Oh yeah ... Colpy.... Layton said ban handguns ON THE STREETS.....
In the debate????? Damn, I left for about 25 minutes total, never saw any mention of justice whatsoever. Figures.
Yes the Moderator lost control of it and blew it. Harper did well considering how the other 4 acted rudely.Wow...OK...the debate (or the Harper bashing) is over. I was impressed at times with
Elizabeth May. I was impressed often by Steven Harper keeping his cool with all the others
talking out of turn while he was answering (or try'n to) their questions. A lesser man would
have been swinging a chair at the extreme, and asking the moderator to do his job as a
minimum.
The moderator, if people where going to speak out of turn and interupt others like young
children, should have done a much better job. "Act like a child, get treated like a child."
Some of those leaders should still have their noses in the corner. I'm voting for the adult.
The idiot just doesn't get it. Criminals will still get handguns, whether they are banned or not...Oh yeah ... Colpy.... Layton said ban handguns ON THE STREETS.....
One of the segments was on the justice system.
As for infrastructure LittleRunningGag, I'm not sure what you're referring to. The infrastructure *I* rely on isn't benefiting in any tangible way that I can see. With hospitals, schools, clinics, housing availability and roadways so unbelievably under equipped for the influx of workers the oil industry attracted here, it's become hell to drive, seek medical attention, shop, basically function in my own city....my neighbourhood is STILL without a high school, despite the fact that it's a well established 40+ year old area.... and this is not at all a unique experience in my neighborhood nor my city in Alberta. Whoever it is that's benefiting around here, it sure isn't your average Albertan nor the infrastructure they are using daily. I can't see how in the world it would be a bad thing to freeze further development and let the infrastructure actually have time to ramp up it's ability to cope with this surge in population.
They're banned from the street now ... and always have been. Why is he the idiot? The point was ... there is no suggestion of confiscating handguns that AREN'T on the street.The idiot just doesn't get it. Criminals will still get handguns, whether they are banned or not...
Oh, believe me, I fully understand the hike in housing prices and cost of living. My wife and I just purchased our first house earlier this year, its worth less now than it was when we bought it. If they freeze oil production, prices will fall far enough that I'll owe a hundred thousand more on it than its worth. And I'm in the IT sector, not oil.
On the other hand, there are plenty of monies going to infrastructure. Check for yourself.
As for a high school in your neighbourhood, I would suggest that there could be reasons for that. Often older areas do not have enough kids to justify building that kind of infrastructure. My neighbourhood doesn't have a high school either (its roughly thirty years old), but that doesn't mean that I can't see the evidence of oil monies in the economy.
In the end though, Alberta's infrastructure comes second to Canada's economic health. Alberta and Saskatchewan's oil, gas and mineral sectors are propping the national economy and keeping it running. You want to see recession? Stop the mineral wealth.
There's nothing wrong with encouraging renewable energy growth. There's nothing wrong with encouraging environmental protectionism. The problem comes when you advocate for radical change to an economy, and a radical shift in moving money from one area of the country (AB, SK) to another (ON, QC). That will crush Alberta and Saskatchewan's economies and with them will go the national economy.
Sorry, I know it's unpopular to make anything other than money the primary basis for a decision, but I can't see how that can ever be justified as the highest priority when it's the only benefit with such immense consequences.
The idiot just doesn't get it. Criminals will still get handguns, whether they are banned or not...
Poll gives nod to Harper, with Layton second
Meagan Fitzpatrick, Canwest News Service
Published: Thursday, October 02, 2008
OTTAWA - Stephen Harper came out ahead of his political opponents in the English-language leaders debate Thursday night, but New Democratic Party Leader Jack Layton was a formidable match for the prime minister, according to viewers who answered a survey during the broadcast.
The online Ipsos Reid poll conducted for Canwest News Service and Global National found 31 per cent of voters said Harper won the debate, and Layton was second with 25 per cent. In third place was the newcomer to the leaders' debates, Green Leader Elizabeth May, with 17 per cent of respondents saying she was the winner, followed by the opposition leader, Liberal Leader Stephane Dion, with 15 per cent.
You answered your own question. They are already banned, to say they need to be banned shows he is talking without thinking.They're banned from the street now ... and always have been. Why is he the idiot? The point was ... there is no suggestion of confiscating handguns that AREN'T on the street.