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From the ever-resourceful Steve Ladurantaye, who got me to subscribe to the Globe again: here.
From the ever-resourceful Steve Ladurantaye, who got me to subscribe to the Globe again: here.
Sam Sutherland’s much-anticipated book about Canadian punk rock, which I stayed up reading way too late last night, is crucially important. And not just because I was part of the first wave of Canadian punk, or that he writes a bit about the Hot Nasties herein.
It’s important because Sutherland captures the cultural significance, dare I say it, of Canadian punk. He researches, and he interviews dozens of people, from coast to coast: the result is a book that covers territory no one else has before. (My book on punk, Fury’s Hour, was about more than just Canadian punk, and was more focused on the philosophy of punk.)
Great writing, great insights. Get it, maaaaan.
I know judges. I have worked for and with judges. I have appeared before judges.
Judges don’t like supplant the peoples’ judgement with their own. Even when the facts and the law clearly point them in that direction.
So, if that’s the reality in the case of an election won by two dozen votes (Opitz), it is almost certainly going to be the result in the case of an election won in a landslide (Ford).
Judges, however much conservatives cynically suggest otherwise, consider the peoples’ will to be supreme.
…that I never thought I’d live to see grown men saying the things they’re saying about rape.
Some days, there’s so much evil in this world, you just don’t know what to say. This is one of those times.
Why, yes. Yes they are. Glad you asked.
From the ever-quick Justin Tetreault:
During the Mike Harris/Ernie Eves years, the Ontario PCs prorogued the Legislature five times: Dec. 18, 1997 to April 23, 1998 – 126 days; Dec. 18, 1998 to April 22, 1999 – 125 days; March 2, 2001 to April 19, 2001 – 48 days; March 1, 2002 to May 9, 2002 – 69 days; and March 12, 2003 to April 30, 2003 – 49 days.
When the Ontario NDP was in government, their party prorogued three times during their five year majority reign: Dec. 19, 1991 to April 6, 1992 – 109 days; Dec. 10, 1992 to April 13, 1993 – 124 days; and Dec. 9, 1994 to April 29, 1995 – 140 days, after which they dissolved government and called an election.
CP, CBC and others are reporting similar stuff.
So, if it’s true that Dwight is leaving, it is another very sad development for Ontario Liberals. Dwight Duncan is a giant in our party; it is hard to imagine it without him.