Sandra Finley

Jun 082012
 

Thanks to Richard:

The CPPIB recently released the times and places of its nine public meetings.  These June 11 mtgs are an hour-and-a-half-long opportunity (once every two years) for Canadians to make comments and ask questions about the CPP and its investment practices.  The Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT) is rallying folks to attend these meetings in person or to pose questions online via a CPPIB webcast on June 11.

http://coat.ncf.ca/research/cppib-meetings.htm

Jun 072012
 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/industry-news/energy-and-resources/ottawa-launches-alberta-counterterrorism-unit/article4236422/?cmpid=rss1

Carrie Tait

Calgary — The Globe and Mail

Published Wednesday, Jun. 06 2012

After labelling certain environmental and first nations groups as extremists and radicals, Canada’s federal government, along with the country’s top law enforcement and spy agencies, have set up a counterterrorism unit in Alberta in order to protect the province’s natural resources and infrastructure.

The RCMP, which will lead the effort, would not say whether the team was assembled in response to specific threats, nor did it pinpoint which pieces of infrastructure it will focus on. However, Alberta hosts the vast majority of Canada’s oil assets, which have attracted international criticism and suffered security breaches. The province also has an extensive pipeline network, as well as upgraders and refineries, which protesters also target. Pipelines, for example, have been bombed in British Columbia.

The Tories have long stressed the importance of Alberta’s oil and gas to the entire Canadian economy, and are now taking measures to hinder critics’ ability to speak at regulatory hearings and shore up financial support. By establishing a counter-terrorism team in Alberta, the government is further emphasizing the importance it places on the western province and the threats it believes the energy industry faces.

Indeed, the federal government recently labelled some critics “radicals,” while the RCMP and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service believe protest groups like Greenpeace and other dissenters have the capability to attack critical infrastructure in Canada. Greenpeace insists it is committed to non-violent protest.

The new counterterrorism unit, with offices in Edmonton and Calgary, will be Canada’s fifth so-called Integrated National Security Enforcement Team.

“Our government has made responsible, effective investments to fight terrorism and protect Canadians, including the creation of INSETs in major Canadian cities that are responsible for criminal investigations involving terrorist activities,” Vic Toews, Canada’s Public Safety Minister, said in a statement as the RCMP announced the new effort Wednesday.

Sergeant Greg Cox, a media relations officer for the RCMP in Ottawa, said there is “no indication that the threat level is higher” in Alberta. “However, as in any part of the country, we need to remain vigilant.  The establishment of an INSET in Alberta ensures that we have the capacity to address these threats if they arise.”

INSETs were established following the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the United States. Alberta’s INSET was “prompted by factors such as a growing population, a strong economy supported by the province’s natural resources and the need to protect critical infrastructure,” the RCMP said in its statement.

Public Safety Canada on its website says: “Critical infrastructure refers to processes, systems, facilities, technologies, networks, assets and services essential to the health, safety, security or economic well-being of Canadians and the effective functioning of government … Disruptions of critical infrastructure could result in catastrophic loss of life, adverse economic effects and significant harm to public confidence.”

Alberta hosts 400,000 kilometres of pipeline; more than 176,000 operating oil and gas wells; eight oil sands mines; five upgraders; and 250 in-situ oil extraction facilities, according to the Energy Resources Conservation Board. The ERCB does not tally refineries.

This type of infrastructure is likely what the government had in mind when it established the new INSET, one expert said.

“It is very much in line with the trend of committing more and more national security and counter-terrorism resources without a corresponding basis in any kind of particular threats,” Jeffrey Monaghan, a researcher with the Surveillance Studies Centre at Queen’s University, said. “I think this has to do with property crimes rather than threats to civilians. … It really has to do with economic infrastructure.”

The energy industry’s critics have moved beyond banners and petitions. Protesters in 2009, for example, caused disruptions at Royal Dutch Shell PLC’s upgrader project in Alberta, as well as halting activity at a Suncor Energy Inc. mine after intruding on the properties. Protesters have also bombed and threatened pipelines in Western Canada.

Alberta’s new counterterrorism unit will be composed of specially trained members of the RCMP, Edmonton Police Services, Calgary Police Services, Canada Border Services Agency and CSIS, the Mounties said in a statement Wednesday. INSETs are already established in Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal.

Jun 052012
 

OTHER POSTINGS related to Jeremy Rifkin:

  • 2011-01-18 Jeremy Rifkin: The Empathic Civilization. 11-minute YouTube: Highly recommended!!
  • The YouTube video (11-minutes) at 2011-01-18 (Jeremy Rifkin: The Empathic Civilization) makes the point that nation states are artificial constructions pitting us against each other, when really we are connected. (Excerpt from 2011-03-10 Myths for Profit:)
  • 2011-10-28 Jeremy Rifkin on nuclear – a must hear.  PLUS connect the players and the information.
  • 2011-10-29 It is all right here: The Third Industrial Revolution – an interview with Jeremy Rifkin.
  • 2011-11-02 Occupy:  I fell into the trap. Oakland is not representative.  Don’t be afraid. (Excerpt “The Empathic Civilization”, Rifkin, chapter “The Hidden Paradox of Human History”)

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Emphasis on oil sands called a ‘historic mistake for Canada’, G&M Report on Business

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/emphasis-on-oil-sands-called-a-historic-mistake-for-canada/article4233521/

Richard Blackwell

A high-profile adviser on renewable energy to the European Union says Canada is making a huge mistake in placing so much emphasis on the oil sands as the key component of the country’s energy policy.

Jeremy Rifkin, a Maryland-based author and consultant, said in an interview Tuesday that focusing on the oil sands “is putting [Canada] back in the 20th century, when Europe and Asia are absolutely moving into the 21st century.” Because other economies are shifting dramatically to renewable energy, he said, “this is a really, really historic mistake for Canada…..[It] could potentially become a second tier country.”

Mr. Rifkin helped design the EU’s long-term sustainability plan, which is in the early stages of being implemented across the continent.

He said the oil industry will never be able to remove itself from a growth-collapse cycle that is created by gyrating oil prices, and so it needs to be phased out. While the industry will have to be kept on “life support” during the transition to renewables, over time new technologies will generate a far superior return on investment.

It is a “curse” to be one-resource economy, Mr. Rifkin said. At the same time, “Canada is [now] the bad guy” because of the negative reputation of the oil sands and its contribution to the increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Mr. Rifkin calls the European approach a “third industrial revolution.” It includes a sharp shift to renewable energy, which will be collected mainly through massive numbers of wind, solar, geothermal and biomass generators distributed broadly – and often attached to buildings. Hydrogen and other storage technologies will ensure the power is available when it is needed, and Internet-like technology will control the complex distribution of power. Electric and fuel cell cars will draw power from that grid.

