The unbearable lightness of Bob Rae’s promises
Aaron Wherry does journalism in a simple, and therefore highly-effective way: he simply lets subjects speak for themselves.
Subjects accordingly damn themselves.
Aaron Wherry does journalism in a simple, and therefore highly-effective way: he simply lets subjects speak for themselves.
Subjects accordingly damn themselves.
Sure looks that way.
We don’t want an election, but we’re ready for one. If it happens, we will remind voters that (a) the Ontario PCs promised to vote against the budget before they’d even read it and (b) the Ontario NDs are promising to vote against the budget unless they get their billion-dollar ransom note demands met.
Ontario doesn’t need or want an election just a few months after the last one. If it happens, we’re going to make Hudak and Horwath wear it. And I believe we will win a majority, too.
“As long as they keep that in their personal lives, and don’t anticipate that there’s going to be legislation on that, I don’t believe we’re doing anything different than other political parties.”
When asked if there were personal opinions that were beyond the pale for the party, Smith did not directly answer the question, wrote reporter James Woods.
“Look at our party platform,” Smith said. “The things that we focus on are the things on which we agree.
Edmonton-Southwest candidate and pastor Allan Hunsperger posted a rant on his blog last June, using Lady Gaga’s hit song, Born This Way, to blast the Edmonton public school division’s policy of accepting students for who they are.
“Sounds great at first except nobody is mentioning what the results will be of living the way you were born,” read the post, which has since been removed, with a statement from Hunsperger addressing the issue.
“You see, you can live the way you were born, and if you die the way you were born then you will suffer the rest of eternity in the lake of fire, hell, a place of eternal suffering,”
Mr. Tulk was warned, and he’s now banned from this site.
Bye-bye, Gord. Find a new sandbox. I suspect you won’t be missed by others.
The debate centres on some of the most difficult issues of our era: Reproductive choice for women, equal marriage for gays and lesbians, the wall that exists (supposedly) between church and state.
Alberta Wildrose leader Danielle Smith wants to tear down that wall, although she would never be so impolitic as to say so out loud. When a microphone is pointed in her direction, the frontrunner in the Alberta election insists she doesn’t want to defund abortion.
She claims she doesn’t want to stop gay marriages. She will say, with a straight face, that she wants to keep religion out of politics.
But here’s the thing: Smith — who, with her background in TV journalism, knows how to lull voters to sleep — isn’t telling the truth. She’s lying, in fact. She’s trying to have it both ways.
Here are some of the things that Smith said before Wildrose existed, and before she became its leader. She was a lot more candid, back then.
SFH and Bjorn are going to lose their shit over this. Godlike genius. Sent by Mraz, via some anonymous person who told him to give it to me. Now, I give it to you. It will change your life.
[Son Two has just been picked up by Dad from a sleepover at a pal’s. He’s asked how it went.]
Son, wearily: Dad, it was a party.
Me: You actually look like you did some partying, to tell you the truth.
Son, bemused: Dad, I am the party.
Me, marveling: Wow. Are you a Kinsella male or what?