Interesting colour scheme for this Liberal incumbent
It tells me I made the right move!

It tells me I made the right move!

Warren Kinsella who lives in the Beaches and is the founder of @STAMPtogether outside court, reacting to the trial judge today saying he would consider re-opening the trial after James Sears was convicted of wilfully promoting hate against women and Jews @kinsellawarren pic.twitter.com/Sm9h30AUpN
— Catherine McDonald (@cmcdonaldglobal) July 15, 2019
The publisher of the neo-Nazi rag just told the judge that Yours Truly is behind all of the persecution he’s faced. I wish that were so, but – like everything else he says – it’s a lie.
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) July 15, 2019
STORY: “An attempt to delay the inevitable, which is jail time.” – @kinsellawarren
Your Ward News’ James Sears, not sentenced today after being found guilty of inciting hatred against women/Jews this year; judge open to hear how lawyer “threw” casehttps://t.co/FRpEUSMlot pic.twitter.com/Ep5ZvZxOTC
— Lucas Meyer (@meyer_lucas) July 15, 2019
Snipe Yeomanson, Bjorn von Flapjack III and Yours Screwly played last night, and we were godlike geniuses, basically.
Here’s our latest vid, directed by the brilliant Nick “The Knife” Nelson, and starring our Steve Deceive, our Scottish muse. Get it on iTunes here!
Gay conversion "therapy" is insane and evil. It needs to be condemned without qualification. It needs to be illegal. This shouldn't be hard. @AndrewScheer #cdnpoli
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) July 11, 2019
And Liberals need to be consistent on this issue. They haven't been. "Federal government rejects petition for nationwide conversion therapy ban" #cdnpoli #lpc #cpc https://t.co/G6oYGouR1c
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) July 11, 2019
Dimples.
That’s what you actually get some Trudeau trolls nattering about online: Andrew Scheer’s dimples.
Seriously.
For some reason beyond the understanding of sane people, the Trudeaupian types think that the Conservative leader’s dimples disqualify him as a candidate for Prime Minister. They go on about it all the time.
The same criticism used to be made about Bill Clinton. The Democratic president’s many Republican antagonists would say that Clinton’s ever-present grin was unsettling. They would say that Clinton seems to be smiling when, you know, he shouldn’t be.
In recent months, the upward tilt of Andrew Scheer’s lips haven’t been as evident. We don’t know if he’s received advice to look less happy, or if he is simply distressed by the state of Confederation. Either way, Andrew Scheer is not smirking nearly as much as he used to.
This tendency of some people to attack politicians for something over which they have no control – to wit, their physical appearance – is nothing really new.
Haters on the left attacked Doug Ford for his weight, just as they did with his deceased brother, Toronto Mayor Rob. Kathleen Wynne was mocked for resembling the Church Lady on Saturday Night Live.
And, as Wynne would certainly know, female politicians are regularly attacked – viciously, ceaselessly, unfairly – for their appearance: their hairstyle, their style of dress, their relative attractiveness. All the time.
Such attacks can change the course of political history. The infamous 1993 Conservative Party ad that pointed out the facial paralysis of my former boss, Jean Chretien, is the most infamous example. On the night those ads hit the airwaves in the midst of the 1993 federal election campaign, this writer was running Chretien’s war room at his Ottawa headquarters.
We did not know those attack ads were coming, and we were shocked when they did. Unidentified voices could be heard asking if the Liberal leader “looked like a Prime Minister.“
My boss had been waiting his whole life for that attack. He responded a few hours later, at a campaign stop in New Brunswick. He pointed out that “this was the face” that God gave him, and – unlike Tories, he said – “I don’t speak out of both sides of my mouth.“
Boom. Tories reduced to two seats.
In political back rooms, however, a great deal of time is still devoted to discussing and debating the physiology of political candidates. Example: prior to this writer arriving in British Columbia in 1996 to assist the BC Liberal campaign, some nameless genius strategist decided to stick BC liberal leader Gordon Campbell in a plaid shirt, so he would look a little more proletarian, and a little less house street.
The gambit backfired dramatically. Campbell was ridiculed for trying to be something that he was not.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau presents a political anomaly. Trudeau, like Gordon Campbell, is a handsome fellow. Even Rolling Stone gushed in a cover story that Trudeau and his family are “photogenic” and “glamorous.”
In Canada, the politicians who tend to succeed are unlike Trudeau. They are the ones who possess the hockey-rink-and-Timmmies Everyman look. Ralph Klein, Rene Levesque, Mel Lastman, Jean Chretien and Rob Ford were frequently attacked by the elites for being dishevelled or, at least, somewhat less than a Hollywood matinee idol.
But voters, clearly, loved them for it. Because, in the main, not too many voters resemble Hollywood matinee idols either.
If they’ve gotten this far, serious students of policy will be offended by all this talk about physical appearance.
They’re right. We shouldn’t make important decisions based on looks.
But, not long after he lost the aforementioned 1996 BC election, Gordon Campbell ruefully remarked to this writer: “It’s 70 per cent how you look, 20 per cent how you say it, and only 10 per cent what you say.”
Campbell knows whereof he speaks. And, if you don’t believe me, go looking for Andrew Scheer’s dimples.
They’re gone.
He’s tough. Don’t worry. “Jean Chretien hospitalized in Hong Kong as precaution” https://t.co/MUXBxbrlVn
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) July 9, 2019
The Boss will be just fine. Resting comfortably, and spending a couple extra days in Hong Kong. He’s grateful for all the kind wishes! #cdnpoli #chretien
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) July 9, 2019
…one of whom makes a white power symbol.
When someone shows you who they really are, believe them.
@MaximeBernier posing with white nationalist street gang northern guard. NG are a Canadian break away from Soldiers of Odin, a neo nazi street gang from Finland. Not much separates these 2 from each other other than colors, they often congregate together & espouse the same views. pic.twitter.com/D7GfvI7rLt
— Anti-Racist News & Watch (@YYCantiracist) July 8, 2019
Son Three wants you guys to rate his swing. pic.twitter.com/nMSfYQMYO0
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) July 9, 2019
A reader asked me what to do about the MacLeod v. Melnyk controversy. Here’s my advice, gratis.
That’s a headline that ran in the Sun, nearly a generation ago. It changed political history.
Remember Lyn McLeod? I do. McLeod was the leader of the Ontario Liberal Party in the mid-1990s. In the months leading up to the 1995 election, McLeod had a massive lead in every opinion poll. NDP Premier Bob Rae’s government was despised; P.C. leader Mike Harris was mostly unknown.
One fateful day, McLeod talked to a reporter on proposed legislation that would change the definition of domestic violence – and the penalties for it.
One penalty for abusing one’s spouse, she said, should be the abuser’s eviction from the family home. Hard to argue with that, perhaps.
But then the reporter asked McLeod if domestic violence included “verbal abuse.” It did, she said. Yes.
The next day, the headline in the Toronto Sun was this: “Shout at spouse, lose your house.”
Almost immediately, the Ontario Liberals started to slide in the polls. Mike Harris would go on to win a big majority. And a close friend, and a senior advisor to McLeod, later told me: “Yell at the spouse, lose the house,” he said. “That’s why we lost.”
Which brings us to this, the former Bill C-46:

