthy skepticism to the table,” he said. “But they are going to have to demonstrate to us that they are prepared to do what it takes. Let's see some specific plans. Let's get some reliable assurances things are going to get better.”
However, Mr. McGuinty said taxpayers and governments also have to be realistic in demanding that car makers to switch to smaller, more fuel efficient cars and trucks, noting that five out of the top ten selling vehicles in Canada are trucks and mini-vans.
“We buy a lot of trucks and big vehicles, and we need to be honest about the demands we place on the auto sector,” he said.
“If we want them to produce more fuel efficient vehicles, I think we have to buy more fuel efficient vehicles.”


Summary:
Premier McGuinty, the premier of Ontario, is trying to decide whether to give the American car manufacturers money. The American cars tend to use lots of gas. People these days like the Japanese and German cars. This means the Americans are losing a lot of business. This is important in Canada because the manufacturers have big plants in Canada and especially in Ontario. The manufacturers in Ontario are begging McGuinty for money now. McGuinty is afraid that if he gives them money, Ontario will fall into a $500 million deficit.

If the car manufacturers don't get money, then lots of people will lose their jobs. This will cause a domino effect so that other people will also lose their jobs.

Questions:
1. How does this relate to this course?
2. Why are the problems in the car industry significant to other people's jobs?
3. How could this affect us when we become adults?

Friday, November 21, 2008

TORONTO — What pushed Keith Delong over the edge? Why would the retired IBM employee stab to death his wife and two adult children, and then kill himself with a rifle?
As Toronto detectives Thursday pieced together a horrifying murder-suicide on a tidy residential Scarborough street, a catalogue of concerns emerged that may have been quietly building within the walls of the Delong family's modest bungalow.
The pressures of a remortgaged home, a volatile stock market, a shrinking family income and two ailing kin – one dependent on pricey medication – may have boiled over with violence.
There had been widespread speculation that the bloody interior of 12 Welwyn Ave. was the site of a quadruple murder and that the prime suspect was Mr. Delong's 44-year-old son-in-law, James Tompkins, led away from the crime scene in handcuffs, weeping.
Videos

Police are still trying to piece together why someone killed their three family members and dog before committing suicide in an east-end Toronto home.

But after speaking to Mr. Tompkins for several hours and examining his townhouse in Whitby, just east of Toronto, police released the 44-year-old welder, concluding he had nothing to do with the slaughter that claimed the lives of Keith Delong, his wife Wanda and their two children, Elizabeth, 41, and Richard, 38.
Rather, Detective Sergeant Pauline Gray of the Toronto police homicide squad, said “the tragic deaths of the family was in fact a triple homicide-suicide.”
Autopsies are scheduled for Saturday Det. Sgt. Gray would not confirm the names of the victims or the killer, or say how any of them died.
Police sources confirmed, however, that detectives are certain the murders were committed by Keith Delong and that, after stabbing his family to death and also killing the family poodle, Charlotte, he shot himself.
Mr. Delong's fishing-lure-decorated hat was a common neighbourhood sight, in sun or snow, and residents struggled to understand the concerns percolating beneath its broad rim.
“I can't believe it,” said Katherine Harper, a neighbour, whose driveway Mr. Delong often shovelled. “They were both good, very nice people.”
Taped to the Welwyn Avenue bungalow's front door, below a loon-shaped welcome sign, was a note scribbled in blue ink on white paper. Written in a leaning, unsteady hand, it urged the reader not to step inside and to call police.
But there was no explanatory note offering what drove Mr. Delong to despair, and no criminal history. As far as is known, none of the four slain Delongs had had any prior contact with police.
What does seem clear is that Mr. Delong may have been under some financial pressure.
One concern may have been his mother-in-law, who lives in Mexico and is unwell – sufficiently so that on the same day the family were found dead, Keith and Wanda had been scheduled to head to Mexico to help care for her.
A second worry may have involved the couple's son Richard, who suffered from a degenerative bone disorder and lived in the basement of the beige-brick bungalow. Neighbours said his condition had worsened in recent years, that Richard was in an increasing amount of pain, and that the cost of his medication had risen.
A friend of Richard's who visited the crime scene Thursday said that a few years ago his condition had forced him to leave his job at Sears, where he had been a member of the IT department. Tears filled her eyes as she recalled that she had made plans to come over for pizza and a movie with Richard while his parents were away.
“They were such good, gentle people,” she said.
Keith Delong had recently incurred a slab of fresh debt, money that may conceivably have been sunk into some ailing investments. Certainly the timing would fit that scenario.
The Delongs purchased their home in 1975 for $60,000, and remortgaged it at least once before moving their banking arrangements to the Bank of Nova Scotia in 2002.
Mortgage documents show that on Sept. 30 of this year, Scotiabank registered a new mortgage with the Delongs for $240,000. How much the couple already owed the bank at that point is unclear, but the new mortgage was at least $70,000 more than the discharged mortgage it replaced.
At that stage – before Toronto's housing market began to weaken, and before severe turmoil began roiling financial markets – there may have been little reason for Scotiabank to hesitate about advancing cash to the couple. What the Delongs did with the extra money is unknown.
But if any of it was tied up in the stock market, they may have had some concern.
On Sept. 30, the TSX composite index stood at 11,752.90. By Nov. 18, the day before the killings, it had slumped to 8,835.73, a drop of roughly 25 per cent.