The shift to this kind of distributed, clean power is absolutely crucial to prevent a devastating increase in the planet’s temperature, and a mass extinction of human beings, Mr. Rifkin argued at a Toronto hydrogen conference on Tuesday. “We have to be off carbon in 30 years,” he said.

He said European enthusiasm for the new distributed power mode will help jump-start the moribund economies of that continent and create thousands of jobs. The United States, by contrast, has promoted individual pilot projects in an unconnected way, he said, and will not get the same economic benefits as Europe.

Mr. Rifkin said he is encouraged, however, by the efforts by groups of state governors and provincial premiers in the Eastern and Western edges of the continent, who are attempting to develop cross-border electrical grids. This is creating a “de facto continental union” for power systems, he said.

Ontario’s feed-in-tariff program, which pays high prices for renewable power fed into its power grid, is also an important first step, Mr. Rifkin said. But the province hasn’t put enough emphasis on energy storage or the move to a “smart” electrical grid, he added.

Jun 052012
 

(Scroll down to the Q&A.)

Bill C-38 has mobilized groups in Canada from seniors to environmentalists to municipal councillors, to First Nations, to legal scholars and beyond.

It came back before the House of Commons on Monday, May 4.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Elizabeth May is brilliant in her argument – the legislation is out of order.  Read or hear it for yourself:   (Or, the next item is a briefer news report.)

http://elizabethmaymp.ca/parliament/points-of-order/2012/06/04/points-of-order-bill-c-38/

Now we wait to see the caliber of the Speaker-of-the-House of Commons, Andrew Scheer.

His decision will affect the history of democracy in Canada.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

News report May 5: Elizabeth May refers the omnibus Budget bill, C-38, to the Speaker.

Current status of C-38:  Awaiting Speaker’s ruling.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Q: So if this played out and the Speaker agreed with you, what would  then happen?

Excerpt from Q&A: Elizabeth May, Maclean’s Magazine

http://www2.macleans.ca/2012/06/05/qa-elizabeth-may/#more-264180

by Aaron Wherry on Tuesday, June 5, 2012

A: Then the bill would be rejected.
And speakers have rejected bills that didn’t meet Standing Order 68 or are in other ways deficient. Over the history of Parliament, Speakers have ruled bills out of order. The Speaker does have that power.

The Speaker has a number of options. Obviously he could rule against me. He could rule for me 100% and say this bill is rejected, it’s not a proper omnibus bill.

Or he could do the sort of partway ruling, such as what Peter Milliken did around the Afghan detainee documents and say, look, I’m prepared to find prima facie that this isn’t a properly constructed piece of omnibus legislation, these are the rules around an omnibus bill and I’m asking if the government and the parties in the House, together, would like to present C-38 in proper form. In other words, punt it back to the government and the opposition parties to sort it out.

I think in a lot of ways that would be a helpful thing for the Speaker to do. Obviously helpful in terms of protecting democracy, which is my main argument.

But in the political undercurrents that I’m seeing right now, the movement against C-38 is growing and it’s growing in Conservative ranks, it’s growing in Conservative heartland.

There are an awful lot of people against this legislation.  Keith Ashfield, in bringing in these changes, said changes to the Fisheries Act (which of course weren’t part of the budget) we have to bring in these changes to the Fisheries Act because there are so many municipalities across the country complaining about the current Fisheries Act.

Well, this weekend, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, almost unanimously, voted to appeal to the Prime Minister to remove the fisheries legislation from C-38. They are very concerned about it.  Not only was that a group the government didn’t think would oppose them, they were claiming that group was on board.

I think they may have decided that by sticking a lot of controversial things inside a budget, nobody would ever notice them. But the opposition is building. And in ways that they probably didn’t expect. Because they probably thought, oh, it’ll be the usual suspects, the groups we’ve already attacked and smeared as radicals and getting money from foreign sources and we can ignore those people because we’ve shut them down and we’ll just ride this out.

But I don’t think that’s the case anymore. And I think if the Speaker can provide them the space, who knows, they might actually appreciate an out, so they can get what they need passed and reintroduce properly the bills that have nothing to do with the budget.

Q: Is there any argument to be made that your point of order should have been introduced before this bill was passed at second reading?

A: No, not really. You can introduce a point of order at anytime. And at the time of that, there were negotiations taking place between the official opposition and the government of the day and who knew how that was going to turn out?

In some ways, there could have been an argument that I should’ve waited to see what it looked like when it came out at the other end of committee.

And I thought about that, but realized this is a substantive point of order and I expect that Speaker Scheer will do it justice.  And that means listening to the arguments from the other parties in the House, constructing, researching and writing what will be, one way or the other, a precedent-setting decision.

It’s not something done lightly and therefore I didn’t want to squeeze it so that my point of order would come when the bill came back at report stage.

Q: And would you say you feel confident at this point?

A: I feel confident that I’ve written an argument that is legally correct.

Jun 052012
 

Current status:  awaiting the decision by the Speaker of the House (Andrew Scheer) on Elizabeth’s argument that the bill must be set aside.

http://elizabethmaymp.ca/parliament/points-of-order/2012/06/04/points-of-order-bill-c-38/

(It is best to access this at the above link.  There is also a Youtube of Elizabeth’s presentation.  I copied the text below as a back-up copy.)

Points of Order – Bill C-38

Elizabeth May: Mr. Speaker, I am rising on a point of order today. It may be a little lengthy, so I would just like to establish that it will be acceptable to omit various page and section references and submit them in written form so that members are able to refer to the various precedents that I will be citing, just in the interests of time.

I rise on a point of order related to Bill C-38. My point of order is based on Standing Order 68(3), which states “No bill may be introduced either in blank or in an imperfect shape”.

First, let me set aside the argument I will not be advancing. I will not argue that C-38 goes too far as an omnibus bill or that it should be split. I will argue that C-38 is not properly an omnibus bill at all and therefore cannot benefit from the trend toward over-large and complex omnibus legislation.

I seek a ruling that the bill has not been put forward in its proper form, is therefore imperfect and must be set aside.

My first observation in relation to the standing rule and how I hope that the precedent will lead you to interpret it comes from a citation of the House in 1982 in which an hon. member said:

“Shape”, according to the Oxford Concise Dictionary, is a synonym for “form”. Therefore, a bill according to Standing Order 69 [as it then was] must not be in imperfect form. The question of a bill’s form is extensively dealt with in our parliamentary authorities…

A few of which are then cited from that era.

