Tories release first attack ad against Mulcair

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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You still need unions to provide the incentive for employers to want to provide better pay and benefits.

I'm not interested in seeing a Canada run by unions, but I'm also not looking forward to the day when unions are so marginalized that they have no power. You just have to look at some of the abuses of workers in the past to realize that if given a chance some people will treat other people as virtual slaves.

It's all about balance and the balance has shifted to the side of the private sector at the expense of the public, thirty years ago the guy at the top made about 30 times what the guy on the shop floor did, now it more like 200 times or even 1000 in some cases. Is it right that some guy(or woman) makes as much in one day as most people make in a year, and often by eliminating jobs or shipping them somewhere they don't have any modern standards?

Letting people who's only real interest is self-interest run things is self-destructive. Even Adam Smith the father of modern free market economics realized this after witnessing what was going on in Scotland of his day. His love of free market over social control turned into deep suspicion and he started talking about how whenever bankers and businessmen got together it inevitably turned into a conspiracy against the public.

Like I said, I think it's all about balance and it's about time we gave the other side of the spectrum a chance.

To a point. There is a huge difference between free enterprise and rampant capitalism though. I'm all in favor of entrepreneurship, Capitalism not so much. But you do have to remember that many union pension plans are majority shareholders in the large companies that ship working peoples jobs out of the country in the name of maximizing shareholder profits. Ontario Teachers Pension Plan is one of the worst offenders.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
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First the NDP would change the priorities and that in itself might save some money
though the Tories have screwed up the jet deal so bad we are likely stuck with them.
In addition we will likely not continue fighting aggressive wars. Why is it we have the
money for dozens of things but not seniors pensions and medicare?
Some say oh an NDP government would spend even more and that is not always the
case.
The Conservatives under Grant Devine in Sask rang up millions of debt in less than
ten years. As I recall they blew through 3 billion left from the Blakeney government and
went on to overspend by nearly 22 billion or there abouts. When the NDP came back
under Rominow he managed to set most of the problems right over time.
In addition the last NDP administration produced something like 14 balanced budgets
in a row in Saskatchewan
The problem is we have a current government that has piled up debt even worse
that the Liberals before and in a lot less time.
Mulcair is liked by Canadians and that is a problem.
Nanos polling demonstrates the trending going on. Immigrants slightly favour the NDP
Seniors are slowly going over to Mulcair, and in Quebec the Tories have lost almost
everything they have. Every Time they attack Mulcair he goes up in the polls and another
fact is the NDP responds with adds of their own.
Attacking Mulcair is not the answer, listening to Canadians is the answer and most Canucks
don't want to go where Harper is leading and for him that's a problem.
 

beaker

Electoral Member
Jun 11, 2012
508
0
16
thepeacecountry
First the NDP would change the priorities and that in itself might save some money
though the Tories have screwed up the jet deal so bad we are likely stuck with them.
In addition we will likely not continue fighting aggressive wars. Why is it we have the
money for dozens of things but not seniors pensions and medicare?
Some say oh an NDP government would spend even more and that is not always the
case.
The Conservatives under Grant Devine in Sask rang up millions of debt in less than
ten years. As I recall they blew through 3 billion left from the Blakeney government and
went on to overspend by nearly 22 billion or there abouts. When the NDP came back
under Rominow he managed to set most of the problems right over time.
In addition the last NDP administration produced something like 14 balanced budgets
in a row in Saskatchewan
The problem is we have a current government that has piled up debt even worse
that the Liberals before and in a lot less time.
Mulcair is liked by Canadians and that is a problem.
Nanos polling demonstrates the trending going on. Immigrants slightly favour the NDP
Seniors are slowly going over to Mulcair, and in Quebec the Tories have lost almost
everything they have. Every Time they attack Mulcair he goes up in the polls and another
fact is the NDP responds with adds of their own.
Attacking Mulcair is not the answer, listening to Canadians is the answer and most Canucks
don't want to go where Harper is leading and for him that's a problem.

I heard on the news a couple of days ago that Harper has gone back on another promise. He has met with Mulroney to try to figure out how to get back into Quebec. I think this is terrific. As we start seeing Mulroneys politics lead the Conservatives again I'm betting on another dry election for the Tories. 2 seats would be really appropriate.
 

beaker

Electoral Member
Jun 11, 2012
508
0
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thepeacecountry
I'll take that bet.