Summary: A recent muder of the Welwyn family has now been linked to the next door neihbours, and more precisely Mr. Delong. Other nieghbours say that they are shocked and said that the Delong family was a very nice one.

Questions:

1. What do you think made Mr.Delong do this?
2. Would you feel safe if you lived in that neighbourhood after this muderer?
3. What things in Mr.Delong's family might have put him in a depressioned state?

Monday, November 17, 2008

Tougher Rules Ahead for Young Drivers

Nov 17, 2008 04:30 AM
Brett Popplewell Staff Reporter

The Ontario government is expected to introduce tough new legislation today that will further restrict the privileges of young drivers.
The move comes after a long lobbying campaign, led by Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) and Tim Mulcahy, the father of one of the three young people killed in a drunk-driving accident in Muskoka on July 3.
New measures affecting young new drivers are expected to include:
A total ban on alcohol consumption
A ban on more than one teenage passenger
Zero tolerance for speeders – one ticket and they're off the road.
"We've been advocating this for a long time," said Carolyn Swinson, Toronto spokeswoman for MADD.
"Manitoba has already brought that in – it's already zero blood alcohol for drivers up to the age of 21 and for the first five years for new drivers.
"We've been asking Ontario to follow suit for a while."
In Ontario's current graduated licensing system – introduced in 1994 – young drivers can obtain a full driver's licence after just two years of driving experience, making it legal for them to drive after having a drink, and placing them on the standard demerit point system for speeding and other moving infractions.
Mulcahy began echoing MADD's calls for action shortly after his son's death when he learned that his son had a history of speeding and that alcohol had been a factor in his deadly car crash.
On July 3, Tyler Mulcahy, 20, his girlfriend Nastasia Inez Elzinga, 19, and friends Kourosh Totonchian, 19, and Cory Mintz, 20, spent the afternoon drinking 31 drinks over a three-hour period at a restaurant in Port Carling.
They left that evening in Mulcahy's Audi, but they never made it home.
Tyler Mulcahy was driving when he crashed the car into the Joseph River.
Only Elzinga escaped the sinking car with her life.
His son's death launched Mulcahy on a crusade to change the laws that bind young drivers in the province, to stop other youth from following his son's fatal journey.
First he began a petition for a revamping of the laws.
Then he began taking out full-page ads in the Star and other local newspapers that urged the province to revoke the licences of those under the age of 21 should they be caught speeding or driving with any alcohol in their system.
"Dear Mr. McGuinty, my son is dead," the ads began.
"It is not your fault, but you can make a difference and reduce future suffering."
It was enough to earn him a private meeting with the premier and, according to a note posted to his blog last Thursday, the drive produced results.
"Mr. McGuinty called me this morning and told me that both laws are being introduced into the legislature on Tuesday," Mulcahy wrote last week.
"I could not believe my ears and wept with Mr. McGuinty on the phone. If these bills are passed, Ontario will be the safest jurisdiction for young drivers in the world."
A spokesperson for the ministry of transportation could not be reached for comment.
Mulcahy wasn't available for comment yesterday, but in August he told the Star: "I'd like Tyler's accident to make a difference.
"I really feel there needs to be zero tolerance for alcohol up to the age of 21. Once someone takes one drink, it's easy to take two, three, four or 10 because we stop thinking," he added.
"I feel that speeding is at least as much of an issue as drinking and driving. If there was a zero tolerance for speeding and the licence was revoked for one speeding incident, then word would quickly get around that you can't speed and (keep) your licence.
"I want the law changed immediately so that I don't have to worry as much when my daughters are out partying and driving around in vehicles."