Having said I do not intend to argue that the bill must be split as being overly large for an omnibus bill, I still think there is a compelling case that the House must act to set limits around omnibus legislation.

Speaker Lamoureux stated his concern that some limits must be established in his well-known musings on this subject in 1971. He said at the time:

However, where do we stop? Where is the point of no return? The hon. member for Winnipeg North Centre, and I believe the hon. member for Edmonton West, said that we might reach the point where we would have only one bill, a bill at the start of the session for the improvement of the quality of life in Canada which would include every single proposed piece of legislation for the session. That would be an omnibus bill with a capital “O” and a capital “B”. But would it be acceptable…from a strictly parliamentary standpoint….

This is a critical question, but it is for another time and for the House itself. Rulings from speakers Sauvé, Fraser, Parent and Milliken have confirmed Lamoureux’s misgivings but also a general traditional view that it is not for the Speaker to say an omnibus bill has gone too far in terms of its length or in terms of the numbers of different items or complex matters in one bill.

This point of order does not rest on argumentation that 420 pages is too long for an omnibus bill, nor that amending, repealing or reinstating 70 different acts of Parliament goes too far. So long as a bill meets the tests of being an omnibus bill, tradition will allow it.

In order to respect the standing orders of this House, any proposed omnibus bill must conform to the established criteria of an omnibus bill.

Furthermore, to be accepted as a budget omnibus bill, the proposed legislation must further conform to the rule that the implementation legislation must relate to commitments made in the budget document itself.

The tests for a proper omnibus bill are well established. I cite from our current authorities O’Brien and Bosc:

An omnibus bill has “one basic principle or purpose which ties together all the proposed enactments and thereby renders the Bill intelligible for parliamentary purposes”.

That is a closed inner quote. Then it continues:

One of the reasons cited for introducing an omnibus bill is to bring together in a single bill all the legislative amendments resulting from a [single] policy decision to facilitate parliamentary debate.

A further citation from Beauchesne’s 6th edition, which by the way was cited with approval by Speaker Fraser in 1992, states:

Although there is no specific set of rules or guidelines governing the content of a bill, there should be a theme of relevancy amongst the contents of a bill. They must be relevant to and subject to the umbrella which is raised by the terminology of the long title of the bill.

Speaker Fraser ruled in 1988:

The essential defence of an omnibus procedure is that the Bill in question, although it may seek to create or amend many disparate statutes, in effect has one basic principle or purpose which ties together all the proposed enactments and thereby renders the Bill intelligible for parliamentary purposes.

Speaker Fraser went on to say, citing at this point a definition put forward by the hon. member, at the time, for Windsor West:

I believe that his definition will stand the test of time and be useful to the House and future chair occupants for years to come.

It is worth noting that, while back in 1982 the energy bill that was split through the action of the House due to determined action of the opposition, the famous bell-ringing episode, was not set aside by the Speaker, still Speaker Fraser cites the energy bill in the 1988 argument and by inference uses it as an example of a bill that went too far in its attempt to claim all legislative changes fit a common purpose. He compares and contrasts it with the free trade legislation, which formed a context within which his lengthy and detailed canvassing of the issues took place in 1988.

The implication is clear, that in Speaker Fraser’s view the 1982 energy bill failed the test of omnibus definition he had put forward. As such, although it is at best obiter dicta, it does serve to add weight to the notion that simply calling legislation omnibus will not assure that it can be accepted as such.

His final summation on the detailed ruling does indeed confirm that the Speaker has the authority to find if a bill is in proper shape. The Speaker has the authority to determine if a piece of legislation meets the test of being a true omnibus bill.

Speaker Fraser ruled:

Bill C-130 is indeed an omnibus Bill—it meets the definition as stated by the Hon. Member for Windsor West in that it has a single purpose, while amending various statutes but without further guidance of the House and based on the practice to this day, it should be allowed to proceed…;

It is clear that the Speaker is not, at present and in absence of rules from the House to limit the length and complexities of omnibus bills, entitled to rule that an omnibus bill is too long, too complex or too broad in scope.

It is also clear that the Speaker is entitled to determine if legislation purporting to be an omnibus bill is actually in the proper shape to be considered an omnibus bill.

The tests are also clear. To be an omnibus bill, it must have a single purpose.

Bill C-38 has been introduced in an imperfect shape. It fails the tests of being a proper omnibus bill.

First, it fails because it has no central theme—that “one basic principle or purpose”—in order to be legitimized as a reasonable basis for debate and study.

Second, it fails because it does not provide a link between items in the bill and the budget itself.

Third, it fails because it omits actions, regulatory and legislative changes described by representatives of the Privy Council as part of Bill C-38. The omission of items that the ministers and hon. members speaking for the Privy Council assert are in C-38 further confirms the bill is imperfect, unready and requiring a reworking.

I will take each of these failings in turn.

First, Bill C-38 does not have a theme of relevancy, one basic principle or purpose, nor does it arise from a single policy decision. I anticipate that the Conservative Privy Council officers will respond to this point of order and say its theme is the budget. It is entitled, “An act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on March 29, 2012 and other measures”. Clearly, a budget is no longer merely a fiscal statement comprising changes to the Income Tax Act and other tax measures. It is understood to be a policy statement, and as such, a policy statement, it can be considered a theme.

Commentators have warned us that this trend undermines the role of Parliament in proper oversight of the public purse and of individual pieces of legislation.

Professor Ned Franks, professor emeritus at Queen’s University, wrote back in 2010:

Canadian budget implementation acts…have morphed from short bills dealing with minor items mentioned in the budget speech to enormous omnibus bills…Parliament cannot study them properly…These omnibus budget implementation bills subvert and evade the normal principles of parliamentary review of legislation.

As the anti-democratic risks of omnibus bills draw greater scrutiny, the links to policy must not be accepted on faith. Nor should they be loose or sloppy in analysis. Much rides on knowing that there is a legitimate link between the measures in an omnibus budget bill and the budget itself. If the link is not there, the legislation fails to meet the test of an omnibus bill.

The failure of opposition parties in recent years to adequately challenge the creeping nature of omnibus budget bills cannot in itself create precedents. The silence of opposition parties and therefore of the Speaker does not create affirmative approval of the so-called omnibus budget bills of 2009 and 2010.

I return now to the first test of whether the bill is properly an omnibus budget bill.