Ya well, he does have time to turn it around, but he seems to be fighting his own best interests. He doesn't seem to trust his associates, and yet he has gone to Mulroney. It doesn't make sense. He calls himself a conservative when the word has taken on a different meaning, and one that goes against his grain. He is too much of a stuffed shirt to adapt, to learn flexibility. In his mind a conservative is betraying the cause if he accepts the need to adapt. Nope, I see self destruction bouncing all around his feet.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
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Beaker, your posts are a breath of fresh air, in stark contrast from the baseless anger and negativity of the bear and his cheerleader.

Keep up the good work!
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Ya well, he does have time to turn it around, but he seems to be fighting his own best interests. He doesn't seem to trust his associates, and yet he has gone to Mulroney. It doesn't make sense. He calls himself a conservative when the word has taken on a different meaning, and one that goes against his grain. He is too much of a stuffed shirt to adapt, to learn flexibility. In his mind a conservative is betraying the cause if he accepts the need to adapt. Nope, I see self destruction bouncing all around his feet.
Just like any new govt the things that piss people off are the first to happen. Soon you'll see a change in the current and things going in new directions that are likaeble. It's pretty much standard procedure for any new govt. If for some bizarre reason Mulcair became PM, he'd be running to Romanow to run the show from behind the scenes.
 

jariax

Electoral Member
Jun 13, 2006
141
0
16
This ad will really only resonate in Alberta, and to a small degree Saskatchewan.
It is not intended to sway public opinion. It is intended to create fear within the petroleum industry, such that they give generously to the Conservative campaign. Therefore, it doesn't matter if it's tame, accurate or can be easily rebutted.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
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Ontario
Beaker, your posts are a breath of fresh air, in stark contrast from the baseless anger and negativity of the bear and his cheerleader.

Keep up the good work!
 
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captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
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I'm glad you are getting your kicks out of this. It must be very satisfying to you. And I'm glad to hear you actually read it, which only means that you didn't understand it, otherwaise you wouldn't have labelled it as static.

I wouldn't say it's a lot of kicks. In the end, you have yet to provide any real answer/solution to anything, just more pie-in-the-sky ideals. So there's really nothing to comment on.


Or at least so you believe. Tell ya what, Approach my "diatribe" from this reference post, find one that is Utopian, and point it out. If you can't deal with the ideals, and you can't deal with the nuts and bolts, where does that leave you?

Just one utopian ideal? How about your demand to leave a net increase in resources for the next generation.

I'm unable to think of any way of leaving more arable land for the next generation unless you figure that we expend lots of oil/gas on heavy machinery to level some forests... Come to think of it, how would we be able to leave 'more oil' for the future when we need to burn it to raze the land to accommodate the first goal.

Hmmmm.... What's your solution beaker?

Sorry but when you make stuff up, and then attribute it to me in order to be able to attack my position which you can't be bothered to read or understand, do you expect to be taken seriously? WHO did I vilifiy, and when?

They were your words beaker..... Words that you aren't prepared to address directly in terms of a go-forward solution.

This "demand" is created by world citizens. As I pointed out earlier in this thread we have companies flying the flags of many different nations trying to rip us off as fast as they can. And they are trying their damndest to meet those demands. And no, I would not be denying the rights of world citizens.. Demands are not rights. There is an important and I would have thought obvious difference.

Ahhhhh.. It's all clear now... Beaker will sit in judgement as to who and when these natural resources will be allowed to be consumed by the world citizens.

Just for the benefit of the discussion, what are the rights of world citizens in your omnipotent eyes?

Yes, and any other residents present or future of this amazing land. The Liberals and Conservatives have sat smugly in their little power bases and ignorantly impoverished us. I'm hopeful that the next election will turn things around.

What kind of math do you practice in beaker-world?

Do the 'any other citizens' include the majority that voted for our present gvt?

Just curious about that. Some clarity would be nice.

it would be a coincidence that countries around the world are struggling with the need to counter the effects of too much carbon in our atmosphere with carbon taxes, cap and trade, etc.

Why are you calling it climate change when the 'experts' were dead set on global warming just a few short years ago? Were they mistaken? Are you mistaken?

:) A better example than cars, would be a price difference on cigarettes. Would you rush out and buy Chinese cigarettes because they are considerably cheaper than Canadian ones?

Yes

And what benefit do you hope to gain by doing that?

Cheaper smokes

Once again you have decided to make up something, attribute it to me and then show how silly it is. Congratulations, you know how to use strawmen!!! Terrific accomplishment. But it doesn't further your position one bit and really only makes you, ironically I suppose, look silly.

You have no solutions to offer, only these untenable demands.... I didn't make that up and attribute it to you - you did that all on your lonesome.

BTW, I notice that you have aggressively postured your responses such that you deflect the discussion from providing any solutions and piss and moan about red herrings, strawmen, etc, ad nauseum.

