The logic of Fox commentators is, to say the least, difficult for an old fella like me to follow:
Reflections, Observations, and Analyses Pertaining to the Canadian Political Scene
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
UPDATE: Lest We Forget
Brutality against women can come from those whose duty it is to protect and serve:
UPDATED: Many thanks to Inse for providing this link to a very disturbing video showing physical brutality by a London Metropolitan police officer. In this case, unlike the vast majority in Canada, the offending officer was charged and terminated.
A Winnipeg woman said this week that she had filed a complaint after an officer beat her in her own home as her 8-year-old son watched.
Lana Sinclair told CBC that Winnipeg police officers showed up on Halloween night to investigate reports of “yelling.” One officer spoke to her son, while another officer talked to her.
“He came up to me and poked me,” Sinclair recalled. “I was sitting on a chair in the kitchen and I jumped up and said you don’t need to touch me.”
The officer pulled out a baton, and beat her with it, she explained to CTV. She said he then smashed her face into a work table, and into the floor.
UPDATED: Many thanks to Inse for providing this link to a very disturbing video showing physical brutality by a London Metropolitan police officer. In this case, unlike the vast majority in Canada, the offending officer was charged and terminated.
A Sobering Remembrance Day Reminder
I have to confess that all of the extra 'enthusiasm' for this year's Remembrance Day makes me uneasy. Poppy sales are at an all time high. Special and protracted ceremonies are planned. Government propaganda is being churned out incessantly.
While I fully respect the fact that many people fought and died to protect our increasingly fragile freedoms, the reflexive reaction of a wide swath of citizenry to the military, especially since the events of last month, should be cause for some concern. It suggests to me a willingness to suspend critical faculties when they are most needed, given that we currently strain under the yoke of probably the least democratic domestic regime in our history.
Two Star letter writers address these concerns effectively:
Re: ‘I know Hitler will destroy Germany,' Insight Nov. 8
I have read, with fascination, David Halton’s story of his father’s reporting on the early days of the Nazi era in Germany. Glorification of the military; rush to war at the first opportunity; rigorous control of the media message; muzzling of dissent; demonization of certain groups. Remind you of anywhere?
People everywhere must constantly be vigilant or live to regret it.
John Simke, Toronto
Matthew Halton, in his 30-part German series for the Star, provided an intersting description of Gleichschaltung, in which Germans served the state rather than the other way around after the Nazis wrested control of Germany in 1933.
To Halton, Gleichschaltung “was ‘bringing into line’ every aspect of German thought and activity, the Nazis’ rationale for suppressing “political parties, trade unions, independent churches, even long-standing provincial governments whose powers were stripped away.”
Call me crazy, but wouldn’t Gleichschaltung somewhat describe Harper Inc.’s end-game?
Alan Pellettier, Scarborough
H/t Operation Maple
Monday, November 10, 2014
No Surprises Here: The Fraser Institute Shows Its Biased Incompetence
Of course, right-wing groups like the Fraser Institute never let facts and data get in the way of a rabid ideology:
UPDATED: The Mighty (Pol)Oz Speaks
But his message is not being well-received. No, not at all.
UPDATE: With their usual perspicacity, Star readers also weigh in on the bank governor's pontifications.
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