Re: RE: Anyone dislike Bush, but voting for Harper?
the caracal kid said:
well,
you need to see how our screwy system works.
we have career politicians that fear challenging the status quo.
Don't rock the boat too much, especially when it is so
easy to just "ride the tide" and collect your pension.
we lack political visionaries.
we need the judges to push the system.
most of our progress comes from the courts.
look at Martin. He needs a poke with the pointy stick to actually bring about progressive policy.
Who holds the stick? In a minority it would be the NDP.
But the NDP comes with "big spending" baggage as well.
The courts on the other hand can give a good poking without said baggage.
We need our courts to work the way they do.
Only the regressives are unhappy with the courts
becuase the courts bring change,
and they would rather live back in the "good old days".
edit:
triple,
to add:
the GST is a necessary tax and functional tax. The savings to the poor are so miniscule it really is not worth mentioning. Like i said, i am not a fan of taxation on your dollar twice (income + at the register) but given our financial condition it is necessary.
again: references to a "god" is divisive because not all people follow harper's god. as to your superman statement, would you really trust a man saying "He-man bless canada"? It is a division when not all people believe the same thing, and Harper has to see that. Harper is a "used car salesman". Notice how all he has done is give slick presentations to the populace? All he does is play on their desires and yet has no substance to unite this country. His pandering would without balancing the powers would only further divide the country.
I must say that I'm taken aback by your comments on the courts. You're now essentially admitting that the courts ARE, in fact, activistic (and hence not completely impartial). Your simply arguing that you believe that this is a good thing.
I'm not arguing whether or not this lack of perfect impartiality is good or not - I'm merely saying that it's a reality, and hence nobody should be made somehow afraid by Harper's comments. He's merely pointing towards an objective reality.
Whether or not an activistic court system is a good thing or not is a lengthy debate that I have no interest in for the moment. I'm merely arguing that the court system is not completely impartial, and tends to lean along the same political lines as those who appointed them.
Nobody is saying that we should scrap the GST altogether (something that the Liberals, at one time, said that they would do). I'm merely saying that a GST cut will help poor Canadians more than an income tax cut will. You can downplay that all you want, but it's the truth. For a lot of poor Canadians, a few dollars can make the difference between having something to eat, or going with out. It's a significant difference to the poor, sir.
A reference to God is
not devisive. Your attempt to work off of my analogy is poor, because even the most ardent atheist realizes that s/he's in the minority, and hence realizes that perfectly sane people refer to, and believe in, God. If the vast majority of the world's population believed that He-Man really existed, and was all-powerful (with Skeletor being Satan) saying "He-Man bless Canada" would not be a shocking statement either. Also, it is not whether or not you believe in
Harper's God, as much as you believe in God period. If Harper wanted to be exclusionary, and keep it strictly to his God, he would have said "Jesus bless Canada". And then I could see the concern. As is, there is no concern - well, actually, there is. I am concerned with those who would take exception to "God bless Canada". These are people that are nothing short of grossly intolerant of religious people, and are liable to force churches to do things against their own scriptures. They are genuine threats to freedom of speech, and freedom of religion.
In any event, I find it to be the hights of hypocrasy for anybody who champions SSM to fret over how something as innocuous as "God bless Canada" could, somehow, be dividing the country. Due to a lack of nuanced handling of this issue, the SSM issue has divided Canada to a great extent. This is why I'd rather have politicians deal with such issues than courts. Politicians are likely to hammer out compromises that everybody can live. Courts tend to simply declare a winner, and the loser is left with nothing - that obviously breeds resentment, and divisiveness.