Peak oil is peak oil, the absolute numbers might change with technology, economics, or social pressure, but the ennd result is the same. The faster we use it the faster we run out, and the faster all the economic impacts of crossing that peak arrive.

You're saying that peak oil is another name for just oil?

So then subsidies would be the word you think is important? gotcha. Well try these two.


from: http://www.worldenergyoutlook.org/docs/weo2011/factsheets.pdf
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and this,

In 2011, IEA chief economist Faith Birol said the current $409 billion equivalent of fossil fuel subsidies are encouraging a wasteful use of energy, and that the cuts in subsidies is the biggest policy item that would help renewable energies get more market share and reduce CO2 emissions

from:

Renewable Energy Being Held Back by Fossil Fuel Subsidies - IEA

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Check the file name for capitalization or other typing errors.
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And I think that answers the following comment as well. If five times the subsidies are going to fosil fuels,it is difficult for anything to compete.

Yep... Those 2 links pretty clearly represent your position.

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See And I was hoping, asking, that you would tell me the difference in the companies bottom line. And just for your reference it was you who referenced a write off as a cash subsidy, not me, which either makes this another strawman or it makes you very confused.

I don't have the time to explain basic accounting principles to you.... You can figure it out yourself, or more likely, you can refuse to do so and remain incorrect
 

Cabbagesandking

Council Member
Apr 24, 2012
1,041
0
36
Ontario
I wouldn't say it's a lot of kicks. In the end, you have yet to provide any real answer/solution to anything, just more pie-in-the-sky ideals. So there's really nothing to comment on.




Just one utopian ideal? How about your demand to leave a net increase in resources for the next generation.

I'm unable to think of any way of leaving more arable land for the next generation unless you figure that we expend lots of oil/gas on heavy machinery to level some forests... Come to think of it, how would we be able to leave 'more oil' for the future when we need to burn it to raze the land to accommodate the first goal.

Hmmmm.... What's your solution beaker?



They were your words beaker..... Words that you aren't prepared to address directly in terms of a go-forward solution.



Ahhhhh.. It's all clear now... Beaker will sit in judgement as to who and when these natural resources will be allowed to be consumed by the world citizens.

Just for the benefit of the discussion, what are the rights of world citizens in your omnipotent eyes?



What kind of math do you practice in beaker-world?

Do the 'any other citizens' include the majority that voted for our present gvt?

Just curious about that. Some clarity would be nice.



Why are you calling it climate change when the 'experts' were dead set on global warming just a few short years ago? Were they mistaken? Are you mistaken?



Yes



Cheaper smokes



You have no solutions to offer, only these untenable demands.... I didn't make that up and attribute it to you - you did that all on your lonesome.

BTW, I notice that you have aggressively postured your responses such that you deflect the discussion from providing any solutions and piss and moan about red herrings, strawmen, etc, ad nauseum.



You're saying that peak oil is another name for just oil?

The page cannot be found

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  • Click the Back button to try another link.
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File not found

Firefox can't find the file at jar:file:///C:/Program Files/Mozilla Firefox/omni.ja!/chrome/en-US/locale/browser-region/region.propertiesRenewable+Energy+Being+Held+Back+by+Fossil+Fuel+Subsidies+-+IEA[.



Check the file name for capitalization or other typing errors.
Check to see if the file was moved, renamed or deleted.



Yep... Those 2 links pretty clearly represent your position.

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I don't have the time to explain basic accounting principles to you.... You can figure it out yourself, or more likely, you can refuse to do so and remain incorrect
Perhaps if you leave out the attempts at sarcasm, a losing strategy, and address the meat, you will make the points you are trying to make clearer.

What are the 'problems' in your opinion and what is being done to address those problems? What problems would you like to see other proposals for?

And, it was called "climate change" long before the term 'global warming' was heard. Global warming seems to have been an attempt to explain the current direction of climate change to the observationally and cognitively challenged. Read (or consider the title) of Broecker's book written in the 50s and titled "Climate Change."

If you cannot access the two links Beaker gave, then look up the IEA. The information is available at the site. The figure a couple of years ago was given as between $350 billion and $550 billion with the high estimate being the more probable. The difference is in what is counted as subsidy, taxes or Royalties and so on.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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If you cannot access the two links Beaker gave, then look up the IEA. The information is available at the site. The figure a couple of years ago was given as between $350 billion and $550 billion with the high estimate being the more probable. The difference is in what is counted as subsidy, taxes or Royalties and so on.
A tax credit is a subsidy?
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
28,429
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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
Beaker, your posts are a breath of fresh air, in stark contrast from the baseless anger and negativity of the bear and his cheerleader.