Summary


The Ontario Government is expected to introduce a tough legislation today that will make driving harder for teenage drivers. The reason they started talking about this is because MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) and a man named Tim Mulcahy introduced the legislation. Tim Mulcahy lost his son in a drunk driving accident. The new rules will be that you cannot have any alcohol in your body, period, no more then one other teenage passenger in the vehicle with you, and zero tolerance for speeding – one ticket and your off the road.



Questions


What will be the outcome of this legislation?

Do you think this will affect how teenagers drive and do you think this legislation will really cause teenagers not to drink alcohol before driving.

Do you want the legislation to be introduced to Ontario? Why or why not?

Will this cause you not to speed when your in a hurry when your older?


Erik Kimmerer

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Stanley Cup rings stolen in Bronfman break-in

Two Stanley Cup rings from the 1970s are among jewellery worth more than $1 million that has been stolen from the Toronto home of one of Canada's wealthiest families, police say.
Police say about 59 items including the rings and a third ring worth $350,000 were taken from a home in the Bathurst Street and St. Clair Avenue West area owned by the Bronfman family during a break-in this weekend.
Det. Lisa Benoit did not identify which family members owned the hoeme or its exact location. She said the items were mainly necklaces, bracelets and earrings, with some of the diamonds as large as 5 to 6 carats. The other stones included pearls and rubies.
Two of the rings were from the 1974 and 1976 Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens then owned by Peter and Edward Bronfman. The family name was engraved on the side of the rings. The brothers owned the Canadiens between 1971 and 1978, winning four Cups in those years. They settled in Toronto and co-founded the Edper Group.
"It's few and far between when you get a break-in of this value," Det. Benoit said at a press conference at Toronto Police Headquarters this morning.
She said that the property was broken into between 7:30 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. Saturday night while the family was out. The culprits broke in through a second storey side window house and took a 200-lb. (90 kg.) safe.
Police can't say how many people were involved but are reviewing security video and canvassing the area to gather any possible leads.

Summary

There was a great break in at the house of one of the house which was owned by one of the richest families in Canada and the value was over $1 million dollars including 2 different Stanley cup Championship rings. This catastrophe occured while the family was out for dinner, the culprits broke in through a second storey side window and took a 200-lb safe.
The stolen objects were mainly necklaces, earings, and other jeweleries such as rubies.
Police are still reviewing security video and canvassing the area to gather possible suspects.

Questions
#1
How many people do you think were needed to theft the 200 lb safe out of the house? Do you think it was possible with small number of people?
#2
In your opinion, do you think the thiefs already knew and planned about this theft with information of the Stanley cup championship rings?
#3
What are the important factors about the Stanley cup championship rings, and especially for Canadian families?

