The former Governor General himself is now being accused of treason by journalists. My goodness. pic.twitter.com/13o10zFYs0
— Gerald Butts (@gmbutts) March 17, 2023
"Do not go gentle into that good night. Blog, blog against the dying of the light"
Saturday, March 18, 2023
Today's News: Temper Tantrums
Thursday, March 16, 2023
Today's News: David Johnston to the rescue
Seriously. Watching journalists in Canada is like watching 7 year olds playing soccer. Just a gaggle of kids chasing the ball. No strategy or plan. Only focused on one ball while the world burns around them.
— Neil Before Zod™ (@WaytowichNeil) March 15, 2023
🧵
— Rambod Behboodi (@GenevaTradeLaw) March 4, 2023
The most interesting thing about the China scandal that has Canadian media in a feeding frenzy is that we know exactly nothing about it. It's a scandal because they say it is, not because anything scandalous has been revealed.
My $0.02 about the media-driven "scandal". 1/ pic.twitter.com/0bJDVZSFmO
Former CSIS director Richard Fadden, who also served as national-security adviser to Mr. Trudeau and former PM Stephen Harper.... “I think [David Johnston] is probably the only person in 🇨🇦 that would add sufficient credibility to the special rapporteur process....” @globeandmail
— Judy Gombita (@jgombita) March 16, 2023
whatever one's opinion of David Johnston being named a Special Rapporteur, "Beijing-funded Trudeau foundation" is a crass, ignorant comment
— Steve Ricketts (@SteveRickettsSP) March 16, 2023
or, as we like to say, just another tweet from Pierre Poilievre https://t.co/EsskLWHul7
Sunday, March 12, 2023
Today's Random Stuff: Cats and Pigs and Politics
I built my cat a mech suit out of cardboard. https://t.co/UKkfBQlsVm pic.twitter.com/6Z5rgEnDZf
— Jesse McLaren (@McJesse) March 11, 2023
I made my cat a Viking ship and she kinda liked it pic.twitter.com/0BtqBGvoPL
— corndog (@jay_veaux) March 12, 2023
The cat army grows. pic.twitter.com/y5t1aBLqNA
— Teapot (@Clay_Teapot) March 11, 2023
Recreated them BADLY, with items sourced from the basement pic.twitter.com/Hhh2dArTH6
— DejaBlu (@KidKnapt) March 11, 2023
— HawksNest1010 (@jay_hohl) March 9, 2023Next, here's a pig blowing bubbles and its just so righteous:
Friday, March 10, 2023
Today's News: Outstanding Support for Trans Rights
Because we don't get to choose the battle, we only get to choose our side. When people whose rights are under attack need us to stand up and be counted, then we all have to do that, just as Trudeau did.And with a disturbing rise in anti-transgender hate here in Canada and around the world recently, I want to be very clear about one more thing: Trans women are women. We will always stand up to this hate – whenever and wherever it occurs.
