"Do not go gentle into that good night. Blog, blog against the dying of the light"
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
Be careful what you wish for
So Conservative blogger Stephen Taylor tried to put down the Liberals by posting this graph showing how many so called "fossil of the day awards" the Chretien/Martin Liberals "won" for blocking progress at the United Nations Climate Change negotations:
In reply, Steve V gives us this graph showing how the Harper Conservatives managed to surpass both the Saudis and the US to lead the world in fossil awards at the last round of climate talks at Bali:
So I guess we can conclude that the Liberal "achievement" over five years doesn't compare to what Harper managed in just 10 days!
Seems like we're on pace at Copenhagen, too, tying with the Saudis for third place on day one. Go, team, go!
Sunday, December 06, 2009
Legacy
"[The long gun registry] was the centrepiece of their legacy, the biggest thing we did over the last 20 years," said Sylvie Haviernick, who lost her sister, Maud, to Marc Lépine's killing spree. "We can't in all decency let it go."So apparently we've given up on achieving a society where men don't resent women for entering "male" professions like engineering. And we're not focusing on improving our capacity to identify and treat psychotics before they explode. Can it be true that all we have done in two decades for the Montreal massacre victims is spend millions of dollars to make it more bureaucratic for hunters to own rifles?
Seems to me that the only real accomplishment of the long gun registry has been to make it almost impossible for Liberals to get elected west of the Lakehead.
That's not the memorial these women deserved.
Sick and tired
Here's about all the complexity I can handle right now:
And this one:
Friday, December 04, 2009
Is there something wrong with me?
Thursday, December 03, 2009
The beatings will continue until morale improves
An unfortunate analogy occurs to me. The Harper government is behaving very much like a stubborn prisoner reluctant to confess. Electric cables and beatings are obviously not ours to deploy, even if by now we were to have the unpleasant urge to use such devices. Nevertheless, we--blogospherians, frustrated parliamentary committee members, bloodhound journos, various fed-up officials, human rights activists, maybe even The Hague--have ways of making you talk.Drip, drip, drip... the revelations keep coming day by day.
It's just a matter of time. And there's no point screaming--because we don't give a damn about your pain.
Here's the latest one in which we hear the most convoluted scenario I have ever read, all about how our military says they don't want to be policemen but they have been arresting people without evidence that justifies the arrest and then the Afghan authorities are releasing those people without, apparently, torturing them for confessions, so our soldiers are supposed to be all discouraged and disheartened.
More discouraging, I would think, is how nobody seems to be able to say why these people were being arrested in the first place, if they weren't committing a crime.
But at least Obama, for all the criticism of his speech, has finally laid out a rationale for why the Afghanistan war is continuing -- its not about nation building
he made explicitly clear that we are in Afghanistan to serve our own interests (as he perceives them), not to build a better nation for Afghans. Nation-building, he said, goes "beyond ... what we need to achieve to secure our interests" and "go beyond our responsibility."They're not making the world safe for democracy; they're making it safe for the United States.
So now, finally, Canada can decide whether that is a goal we can share.
Being a parent
Several friends and acquaintances have recently announced their first pregnancies, and I find myself offering the usual pithy niceties and dull truisms, an aloof veteran patting the backs of the new recruits just before they hoist themselves over the top into the maelstrom of shrapnel and armament. Welcome to the trenches. I hope you don't mind the smell of human excrement.Thanks to Nancy Nall for linking to this piece.
But there's more to it than just that....
Broken record
You've obviously mistaken me for someone who gives a shit.Actually, I don't know why we would be the least bit surprised that our Conservative government didn't care about what was being done to Afghan prisoners -- they don't think it's their job to help Canadians who get into trouble abroad either.
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Disconnect
So was she lying then? Or now?
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Next year country
Good on ya, guys. You played your hearts out for us, but, as my son quipped, for once the 13th man did you in.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Twitter Hamlet
SwtPrince_dk Oh that this 2 2 solid flesh wld melt thaw resolve itself=dew
SwtPrince_dk RT @Marcellus Something is rotten in the state of DK || Ya think?
SwtPrince_dk RT @DaneKing I am thy father’s spirit || Oh yeah? Prove it!
SwtPrince_dk @Horatio In heaven & earth > yr philosophy
SwtPrince_dk 2B or not 2B that is the ? Thoughts?
SwtPrince_dk Alas, poor Yorick I knew him @Horatio. See my blog for post I wrote about him, Infinite Jest. http://snurl.com/tehlk
SwtPrince_dk @Horatio Fie on the 140 character limit!
SwtPrince_dk @Horatio Forget it. Never saw the point of the @NorwayFort subplot anyway
SwtPrince_dk @Horatio iphone battery dying too. Irony?
SwtPrince_dk @Horatio The rest is silence
Saturday Morning Cartoon
Our Riders were still called the "Regina Roughriders" when this cartoon was made, so maybe that's why they weren't featured in it!
Friday, November 27, 2009
Pig in a poke
The latest mess is the screw up of school financing -- last spring the Sask Party did the bidding of their rural base by lowering school taxes and eliminating the ability of school boards to set their own mill rates.
Now with the drop in potash revenues, its becoming clear that they won't be able to afford to backfill school budgets like they promised they would.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Building a life
Instead of breaking their contracts and leaving the first chance they get, to break their hearts and lose their skills sitting on an NFL team bench, or to disappear into the second-banana coaching staff at Redneck U, these young players could stay in Regina, where they could not only keep on playing football at a high level but also become a leader and a highly-respected contributor to the community.
Darian Durant gets it.
"I don't think a quarterback has been around here for longer than four or five years in a long time," Durant said. "I just want to change the culture.On his website Durant promises "We will make Rider Nation proud!"
"We have a good nucleus here. Let's build around it, and let's try to build a dynasty."
Durant is actually the first Saskatchewan quarterback of note to take his first professional snap with the Riders and develop into a starter.
Double D, you already have.