Thursday, October 30, 2008

PM could set record for most women in cabinet

PM could set record for most women in cabinet
JANE TABER Globe and Mail Update October 29, 2008 at 9:01 PM EDT
Stephen Harper could make history Thursday by surpassing the record for the number of women in a federal cabinet and appointing the first cabinet minister from Nunavut, who is also a woman. More women in cabinet could address some of the Prime Minister's challenges in Quebec, say political observers, who note that Premier Jean Charest turned around his fortunes after he chose women to make up half of his cabinet. The Harper Conservatives elected 23 women MPs on Oct. 14, 12 more than in 2006. There were seven women in the Tories' last cabinet, two of whom were junior ministers. Mr. Harper is expected to add four or five more Thursday, bringing to 11 or 12 the number of women in what could be a 30-member cabinet. This could be the largest percentage of women – 36 or 40 per cent – in a federal cabinet.
Jean Chrétien appointed nine women to his 37-member cabinet in 2000 – 24 per cent – and Paul Martin had 12 women in his 39-member cabinet in 2003-04, or 30 per cent. “Stephen Harper is very well positioned this time around [to add a significant number of women to cabinet],” said Françoise Gagnon, executive director of Equal Voice, an organization dedicated to getting more women elected in Canada. “He's got 23 women and if you look at the calibre who are coming to the Hill there's some huge talent pool in there for him to pick from. I think [Thursday] is going to show some interesting and possible historical results.” Ms. Gagnon says that if Leona Aglukkaq, the first Conservative MP elected from Nunavut, is appointed to cabinet it would be “huge” because it addresses “the needs of a population whose voice has not been heard at that level before.” Ms. Aglukkaq has held several positions in the territorial government and is expected to get a new northern development portfolio. It's also expected that the Tory's new MP from PEI, Gail Shea, a former provincial minister, will be given the fisheries portfolio (the Conservatives have not had a seat in PEI since 1988). Lisa Raitt, who beat Tory turncoat Garth Turner in the coveted 905-area around Toronto, is also expected to be given a post, as is Shelly Glover, a bilingual Metis police officer from Manitoba. The women-factor could play a role in reversing the Harper Tory fortunes in Quebec. Peter Donolo, of The Strategic Counsel polling firm, said Mr. Harper's approval ratings in Quebec dropped significantly during the election campaign as a result of being “out of sync” with Quebeckers, including cutting cultural programs and announcing a youth justice scheme that was hugely unpopular in that province. “He went from hero to zero in record time,” he said. Adding more women could increase his success in the province as it did for Mr. Charest, whose voter-approval rating increased in a few months from 32 per cent to 49 per cent. Many credit this to the fact that he appointed women to half of his 18 cabinet positions. “This … was very public, very symbolic,” Mr. Donolo said. “It doesn't just signal gender equity. It signals the kind of values the government has. Women tend to skew somewhat differently from men on a whole range of issues and it says you are going to be more sensitive to those issues … social issues, primarily.” Sheila Copps, a former Liberal cabinet minister, said a government “gets more balance” with more women in senior roles. “The problem that the government had with its conflicted cultural message, I don't think it would have happened [with more] women,” she said. “As a general rule, women tend to be more supportive of government involvement in supporting the collective and the society and not just the individual. In a sense women's views tend to very much reflect the view of Quebeckers and those are two areas they very much need work on.” One Tory strategist said Mr. Harper will not put rookie women into senior cabinet posts to avoid the so-called “Rona effect” that saw Rona Ambrose, a young, untested MP from Alberta, flop as Environment Minister. “I don't think you're going to see new MPs thrust into cabinet positions they are not ready for,” the strategist said.

Summary: The Conservatives could make history on Thursday by beating the record for the number of woman appointed to the federal cabinet. Harper could also make history if he appoints the first cabinet minister from Nunavut, who is also a woman.
There were 7 woman in Harper's last cabinet and he is expected to rase that number to 11 or 12 out of the cabinet of 30 members. This would mean that woman would make up 36 to 40 percent of the cabinet, which is the largest in history
Questions:

1. If Leona Aglukkaq is appointed to cabinet how is this important to Canada?

2. How are a woman's views different with a mans views in government according to Sheila
Copps?

3. How does this relate to what we have studied so far in history?

By. Jono McConnell (8-02)

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Liam Neuman Boy stabbed walking home from school; called 911 The Star's Bob Mitchel and Sandro Contenta

A 15-year-old youth, arrested today in the stabbing death last week of a 14-year-old boy as he walked home from school, appeared in a Brampton courtroom late this afternoon.
Rajiv Dharamdial was stabbed to death last Tuesday. He called 911 in a frantic attempt to save his own life.
Peel Police confirmed earlier this afternoon that they had arrested and charged a 15-year-old with first-degree murder.
The mother of the dead boy, Sunita Dharamdial, appeared at the courthouse in the company of about a dozen family members.
She was wearing a t-shirt with a photograph of her son on the front.
"I never thought in a million years that this would happen to us,” she said as she arrived.


Summary: A 14 year old boy was stabbed lats tuesday he called 911 to try and save his own life. They caught and arrested the killer and charged him for first degree murder. The mom of Rajiv Dharamdial wore a plain white shirt with a picture of her son on it to the court.

Questions

1. How do you feel about this?
2. How does this relate to what we are studying so far?
3. How should we stop this from happening?

