140 characters on this email “scandal”
If you start criminally investigating every pol who deletes email, you’d better build a lot more jails. They’re gonna fill up fast. #onpoli
If you start criminally investigating every pol who deletes email, you’d better build a lot more jails. They’re gonna fill up fast. #onpoli
This week, Ontario’s “Information and Privacy Commissioner” – her oxymoronic title neatly lays out the point I am about to make – excoriate some of the folks I know pretty well from the Dalton McGuinty government. She ripped those folks from stem to stern, for deleting – or even apparently thinking about deleting – emails.
You can read her report for yourself, here. Personally, I found her approach and tone to closely resemble that of former Justice John Gomery, the Westmount hobby farmer who seemed to be far more interested in publicity than the public good.
Here’s some of the problems I have with Cavoukian’s report:
That’s what I think, too, and it was what I was attempting to say on Sun News the other day (when I could get a word in edgewise, that is). As Cavoukian’s title makes clear, there is a glaring contradiction at the centre of this false controversy: political staff are told – indeed, threatened with prosecution if they don’t – that they must keep confidential information confidential. They are also told by publicity-seekers like Cavoukian they must simultaneously do the polar opposite.
That’s dumb; that’s idiotic. Politicians, and policy-makers, need to choose. Total openness, nothing held back – or some degree of confidentiality, to ensure that government (and citizens, and business, and unions, and associations) can continue to do its work.
Which is it? I know what I pick.
Quote:
Her brother, Fabio Basso, was convicted in 2005 of possessing a prohibited weapon.
I love how law and order Conservatives keep trying to defend this sleaze and slime. Mostly because, in so doing, they’re destroying their brand in and around the GTA.
My ex is riding a bike tomorrow all the way to Niagara Falls.
She won’t be alone. Lots of folks are doing likewise, for the Princess Margaret Ride to Conquer Cancer.
Suzanne’s personal page, where you can read her story and contribute, is here. She’s been training for months, and she – and all of the other participants – deserve support and admiration. Cancer took my Dad eight years, 11 months and 357 days ago, and I strongly support this event. You should, too.
A must-read:
The province has silenced them for half a century. But their day of reckoning will come — no matter how many legal roadblocks the government erects.
From Gawker. A certain chief magistrate won’t be sleeping well, tonight:

Ford and the boys at 15 Windsor Road, the night the video was shot.