Kudos to both sides: politicians working together to stop online B.S.

The Ontario Liberals have asked Twitter to shut down a fake account that claims to be registered to Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak’s three-year-old daughter.

A user purporting to be “Miller Hudak,” began posting on Twitter under the username@Hooodakkkk late Monday.

“Everyone is on Twitter. Including those weird relations you want to avoid. Too late now,” reads the first tweet, which is followed by another one that says “Polkaroo is on Twitter!”

When Premier Dalton McGuinty learned of the prank, he sent a handwritten note “from one father to another” to alert Hudak during question period on Tuesday.

The opposition leader read McGuinty’s missive, delivered by a parliamentary page, then walked across the floor to thank the premier. The two men shook hands and later resumed debating.


In today’s Sun: five years later (updated)

For starters, Stephen Harper – once the feared Reform Party outsider – is no longer feared so much, if at all. As with all prime ministers, Harper has become pretty familiar to the rest of us.

For a decade, the Liberals kept Harper and his conservative colleagues from power with frightening tales about what the right-wingers would do to social programs, health care and race relations.

But after five years, our social network is mainly what it was; health care is more or less intact; and the party with the most racially diverse caucus in the House of Commons is, well, Harper’s.

UPDATE: Delacourt weighs in on what I’ve tried to say, and what Martin has said much better than I could.


You can’t make this stuff up, even if you wanted to

And if you don’t like our position today, we’ll have a new one next week!

November 22, 2010: “Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff said Monday he is now willing to support a vote in the House of Commons on the federal government’s plan to extend Canada’s mission in Afghanistan beyond 2011.”

November 12, 2010: “Prime Minister Stephen Harper said…at the end of the day, he and his cabinet will make the final call about a new training mission there.  And Liberal Foreign Affairs critic Bob Rae said he has no problem with that.”

UPDATE: And the game is afoot, as they say, thanks to Monsieur Duceppe. Wonder if it’ll be a whipped vote?


Tom Robinson? I super-loved ‘Glad To Be Gay’ and the first album, buddy!

Heh.

Proving Monte’s point, below. I loved this one. Leftards! Liberals! Socialists! Grrr, I’m angry! Grrr!

—–Original Message—–
From: Tom Robinson
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2010 05:12:32
To:
Shut the fuck up goof.

If this was the USA, the many Conservative commentators would eat you alive.

None of that softball shit we get here in Marxist Canada.

You’re a piece of shit Kinsella and you can take that to the bank,meat head.

Wait till your hero Omar Khadr comes home.

That’s when shit is going to hit the fan.

Are you going to babysit Omar, you anti-American piece of shit?

Warren Kinsella is a fucking piece of shit junkie.

Go smoke another one junkie.

My response:

—–Original Message—–
From: wkinsella@hotmail.com
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2010 13:29:25
To: Tom Robinson
Reply-To: wkinsella@hotmail.com
Subject: Re:

Thanks, Tom! God bless you and your team of doctors!


Solberg in the Sun: comment on comments

When I read the comments section of any website that covers political news, I get the urge to destroy the very Internet that Al Gore invented and that I perfected.

Yes, some of the reader comments are insightful. Some are witty. This is especially the case with Sun readers! But it pains me to note that most of the comments on most websites most of the time are comprised of conspiracy theories, sweeping generalizations, random thoughts and ugly venom. If you struggle with depression, please avoid reading them.


Davey in the Post! Read him!

My buddy Ian, always worth reading:

“Federal Liberals would do well to look closely at the recent election of Rob Ford as mayor of Toronto. Though political analysts talk about anger or attach labels of left, right, liberal and conservative, the truth is that Ford’s success had less to do with these things than with his ability to focus a message of change. For the most part, Torontonians recognized one thing about their city after two terms of David Miller: Taxes had gone up but services had not increased or improved. While most mayoral candidates debated how to provide better or more efficient services (in essence, how to spend your money), Ford focused on taxes. He had the right message in the right place and repeated it with clarity and determination.”


Guess who

I don’t want to make this personal, so I will not – not! – call him a rude, pompous, soulless rageaholic who is, was, and always will be a tourist in the Liberal Party of Canada.

I won’t do that. I just won’t.

Thank you.