Your dead wrong, Socrates- I'm neither Liberal or Conservative but I've done a lot better in 3 years under the Cons. than I did in 13 under the Liberals.
They've literally saved me $thousands in income tax alone and unlike the Libs they have reduced the G.S.T. :smile:
Hey!! Awesome!! You got something right for a change. Congrats!GST cut is more tax cut for the rich than for anybody else. The rich man who wants to buy a 200,000 $ Rolls saves 2000 $ if there is a 1% GST cut. The single mother on welfare saves squat, since most of her income is spent on the necessities of life and there is no GST on those.
I'd be cautious, it is a good thing we have that notwithstanding clause lest we end up with judicial law, which we have a lot of anyway. The clause still allows our elected members to nix laws the judiciary enact.
Quite so, bob. I think the NW Clause is what makes the Charter such a great document, the best document of its kind in the world. While enumerating the basic rights, making them sacrosanct (it is practically impossible to amend the Charter), it clearly establishes the superiority of the elected Parliament over the appointed Supreme Court.
And that is as it should be. At the same time, the NW Clause must be used sparingly, only in emergency (and only if there is a broad consensus in the country for its use). When a PM uses the NW clause, he is abrogating part of the constitution. He in effect says that notwithstanding what the constitution says, the law will be such and such in defiance of the constitution.
So NW is a nuclear option, and must be used only in emergencies. And the PMs are clearly aware of this; the NW Clause has never been used federally. Nevertheless, it is an essential Clause and it is what makes our Charter great.
A good humour is rarely at somebody’s expense, countryboy. Have you read P.G. Wodehouse, Jeeves and Wooster? Have you seen Fawlty Towers? Three Is Company? That is my idea of great humour, not making fun of somebody and calling that humour.
Indeed, there are people who tell Polish jokes (quite popular in USA), sexist jokes, racist jokes, homophonic jokes. Paki jokes are popular in Britain in some circles. That way one could express one’s worst prejudices and call it humour.
It does not take any brains, any skill to make fun of somebody. To come up with true humour, that most will find funny, it takes an artist to do that, a creative talent to do that. Anybody could make fun of somebody and call it humor. That may be your idea of humour, it isn’t mine.
Bull****! Anyone half a sniff of business sense knows you buy a Rolls under your business entity, put your business card on the dash as "advertising", park it in a rental garage, use your depreciation credits then sell it to yourself 4 years later.Quoting SirJosephPorter
GST cut is more tax cut for the rich than for anybody else. The rich man who wants to buy a 200,000 $ Rolls saves 2000 $ if there is a 1% GST cut. The single mother on welfare saves squat, since most of her income is spent on the necessities of life and there is no GST on those.
Sir JoP
Who is Canada indebted to and why is it in debt?
Bull****! Anyone half a sniff of business sense knows you buy a Rolls under your business entity, put your business card on the dash as "advertising", park it in a rental garage, use your depreciation credits then sell it to yourself 4 years later.
Me, my wife and my daughter all drive brand new 4 year old vehicles.
Now me, I am a liberal and I don’t mind shouting it from the rooftop.
You're quite right - we have different tastes in humour, for sure. I used to sit around with my Asian buddies - in Asia - (Japanese, Chinese, and Korean) and we'd all recite our favourite jokes about each other. I'm sure you would have been horrified. In fact, we'd do it in 2 or 3 languages, and making humour "stick" in a foreign language is a real challenge in most cases. Usually it doesn't translate directly or well, so telling jokes in multiple languages is great linguistic exercise.
It was a lot of fun for us, and we all agreed that they're just a bunch of words. Some maintain that it's a bit of a "culture study" when you get into the local humour and prejudices. However, one has to be flexible, caring of others, understanding of human nature, and fast on their feet to be able to function in an environment like that. You never know when the "politically correct" types might be lurking in the wings, waiting to pounce and spoil an otherwise perfectly good time.
Anyway, the next day, we'd all be back at work, getting along just fine, never having lost respect for each other at any time.
If anything, surfacing prejudices through humour can go a long way toward eliminating racial prejudices, in my opinion. Taking a particular trait to an extreme and making light of it is obvious satire to many people. Then there are those who are just waiting for an excuse to scream about political incorrectness, racial prejudice, and all the rest of it. In some cases, they cause more problems than they solve.
Russell Peters (the Canadian-born comedian) has carved out a pretty fine career making fun of various cultures and I think he probably does more good in one concert than much of the legislation that has ever been written.
That's just my opinion, of course. I know you disagree, but hey, we're all different. That's what makes the world an interesting and "colorful" place.
And to relate this point to the thread topic, it is the extreme politically-correct liberal types that react in shock and horror to such goings-on are the ones that are responsible for "Liberalphobia", in my opinion. They're just not doing anyone much good at all.
Bull****! Anyone half a sniff of business sense knows you buy a Rolls under your business entity, put your business card on the dash as "advertising", park it in a rental garage, use your depreciation credits then sell it to yourself 4 years later.
Me, my wife and my daughter all drive brand new 4 year old vehicles.
I don't care who the puppet at the time was.Who is it indebted? I don't know, to China maybe. And the debt is the result of deficits mainly run by Trudeau, Mulroney and Harper.
Yes, that would make sense. Many Liberals share that particular trait, especially when things aren't going their way. When those noise levels begin to peak at the usual screeching levels, the phobia kicks in for us thoughtful, more reserved, well-mannered, caring, considerate, conservative types. :lol:
Sorry countryboy, but telling racist, sexist, homophobic jokes may be your idea of humour, it isn’t mine. When I want to laugh I prefer to laugh with somebody rather than laugh at somebody.
To make fun of a person (other than a politician or somebody in public life) shows to me the narrowness of mind and extreme prejudice.
And surprisingly, many cosnervatives are ashamed of the label. Now, you proclaim yourself to be a conservative, fair enough. And your post here clearly exhibits your political partisanship.
But there are many Harper acolytes here who are ashamed to call themselves conservative, I will never understand why.
Quite so, bob. I think the NW Clause is what makes the Charter such a great document, the best document of its kind in the world. While enumerating the basic rights, making them sacrosanct (it is practically impossible to amend the Charter), it clearly establishes the superiority of the elected Parliament over the appointed Supreme Court.
Nor will I. Hell, when you have a skilled, intelligent performer like that running the country, you should be proud of it. It's possible the acolytes are being low-key in order to avoid the verbal wrath of Liberal fanatics. Oops, there goes that phobia thing again.
Quite so, countryboy. If you are a conservative, shout it from the rooftop, be proud of what you are. If Harper indeed is your Messiah, don't be ashamed to say so. But for some reason, many conservatives here claim to be unbiased. And they support Harper each and every time, without fail.
We do agree on something, though you do go a bit overboard on some points. It is not a great document, the Supreme Court does believe they have dominion over us and our elected representatives are so loathe to use the Nw clause that it almost makes it inneffectual. The only time the NW clause has been used is in the case of language laws in Quebec. My belief is that it should be used far more often.