Bill C-38 does not have one central theme. Even if one accepts that the budget document of March 29, with its myriad policy and fiscal initiatives, represents a theme, a single purpose, Bill C-38 contains much that was simply never mentioned in the budget and which further fails to have more than a fanciful connection to the public relations short title of the bill, jobs, growth and long-term prosperity.

This is frankly baffling. Budget 2012 covers hundreds of areas. There was no limit or restriction for the Minister of Finance on the topics that were chosen for inclusion. The Privy Council officers who signed off on the March 29 budget had abundant opportunity to ensure that nothing included in Bill C-38, the budget implementation act, would fall outside the scope of the budget itself. Had they done so, the affront to Parliament would at least fall within our rules. The respect for Westminster parliamentary tradition and our role as parliamentarians would not have been so egregiously abused.

As it is, I maintain that Bill C-38 fails to meet the first test to ascertain whether it is properly an omnibus budget bill, whether the measures in Bill C-38 are included in the budget itself.

The following examples establish that Bill C-38 fails to provide a link between the items in Bill C-38 and the budget itself. I will begin with the sections that have completely changed the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act.

While “streamlining”, eliminating duplicate reviews and time limits for the reviews found under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act were flagged in the budget, the fact that the act was to be repealed was never mentioned in the March 2012 budget. The budget suggested important amendments to CEAA, but it simply never mentioned repealing the act and introducing an entirely new legislative scheme. It never mentioned that triggers for federal review, in place since the 1980s guidelines order, such as the presence of federal funds in the proposed undertaking as a trigger for required review, would be removed.

The budget never mentioned wholesale redefinition of the substance of review, of those impacts that require study under the act. These changes are not relevant to the proposed rationalization for streamlining. These and other changes represent a threat and a retreat from federal responsibilities for which no foundation was laid in the budget itself.

Further, the Fisheries Act was never mentioned in the budget at all. Other than reductions in available funding for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, enhanced funding for first nations fisheries and increased funding for fisheries science, fisheries are not mentioned in the budget at all. Nowhere in the budget is it suggested, or required as a legislative change to implement other parts of the budget, that a major overhaul of the Fisheries Act is to be expected.

The changes to the Fisheries Act concealed in Bill C-38 are simply the most far-reaching, radical and fundamental changes to the Fisheries Act in Canada’s history. Nothing less would have provoked four former ministers of fisheries and oceans, representing fishery policy under three different prime ministers, to speak with one voice in urging the act to be withdrawn. Yet the proposed amendments to the Fisheries Act were not mentioned in the budget at all. They are not anchored to any promised change in the budget. Unmoored from the budget, the changes to the Fisheries Act lack all legitimacy.

Also unmentioned in the budget are changes to the functions of personnel within national parks. The amendments to the Parks Canada Agency Act are perhaps sensible. They would allow Parks Canada Agency wardens to enforce other acts for other agencies. Regardless of whether such changes would be offensive or not, and without further study of the long-term implications for Parks Canada’s core mandate, I cannot say, and whether it is a good change or not is irrelevant to the main point. These changes have nothing whatsoever to do with the budget. Parks Canada’s budget was reduced and a new national park was announced without funding for the Rouge Valley near Toronto. Neither of these budgetary mentions have any connection to the Bill C-38 amendments to the Parks Canada Agency Act.

Amendments to the Canada Oil and Gas Operations Act to give the National Energy Board authority over pipelines and power lines crossing navigable waters, removing authority held under the Navigable Waters Protection Act, were also never mentioned in the budget.

There is similarly no mention in the budget of changes to the Species at Risk Act, the Canadian Environmental Protection Act or the Navigable Waters Protection Act. The only reference to the policy area of species at risk within the budget was to provide more funding. If the act governing species at risk required overhaul to deliver on this aspect of the budget, why was it never mentioned? There is no nexus between the one reference to species at risk in budget 2012 and the subsequent legislative changes in Bill C-38. There is no reference at all to policy or legislative changes in the budget related to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act or the Navigable Waters Protection Act.

I come to the repeal of the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act. This repeal could hardly be described as a surprise. The current executive branch has made it very clear that it wishes to repudiate Canada’s global treaty obligations. Nevertheless, I ask you, Mr. Speaker, to consider the rules and precedents of Parliament. A measure in an omnibus budget bill is only legitimate if it has some relation to a central organizing theme. The topic of climate change is never once mentioned in the budget.

The House cannot take the equivalent of judicial notice that everyone knows the Prime Minister intends to kill the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act. The Prime Minister, or, more accurately, his Minister of the Environment has all the powers and authority necessary to present legislation to the House to repeal the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act. The Conservatives have a majority of seats in both places, making it a foregone conclusion for this and all the other bills I have mentioned that do not belong in Bill C-38 and that properly tabled legislation will meet with parliamentary approval.

Should the Privy Council officers respond that “the jobs, growth and long-term prosperity” agenda requires the repeal of this act, they must be called upon to make proof of this assertion. The Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act provisions make its terms moot with the withdrawal of Canada from the Kyoto protocol through the action of the Minister of the Environment announced in the House in December of last year. The repeal of the act included in Bill C-38 is further evidence that the act has no central theme, purpose or principle.

Moving on from the extensive environmental aspects of Bill C-38, there are other legislative changes for which no foundation has been laid in the budget.

One of the most serious changes to Bill C-38 relates to a new supremacy of Privy Council to override decisions of the National Energy Board. This change to the National Energy Board Act was not mentioned at all in the budget document. Nor was it shared in advance explanatory notes. It is not connected to any theme, but is a significant change in the context of a quasi-judicial body with a long history of professionalism. There has been no explanation, so it is impossible to find in this change any link or theme to connect it to other aspects of Bill C-38.

The elimination of the Office of the Inspector General under the Canadian Security Intelligence Service has no connection whatsoever to the budget. Neither are the changes to consolidate the responsibility for reviewing the activities of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service into the Security Intelligence Review Committee foreshadowed in the 2012 budget. To attempt to find a theme that embraces repealing the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act, weakening of fisheries habitat protection and eliminating the Inspector General of CSIS within C-38 is an exercise to make your head hurt.

The new provisions for conditional release decisions within the Corrections and Conditional Release Act are also completely unhinged from anything in the budget.

There is no logical—or even illogical—link between budgetary measures and the changes in Bill C-38. The repeal of the Fair Wages and Hours of Labour Act is not referenced in Budget 2012. The repeal of this act could have serious implications. In addition, it is not related to other aspects of Bill C-38, which drives home the point that the bill has no overarching theme.

