Bonus schmonus

My friends at the Sun, and others, have a story up this morning about Ontario public servants getting bonuses. Here’s what the stories don’t say:

  • Um, they’re not bonuses. In 1996, Mike Harris changed the way management in the public service was paid, and took a portion of their salary and tied it to performance.  And in the election Tim Hudak pledged to expand it.
  • The managers have a portion of their salary that is related to their performance. It’s not automatic. They have to earn it. One would think that’d be something conservatives would approve of, but I guess not.
  • In 2009, McGuinty slashed the pool of possible recipients by 30 per cent, and froze salaries. So he’s gone beyond an actual freeze and cut the amount paid out by a third.  That sort of thing didn’t happen in the Harris/Eves/Hudak years, as I recall.  All they did was close hospitals, close hospital beds, and fire nurses.
  • Nobody can rewrite the employment contract terms of 8000 people retroactively. If you know how to do so, without kick-starting multi-million-dollar lawsuits, fill me in.
  • Again, so no one misses the point, including Tea Party North: Hudak said he’d expand bonuses for health care managers – despite the fact that he’s now supporting Flaherty’s plan to allow for privatization of health care, and closure of hospitals, etc.

 


Best song of 2011

Mine, anyway.  Take a bunch of art student musicians from different countries, toss in some Pavement and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, and hey presto! A tune catchier than a drawer full of fish hooks.


“Stupid bloggers”

That’s what Leader-for-life Bob Rae called me, recently. I had thought (nay, hoped) he was referring to me, personally, but it may be that the Supreme Leader was also referring to all bloggers.

That can be the only logical explanation for this, which is stupider than dinosaurs, and just about as modern.


Deloitte’s on immigrants (updated)

In response to today’s Sun column on Jason Kenney, I just got a super-nice email from one Blaine L. Mcdonald, wherein the Deloittes man – who, ironically enough, works at one of the mega-firm’s Arlington offices – rails on and on about “immigrants” and “failed immigration policy.” And that sort of thing. Using firm email.

Anyone able to help me find out more about this charming man?

UPDATE: Mr. Mcdonald has surfaced.  He’s sent me an ass-covering email in which he says he’s abroad on Deloitte’s business, and used a firm laptop by “mistake.”  Methinks, instead, that some managers at Deloitte’s got a Google alert about Mcdonald’s “mistake” and told him to fix it, pronto.


Comment below my column in today’s Sun

Moderation really needs to improve over there, methinks.
**
Got a question for all the anti-Whites… 

As an anti-White, can you name an Asian country, that you believe must bring in millions of non-Asians and assimilate with them, until Asians become extinct?

Which non-White populations, do you INSIST must be ‘mixed’ and ‘blended’ out of existence, in their own countries, or is it ONLY White people you are against?

Anti-racist is a code word for anti-White.


“The number was ours”

Quote:

The complaint filed by Joe Nowak, president of the Kitchener-Conestoga federal Liberal association, was obtained by The Record and includes the phone number Siopiolosz traced.

When called, the number goes to a voice mail for the “Conservative Party.” The message asks callers to leave their name, number and a detailed message and says the party will get back to them within three business days.

Fred DeLorey, director of communications and deputy director of political operations for the Conservative Party of Canada, confirmed in an email “that the number was ours.”

Kitchener-Conestoga Conservative MP Harold Albrecht, reached on Monday, was so surprised by the situation that he called the number himself. He said he found the ownership of the number troubling and the message unprofessional.

Good on Albrecht.  His party, meanwhile, are led by the biggest bunch of scumbags to hold power in Ottawa since, well, ever.

They’re going to keep doing this sort of shit, too, until someone is found culpable.  That’s where my focus would be – jailing a few of these Segretti wannabes.  Comb the Code to find any and all sections that would apply.  And then keep going at them, relentlessly.

General Provisions

Obstruction, etc., of electoral process

480. (1) Every person is guilty of an offence who, with the intention of delaying or obstructing the electoral process, contravenes this Act, otherwise than by committing an offence under subsection (2) or section 481 or 482 or contravening a provision referred to in any of sections 483 to 499.

Intimidation, etc.

482. Every person is guilty of an offence who


 


In today’s Sun: Kenney for leader!

There are many things, and many people, which Jason Kenney doesn’t like.

The list of things which the minister of Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism detests is long. For example, the corpulent Calgary Conservative detests multiculturalism, quite a few immigrants, and an impressive number of his fellow citizens, too. In fact, Kenney may be the first federal cabinet minister to preside over a department he would like to eliminate.

Born in 1968 in Oakville, Ont., Kenney has never really worked in the private sector. He was one of the mouthpieces of the Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation for a while, but that’s essentially a branch of the Conservative Party. Since 1997, he’s had his snout firmly planted in the public trough, and he likes it there. For example, when he was (ironically) the Canadian Alliance finance critic, Kenney spent more than $120,000 in taxpayer money on trips in a single year. That made him one of Parliament’s biggest big-spenders.

He also attacked fellow conservative-minded MPs – calling them “dishonest and hypocritical” – for opting into the MP pension plan. When, um, he was already a member of said plan.

Therefore, we know that’s something he likes: Kenney likes to blow taxpayer dough on himself.