— Justin Trudeau (@JustinTrudeau) March 8, 2023
Well done, Saskatoon city council! They handled this very well, I would say, and made it perfectly clear that trans people are a valued segment of society. 👏🏼 https://t.co/mIaTIE72tN
— FuzzyWuzzy💤 (@FuzzyWuzzyTO) March 9, 2023
Saskatoon's real freedom fighters showed up today and it was a beautiful thing to witness. #TransWomenAreWomen #TransRightsAreHumanRights https://t.co/CHUlTkkOdk
— Kyle Anderson (@DrKyle) March 8, 2023
Monday, March 06, 2023
Today's Random Stuff -- dogs, frogs, and physics
Great, now I have to go buy twice as many tennis balls. https://t.co/PMJnXwp8lJ
— Gerggers (@gerggers) February 23, 2023
this dog is friends with a crow and it's like a real life pixar movie
— theworldofdog (@theworldofdog) February 22, 2023
(jukin media) pic.twitter.com/A3pKDJOb9i
That Wascally Wabbit pic.twitter.com/SyuTkIDV1M
— Madeyousmile (@Thund3rB0lt) February 26, 2023
As seen on George Takai's substack:Duck and Dog Wrestle Playfully in Snow
— Funniest Family Moments (@Funniest_Family) February 27, 2023
Look how they play! 🙂
💌Follow for the most inspirational stories of hope, love, tradition, family and art. pic.twitter.com/1EaBIWBH4v
Allow me to introduce you to the most ridiculous yet amazing thing you will see this week. pic.twitter.com/MHlGmz9Ph2
— fragrance and foolishness (@Brieyonce) February 27, 2023
Sunday, March 05, 2023
Today's News: "Being Woke" = "Being Kind"
Another word for “woke” is “kindness”
— Bob Rae (@BobRae48) March 3, 2023
Thursday, March 02, 2023
Today's Scene: An Inquiry If Necessary, but Not Necessarily An Inquiry
1. If China interfered in Canadian elections and the Liberals let them, then there needs to be an investigation and Trudeau would likely need to resign.2. But the CSIS leaks so far seem to show just normal political activity by Chinese-Canadian Liberal supporters, whose political involvement should be applauded, not targeted.3. So we should have an inquiry if necessary, but not necessarily an inquiry
4 Conservatives will lose the plot if they keep on trying to turn the China questions into just another partisan anti-Trudeau issue.
CSIS reported Chinese interference since at least 2010 when Stephen Harper was PM
— 🇨🇦 Henri A🇨🇦🇺🇦 (@HenriAGS) February 28, 2023
Anyone trying to tie Chinese attacks against Canada to a particular party does so b/c of blind hate
That hate betrays our national security & helps foreign interests for gotcha points 🤦♂️#cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/CxSL7busob
Anyone who suggested the Friday Han Dong leak was an act of a whistleblower needs to apologize for getting played
— Evan Scrimshaw (@EScrimshaw) March 1, 2023
This is CSIS deciding they want to hurt the PM, which is fucking terrifying https://t.co/29bCk9WyiR
A reminder of the time the RCMP contributed to the defeat of the Martin government by launching an investigation into what proved to be spurious allegations against Ralph Goodale. Without hard evidence, security forces ought to keep their noses out of electoral politics.
— David G (@accfanto) February 25, 2023
Sunday, February 26, 2023
Today's Random Stuff
Fascinating article in The Atlantic: The Puzzling Gap Between How Old You Are and How Old You Think You AreReservation runway: Rising Cree designer makes New York runway debut -- ‘The future is going to be Indigenous-led’: designer Scott Wabano /via @CBCMontreal https://t.co/5ADVQ8anAR
— Treaty Commissioner (@TreatyOfficeSK) February 22, 2023
...It’s bizarre, if you think about it. Certainly most of us don’t believe ourselves to be shorter or taller than we actually are. We don’t think of ourselves as having smaller ears or longer noses or curlier hair. Most of us also know where our bodies are in space, what physiologists call “proprioception.” Yet we seem to have an awfully rough go of locating ourselves in time.......adults over 40 perceive themselves to be, on average, about 20 percent younger than their actual age.... viewing yourself as younger is a form of optimism, rather than denialism. It says that you envision many generative years ahead of you, that you will not be written off, that your future is not one long, dreary corridor of locked doors.
...I’m 53 in real life but suspended at 36 in my head, and if I stop my brain from doing its usual Tilt-A-Whirl for long enough, I land on the same explanation: At 36, I knew the broad contours of my life, but hadn’t yet filled them in....I was not yet on the gray turnpike of middle age, in other words.... Adolescence and emerging adulthood are times dense with firsts (first kiss, first time having sex, first love, first foray into the world without your parents’ watchful gaze); they are also times when our brains, for a variety of neurodevelopmental reasons, are inclined to feel things more intensely, especially the devil’s buzz of a good, foolhardy risk....adults have an outsize number of memories from the ages of about 15 to 25. They called this phenomenon “the reminiscence bump.” (This is generally used to explain why we’re so responsive to the music of our adolescence—which in my case means my iPhone is loaded with a lot more Duran Duran songs than any dignified person should admit.)
