Not bad
https://twitter.com/kinsellawarren/status/980233458390794241?s=21
They tried to pull a fast one on Good Friday, as my wife pointed out. But it didn’t work.
In one of the safest Liberal seats in Canada – when you have someone amazing like Jess Spindler prepared to run for you – you shouldn’t jam in a buddy of a crony. Who doesn’t even live in the riding.
And trample all over democracy in the process.
Make no mistake: this is Kathleen Wynne rebuking the Wizard and the Board – the same crew who sank Paul Martin and consigned the Liberal Party of Canada to a decade in the wilderness. It’s overdue.
Great news. And, sometimes, democracy will prevail, you know?
BREAKING: Sources say that Kathleen Wynne has reversed her decision to appoint a male friend of her election co-chair. She is now allowing an open nomination contest in St. Paul’s – which means the amazing Jess Spindler is back in the race! Woot! #onpoli #olp
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) April 1, 2018
Irie. Two guys on the beach. I love this.
As a former federal Chief of Staff at Health, and as someone who has represented the CMA, OMA, OHA and lots of hospitals – and whose Dad was awarded the Order of Canada for his bioethics work – I have always had more than a passing interest in medical education. It’s important.
Down here in the Caribbean for a few days, I’ve been overhearing some folks talk about “diploma mills.” And one name that has come up is St. George’s in Grenada. So I started Googling. The New York Times:
Their argument is one that has been lobbed at Caribbean schools for decades: that those schools turn out poorly trained students who undercut the quality of training for their New York peers learning alongside them at the same hospitals.
And they complain that the biggest Caribbean schools, which are profit-making institutions, are essentially bribing New York hospitals by paying them millions of dollars to take their students. The American medical schools traditionally pay nothing, because hospitals like the prestige of being associated with universities.
“These are designed to be for-profit education mills to train students to pass the boards, which is all they need to get a license,” said Dr. Michael J. Reichgott, a professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx.
I plan to write more about this in the coming days. It interests me.
One thing is apparent, so far: if you want a decent medical education, and you want to practice medicine afterwards, don’t go to a place like St. George’s down here in the Caribbean. It’s a diploma mill.
…has come to this.
Hearing an amazing, capable woman – a brilliant lawyer and activist too – is being pushed aside so “brain trust” around Wynne can appoint a guy in St. Paul’s. One of their pals. Let them have it, #onpoli. #olp
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) March 30, 2018
Plus: well-timed sirens!
I could be wrong, but I’m pretty sure this is the most-noticed tweet I’ve ever sent out into the Internet ether.
Genius. pic.twitter.com/viHlzyM7gR
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) March 25, 2018
It’s a photo of a woman holding a funny but important message, at this past weekend’s March For Our Lives. One word description, that’s it.
What it tells me is that social media – previously the exclusive preserve of the Troll-in-Chief, Donald Trump, and his feral winged monkeys – is possibly getting a lot more progressive. That tweet was pro-women, anti-gun – and it took off like a rocket.
The so-called whistleblower in the Cambridge Analytica scandal is testifying before the British Parliament as I type this. CBC is covering it live – because he’s a Canadian, and because he and his cabal were paid plenty to do work for the Canadian Liberals, the British Brexiteers and the American Republicans. All of whom won, hugely, in circumstances where no one – no one – thought they would. And now people are taking notice and speaking out.
All of this comes together to suggest to me that something is happening out, there, perhaps. Something positive.
We shall see. In the meantime, I remain amazed about that one little tweet.
I have been doing this stupid web site for nearly two decades. In that time, I have made the acquaintance of some extraordinary people.
Jordon Cooper was one of them. We never met, face to face – he was in his beloved Saskatoon, and I was always somewhere else, and we kept missing each other – but we corresponded enough, over the years. I got to know him, a bit.
He loved his wife Wendy deeply, and was so proud to become a Dad. And he possessed this wonderful wit, with a truly progressive conservative sensibility. What a writer he was!
He’d send me notes, like the one below, and he’d make me laugh or think, or both. I put him high up on my blogroll – remember those? – and I never regretted it. He was this gentle, wise man.
Sitting here in the kitchen, just me and the dogs, and I am so extraordinarily sad to just now learn of his passing. A guy I never met, face-to-face.
We are diminished by his passing. Believe me.
My deepest condolences to Wendy and their sons.
Name: Jordon CooperEmail: jordoncooper@gmail.com
Subject: Give back to YouTube
Comment:
On Thursday, January 17, 2008, 10:54 AM, Jordon Cooper wrote:
Warren,
I was looking for the clip of you with Barney and Tim Powers on YouTube and it isn’t there. I am assuming that probably you and Stockwell Day are the only ones that have a copy of the clip and since I can’t lobby Day to upload it without registering as a lobbyist, I thought I would see if I could talk you into uploading it.