Keep up the good work!

Get a room already

Perhaps if you leave out the attempts at sarcasm, a losing strategy, and address the meat, you will make the points you are trying to make clearer.

The problem; there is no meat to the points that I addressed... It's like someone demanding that taxes be assessed against a rifle manufacturer because some lobby group demands world peace and harmony

What are the 'problems' in your opinion and what is being done to address those problems? What problems would you like to see other proposals for?

Want to talk about conservation and/or pollution; I'm your guy.... But understand that I drive to the root of the issue and don't piss about with idealistic impossibilities or actions that don't drive to the heart of the matter

And, it was called "climate change" long before the term 'global warming' was heard. Global warming seems to have been an attempt to explain the current direction of climate change to the observationally and cognitively challenged. Read (or consider the title) of Broecker's book written in the 50s and titled "Climate Change."

Yeah, and Suzuki was screaming that the sky was falling re: the comin' ice age 20 or so years ago.

Fact is, anyone can employ selective examples to support an idea after the fact. What appears to be in very short supply, however, are actual facts.

If you cannot access the two links Beaker gave, then look up the IEA. The information is available at the site. The figure a couple of years ago was given as between $350 billion and $550 billion with the high estimate being the more probable. The difference is in what is counted as subsidy, taxes or Royalties and so on.

What's really sad about yours and beakers analysis is that you haven't seen past the all of the glitz and sparkles to understand that the underlying cause of this artificial construct called 'climate change' is rooted in the managed consumption of ghg emitting resources. At the end of the day, as long as the global population is increasing, there is no such thing as equilibrium (assuming that people will want to eat, consume energy in all its forms and construct dwellings).

Look past the minutae for the macro view and then tell me that any superficial solution that the eco-lobbies propose are nothing but an attempt to hit a moving target with a short term fix - And I mean very short term

A tax credit is a subsidy?

That's the understanding of an employee that doesn't have to worry about revenues or (maybe, hopefully) profits

SInce we are dealing with lala land why not? I wonder if write offs are a subsidy there as well?

Does the gvt mail you an envelope full of cash when you claim a tax deduction?

Maybe I need to get a new accountant
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Yeah, and Suzuki was screaming that the sky was falling re: the comin' ice age 20 or so years ago.
I was watching Natue of Things the other day (topic was ferrets in Grasslands National Park). I took note of the sponsors, Shell, Enbridge, Potash Corp and whoever makes Purex bum fluff. Irony I tells ya.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Does the gvt mail you an envelope full of cash when you claim a tax deduction?

Maybe I need to get a new accountant[/QUOTE]

Well sometimes but that is only because they already stole the money from my paycheque before I could claim the deduction but I understand that sometimes politicians will had out envelopes full of cash for certain favors.
 

beaker

Electoral Member
Jun 11, 2012
508
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thepeacecountry
I wouldn't say it's a lot of kicks. In the end, you have yet to provide any real answer/solution to anything, just more pie-in-the-sky ideals. So there's really nothing to comment on.

I take it ideals aren't something you put much stock in. Can I take it also that you are a Conservative? :)

I did provide a couple of options we have for increasing the resources of the planet in order to make sustainability possible. I guess since you had trouble of one sort or another understanding or perhaps seeing them, (have you been drinking too much of your namesake?) before, I could point them out again. By improving our care of forest and farm lands we can improve our grandkids chances of sustaining themselves. By conserving our fossil fuel resources as much as possible we improve the near term sustainability for humans and other species as well. Such a deal eh? Would you like me to put that in bold for you?

Just one utopian ideal? How about your demand to leave a net increase in resources for the next generation.

I'm unable to think of any way of leaving more arable land for the next generation unless you figure that we expend lots of oil/gas on heavy machinery to level some forests... Come to think of it, how would we be able to leave 'more oil' for the future when we need to burn it to raze the land to accommodate the first goal.

Hmmmm.... What's your solution beaker?

Well given my repeated recommendations, or as you call them demands, that we improve our forest management it would seem at cross purposes to adapt your strategy of destroying forests. You might be surprised to learn that over the centuries and with an emphasis on the last fourty years agricultural land has been degraded through a variety of natural and market forces. This degradation could be reversed leaving improved resource values.

They were your words beaker..... Words that you aren't prepared to address directly in terms of a go-forward solution.

I disagree CM, You accused me of vilifying people who work in the patch. And I have clearly stated my impression of the importance of their work. Your insistence that they are my words means I have to recognize that you are someone who would rather not have a reasonable discussion.

Ahhhhh.. It's all clear now... Beaker will sit in judgement as to who and when these natural resources will be allowed to be consumed by the world citizens.

