Archive for September, 2007

Klaus vs. Gore

Friday, September 28th, 2007

I have long admired the frankness of Czech President Vaclav Klaus:

President Klaus has not minced words on what he sees as the real agenda of those promoting climate hysteria. In an op-ed in the Financial Times (June 13, pointedly titled “Freedom, Not Climate, is at Risk,” Klaus said: “Let us not scare ourselves with catastrophic forecasts, or use them to defend and promote irrational interventions in human lives.” Arguing that the issue of global warming “is more about social than about natural sciences and more about man and his freedom than about tenths of a degree Celsius changes in average global temperature,” Klaus rejected the notion of a “scientific consensus” on climate change as an effort by a “loud minority” to impose its will on a “silent majority.”

However, Klaus reserved his unkindest cut of all for the movement that has joined forces with Gore is spreading fear about global warming:

“As someone who lived under communism for most of his life, I feel obliged to say that I see the biggest threat to freedom, democracy, the market economy and prosperity now in ambitious environmentalism, not in communism. This ideology wants to replace the free and spontaneous evolution of mankind by a sort of central (now global) planning.”

Source.

More on the Quebec by-elections

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

Jason Cherniak, the young Liberal pundit is getting quite a bit of attention today regarding his very public display of angst. Paul Wells gives us a much better assessment.

The Liberal losses in Quebec had little to do with the mechanics of the campaign and everything to do with political trends that began under Chrétien. The Liberal Party today is experiencing what the old PC Party went through – divisions in the ranks and a splitting of the vote. I think that Chrétien (and that Kinsella fellow) are given WAY too much credit for the Liberal successes during the 90’s – there was no credible opposition at the time.

Today the Liberal Party is facing a strong and united right, along with little appetite for separation and the Bloc, while the NDP are carving away at their support on the left. The fact that Dion is a weak leader is simply bonus.

I’m trying not to gloat but it’s a great time to be conservative in Canada.

Tea-leaves

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

The Quebec by-election results are very big news for each of the 5 leading parties.

As Andrew Coyne points out, the biggest net loser appears to be the Bloc, and the separatist movement in Quebec. As I have said in the past, this trend can be credited to the vision of open federalism that Mr. Harper has been promoting over the last two years.

read more | digg story

The faith-based school funding debate

Sunday, September 16th, 2007

Until a couple of months ago it was looking like the Ontario provincial election was going to be a bit of a yawner. Apart from the long list of McGuinty broken promises there were no juicy scandals to trumpet, and on policy issues the two main parties didn’t appear to be all that different from each other.

Then along came the Liberal “slush fund” controversy and the John Tory proposal to fund faith-based schools. Things sure did get interesting in a hurry.

While the people of Ontario have become somewhat complacent when it comes to Liberal broken promises and the flagrant abuse of public money, the faith-based funding debate has ignited some real honest discussion among folks on the street. The Liberals, on the other hand, have chosen to use the issue as a means to divert attention from their own record while fostering divisions among the secular and faith-based communities in this province.

Whether you support the proposal to fund faith-based schools or not, the approach that the McGuinty Liberals are employing to frame this debate is nothing short of deceptive opportunism.

As recently described by Bernie Farber in The Star, McGuinty was on the record as a supporter of Tory’s suggestion not all that long ago:

He was asked about the continuing unfairness faced by parents who send their children to Jewish day schools. What, the questioner wanted to know, was McGuinty’s position on funding faith-based schools? A hush descended on the meeting room. Said McGuinty: “I have no ideological opposition to ensuring that public funds support Jewish day schools.” Yes, he wanted to first reinvigorate public education, but he recognized the inherent “unfairness” in the present funding policy and was prepared to do something about it.

This was no flash in the pan. Over the next three years, McGuinty would continue to herald this position, as noted in an interview he gave to the Ottawa Citizen on June 1, 2001. When asked about whether he would provide funding for faith-based schools, he responded, “If we’re looking at equity, yes, somewhere down the road. I would have all kinds of strings attached when it comes to public dollars.”

He went on to explain, “The ideal here is equity with the Catholic system. Let’s understand what that means. First of all, it means you shall admit any child of any faith. Number two, it means you must hire Ontario-certified teachers. Number three, you must participate in all standardized testing. Number four, you must be subject to all the usual inspections, qualifications and regulations to which all publicly funded schools are subject at the present time. That’s what equity means.”

McGuinty had it right in 2001. Funding for faith-based schools ought to be a matter of principle.

Source: http://www.thestar.com/OntarioElection/article/254043

Here’s another article from 2001:

It turns out McGuinty isn’t opposed to the idea either, if we’re to believe the tune he’s singing now, but that’s not the impression he gave when he wrote former Foreign Affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy on the subject last year. That was shortly after the United Nations criticized Ontario for funding Catholic schools but not those of other faiths.

The Liberal leader now says money for religion-based educational institutions should be made available, just not right away. First, he says, we need to fix a public school system that’s in total disarray.

As usual, the Liberals want to have it both ways.

And there are many others in the Liberal Party that held the same views:

What a mess. Still, Gerard Kennedy, the Grits’ education critic, doesn’t see a contradiction in the Liberal position.

He contends that funding for religious schools doesn’t necessarily mean less money for the public system. Both can be accommodated, he says.

Kathleen Wynne, who unsuccessfully sought the Liberal nomination in St. Paul’s before the last election, says the party could have avoided this mess if it had taken what she calls a “principled stand” in favour of funding for religious schools during the election.

Source: www.nowtoronto.com

Andrew Coyne also has something to say on the issue.

While the faith-based funding debate may be about fairness and choice for parents vs. protecting the status quo, in this election campaign it also offers a striking indication of which candidates are honest and which are manipulative.

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Update Andrew Coyne posted a follow-up to his earlier column and he nails it:

Just to be clear — it probably is true that having kids of different backgrounds mix together at school contributes to greater social harmony. It’s also fair, in light of experience, to worry about what might be taught at the odd madrassa. What’s wrong is to draw a straight line from funding a few religious schools, with appropriate safeguards, to a total breakdown in social cohesion. What’s wrong is to whip this up into the single central issue of the campaign, as if there were some enormous crisis at hand. It’s the difference between legitimate concern and fearmongering — especially fearmongering directed, explicitly or implicitly, at a vulnerable minority. It’s the difference between statesmanship and demagoguery.

Source.

A stark contrast in spending habits

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

In yesterday’s Edmonton Sun the dining and entertainment expenses of Stephen Harper’s staff is compared to the spending of former Liberal staffers:

A comparison of expense claims among prominent staffers within the prime minister’s offices of Stephen Harper and Paul Martin paints a telling picture of extreme penny pinchers taking the reins from a more outgoing group with a taste for finer dining.

Adding up claims over a 12-month period, Harper’s chief of staff, executive assistant, communications director and press secretary reduced spending on hospitality meals and refreshments ($5,438) to almost one-quarter the annual tab for Martin’s staffers ($20,409).

Source.

I’m very curious to see how much media attention this story will get in central Canada.

Hat tip to Kate.