The law that destroyed the Ontario Liberals was a proposed law. This one now is law.
But it’s the law of the land. It gives police the power to demand you submit to a breathalyzer, even they don’t have a reasonable suspicion you’re impaired. Even if you aren’t behind the wheel.
When this change was being considered, legal experts warned that a Canadian who drives home, sober, and then consumes some alcohol could register a fail on the breathalyzer – even though they didn’t drive while drunk. And that’s in fact what happened to a B.C. woman: she was by the pool at her sister’s place, having a drink, when the RCMP arrived and demanded a breath sample.
She lost her licence and her vehicle. Ultimately, she defeated the impairment charge on a technicality – but not before spending thousands on legal fees.
The media are already calling this a “police state” law. That it’s “an inexcusable violation of an individual’s Charter rights, and an invitation to police harassment of visible minorities“. Hell, even the CBC is calling it “unnecessary police power.”
Make no mistake: this issue – coming in the Summer before an election – is potentially lethal for Justin Trudeau’s Liberals. Andrew Scheer’s Conservatives, I am told, are now preparing to do to Trudeau what Mike Harris and a Toronto Sun headline did to Lyn McLeod.
“Have a drink, wind up in the clink”: may not be as deadly as that long-ago Sun headline. But it may do the trick.
UPDATE: Oh, look. Shortly after the above post went up, something interesting happened. I’d say they are nervous, wouldn’t you?
Oh, look. The Department of Justice is doing damage control on a Saturday morning. I wonder why? https://t.co/w5lVDpfGsg pic.twitter.com/om7COKrgva
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) July 6, 2019