Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Where are the Leaders?


Many have noted that Jack Layton came very close to matching the 43 seats gained in 1988 by the NDP under the leadership of Ed Broadbent.

But not many have pointed out the universe of distance between Broadbent and Layton.

It has been a long time since we have seen True Character on display in Canadian politics.

Who is the last Great Man who could cite chapter and verse of literature, history, war, agriculture, music and personal life?

This election was interesting in its minutia and its betting possibilities and not much else.

Barbara Yaffe says in her front page piece in the Sun this morning that Harper "has not demonstrated the warmth, openness, communication skills or values that a lot of voters want in their leader."

She's right; but go further, much further.

Harper is a reasonable enough manager; but he is a vapid blank of a person. Can you imagine struggling through a coffee or dinner with this fellow?

Dion - the less said the better. But who stands in the wings? Michael Ingatieff and Bob Rae. Oh, and "star candidate" Justin Trudeau. Lord help us.

Adrian Carr and Elizabeth May demonstrated the art of the wasted vote and why the Green party needs another 30 years or so to become a contendah.

Now, to some specific Yeas and Boos.

Thank goodness we can now say goodbye to Raymond Chan in Richmond, Don Bell in North Vancouver and Blair Wilson in West Vancouver. We don't know that their replacements will fare any better, but could they do much worse or much less?

The most baffling, confounding and maddening Boo comes in Vancouver centre where Dr. Hedy Fry, possibly the least deserving parliamentarian of all time, won for the sixth time in a row.

None of us know what it is that she has done for her riding to warrant this affection and loyalty.

Lorne Mayencourt, her Conservative opponent, whom she beat decisively, actually built a drug treatment centre in Prince George, a rare enough accomplishment for anyone let alone a politician.

The currency in political life has diminished significantly in the last 20 years. At all three levels of government, leadership, character and inspiration are at an all time low.

Will a new generation of The Inspired emerge?

We can only hope so.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Nixon Redux


Did you see the three-hour American Experience documentary on Richard Nixon last night on PBS?

It was a good primer on all of the current elections.

I watched the first two hours and then taped the last hour, which I can watch tonight after Harper regains his minority government at 8 o'clock.

In Nixon's first two election wins, he didn't beat his opponents, he smashed them. And he did so by spreading the most ugly, hateful and untrue rumours. In his defense for using such tactics, he said that the only important thing is to win. maybe he should have coached the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Nixon had gained national prominence by chasing Communists from under every American bed, even before Joe McCarthy. In other words, his strength was to name enemies, real or imagined.

Sound familiar?

Most of you, like me, lived through the Watergate drama. I was attached to my black-and-white, rotary dial TV all summer long that year.

Looking back on Nixon's disgrace and on his earlier "triumphs," what continues to astonish me is the sight of thousands of sheep cheering madly for this creepy, evil bastard.

Much as I am astonished watching thousands of sheep cheering madly for the dumbest president in history, George W. Bush, and the worst ticket in history, McCain/Palin.

That Nixon was a brilliant, untrustworthy and unstable snake was self-evident. You had only to look at him and listen to his words and the sound of his voice and you knew you were viewing craziness.

That Bush is a dimwit and a puppet and that McCain and Palin have no business in public office is also self-evident.

What scares me is are the adoring throngs. How shallow, how desperate, how ignorant can ordinary people be?

It is to Weep


$8 Million to give free heroin and heroin substitutes to 190 Vancouver addicts and 66 Montreal addicts.

And then a hefty report of "scientific" conclusions to wade through.

One can only weep.

At $50,000 per year per bed, that money would provide 160 treatment opportunities.

That's 85% of the Vancouver addicts who were helped by doctors and scientists to continue using heroin.

What would prompt a human being to proceed with this kind of hateful, evil plan when helping an addict to live free of drugs is always possible?

That anyone takes this "scientific" experiment seriously is frightening.

The Fox is in the Hen House


How reassuring is it to learn that Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., the former head of Goldman Sachs and one of the firm’s most accomplished global deal makers, is leading the Bush administration’s struggle to contain an economic contagion stemming from a disintegrating housing sector, volatile financial markets and frozen credit, resurgent inflation and widening job losses?