One of the most profound changes to Canada contained in Bill C-38 relates to the surrendering of sovereignty in relation to law enforcement. While certain measures for improved movement of goods at the border are mentioned in the budget, the so-called “ship-rider” provisions are not mentioned. The decision to allow the law enforcement officials from another sovereign nation onto Canadian territory to enforce foreign laws is a dramatic and radical change. The Privy Council is, as noted above, entitled to table legislation to reduce the traditional understanding of Canadian sovereignty. Such a radical departure from universally understood principles of sovereignty merit legitimate debate and review. Given the majority of seats held by the Conservative Party, so long as members of Parliament are required by their whip to vote with their cabinet colleagues, any such bill will pass. However, this measure is not linked to the policy direction of the budget. It is not referenced, and as such, it is further evidence that Bill C-38 is not a proper omnibus budget bill at all.

The complete list of measures that had no connection to the budget involves the elimination of numerous bodies and consequential repeal of numerous agencies never mentioned in the budget. I know that the above list is not exhaustive, but covers many of the larger measures for which there is no link to budget 2012.

There is another group of things that I find unusual, and that is the third ground on which I make the case that Bill C-38 violates Standing Order 68(3). It fails by omitting actions, regulatory and legislative changes that were described by representatives of the Privy Council as part of Bill C-38. The omission of items that the ministers and hon. members speaking for Privy Council assert are in Bill C-38 further confirms the bill is imperfect, unready and requiring a re-working.

I will cite numerous examples from the debate at second reading of Bill C-38 in which members of the Privy Council and Conservative members of Parliament spoke favourably to aspects of the legislation that were actually not in Bill C-38 at all. I anticipate that Conservative members may claim that people make mistakes in debate and that the claims that were made about Bill C-38 are not substantive and that statements made in debate cannot add to the evidence that Bill C-38 is imperfect.

In other Parliaments that may have been true. The occasional enthusiastic slip of the tongue does not undermine a governing party’s description of its legislation.

However, these are not occasional slips. The claims of provisions in Bill C-38 that simply are not there were made by the Minister of Natural Resources and by the Minister of Environment. The claims were made, not in extemporaneous fashion, as if such exists any longer in the governing party of the day. The claims were made in prepared speaking notes. The same words and virtually verbatim text were submitted by a number of backbenchers as well.

In relation to claims of greater tanker and pipeline safety, I submit the following statements in debate at second reading. The Minister of Natural Resources said:

Mr. Speaker, the bill would do a great deal to protect the environment…tankers will have to be double-hulled, there will be mandatory pilotage, there will be enhanced navigation, there will be aerial surveillance, and [other] measures will be taken when necessary in particular cases.

The Minister of the Environment said, “The legislation before us would provide new funding in support of improving pipeline and marine safety….It would fund $35.7 million over two years to further strengthen Canada’s tanker safety regime”.

The hon. member for Prince George said, “We would enhance pipeline and marine safety through initiatives such as a strengthened tanker safety regime”

The Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Trade said, “I would like to speak directly to the budget bill…We will strengthen pipeline safety…Every Canadian would support strengthening pipeline safety”.

There is a further statement from the hon. member for West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country, a further statement from the hon. member for North Vancouver and a further statement to the same effect from the hon. member for Kootenay—Columbia.

There is absolutely nothing in Bill C-38 that advances tanker safety or pipeline safety. The budget document itself mentions such changes are planned, but Bill C-38 omits any reference to them.

Ironically, after the litany of measures never mentioned at all in the budget that are included in Bill C-38, in this case the budget promises the changes, but Bill C-38 has not a word about pilotage or double-hulled tankers or increasing pipeline inspections.

We have a choice here. We could either conclude that the ministers and other hon. members were deliberately misleading this House or, because I reject this first notion, I submit the only sensible conclusion is that there are errors in Bill C-38 that have omitted important sections that the ministers honestly believe were in the legislation they were putting before us.

In the matter of environmental assessment, ministers and other hon. members also asserted specific language to the new provisions to allow for the complete substitution of federal environment review for the provincial one. In second reading debate, the specificity of the language and its repetition suggests they honestly believe the legislation is drafted in a way that it is not. The Minister of Natural Resources said:

It would allow provincial environmental assessments that meet the substantive requirements of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act to be substituted for the federal government assessment. In some cases, the provincial process may be deemed equivalent to the federal process. However, these provisions will only be put into effect if the province can demonstrate it can meet federal requirements.

The Minister of Natural Resources further said:

There will be an opportunity for substitution by the province but only if the particular province in question has the capacity and the willingness to conduct an identical level review.

The hon. member for Burlington said roughly the same thing. He said, “I want people to read the legislation.” Frankly, so do I. He said:

I want people to read the legislation. It talks about substitution. It does not talk about elimination. If there is an environmental assessment at the federal level and another one at the provincial level, we can substitute one for the other, but they have to be at least equal.

While substitution of reviews is contemplated in Bill C-38, there is no requirement for an identical level of review, for them to be at least equal, nor for meeting federal requirements.

The summary pages describing the legislation called the substitution “equivalent”, but the word appears nowhere in the operative sections of Bill C-38. In fact the relevant section of the new CEAA offers no criteria at all for a discretionary decision by the minister that the substitution would be “appropriate”, and I cite that section. There is no requirement for equivalency.

These examples of claims for subject matter not covered at all in Bill C-38, pipeline and tanker safety, as well as for subject areas included, but without the strength of criteria repeatedly referenced by Privy Council officers in debate, are further evidence that the legislation is imperfect. I will not accept that so many hon. members spoke in an effort to mislead the House. The members clearly believe that Bill C-38 meets the description they have given the House.

Furthermore, as all speeches delivered by Conservative Party members of Parliament are reviewed in advance by the Prime Minister’s office and given the similarity of wording were likely written by the same person on PMO staff, the Prime Minister cannot but agree that the legislation falls short of his own stated goals.

Whether through hasty drafting or other error, the legislation does not meet the description offered by three members of Privy Council as well as several hon. members. It is imperfect and unready and should be withdrawn.

In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I wish to put forward one final argument to persuade you to reject Bill C-38, which violates the Standing Orders of the House of Commons. My argument is this: the respect of the body politic of this institution is at stake.

I recall the words of the late journalist, a great Canadian, James Travers. We happened to both be on the CBC program Sunday Edition in the spring of 2009, discussing threats to our democratic institutions. He commented that we really no longer have a democracy in Canada, and if we visit Ottawa today, what we will see is a democracy theme park. The buildings are still there and we can tour Parliament, but we will no longer see democracy.