Recently, I wrote to Margaret Atwood, asking her how old she is in her head. In the few interactions I’ve had with her, she seems quite sanguine about aging. Her reply:
At 53 you worry about being old compared to younger people. At 83 you enjoy the moment, and time travel here and there in the past 8 decades. You don’t fret about seeming old, because hey, you really are old! You and your friends make Old jokes. You have more fun than at 53, in some ways. Wait, you’ll see! :)
Saturday, February 25, 2023
Today's News: Ukraine Strong
David Rothkoph has made a list of what has been learned from this war so far:On February 24, millions of us made a choice. Not a white flag, but the blue and yellow one. Not fleeing, but facing. Resisting & fighting.
— Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) February 24, 2023
It was a year of pain, sorrow, faith, and unity. And this year, we remained invincible. We know that 2023 will be the year of our victory! pic.twitter.com/oInWvssjOI
...- While Ukraine has pleaded for fighter jets for a year, unmanned aircraft have stolen the show....- “No Time for Sergeants” was once a TV hit in America. It has been a flop for the Russian army....- Speaking of time, it’s time for traditional navies to realize their time will soon be up....Poland is the new Germany. (And Estonia is the new France.)...- Vladimir Putin may be a madman, but at least he has the common sense not to want to be obliterated in a nuclear war with NATO....- Speaking of Putin, stick a fork in him. He may not be quite done yet, but he will be soon… and besides if anyone deserves to have a fork stuck in him, it’s Putin....- ...Ukraine’s masterful use of social media has played a major role in shaping global public opinion about the war...- Ukraine is already in the EU and NATO whether you (or Russia or Turkey) like it or not....- With friends like Turkey, Israel, the global South and Elon Musk, who needs enemies?...- And the most important lesson of all is, as it will be for the remainder of this century, everything is always about China....
... the prospects of a Ukrainian winter offensive, once widely anticipated, are pretty much nil. There’s no reason to waste lives and material when heavy Western armor is on its way, while the U.S. drills Ukrainian commanders on combined arms operations in Germany’s training fields.Ukraine has gotten this far because it has always worked to undermine Russia’s logistics. It’s why they are screaming for longer-range rockets, to hit Russian ammo depots further behind enemy lines and force those supplies even further back. Ukraine’s success in shrinking the active front line is also its great challenge, as Russia squeezes more men into a smaller space.But Ukraine won't win by killing 300,000 Russians. It will do so by cutting off their food and ammunition. Russia lost the war because of logistics, and Ukraine will win it for the same reason.
Wednesday, February 22, 2023
Today's News: "Home On Native Land"
The Toronto Star reports on the background:“Our home ON native land” -@JullyBlack 🙌🏽 pic.twitter.com/SMoxKHkMPE
— Andrew Baback Boozary MD (@drandrewb) February 20, 2023
...In an interview with TSN reporter Kayla Grey, Black said she had reached out to Indigenous friends for feedback, and landed on this version of the song.Eva Jewell, the research director at Indigenous-led research centre Yellowhead Institute, said she was “heartened” to see her rendition.“Indigenous Peoples have been saying that line for decades actually — this is something that is known within our communities,” Jewell said. “So, to see Jully uplift that into the national anthem … it showed me that she has seen us, she understands us; she gets it.”... Hearing it performed this way, though, is powerful, she said.“I think that changing that word and being very explicit about settler colonialism is a pause for reflection amongst the Canadian public,” she said. “Too often, the Canadian state is normalized as just being a fact, and that small word change would call that into question and be really explicit about that pre-existing world of the Indigenous countries that were here before Canada violently stole our lands.”
Jully Back did Canada a solid with an apparently insignificant change to our National Anthem. Our collective journey has many more lessons to learn. "Our home and native land" shall forever be "our home ON Native land". Make it official, @JustinTrudeau https://t.co/JNDul6RPU5
— Nancy Crouse (@Nancy_Crouse) February 20, 2023
Monday, February 20, 2023
Today's Funny Stuff: rounding up the tweets and substacks
In yesterday's other news - that Globe and Mail piece about China trying to interfere with the 2021 election - Alison flags something that has been completely forgotten:So far it seems, according to Justice Rouleau, @JustinTrudeau’s worst fault regarding the convoy protest is that he said some things that some of the more sensitive protesters might have considered mean. These are the poor dears carrying F🇨🇦c k Trudeau signs.