In other words, the man who made a personal fortune short-selling and manipulating markets and clients with ruthless abandon (His bonus in his last year was in excess of $35 Million.) is now going to lead us all out of the desert.

And then why should we be surprised that Goldman Sachs will itself be one of the beneficiaries of the instant government largess?

The man who should be behind bars is the Treasury Secretary.

We'd like to say, "Only in America," but that would leave out Italy, France, Germany and most of the plundering civilized world.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Praise the Lord and Pass the Ballot Box


The New Yorker magazine carried a major article in its September 8th edition on the role of religion in American politics. The piece, written by Peter J. Boyer, a staff writer, is called "Party Faithful."

I encourage you to read it in its entirety here.

However, here are just a few highlights:

"Karl Rove wasn’t blind to the Catholic opportunity. When Bush assumed the Presidency, in 2001, Hudson became the volunteer chair of the new Catholic-outreach program of the Republican National Committee. In his book “Onward, Christian Soldiers,” Hudson describes himself as “the Catholic gatekeeper” for the White House. The Administration’s policies clearly reflected a Catholic influence. On Bush’s first workday, he acted to limit federal funding of non-governmental organizations that performed or actively supported abortion as a method of family planning overseas. By the end of his first term, Bush had delivered on every item on a wish list that Hudson says he presented to him at the time of their first formal meeting, in Austin, including its centerpiece, the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, which Bush signed in 2003. That year, Michael Novak explained Bush to an Italian readership in the journal Studi Cattolici. “Never have Catholics had so solicitous a friend in the White House,” Novak wrote. “So pro-Catholic are the president’s ideas and sentiments that there are persistent rumors that, like his brother Jeb, the governor of Florida, G.W. might also become a Catholic.”

"By 2004, some JPII bishops were positing that John Kerry, a pro-choice Catholic, should be denied Communion, and had even suggested that casting a vote for him might be a sin."

Religious conservatives had been put off by tales of McCain’s temper, and by his ungallant termination of his first marriage. They remembered how he had lashed out against their own in 2000, condemning Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell as “agents of intolerance,” and likening them to Louis Farrakhan and the Reverend Al Sharpton. “I am convinced Senator McCain is not a conservative, and, in fact, has gone out of his way to stick his thumb in the eyes of those who are,” the evangelical leader James Dobson said in a statement read to a national radio audience on Super Tuesday. “I cannot and I will not vote for Senator John McCain, as a matter of conscience.”

John Hagee is the pastor of a megachurch and he is very influential. He believes that "the antichrist will be the head of the European Union.

He and Falwell and Robertson share this enlightened view: After the defeat of the False Messiah, Jesus Christ will return to earth and reign in glory for a thousand years, before engaging Satan in one last battle, at Armageddon. " Falwell believed that the Antichrist, being a counterfeit of Christ, will of necessity be a male Jew."

That's encouraging.

But wait. It gets better.

In May, the Huffington Post put up an article citing a decade-old sermon in which Hagee suggested that the Holocaust was part of God’s plan, as it helped usher Jews back to Palestine.

Good to know.

Hagee is a man that McCain has repeatedly had to court and appease.

And what about this snapshot of the American voter:

"In casting Republicans as the dangerous God Party, Democrats had turned themselves into the Secular Party so resolutely as to seem almost hostile to religious faith—a perilous position in a country where ninety-two per cent of the population believe in God, more than two-thirds believe in the presence of angels and demons, and nearly a quarter have said that the attacks of September 11, 2001, are prophesied in the Bible."

Of course, McCain is not alone in having to answer to these self-appointed demi-gods. Franklin Graham is Billy Graham's son.

Franklin Graham asked Obama, “Do you believe that Jesus Christ is the way to God, or merely a way?” Obama responded, “Jesus is the only way for me,” and Graham left the meeting impressed.

There is a website called Catholics Against Joe Biden.

And where is the media?

George Stephanopoulos, of ABC, asked McCain about his position on gay adoption. He doesn’t support it, McCain said, but he added, “It’s not the reason why I’m running for President of the United States.”

I give full points to McCain for revealing in that answer what a dreadful, divisive, and irrelevant question that is from anyone pretending to journalism or honor of any kind. The question itself denies complexity. It is a burr under the saddle for simpletons.