I refuse to accept that is the case. I acknowledge that democracy is not a permanent state of existence. It can be won, as in Arab Spring, and it can be lost. It can be lost through violence; it can be lost through neglect. It does not survive without the constant application of checks on the abuse of power. It needs openness. Those things done by stealth invariably breed an unhealthy loss of respect in our democratic institutions. Sunlight is a great antiseptic. The myriad, unrelated pieces of legislation under cover of Bill C-38 should, to respect Westminster parliamentary democracy, be brought out of the shadows, be tabled separately and studied on their own merit.

To allow Bill C-38 to masquerade as a legitimate omnibus bill will bring our institutions into greater disrepute.

Bill C-38 is widely understood in the popular media as a fraud. I will cite a few examples of respected commentators on our system of government.

Andrew Coyne wrote that Bill C-38 “… is not remotely a budget bill despite its name.” He wrote that, while throwing non-budgetary matters into a budget bill is not unknown, in Bill C-38 “the scale and scope is on a level not previously seen, or tolerated. There is no common thread that runs between them, no overarching principle; they represent not a single act of policy but a sort of compulsory buffet.”

John Ivison in the National Post, noting that the excuse for this omnibus approach is the urgency to move projects to approval, maintains:

… it’s not so “urgent” that it justifies an end-run around 145 years of parliamentary tradition…. Someone, somewhere deep within the Prime Minister’s Office took the decision to try to cram as much contentious legislation in one mega-bill to minimize the political fallout. It was a dumb move and it has blown up in their faces…. condemned by all but the most blinkered of partisans.

Terry Glavin wrote in the Ottawa Citizen that:

Bill C-38…is a heck of a thing. It’s an omnibus bill that purports to be a budget bill but isn’t. It’s a statutory juggernaut that introduces, amends, or repeals nearly 70 federal laws. It’s been presented to the House of Commons in a manner that may be without close precedent in Canadian parliamentary history.

Dan Gardner wrote just this weekend in the Ottawa Citizen that:

…the government’s mammoth Bill C-38, which is theoretically the budget implementation bill, but is in reality a vast number of pieces of legislation that have nothing to do with each other, or the budget. Piling most of the government’s legislative agenda together in one bill ensures scrutiny will be kept to a minimum, which is in keeping with the government’s unprecedented use of time allocation and closure to shut down parliamentary debate.

We, as parliamentarians, must be the bulwark against abuse of power, even in a majority government. Our only shield is our traditions, the standing rules, precedent and our respect for the same. Our only hope is in a fair judge. I turn to you, Mr. Speaker, without fear or favour, sine timore aut favore, to rule fairly and protect Westminster parliamentary democracy, to restore public faith in our institutions and to order Bill C-38, a bill imperfect in form and shape, to be withdrawn pursuant to our standing rules.

Jun 052012
 

http://thechronicleherald.ca/canada/103704-may-budget-bill-an-outrage

By PAUL McLEOD   Ottawa Bureau

Green leader argues C-38 breaks rules

Green Leader Elizabeth May asked Andrew Scheer, the Speaker of the House of Commons, to rule the Conservatives’ budget bill out of order.  (PETER PARSONS / Staff)

Green Leader Elizabeth May asked Andrew Scheer, the Speaker of the House of Commons, to rule the Conservatives’ budget bill out of order.  (PETER PARSONS / Staff)

The fate of this year’s and all future omnibus budget bills will be placed in the hands of the Speaker of the House of Commons.

Elizabeth May, leader of the Green party, rose Monday in the House on a point of order to argue that the Conservatives’ budget bill is so broad, it breaks parliamentary rules.

She asked Speaker Andrew Scheer to rule the bill out of order, thus sending it back to the government to be chopped into smaller pieces.

“I think there’s nothing less at stake than the future of the respect of the Canadian public for parliamentary democracy,” May said in an interview.

“This bill is an outrage.”

Scheer reserved his decision. The other opposition parties have signalled they want to weigh in before he rules.

May’s lengthy point of order centres on the parliamentary rule that “no bill may be introduced in either blank or imperfect shape.”

Bill C-38, the budget implementation bill, spans 430 pages, but May takes care to stress she is not objecting to its size.

Instead, she argues that much of its contents have no relationship to the budget itself.

May cites extensive rulings by past Speakers that omnibus bills are supposed to tie together pieces of legislation that share a common theme. House rules call for an omnibus bill to have “one basic principle or purpose which ties together all the proposed enactments.”

May says the budget bill has no common theme and was introduced improperly, and thus imperfectly.

She argues that even simply “the budget” cannot be a theme for the bill as many sections of the bill were never mentioned in the budget.

She lists as examples changes to the Fisheries Act and granting new power for governing pipelines to the National Energy Board.

And she says there is no logical “or even illogical” link between the budget and changing the Corrections and Conditional Release Act.

The budget does include a reference to streamlining duplicate environmental reviews, though May argues it is a stretch to link this to the budget bill’s repealing and rewriting of the Environmental Assessment Act.

“To allow C-38 to masquerade as a legitimate omnibus bill will bring our institutions into greater disrepute,” reads the point of order.

The NDP and Liberals expressed some support for May’s charge. Liberal Leader Bob Rae said allowing C-38 to stand would open the door to governments introducing one massive piece of legislation each year containing all of their ideas.

Speaker Scheer’s ruling will likely be precedent-setting. If he sides with May, he will effectively set limits on how wide-ranging future budget bills can be. If he rejects her appeal, he will provide written justification that governments will be able to point to in defending future omnibus bills.

Scheer, who is in his first year as Speaker, is the Conservative MP for Regina-Qu’Appelle. He has so far sided with the government in his most high-profile rulings involving the Vikileaks Twitter account and scurrilous claims made to constituents of Liberal MP Irwin Cotler.

As Speaker, Scheer must act as the independent arbiter of the House. May said she believes her point of order will get fair consideration.

“It is for him to rise above the fact that he was elected (as a Conservative),” she said.

“He’s not a partisan actor in the House of Commons, and I think he will be fair, he will be impartial.”

There is no timetable for Scheer to reach a decision.

(pmcleod  AT  herald.ca)

Jun 042012
 

Closely related:   Very important televised debate: Jeremy Scahill (“The Nation”) says Obama drone strikes constitute murder, and he says it on NBC.  The U.S. “kill list”. 