— Stephen Best (@BestStephenD) February 18, 2023
NaPo, Oct 13, 2021:
— Alison Creekside (@CreeksideAlison) February 18, 2023
"A group
representing Conservatives of Chinese descent is urging Erin O’Toole to resign as federal leader, charging that his call for a tougher approach to China alienated Chinese-Canadian voters and cost the party three seats in last month’s election." pic.twitter.com/WuvxkBBQq6
Saturday, February 18, 2023
Today's News: Justified
TL;DR
Breaking: #POEC report “Canada’s use of Emergency Act justified due to shit policing and ongoing political interference and douchebaggery from the great unwashed” (I’m paraphrasing). Now go get jobs.
— Dean Blundell🇨🇦 (@ItsDeanBlundell) February 17, 2023
In October, I wrote that I hoped the Public Order Emergency Commission looking into Trudeau's use of the Emergencies Act to shut down the FreeDumb Convoy Ottawa occupation and border blockades should answer five questions:"Justice Rouleau's report is clear: the federal government was justified in using the Emergencies Act to clear out the occupation of downtown Ottawa. But the subtext is even clearer: it had to use it because Doug Ford refused to do anything to help."#POEC #DougFord #cdnpoli https://t.co/17I1aLKzgS
— RF 🇺🇦 (@dipbrat70) February 18, 2023
1. Whose side were the police really on?2. Whose side are the media really on?3. Whose side is the public really on?4. Conservatives, WTF?5. Are the hearings going to be a clown show?
...on October 12, 2021, the government of the United States announced [emphasis mine] that, starting in January 2022, all inbound foreign national travellers crossing United States land or ferry ports of entry would be required to be fully vaccinated. This included those travelling for essential purposes, including commercial trucking. Then, on November 18, 2021, Canada announced that its border rules would also change ...The effect of these new rules was that foreign truck drivers would be barred from entering Canada unless they were vaccinated. Canadian truckers, who have a constitutional right to enter Canada, would not be barred from entry. However, if unvaccinated, they would no longer be exempted from the requirement to quarantine, which would have a significant impact on their ability to engage in commercial trucking.In practice, they were more impacted by the American rules that barred them from entering that country entirely. However, as I mentioned earlier in this chapter, several protest leaders believed that the American authorities decided to impose their vaccination requirement only after Canada did so.This was not the case [emphasis mine] but does go some way to explaining why protesters may have focused their anger toward Canadian authorities and believed that a repeal of the Canadian requirements would have allowed unvaccinated truckers to continue cross-border work ...
In some circles, “the trucker” became a symbol for hard-working Canadians who, despite their contributions to society, were having their lives and livelihoods upended by government COVID-19 regulations.This narrative was a contributing factor that helped to animate the Freedom Convoy.(Volume 2, page 98-99)
Tuesday, February 14, 2023
Today's Scene: "What about the squirrels?"
....ChatGPT is essentially never very far away from a crazy response, and relies on people not feeding it crazy prompts to appear as a sane interlocutor.So now, the danger: at the moment it is easy to find the sense/nonsense boundary. But we could imagine a future ChatGPT version that has orders of magnitude more parameters, and is trained on vastly more, better-curated data, to the point that it is difficult to fool it into giving a pathological response. Question: has the sense/nonsense boundary been annihilated for such a system?The correct answer is “duh, no.” The boundary has simply been made harder to find, even by experts. But it’s still there, waiting for the unwary to be led over it by the Chatbot. Which is guaranteed to happen, eventually, because the future is not like the past. The world is an ever-surprising place. ChatGPT’s heirs are bound to get tripped up eventually by a world that has drifted beyond their training data. Yet humans will trust the AI’s inferences, because it’s never made mistakes before.The fact that such an AI customized for, say, air traffic control has simulated successfully landing billions of aircraft over the past 50 years using real ATC data is a terrible reason to trust it to run ATC unsupervised, because changing aeronautic technology and changing economics of air travel are extremely likely to produce situations that it’s never seen, and ought not “reason” about. But DL systems make overconfident decisions even with cases that in no way resemble their training.Now, for “ATC”, substitute “surgery”. Or “war policy planning”. Or ” emergency management”. And imagine the consequences of falling off the cliff of bullshit, led on by your implicit trust in your “demonstrably” (“never been wrong before”) infallible AI.That’s the real danger. The superficially anthropomorphic character and apparent oracularity of such systems make people forget that the future is a strange country which drifts away from the past, and that any system that cannot acknowledge that — as DL cannot — is doomed to fall off the cliff of bullshit sooner or later, taking anyone who places their faith in that system with it.