Just for the benefit of the discussion, what are the rights of world citizens in your omnipotent eyes?

Another example of the same stuff. Attempt to isolate the opposition, try to make them appear elitist. I will just counter by saying that I think a growing number of people would rather believe in the possibility of a sustainable planetary eco-system, and that a "dying breed" of people has adopted the fatalistic view that we are screwing up the world and so we might as well get on with it, which, so far, seems to be your view.

My opinion is that the rights of the people of the world are equal to the responsibilities of the people of the world, and include our right to use resources in a fashion that allows for a sustainable future. I thought I had mentioned that.

I wrote, Quote: Originally Posted by beaker
"Yes, and any other residents present or future of this amazing land. The Liberals and Conservatives have sat smugly in their little power bases and ignorantly impoverished us. I'm hopeful that the next election will turn things around."

to which CM responded,

What kind of math do you practice in beaker-world?

Do the 'any other citizens' include the majority that voted for our present gvt?

Just curious about that. Some clarity would be nice.

Math is math. If you estimate the value to the future, of the fossil fuels our governments are trying to drag out of the ground and export as quickly as possible so that they can have more money to spend and still look like they know what they are doing, and subtract that from the actual cash flow returning from our resources and efforts you arrive at the level of impoverishment any present and future citizens of this amazing land have achieved under successive so-called centre right and right wing governments. Is that clear?

Why are you calling it climate change when the 'experts' were dead set on global warming just a few short years ago? Were they mistaken? Are you mistaken?

No mistake that I am aware of, just one of those clarifications that I thought you were in favour of.

Yes

Cheaper smokes

And may you have a long and happy drugged life enjoying your bargain. Personally I favour approaching life a little more realistically and think that if we can create a level playing field around energy options we will arrive at better decisions on how we deploy our financial, labour, and environmental resources.

You have no solutions to offer, only these untenable demands.... I didn't make that up and attribute it to you - you did that all on your lonesome.

BTW, I notice that you have aggressively postured your responses such that you deflect the discussion from providing any solutions and piss and moan about red herrings, strawmen, etc, ad nauseum.

I did? Not something I would normally do, suggest that we could "leave the next generation with a net increase in oil, gas, iron ore and arable land" But okay, show me where I said that and I will withdraw my suggestion that this was a strawman argument.

Let's make a deal, you quit throwing in red herrings and strawmen and I will quit complaining about them.

You're saying that peak oil is another name for just oil?

No, I didn't say that, Peak oil is a time reference for the occasion when we have used half of our oil resources. What I said was that there are a variety of conditions which affect the given moment in question, but there is no doubt about the effect of our exponential growth in use of this non-renewable resource as we slide down the backside of the Peak oil bell curve.

Yep... Those 2 links pretty clearly represent your position.

I can see that it is a difficult thing for you to respond to the quoted segments that I left for you from those links. Sorry about the links not working however. Try these,

http://www.worldenergyoutlook.org/media/weowebsite/2011/factsheets.pdf

Fossil-fuel consumption subsidies worldwide amounted to $409 billion in 2010, with subsidies to oil products representing almost half of the total. Persistently high oil prices have made the cost of subsidies unsustainable in many countries and prompted some governments to try to reduce them. In a global survey covering 37 countries where subsidies exist, at least 15 have taken steps to phase them out since the start of 2010. Without further reform, the cost of fossil-fuel consumption subsidies is set to reach $660 billion in 2020, or 0.7% of global GDP (at market exchange rates).

Coal's hidden costs top $345 billion in U.S.-study | Reuters

The United States' reliance on coal to generate almost half of its electricity, costs the economy about $345 billion a year in hidden expenses not borne by miners or utilities, including health problems in mining communities and pollution around power plants, a study found.

Those costs would effectively triple the price of electricity produced by coal-fired plants, which are prevalent in part due to the their low cost of operation, the study led by a Harvard University researcher found.

"This is not borne by the coal industry, this is borne by us, in our taxes," said Paul Epstein, a Harvard Medical School instructor and the associate director of its Center for Health and the Global Environment, the study's lead author.

I don't have the time to explain basic accounting principles to you.... You can figure it out yourself, or more likely, you can refuse to do so and remain incorrect

You must be very busy, but you wouldn't need to get into the basic accounting principles. All I asked for was the difference on the bottom line between a subsidy in the form of a cash payment and a tax write-off of smilar amount. I have figured it out using my modest accounting abilities and son of a gun if it doesn't look to me like the resulting effects are very similar. Which means that subsidies benefit the oil industry. Which wouldn't be a big surprise would it?