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http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/comment/2012/05/the-presidents-kill-list.html

The President’s Kill List, The New Yorker, Amy Davidson

What is wrong with the President sitting in a room, looking at lists and  portraits of people—a Somali man, a seventeen-year-old girl, an American  citizen—and deciding whom to kill?

That, according to long and troubling  articles in both the Times and Newsweek, is a job Barack Obama has assigned himself.  His aides, notably John Brennan, his counter-terrorism adviser, portray it as a  matter of taking responsibility—if we are going to assassinate someone, or call  in a drone strike to take out a camp in Yemen, the President should make the  call—as if our only alternative were some sort of rogue operation, with generals  or C.I.A. agents shooting at will.

But responsibility involves accountability,  which is something, in this case, that appears to be badly lacking. Obama has  not taken on a burden, but instead has given the Presidency a novel power.

The “kill list” story is a reminder of how much language matters, and how  dangerous it is when the plain meaning of a word is ignored. Each might include  a mini-glossary: “baseball cards,” for the PowerPoint slides with the  biographies and faces of targets; “Terror Tuesday,” meetings where targets are  sorted out; “nominations” for death-marked finalists; “personality strikes” that  aimed to kill a person, and “signature strikes” that went after a group of  people whose names one didn’t know because of the way they seemed, from pictures  in the sky, to be acting. (From the Times piece, written by Jo Becker  and Scott Shane: “The joke was that when the C.I.A. sees ‘three guys doing  jumping jacks,’ the agency thinks it is a terrorist training camp, said one  senior official.”)

Signature strikes were also known as TADS, for  terrorist-attack-disruption strikes, or just as “crowd kills.” Both articles  explore Obama’s halting efforts to confine signature strikes to Pakistan, rather  than Yemen and Somalia, and how he ultimately didn’t, really. This is the kind  of attack that, in one incident mentioned by Daniel Klaidman in his Newsweek piece, led to “persuasive” reports of dozens of women and  children dying. A lawyer who saw that on “Kill TV,” the feed that let the  military and lawyers watch strikes, said later, “If I were Catholic, I’d have to  go to confession.”

More disturbing than childish names for brutal things are the absurd meanings  ascribed to more sober terms. The key ones are “civilians and combatants,” and “due process.”How do you minimize civilian casualties in a conflict? Ask a military planner  or human-rights organization or just a sensible person and each might come up  with a list of tactics, plans, litmus tests. And there were apparently elements  of that in the White House’s conversations. But ask a sophist or, as it happens,  the C.I.A.,  and you might get this suggestion: change the definition. As the Times described it, Obama

embraced a disputed method for counting civilian casualties that did  little to box him in. It in effect counts all military-age males in a strike  zone as combatants, according to several administration officials, unless there  is explicit intelligence posthumously proving them innocent.

In other words, if we thought that you were someone we should kill, and we  did kill you, and you look to be the right age to be cast as an extra in a spy  movie, you were guilty. Does that mean that, if a house is hit and the bodies of  a father, mother, teen-age boy, and middle-school-aged girl are found entangled  with each other, two are combatants and two are civilians?

These words are important because of the argument that we have to act to  protect ourselves: there is a terrorist on a screen; hit him now. But how are we  deciding who a terrorist is? In some cases, we don’t even know the names of  people we’re killing, in countries where we are not actually at war. In others,  we do know their names, and don’t care who dies with them. (In one strike, in  which the identity of the man was known, according to the Times, Obama  made a deliberate decision to kill his wife and in-laws along with him.)

The method we have built, over a couple of hundred years, for sorting out  questions of guilt and innocence and probable cause, is due process. And that  may be the most degraded phrase of all.

The Obama Administration has sought and killed American citizens, notably  Anwar al-Awlaki. As the Times noted, “The Justice Department’s Office  of Legal Counsel prepared a lengthy memo justifying that extraordinary step,  asserting that while the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of due process applied, it  could be satisfied by internal deliberations in the executive branch.” In other  words, it’s due process if the President thinks about it. One wonders how low  the standard for “internal deliberations” are—if it might be enough if Obama  mulled it over while walking his dog. And if an American whom the President  decides is a threat can be assassinated in Yemen, where Awlaki was hit, why not  in London, or Toronto, or Los Angeles?  (Awlaki’s teen-age son, an American  citizen who had not been accused of anything, died in a separate strike.)

These are not far-fetched concerns. The Times quoted Michael Hayden,  who served as the director of the C.I.A. under George Bush:

“This program rests on the personal legitimacy of the president, and  that’s not sustainable,” Mr. Hayden said. “I have lived the life of someone  taking action on the basis of secret O.L.C. memos, and it ain’t a good life.  Democracies do not make war on the basis of legal memos locked in a D.O.J.  safe.”

As Jane  Mayer has written in The New Yorker, drone strikes, as opposed to  ground troops, bring with them a comforting illusion of distance. Picturing  Obama going through the lists in a bright office in Washington shows where that  daydream leads, and how deceptive it can be. A drone-based conflict may, in the  short run, keep some troops from harm, but it may also take the debate about war  and peace out of the public sphere and into what is, in political terms, a much  darker space.

Brennan and other officials interviewed by the Times and Newsweek said that Obama had enormous faith in himself. It would be  more responsible, though, if he had less—if he thought that he was no better  than any other President we’ve had or ever will.

The point isn’t just the task,  or burden, he takes on, but the machine he has built for his successors to use.  Perhaps, just to suggest a range, he could picture each of the Republican  contenders from this past season being walked through the process, told how it  works, shown some of those video clips with tiny people and big explosions, and  taking it for a test drive.

Never mind whether Obama, in particular, sighs or  loses sleeps or tosses a coin when he chooses a target: What would it mean for a  bad, or craven, or simply carelessly accommodating President to do so? In the  end we are not really being asked to trust Obama, or his niceness, but the  office of the Presidency.  Do we?

Jun 042012
 

Jim from the U.S. writes:  These are the kinds of DEBATES that must be aired and allowed to actually ALTER U.S. POLICIES!

6 min, Jeremy Scahill says it on The Nation:

http://video.msnbc.msn.com/up-with-chris-hayes/47658344#47658344

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See also:   2012-05-30  The President’s Kill List, The New Yorker, Amy Davidson (Drones).

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http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/05/what-if-herman-cain-had-a-kill-list/257860/

What If Herman Cain Had a Kill List?
May 31 2012

Atlantic_situation_room_615.jpg
Reuters, Kasia Cieplak-Mayr von Baldegg

Many Democrats trust Obama to order assassinations anywhere on earth based on his judgment. Do they trust whatever Republican next wins?