Liam Neuman's Current Events 8-02

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

My Current Events - The Recent Canadian Election

Bilaal Rajan Thursday, October 16, 2008
The Fiasco Complete, This Minority Will Have to Suffice for Harper

Roy MacGregor Wednesday's Globe and Mail
October 15, 2008 at 1:49 AM EDT
Article:

Now that this turkey's done, let the chickens come home to roost.
Let us begin with the Prime Minister.
Perhaps it is only appropriate that the Hunter's Moon was in full glory this clear night over Ottawa. Also known as the Blood Moon, it seems an ideal choice to show the way ahead.
It was clear, from the moment polls closed in Eastern Canada, that nothing significant was going to change. As CTV's Craig Oliver so accurately called it, the “Groundhog Day” election was over. Or was it?
What's everyone doing tomorrow?
The Prime Minister of Canada broke a law, his own law, in order to gain what he believed would be an easy majority government without waiting for the legal fixed-date election. For Conservatives to pretend, as they did all last evening, that the object all along was to gain another minority is to insult the intelligence of everyone old enough to cast a vote – no matter for which party.
After 37 days and $300-million, the conclusion is not profoundly different today than it was on the day the Prime Minister called the Parliament “dysfunctional” and claimed it was not working – except, of course, for all the claims he instantly made to the contrary.
How, one wonders, could Stephen Harper not have won an easy majority when the Liberals began play with an empty net and never really got their game together?
If there is no immediate blood on the floor where Stephen Harper stands – he does, after all, have a “stronger” minority – then surely mops will be required this morning wherever Stéphane Dion chooses to stand, his only ally in holding onto power the powerlessness of his own nearly bankrupt party.
And yet how, one also must wonder, could the Liberals not capitalize on the long string of Tory goofs – apologies over puffins and stupid comments of workers and cabinet ministers, a serious faux pas in Quebec over the arts and crime, Harper's cold-hearted comment about buying stocks when the world appears in collapse – if the Liberals really are, as they believe, the natural ruling party of Canada?
Given the performance of the two main characters in this expensive farce, Harper and Dion, one is reminded of the comment Marion Pearson let slip in the John Diefenbaker sweep of 1958, when her husband, Lester, took Algoma East: “We've lost everything. We've even won our own seat!”
Harper, with his iron grip on everything in the Conservative Party from policy to the Pepsi supply, will surely hold on until, one distant day, the forces who now believe he can never deliver a majority start wondering where all those familiar old Tory knives are buried.
Dion, on the other hand, is doomed. He not only ran a dreadful campaign – incapable of explaining the only plank that mattered, the Green Shift – he had to turn in the end to those he defeated in the 2006 Liberal leadership race. Not only does he now have the ambitions and rabid supporters of Rae, Ignatieff, Hall Findlay, Dryden and Kennedy to contend with, but a whole new wave of leadership hopefuls in Justin Trudeau and Dominic LeBlanc and, presumably, names not yet heard in the national chat room.
M. Dion is toast.
And given that both the main parties performed so listlessly, how can it be that Jack Layton, who seemed alert as a chihuahua at the mail slot throughout the campaign, could gain no remarkable traction himself beyond the usual NDP payoff? A half dozen seats or so do not seem fair pay for all that hard work. His leadership is obviously safe, but the deeper story may well be that there is, simply, an orange ceiling out there, and Mr. Layton has just bumped his bobbing head against it.
As for Gilles Duceppe, the luckiest man in this magnificent country called Canada, how else do you explain what happened to a man who, only months ago, declared himself ready to bail to provincial politics, only to be told he wasn't wanted?
And so, what are we left with after this fiasco?
A minority – stronger, yet, but in more important ways different from the minority that wasn't good enough for Stephen Harper 38 days back.
This one they might have to make work – and the country will insist that it does.
This one, he won't be able to fold up at his own discretion and try, try, try again.
Not next time.
Not after this.

Article Summary:

The failure of Steven Harper of the Conservative Party to gain a clear majority to solve a “dysfunctional” parliament with an earlier minority government and the clear indication of voters to send Stephane Dion and the Liberals to their worst election by total votes in Canadian history tells us that this election was a waste of time, effort, and funds to the tune of $300 million for all Canadians. Mr Harper will probably stay on until voters eventually decide to dump the Conservatives while Mr. Dion is “toast” as there are a handful of potential leadership candidates waiting in the wings. The other leaders like Mr. Duceppe and Mr. Layton were fortunate as Quebeckers ditched the Conservatives and the NDP feasted on the Liberal death toll.

