Mr. Mulcair’s comments in the House are protected by parliamentary privilege from libel actions. When asked outside the House to comment on his mention of Mr. MacEachen, Mr. Mulcair instead discussed the nature of the public inquiry into the relationship between Mr. Schreiber and Mr. Mulroney.
I’m getting sick of this garbage - Say anything you want in the House; then obfuscate outside. No wonder people are getting turned off politics and not bothering to vote.
I was really hoping someone else would pick up on this, but since I don’t see a post in Blogging Tories, I will proceed.
On MDL tonight, Duff interviews Environment Minister John Baird and discusses the ‘nasty’ atmosphere in Question Period.
The ever-pompous Thomas Mulcair was shown in a clip, right after Dion. He rants for a while, and then says this:
“…We’re talking about the greatest ecological crisis the world has ever faced. All of the scientists that have looked at this issue agree with it…”
All of the scientists???? There are no opposing scientific views? I had no idea.
Or is exaggeration also covered by ‘Parliamentary immunity’?
Tuesday - Exact quote from Hansard now available:
Mr. Speaker, we do not have hard targets. We do have aspirational goals, as in the void, the vacuum, created by the vacuous statements of that irresponsible government. We are talking about the greatest ecological crisis the world has ever faced. All of the scientists who have looked at this issue agree with it.
Well, it’s hardly surprising that the left-wing media are all over Harper like a pack of jackals. The Record has this editorial offering today - Harper drops the ball on climate change.
Here’s a classic line:
To be sure, implementing an international plan to deal with climate change will not be cheap. Every cleanup comes with a cost. Harper’s approach of waiting for all countries to be able to pay is naive. It will just delay the process. If rich and poor houses on a street were on fire, would Harper wait until everyone paid the same taxes before calling the fire brigade?
What a weak analogy!!!
For one thing, Harper isn’t ‘refusing to call the fire brigade’. He simply realizes that it’s pointless to fight a wildfire that’s engulfing a whole neighbourhood if the poorer houses refuse to have their gas turned off. No matter how hard you try to stop your own house from burning, the fire from your neighbour’s house is going to affect yours unless they stop it at the source.
Next they make this disingenuous comment:
Interestingly, Australia’s prime minister, John Howard, who opposed Kyoto, has just been defeated by Labour Leader Kevin Ruud, who has pledged to sign the accord. From both a policy and a political perspective, Harper would be wise to become a more ardent opponent of climate change.
Well, Dr. John Ray from Brisbane thinks Rudd’s stance is just so much hot air:
…And the resolve of Prime-minister-elect Kevin Rudd to sign the Kyoto treaty is a good example of such tokenism. Australia’s emissions of carbon dioxide are already in line with what most of Europe has achieved so the signing will make little difference.
It should also be noted that Rudd will have to get the treaty through the Senate and, in a quirk of Australian politics, he is unlikely to be able to do that until July, 2008. Senate membership does not change until then and the present Senate is conservative-dominated. So Rudd’s talk of “immediate” action is just the usual political flim-flam.
By contrast, the National Post has quite a different take on things than the Record - Standing tall in Uganda:
At the Commonwealth meeting in Uganda, Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi professed himself “disappointed” with Mr. Harper’s stand. No wonder. Under the original draft, nations such as Malaysia would have been subject to no emission limits unless they were also recipients of large cash payments.
Putting aside this attempted cash grab, our more fundamental objection to Kyoto, and any plan that requires large-scale cuts in greenhouse gasses, is that it would hobble our economy — especially our already-struggling manufacturing sector. Mr. Dion may not admit it, but the drastic cuts he seeks would essentially kill whole industries — including, most likely, Ontario’s auto industry. In recent months, Mr. Harper has been accused of ignoring the financial needs of the Greater Toronto Area by snubbing its demands for more federal cash. Ironically, his rejection of the logic of Kyoto has, in one fell swoop, done more to help the region than any of the bailout schemes proposed by Mayor David Miller.
Exactly. With the auto manufacturing sector already on the skids and begging for help, signing Kyoto would only worsen an already troubled Ontario economy. People are losing their jobs. They have to eat and be housed.
And where does that money come from? Taxes.
Are you willing to pay the price?
Tip from a loyal reader - Al Gore buddy owner of sunken ship that left huge carbon footprint on Antarctic Ocean floor: CFP.
Elizabeth May - Global Saboteur. Bourque gave this the following headline - Liz May: Climate Change Worse than Nazis.
Some people never learn.
Elizabeth May goes too far - EcoLibertarian.
Interesting debate going on at Cherniak’s about how he feels that gay men are being discriminated against by the Canadian Blood Services.
In this country where political correctness reigns supreme, I can only guess that the reason gay men are not allowed to donate blood is that the math and science must indicate the the risk is too great.
Yet some still rail on against it.
In Jason’s comments section, a reader mentions a gay columnist who had the courage to disclose the truth. I found the article - A bloody disgrace by Richard Burnett.
It closes with this line:
A ban on gay blood will continue to save lives. And just one life is worth it.
Straight (?) from the horse’s mouth, as it were.
It’s interesting how we are getting all this man-on-man sex pumped at us in the media lately, but when it comes down to it, there continues to be some medical issues about safety.
I know those on the left will have a field-day with this post. I have been purposely avoiding this issue for a while. However, some things need to be heard.
Like the truth.