That and some political consultant in future decades may want to name his or her consultancy firm, “Barney” and they will need a copy of the clip to explain their choice of names.
Jordon
It almost seems kind of quaint, doesn’t it?
Back when the Conservative Party was running things, the commentariat were apoplectic about something called CIMS: the Constituent Information Management System (CIMS).
“Tory database draws ire of privacy experts,” went one CTV News headline. An “unethical invasion of Canadians’ privacy,” thundered Conservative-turned-Liberal MP Garth Turner. It was “chilling,” warned University of Ottawa privacy expert Michael Geist.
A decade ago, the Conservative Party started using CIMS for targeted appeals to voters, for donations, and to Get Out the Vote on election day. CIMS relied upon information gleaned from door-to-door canvassing, phone banks and direct mailings to gather information – and it gave the CPC a decided edge, too.
CIMS provided the Conservatives with what is called “psychographic” data – that is, very specific information about a person’s personality and attitudes, their values and interests, and their lifestyle. It was much more than a voter’s street address, postal code and voting history: CIMS offered the Tories data about a person’s IAOs – their Interests, Attitudes and Opinions.
The value of all that stuff was certainly apparent to the Liberals and the New Democrats, who started to lose to the Conservatives right around the time that the CIMS machine was humming away in a CPC backroom. CIMS gave Harper’s team a better way to identify supporters, and communicate with them. It also gave them a means to micro-target and then mobilize supporters and potential supporters.
As noted, CIMS seems a bit old-fashioned now, like dial-up modems and Blackberries. It has been overtaken by something that is far more invasive, and far more dangerous. And it has a moonish, bland face: Christopher Wylie.
He’s a Canadian, as the entire planet knows by now. Among other things, he has hammered the reputation of one of the biggest companies on Earth (Facebook), he has gutted the markets ($50 billion, from Facebook) with his revelations about illicit/illegal activity, and he has set off a firestorm in political capitals around the world (Washington, Ottawa and London, all focusing on Facebook).
He calls himself a whistleblower, but that seems to be a bit of mendacious spin and proactive self-preservation. In reality, Wylie was the guy who helped create the companies which stole highly personal information about millions upon millions of voters.
And he did that kind of work for the Liberal Party of Canada, too, for successive Liberal leaders. Including the current one. The Prime Minister.
For the record: during the blessedly brief period when I was advising Michael Ignatieff, I did not ever meet young Mr. Wylie. I am told now that he hung out with what I called the propeller-heads – the ones who manipulated data down in the bowels of the various offices of the Leader of the Opposition.
No one in Liberaldom wants to admit to knowing Wylie these days, of course, because they correctly sense that a genuine scandal is in the offing. The guy who helped engineer one of the biggest data breaches in human history worked, as it turned out, for them.
Usually, when an individual has become radioactive, politicos adopt a standardized approach. The revolving-door Trump White House uses it quite a bit. First, claim the individual in question was “just a volunteer,” nothing more. If that doesn’t work, insist the aforementioned individual is unimportant, a “coffee boy,” in effect. And if none of that works – and it rarely does – join the pile-on, and say, with a straight face, that the President/Prime Minister/Potentate “never met with this person, and is cooperating with police.”
Pat Sorbara was the Grits’ 2011 deputy campaign boss – and, in 2014, a very senior campaign advisor to Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne. She is one of the few who has been willing to speak about Wylie on the record. Wylie was “way ahead of his time,” Sorbara marveled in the Globe. The two of them spitballed various microtargeting techniques.
“[Sorbara] was impressed by his ideas,” reported the Globe and Mail, “but said that after his initial presentation she had to reject his proposals owing to a lack of time and resources.” So the story changes, yet again: the Ignatieff Liberals didn’t reject Wylie because what he was suggesting was unethical and possibly illegal.
No, they didn’t use him because they couldn’t afford it.
Regrettably for Ignatieff’s successor, that all changed in 2016. In that year, Christopher Wylie was paid at least $100,000 by Trudeau’s own political hit squad – the Liberal Caucus Services Bureau. It is impossible to claim that the bespectacled, cherubic computer whiz with the technicolour tresses is a mere coffee boy – as the Trudeau spinners initially did – because they paid him, they now admit, $100,000.
That’s more than what most of their full-time tech folks are paid in a year, Virginia. And that, therefore, has all the makings of a full-blown scandal.
Stephen Harper, sitting in a Calgary office tower looking at the yellowed press clippings about the scandal that was CIMS, must be having a good old chuckle.