Course Topic Link - History 8-02:

Never before since pre-confederation times has Canada been so divided and polarized according to regions. The West and Rural Ontario want to get more say and autonomy as their economies are experiencing a natural resource boom that have elected Steven Harper’s minority Conservative government . Major urban centres with their economic powerhouses and the East are Liberal strongholds supporting neither side of the political spectrum and Quebec voters are still, since French rule in Canada, seeking a way out by electing the pro-sovereignist Bloc Québécois in most ridings (again except urban Montreal). This is idealistically the same situation just before Sir John A Macdonald, George Brown, and George Etienne Cartier joined forces to form a coalition to improve legislative gridlock before confederation. Canada East (Quebec in preconfederation times) wanted to preserve French rights and language as they do now, the West is largely untamed economically as they are now, and the regions in the East coast of Canada were suspicious of the intentions of the government based in the Canadas (Ontario and Quebec formerly) as they are now. The more Canada changes, the more it stays the same.

Questions?:

1) What was the purpose of this election in your opinion?
2) What do you think the impact of the election will have for the future of Canada?
3) Will Canada ever resolve the Quebec French sovereign issue? Why do you think so or not?

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Current events Marc Romanin

'I'm a good boy,' autistic man, 43, tells officers after they Taser him in bedroom, family alleges
Oct 07, 2008 04:30 AM
Dale Anne Freed Staff Reporter

A 43-year-old physically and mentally disabled North York man and his family are suing several police officers, including members of the Emergency Task Force, and the Toronto Police Services Board for more than $9 million in damages after he was hit with a Taser in his bedroom.
According to the lawsuit filed in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, George Lochner was in his second-floor bedroom when emergency task force officers came looking for his brother Silvano, who was wanted for allegedly threatening to assault his neighbour with a sledgehammer.
None of the family's accusations has been proven in court. In a statement of defence, the police and the board deny all of the family's allegations.
Police Tasered Lochner twice and beat him on his face and all over his body, his brother Silvano, 50, said last night at the family home in a quiet, middle-class neighbourhood.
"It was scary. My brother was in his room on the second floor sleeping when emergency task force officers came in with rifles. They said my brother tried to attack them," said Silvano, as he and his mother Lina, 77, showed the Star photos of George's injuries. "We have a medical report that says he was Tasered twice.
"Look what they did to him – he's handicapped, he's autistic," said his brother.
"Our lawyer, Clayton Ruby, will explain it all at a press conference at his office (today.)"
On Aug. 11, 2006, Silvano, who police said showed "violent tendencies," refused to surrender. The emergency task force team, backed up by tactical paramedics, arrived at the Lochner family home, where George Lochner lives with his parents and Silvano.
Police found George's mother and his brother Paul Lochner in the garage. They told police Silvano was out walking their disabled father and nobody was in the Verwood Ave. home.
The Lochners claim police attacked and punched Paul, pushed him to the ground, "pointed guns at his head" and handcuffed him.
Police then went in the home, "clearing" it room by room and found George lying in his bed.
Police say they identified themselves and told the special-needs man not to move, but say he tried to attack them and had to be subdued. But the Lochner family claims that police Tasered George "numerous" times in "drive stun mode" and "full deployment mode."
"I'm a good boy," George reportedly told police after they Tasered him. Silvano was later arrested.
Police say they used no more force than necessary and that he "suffered no physical injuries."


Summary A 43 year old mentally challenged man was tasered twice becasue the police were looking for his brother. The police said he tried to attack them. The family is suing several police and several men on the task force for $9 million dollars.


Questions,

1. How can things like this be prevented
2. Do you think police should be tasering autistic/mentally and physicly challenged people.
3. How could this relate to our history course, (no tasers, less violence)

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Current Events 8-02 Nicholas Whitelaw

EDWARD ALDEN
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
October 4, 2008 at 12:22 AM EDT