I think I have a way of quickly finding the boundary.Ask: “What about the squirrels?”If it attempts to answer the question, it’s a bot.If it says, “Huh?” it’s a human.
Sunday, February 12, 2023
Today's Funny Stuff: Baseball and Billings Bridge and Penquins and more
I now subscribe to a substack newsletter Dead Legends, which this week talked about The Pine Tar Incident. See the newsletter for the full story in all its glory.Some of the worst baseball you’ll ever see
— Shit Bsb Players Say (@ShitBsbPlyrsSay) February 11, 2023
pic.twitter.com/qURCSX3HtW
Loved Billy Martin's comment here "When you win the game, you don't protest."“The Pine Tar Incident”
— Shit Bsb Players Say (@ShitBsbPlyrsSay) May 21, 2021
pic.twitter.com/3FkJTqz3QY
The news tonight in baseball is that now the LA Dodgers have been accused of stealing signs in the 2018 World Series, which they lost in five games to Boston anyway, so whatever they may have been doing, it didn't do them any good.“Old Days”An”Angelic”Billy Martin explains the
— Tom's Old Days (@sigg20) October 8, 2022
”Pine Tar Incident” In a 1983 interview with Bill White.#Yankees #NYC #kansascity #Royals #1980s #MLB
pic.twitter.com/JT7AS6zBWs
Baseball is now getting dragged into the US culture wars - school districts in Florida are preemptively removing biographies of players like Roberto Clemente and Hank Aaron, apparently because nobody wants to find themselves targetted by Florida's asshole governor Ron DeSantis nor his redneck supporters.This is how much baseball means to the people who play it! https://t.co/70joPVGQAB
— Cathie from Canada 🇨🇦 😷🏳️🌈 (@CathieCanada) February 12, 2023
Serious question: Where is @MLB? They’ve removed this book and Hank Aaron’s. MLB really should assert itself here and let @RonDeSantisFL know this is unacceptable. In fact, if I were the Rays & Marlins, I’d give away copies of this book to fans on Opening Day. https://t.co/U1MeQeMEUy
— Jemele Hill (@jemelehill) February 12, 2023
Friday, February 10, 2023
Today's News: Roundup time
The handshake. pic.twitter.com/9KBgNH1mcP
— Andrew Brown (@browncbc) February 7, 2023
Then on Thursday, Smith did this -- Twitter can't decide whether it was stupid or smart:I can’t believe this needs to be said but- if you’re meeting the bloody Prime Minister you suck it up and shake his hand like an adult. Don’t even have to like the guy…lord knows I haven’t always liked every PM I have met but I was still respectful.
— Thomas Watson Jr. (@ThomasWatsonCD) February 8, 2023
Of course, none of this has anything to do with increasing federal money for health care -- we'll find out on Friday how much more the Premiers they they can get:After many jokes about her handshake with the Prime Minister, this is how Premier Danielle Smith entered today’s press conference with reporters in Calgary. pic.twitter.com/gP03lT49rh
— Adam MacVicar (@AdamMacVicar) February 9, 2023
Gee, I wonder which they will choose?
— Cathie from Canada 🇨🇦 😷🏳️🌈 (@CathieCanada) February 9, 2023
"The premiers were non-committal about [Trudeau's $46.2 Billion health] plan ....They said they'd take time to review Trudeau's pitch before either accepting the terms or demanding more."https://t.co/djXMhs1bTR