And when McCain selected Governor Palin as his running mate, who applauded loudest?

McCain thrilled his conservative base further with the selection of the fervently Christian Governor Sarah Palin, of Alaska, as his Vice-Presidential nominee. (“A home run,” Reed declared to the Times, and Dobson called the choice “outstanding.”)

That is Ralph Reed and James Dobson, two hugely powerful Evangelicals and in my opinion tow of the most dangerous men in America.

Why have I quoted much of this article today and why do I encourage you to read it?

Unlike some of my Rabbi friends and unlike the celebrated religion writer in the Sun, I deplore the mix of religion and politics.

For me, the separation of Church and State is a fundamental principle of democracy.

For me, the enormous sway held in American political life by egomaniacal snake-oil salesmen with simplistic doctrinaire views is horrifying.

Beware falseprophets.

And at this juncture, we might add...and they are all false.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Back...

Friday, October 10, 2008

au resevoir


Into the woods again...

Non postismentis tomorrow, but back in form either Sunday night or Monday morning, depending on how many breadcrumbs I leave on my path...

Eh?


Stockwell Day, demonstrating a fine mind for numbers, assures us that the security bill for the 2010 fiasco will be somewhere between $400 Million and $1 Billion.

What a sharp pencil he has.

May he never be the finance minister.

Your right to Drive Doped Supercedes my right to be safe crossing the street?


The first person in Candian history has been arrested for driving while stoned on drugs.

Some might think this progress.

But privacy critics call this an invasion of privacy.

I'll tell you what's a really, really big invasion of privacy -

Being struck down and killed by a stoned driver.

Now that's an invasion of privacy.

Boycott


The American Family Association is at it again.

They managed, by threat of boycott, to get a MacDonald's executive to resign from the board of the National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce.

This activity was no doubt a heinous venal sin.

The Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce had the outrageous temerity to try to get health care coverage for its business-owning members.

Shame on them.

The MacDonald's exec has not only left the Board, he has left the good old open and tolent Excited States.

Last month he started his new job here in Canada.

By the way, when you Google the AFA, some of the choices you are offered include "The Homosexual Agenda," and "Hallmark Pushes Same-Sex Marriage."

A lot of people with a lot of spare time on their hands.

Spending


Between the two of them, Barack Obama and John McCain will have raised and spent more than a billion dollars on their campaigns for the presidency.

What does that say about "the system?"

How many health insurance policies, schools, day cares, operating rooms, and new houses would that money have brought to the common good?

I know.

Life is unfair. That's the way it is.

Sleepy, dreamy thoughts...

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Now, that's funny...but you've got to stay with it to the last beat

More on VANOC and their deep concern for all


Dear David,

As soon as I heard about Right to Play on the CBC television news, I fired
off this letter to the Sun, the Province and the CBC. Perhaps I was too
quick as the print story had not yet appeared. In any event, it went
nowhere. If you are able to use it in anyway - please feel free.

Warmest regards,
Jillian Skeet
(International Affairs Consultant and Cambie Resident)


Nothing demonstrates the spiritual bankruptcy of the 2010 Olympic games more
than the recent news that "Right to Play" is being excluded from the Olympic
Village due to organizers' concerns that they will compete for sponsorship
money.

"Right to Play" is a wonderful organization that has the support and
involvement of Canadian athletes and Olympians. It provides sports
equipment and facilities for children living in some of the most deprived
circumstances on our planet. It believes that all children have a right and
a need to play. And it's probably the cheapest and easiest form of therapy
that we can offer to children damaged by appalling poverty and war - not to
mention a way to ensure that Olympic dreams are accessible to all the
world's children, no matter how humble their beginnings.

As a British Columbian, I shudder to think what we will be showcasing to the
world in a year and a half. The world will see a province with the highest
child poverty rate in Canada and horrific levels of homelessness, crime and
addiction. They will be told of all the cutbacks to programmes and services
for our most vulnerable citizens and how businesses were left to die along
Cambie to make way for the new Olympic super-train, while greedy developers
snapped up the bankrupt properties in true disaster capitalism.

In short, they will see a province without a heart or a soul, and no clue as
to the true Olympic spirit.