Stephen Harper has said that, if he is re-elected, he wants a "fresh start" with the new U.S. administration on dealing with the border, to see if ways can be found to reassure the Americans on security while easing restrictions that are causing costly delays for Canada.
John McCain, who made the unusual gesture of delivering a campaign speech in Ottawa in June, said he recognizes that the backups caused by new security measures "can pose a serious impediment to trade." Barack Obama has wanted nothing to do with Canada since a Canadian official embarrassed him by leaking one of his adviser's private reassurances over NAFTA, but he too is likely to be sympathetic to the Canadian concerns.
There is little reason, however, to think that dealing with border issues will be any easier after the elections in both countries; indeed, it is likely to become harder.
Canada and the United States long defined what it meant to have an open border. The orange cones that were placed at night across rural border crossings from Vermont to B.C. symbolized an extraordinary level of trust, rarely achieved by two neighbouring nations. That trust permitted ever deeper, and in some ways riskier, economic ties, from an automobile industry that grew up in virtual disregard of the border to a free-trade agreement that set rules since imitated on a global scale.
Enlarge Image
Canadian and American flags at a border crossing.
Related Articles
Recent
Live, Monday: Edward Alden on U.S. border security
Madelaine Drohan: Canada is not the U.S.
From the archives
Globe Editorial: Data as baggage
Since Sept. 11, 2001, we no longer live in a high-trust world. In the eyes of many Americans, 9/11 was a failure not of its foreign and military policies, or even of its intelligence agencies, but rather of its open borders. In seven years, the United States has doubled the number of its Border Patrol agents and tripled its enforcement expenditures and it is now deporting more than 250,000 illegal immigrants a year, all in the elusive quest for border security. On the Canadian border, it's known as "thickening"; on the Mexican border, it comes closer to warfare.
In the months after 9/11, some in the Bush administration turned to Canada in the hopes of building what they called "the border of the future" - one that would be open to trade and tourism but impervious to terrorists, drug smugglers and illegal immigrants. The virtual shutdown of the border after the terrorist attacks had been disastrous for the auto industry and the regions that relied on it, and both Ottawa and Washington were determined to prevent anything similar in the future. Tom Ridge, the White House homeland-security czar, had grown up on the shores of Lake Ontario and, as a former Pennsylvania governor, he understood the value of trade with Canada.
The result was the 2001 Smart Border accords, a laundry list of measures that was a remarkably cool-headed, sophisticated response to the trauma of 9/11. Its architects on both sides of the border believed two seemingly contradictory things: that the safeguards against terrorists crossing the border had to be maximized, but that barriers to legitimate cross-border traffic must be minimized for the prosperity of both countries. The way to do so was to "manage risk." By using modern information technologies and co-operating closely, the two governments would be better armed to recognize threats to security. Low-risk traffic — the commercial truck filled with auto parts or the nurse crossing daily from Windsor to Detroit — would be sped through, saving precious inspection resources that could instead be devoted to more suspicious targets.

Summary: This story talks about the U.S. border and about the security of the border.

Questions: 1. How does this relate to what we have studied so far?

2. Back then did Canada have troubles with the American boder?

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Instant poll finds Dion clear debate winner

French-speaking Canadians surveyed by Ipsos Reid immediately after Wednesday's debate said the Liberal Leader won the night, and one in five viewers say they changed their mind

Globe and Mail Update

TORONTO — Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion clearly prevailed in the French-language leaders' debate, according to viewers surveyed by Ipsos Reid immediately after Wednesday's telecast.

The online poll found 40 per cent of voters said Mr. Dion won the debate, compared with 24 per cent who gave the contest to Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe. Conservative Leader Stephen Harper came in at 16 per cent, NDP Leader Jack Layton at 11 per cent, and Green Party Leader Elizabeth May at just 1 per cent.

A Crop poll for La Presse with a smaller sample size found Mr. Dion ranked second, trailing Mr. Duceppe by only 6 per cent among viewers who rated their performance as "excellent" or "very good." Only 18 per cent said Mr. Harper had won the debate.

While there was no knock-out punch, Mr. Dion was at ease in his native tongue and set the agenda by promising he would implement a five-point economic action plan within 30 days of becoming prime minister. He may have also benefited from low expectations after a rocky campaign plagued by poor polling numbers.

Darrell Bricker of Ipsos Reid said a pre-debate poll found most voters expected Mr. Dion to do very poorly, so even a moderately credible performance had significant impact on post-debate results. Likewise, Mr. Harper was expected to "wipe up the floor" with everyone there save for Mr. Duceppe, he said.

"Dion outperformed expectations and Harper underperformed against expectations," said Mr. Bricker, adding that it reminded him of the 1988 free trade debates in which then-Liberal leader John Turner defied low expectations by going toe-to-toe with Brian Mulroney.

