Toronto Raiders

April 22, 2008 · Posted in Conservatism.ca · Comments Off 

I think competition is a good thing. If businesses and colleges and professionals and municipalities should all compete to succeed, why shouldn’t judges?

Well, when it comes to getting a warrant, it seems, the best place in Canada to go is Toronto!

Way to go T.O.!

Canadian Pennies – In God We Trust

April 14, 2008 · Posted in Conservatism.ca · View Comments 

Give NDP MP Pat Martin credit where credit is deserved – the penny has to go! Whether we do away with the nickel and change the quarter to 20 cents and introduce a 50 cent piece and a $5 coin, and make the loonie and toonie smaller are pretty secondary.

Step 1. Get rid of the penny.

Step 2. ???

Step 3. Profit!

Now that that’s out of the way, let’s talk about what a Canadian penny looks like. It seems Canwest News Service has very little idea. Check out the picture and tell me what country the second most prominent penny in the photo is from. Hint: It’s not Canada.

Survivor: Parliament Hill

April 9, 2008 · Posted in Conservatism.ca · View Comments 

In the beginning, the word “survive” seemed appropriate when the Harper minority government made it through a confidence bill. (Indeed, the word became a routine headline insert sometime during the Martin minority government.)

The thing is, it’s not appropriate anymore. How can you call it “survival” (as most continue to do, see “Harper government survives another confidence vote“, Canadian Press, globeandmail.com)?

Let’s call it “Harper minority breezes through another confidence vote” or “Conservatives yawn off another quiet confidence vote down at the office”.

If anyone survived anything, it’s Dion surviving another day as Liberal leader. The one who’d be panicking the most if the government fell on a confidence vote is him: yet another screw up for the Liberals.

Now the continued use of this word “survive” can be blamed on media “sensationalism”. This is what people tell me when I complain about the word. It’s easy to believe this. Sensation sells, and “survive” makes it sounds like more was going on than what actually was. My suggested headlines would obviously be far less interesting to potential readers.

But I don’t think it’s sensationalism. I think it’s laziness.

Real journalists (unlike myself) should come up with some interesting way to describe the non-event of a confidence motion that Dion cowers from. Let’s hear it for honesty in journalism!