“What is wrong,” asks Amy Davidson, “with the president sitting in a room, looking at lists and portraits of people — a Somali man, a seventeen-year-old girl, an American citizen — and deciding whom to kill?” If only it were a rhetorical question. In fact, Obama has assigned himself that macabre job, according to reports in the Times and Newsweek that note the enormous faith he has in his own judgment. “It would be more responsible, though, if he had less,” Davidson argues. “If he thought that he was no better than any other president we’ve had or ever will. The point isn’t just the task, or burden, he takes on, but the machine he has built for his successors to use. Perhaps, just to suggest a range, he could picture each of the Republican contenders from this past season being walked through the process, told how it works, shown some of those video clips with tiny people and big explosions, and taking it for a test drive.” Yes, what if that happened?

. . .  (short script for a play of how it might unfold  – – go to the link for the full text)

Yes, it’s very amusing to poke fun at all the dubious figures that run for president. Too bad that Obama hasdecided to aggrandize for every future winner the power to kill anyone on earth, subject only to the whims of whoever happens to be heading the executive branch at the time. If Democrats are uneasy handing that power to Republicans, now is the time to act. They’ve been warned.

Jun 042012
 

Dear Friends,

WE NEED YOUR HELP TO PUBLICIZE THE CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY COMPLAINT FILED IN THE WORLDWIDE COURT AT THE HAGUE – CHILDREN’S AMALGAM TRIAL – AN UNETHICAL EXPERIMENT ON CHILDREN

PLEASE FORWARD TO YOUR MAILING LISTS – FRIENDS, DOCTORS, DENTISTS ETC.

International “Crime Against Humanity” Filed At The Hague

 

On Monday, June 4, a press release was sent out via PR Newswire by Dental Amalgam Mercury Solutions (DAMS) to bring worldwide attention to the unethical Children’s Amalgam Trial funded by the U.S. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR).

International Advocate Anita Tibau and Kelly Gallagher, documentary filmmaker, have been in Portugal for over three months working with an investigational reporter and were in part responsible for the filing of the “Crime Against Humanity” complaint at the Hague in the Netherlands.

WE NEED MAJOR MEDIA COVERAGE BOTH IN THE UNITED STATES AND WORLDWIDE.

As a result of the press release the following major media outlets picked up the story, however it crucial for YOU to write comments to each one of these articles in order to expand coverage….the more hits and comments on these sites the more coverage we will gain.

I am also working with an investigational reporter who is the new editor of the Project on Government Oversight (POGO), a nonprofit organization devoted to watchdog reporting.

WE ALL WANT THIS STORY TO MAKE HEADLINES WORLDWIDE.

Thank you,

Freya Koss
publicist
IAOMT, DAMS

 

The Press Release is on REGULAR REUTERS:  http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/04/idUS57023+04-Jun-2012+PRN20120604

Please share/click/comment on the Reuters link, as well as these other high-profile websites:

Jun 042012
 

It is NOT angry and it is NOT violent!   It is quite wonderful.

Shot & edited by Ian MacKenzie,   ianmack.com

Inspired by Jeremie Battaglia’s gorgeous Montreal film, Vancouver answers the Quebec student movement with a pots and pans revolt of our own.  There is a beauty that emerges when we learn and inspire each other, just as Quebec has done for the rest of Canada.  When we speak to each other instead of through governments or the mainstream media.   Here in Vancouver, we discovered what it means to make music together in the streets,  in the rain, and you can see it on our faces.  It is magic.

André Bourgoin explains:  This one is in Québec city’s Quartier Limoilou (kind of like Riversdale in Saskatoon).  Note that with bill 78 in effect, a gathering of more than 50 people is illegal anywhere in the province of Québec unless the police have been notified 8 hours before it happens.  The police, however, have been tolerant towards most casseroles events, since they are peaceful.  At the end of the video the crowd is chanting “Usons les trottoirs, jusqu’à la victoire” (Let’s beat the sidewalks until we win).

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What is a “casseroles”? . . .  a form of protest that started in Latin American countries, Chile, Argentina.

A pot and a wooden spoon.  Get out in the Streets, connect and become empowered – Our revolution of love, hope and community.  The best remedy ever for depression!

On Wednesday, (June 6 and every Wednesday) bang for 15 minutes starting at 8:00pm.   The list of communities in Canada doing it is too long to copy here.  (Unfortunately, the organizing is all through facebook  National Facebook event – not everyone can access it.  Gotta change Facebook!)

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HOW are the protests in Canada being reported in other countries?  . . .   Russia

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Is Canadian media reporting on what’s happening outside Canada?

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It is not all fun and games!  It’s very hard and creative work for a very good cause – to change the way we’re going!

  • The kids in Quebec set up an office where they’re translating from French into English as fast as they can, so other Canadians can get an accurate report on what’s happening.   Let’s give them a hand – pass this email along!  (And bang your pot with your friends at 8:00 pm every Wednesday!
  • Occupy Wall Street (OWS) ‘Summer Disobedience School’

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The banging is about to get much louder.  Harper is not going to get away with Bill C-38, the omnibus budget bill that undoes what Canada is all about.  To boot, the American police would have the right to operate in Canada, under American laws.

More about that later.

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INSPIRATION (EXCERPT, text from Rabble.ca,  the first link at the top of this page –
http://rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/ethan-cox/2012/05/it-starts-quebec-our-revolution-love-hope-and-community)

It starts in Quebec: Our revolution of love, hope and community

This movement may yet fail. It may be co-opted, or lose track of its goals. But there can be no denying that something extraordinary is happening in Quebec. If we, as a society, as a people, are to make a stand against the governments which cut taxes on the rich and corporations and then plead poverty as they dismantle our society, our communities, it will be here. Call me an idealist, call me a dreamer, call me anything you like. But this is a moment in time we will tell our children about. Together, we can start something here that spreads like wildfire across this continent. What happens next is up to us.    . . .

If you do not live here, I wish I could properly convey to you what it feels like . . . It is magic. It starts quietly, a suggestion here and there, and it builds. Everybody on the street begins to smile. I get there, and we all — young and old, children and students and couples and retirees and workers and weird misfits and dogs and, well, neighbours –we all grin the widest grins you have ever seen while dancing around and making as much noise as possible. We are almost ecstatic with the joy of letting loose like this, of voicing our resistance to a government that seeks to silence us, and of being together like this. I have lived in my neighbourhoods for five years now, and this is the most I have ever felt a part of the community; the lasting impact that these protests will have on how people relate to each other in the city is deep and incredible.