The Ipsos Reid poll found 36 per cent of viewers rated Mr. Dion as the leader who sounds and acts most like a prime minister, ahead of Mr. Harper at 31 per cent. One in five respondents – 20 per cent – said they had changed their mind about who to vote for as a result of viewing the debate.

The debate, which took place at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, was seen as critical to Mr. Harper's effort to win a majority government and to Mr. Dion's efforts to revive the faltering Liberal campaign. The bout saw Mr. Harper raked over the coals, smiling thinly as his opponents did most of the talking. The multipronged barrage appeared to leave the Conservative Leader resigned to having to weather the onslaught.

Mr. Bricker said Mr. Dion's performance may end up benefiting the Bloc by shaking those soft nationalists on the fence who were toying with a vote for the Conservatives.

"What he's done is made them maybe think again about voting for Duceppe. It sets up a really interesting tail-end to the campaign in Quebec," he said.

Other findings:

• 41 per cent of voters said Mr. Dion offered the best policies and ideas during the debate. In second was Mr. Duceppe at 22 per cent, Mr. Layton at 19 per cent, Mr. Harper at 13 per cent and Ms. May at 1 per cent.

• Mr. Layton was ranked most likeable and the person voters would most like to go out with for a beer or coffee. Mr. Layton was also viewed to be the most visually attractive (33 per cent), following by Mr. Duceppe at 22 per cent, Mr. Dion at 19 per cent, Mr. Harper at 15 per cent and Ms. May at 5 per cent.

Christian Leuprecht, who teaches political science at Kingston's Royal Military College of Canada, said he doesn't expect the debate to change Mr. Dion's fortunes in Quebec, where he is widely viewed as a Chrétien Liberal and a key player behind the Clarity Act.

Mr. Leuprecht said he expects Mr. Harper to do especially well in rural Quebec and that recent polls showing a drop in Tory support in the province reflect an urban bias that may not be mirrored in election day results. The unprecedented support for the NDP in Quebec, he added, may make like difficult for the Liberals and even the Bloc, regardless of whether it translates into seats for Mr. Layton.

Ipsos Reid polled a total of 637 French-speaking Canadian voters – 556 of them in Quebec – online immediately after the debate. The results are considered accurate plus-or-minus 3.9 per cent, 19 times out of 20. The data were statistically weighted to ensure the sample's age, sex, regional and party support composition reflects that of the actual French-speaking voter population. The sample was drawn from a pre-recruited panel of 12,000 voters from Ipsos Reid's internet panel.


Summary: This article talks about the French language debate between Mr Harper, Mr Dion, Mr Duceppe and Ms May that took place on October 1, 2008. The results from the polling show that 40% of voters felt that Mr Dion had won. One in five respondents said they had changed their mind about who to vote for after watching the debate.


Questions to Think About:
1. All of the people polled were French Canadians. How do you think this affected the results of the poll?

2. How important are debates in Canadian elections?

3. Which political leader do you think has the best qualities to be the Prime Minister?

This article has a link to our course topic because our elections are an important part of Canadian history.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Old Growth Forests

Protecting Old Growth Forests
What impact will this story have on Canada's future?
What conflicting interests are presented?

Value found in old-growth forests
SEAN PATRICK SULLIVAN
The Canadian PressSeptember 4, 2008 at 1:51 PM EDTVANCOUVER — Leaving British Columbia's old-growth forests standing may make more economic sense than cutting them down for timber, especially as the province looks to strategies to cut global warming, a new B.C. study suggests.The report from Simon Fraser University challenges the status quo and uses Ministry of Forest data to show that conservation wins out over logging when forests are valued for their role in capturing carbon from the atmosphere, protecting endangered species and providing opportunities for recreation.The study backed by three environmental groups – Wilderness Committee, David Suzuki Foundation, and Ecojustice – used computer modelling to look at a variety of conservation and logging scenarios in a large tract of forest near Vancouver.In almost every scenario, the researchers said, they found that the value of the carbon captured and stored by the trees far outweighed the value of the lumber harvested from the logs.Internet LinksB.C. forest information map Faisal Moola, science director for the David Suzuki Foundation, called the results a clear indicator that B.C. should be protecting its old-growth forest as it works with other western provinces to reduce global warming.“The old-growth forests that we have are not only going to be a benefit in the fight against climate change, but there's also a significant economic windfall that could be celebrated by British Columbians,” he said.