Jillian Skeet

YouTube - My Fair Lady - Audrey Hepburn

YouTube - My Fair Lady - Audrey Hepburn

Cannot be

Say it isn't so.

Tell me that this alleged row between George Clooney and Brad Pitt about who will play Professor Henry Higgins in a new version of "My Fair Lady" is sheer hooey.

There are certain movies - "The Godfather," "Lawrence of Arabia" come quickly to mind - that are so perfect in rhythm and pitch, that shot for shot they simply cannot be improved upon.

I just came back from the store, turned on the TV and there they were...Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepburn very near the end of the fairy tale. Even when you walk in on a scene so far along, you have lived for so many years with these characters and these sets and costumes that it is like reliving a familiar and welcome dream. The loveliness is almost unbearable.

Please no George Clooney or Brad or Angelina or Julia Roberts or Renee Z...please...

Quote of the Day, #1


"Can I say this is more important that health care, this is more important than education or climate change and all the other legislative matters that are on the calendar?" he asked, denying suggestions that new legislation could have been passed if the government had not cancelled a fall session of the legislature.

"Even if we had a fall session, this would not be ready for legislation."

Monsieur Opaque has spoken.

Anyone who works for a living deals with at least seven different files a day.

Is this man who poses as the Attorney-General of the province task-challenged?

When my daughter was 11, she talked on the phone, watched TV and did her homework all while sitting cross-legged at the foot of our bed.

Wally can't handle two issues on the same day?

Nonsense.

Even the editorial writers at the Sun have challenged Oppal's refusal to get on with the job of revising the Lobbying legislation.

Then there are Patrick Kinsella and Mark Jiles who refused through their lawyer to cooperate with David Loukadelis' investigation of a complaint from an NDP MLA.

Which makes them first class citizens, doesn't it?

That One, Indeed


It was only on Sunday last that I posted my condemnation of that dangerous fool from Alaska who has taken to calling in public Barack Obama a friend of terrorists.

The contagion, fueled by desperation and flop-sweat, has spread.

Now, McCain has stepped out from behind his Bush and is spreading the same kind of inflammatory hatred.

Result?

The geeks from the audience are hollering out sweet greetings like, "Kill him!"

Do McCain and his Worst Choice Ever Next to Dan Quayle take responsibility for this detestable behaviour?

And what do you accomplish when you call a political opponent or anyone else standing near you, "That one?"

What you accomplish is that you depersonalize that human being. You reduce that other soul to a number, an object, an object of derision.

There are those among you who want McCain to be the next President.

Mercy on all our souls.

Hurray!


Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts has proven once again why she is just about the best politician to appear in Canada in living memory.

The Atira Women's Resource Society has been awarded $1Million from Surrey to complete their new shelter and home for "women-at-risk" and their children.

This is a great, "good news" story.

Read it here and then email Watts (mayor@surrey.ca) first to thank and congratulate her, and then to ask why no other mayor in the region has had the wisdom or courage to step up to the plate like this for a very long time.

Clean it Up


There are no less than three separate stories in the sports section today about the possible involvement of various National Football League players in major crimes, each with the added attraction of violence.

This is to date a taboo subject.

I have yet to see or read or hear a major journalistic piece covering what has become common and unhappy knowledge.

There exists in the NFL, and perhaps other major league sports, a criminal subculture that can barely contain itself in public.

The NFL is the most successful sports league in America if not the world. I believe the Dallas Cowboys franchise was listed recently at a book value of $1Billion US.

Little wonder then that the league is not rushing to air its dirty linen. But air it, they must.

Of course, steroid use is commonplace and has been for decades. That goes without saying.

But now, a great many players are gun-packing punk hoods and the NFL might want to give a good thought to how much they want this kind of citizen representing them.

Quote of the Day, #2


"We respect [Right to Play's] vision, mission and mandate and greatly admire the work they have done around the world," said Cobb.

We just don't respect them as much as we respect General Motors.

And those guys, well, WE REALLY RESPECT THEM!

This was VANOC trying to do the double shuffle on trying to keep a charitable group out of the Olympic Village because the group had the audacity to be sponsored by - gasp - Mitsubishi.

Just wait until the Olympic Village itself becomes a charitable cause.

And we thought it was all about sport and effort and glory and accomplishment...