Liberals and NDP In Bed with the Bloc

Numure

Council Member
Apr 30, 2004
1,063
0
36
Montréal, Québec
bluealberta said:
Vanni Fucci said:
bluealberta said:
So, let me get this straight. You don't like economic policies that get you no debt, no sales tax, lowest personal income tax rates in Canada, low corporate tax rates (you know, so they can reinvest money in exploration and things like that), and the highest standard of living in Canada?

OIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL!!!

Can't deny it... :wink:

Yup, OIL since 1947, developed by Alberta and Albertans, to the point that we now contribute $9 - $12 billion a year back to the rest of Canada, after doing what was necessary to get our province to where it is now.

And Ontario has manufacturing and the auto industry to propel their economic engine, to present a counterpoint to your oil issue. And at no time was Ontario ever forced to sell autombiles at less than market (world) prices to the rest of Canada as Alberta was forced to do with the NEP.

So you still don't like our policies? :roll:

By albertans? What are you talking about! The Oil is owned by foreign compagnies. With oil, you need do nothing, and they shall come. So stfu.
 

The Philosopher

Nominee Member
Reverend Blair said:
Nothing I've said is revisionist history either. Harper worked in the Mulroney government (BTW, a parlimentary secretary is not just part of the steno pool). Now Mulroney has been, according to Harper, working to get the Harperites in as government.

I'm finding some problems with your grammar here. It is ambiguous to make it mean whatever you want it to mean. What pray tell is a "steno pool." From my ancient Greek lessons I know steno is a prefix for "narrow" and pool refers to a group of some sort. So what does steno pool mean? Does it mean small group? If it means small group then by your allegations Harper should be in a steno pool. But if by "steno" it means worth, then it stands. I have found no reference of this term in my life.

Unless by steno it means "stenographer" as in a person who transcribes. If this is what you mean by it then yes, that is exactly what Stephen Harper was. Jim Hawkes did not miss a single parliamentary session since being elected. A parliamentary secretary sits in when the cabinet minister cannot.

All Harper did was take notes on what the policies were for Hawkes' department and explain them to anyone who asked.

Your interpretation is indeed a revisionist one. You make accusations about how things were different and yet you show no sourcing for what you are saying. In academia we refer to you as a waste of paper.
 

Reverend Blair

Council Member
Apr 3, 2004
1,238
1
38
Winnipeg
RE: Liberals and NDP In B

No revisionism at all. If you believe that parliamentary secretaries sit around taking notes and doing nothing else, then you should have another long think. It is traditionally a position given to one of the party faithful to give them a voice in policy etc. while grooming them for a higher office within the party. To claim otherwise is to be far less than honest.

BTW, I realize that my reference to the steno pool was a bit of an anachronism, but since Harper's solcial policies are based on a 1950s tv series, it seemed to fit.
 

Reverend Blair

Council Member
Apr 3, 2004
1,238
1
38
Winnipeg
RE: Liberals and NDP In B

No revisionism at all. If you believe that parliamentary secretaries sit around taking notes and doing nothing else, then you should have another long think. It is traditionally a position given to one of the party faithful to give them a voice in policy etc. while grooming them for a higher office within the party. To claim otherwise is to be far less than honest.

BTW, I realize that my reference to the steno pool was a bit of an anachronism, but since Harper's solcial policies are based on a 1950s tv series, it seemed to fit.
 

Jay

Executive Branch Member
Jan 7, 2005
8,366
3
38
There was a TV show in the 50s about cutting taxes and respecting Provincial powers?

TV was so much better back then....
 

The Philosopher

Nominee Member
Re: RE: Liberals and NDP In Bed with the Bloc

Reverend Blair said:
No revisionism at all. If you believe that parliamentary secretaries sit around taking notes and doing nothing else, then you should have another long think. It is traditionally a position given to one of the party faithful to give them a voice in policy etc. while grooming them for a higher office within the party. To claim otherwise is to be far less than honest.

I will not deny that parliamentary secretaries are being groomed for office. What I will deny is that they have a voice in policy. If Jim Hawkes said A is B, and then Stephen Harper came out and said, NO, A is C, the government takes A is C to be true. All they have is the power to influence a decision, not actually make it.

NOW, a Parliamentary Secretary to the PM is something different. A lot of times these are elected representitives or very high powering people.

Stephen Harper's connection to the PCs is a limited one. As this shows:
http://www.parl.gc.ca/37/1/parlbus/chambus/house/debates/195_2002-05-30/han195_1420-e.htm

Stephen Harper was not a parliamentary secretary for long. Not only that but he also started campaigning specifically against Jim Hawkes. He joined the NCC against Hawkes, as well as the Reform Party as a policy advisor to Preston Manning.

I've actually been trying to find out exactly what department Jim Hawkes was a part of, the answer was none. He was the Tory whip. The job of the whip is not to form policy, it is to enforce it. The whip moves between all departments and makes sure everyone knows how they are voting on certain days. He also forms committees. The biggest bill was C-14, electoral reform. He chaired a committee for that. He also apparently meddled with a gun control bill:
http://www.guncontrol.ca/Content/TheGunControlStory.html

Mulroney even ended up firing Hawkes as whip and sending him to being a backbencher again because he was doing such a horrible job. If you were to tell me that Stephen Harper was the parliamentary sectretary to Brian Mulroney or Joe Clark the connection may be more believable, but right now it is about party stability. Jean Chretien and Paul Martin hated each other and yet they both supported the party.

Mulroney knows if he is to get ONE of his children into politics he has to support the party.Pretty boy Benedict Muloney is always talking about politics. It's not because Mulroney was so influenced by Harper, it is toeing the party line. Liberals know more about toeing the party line than anyone else. That's why O'Brien crossed the floor right?
 

bluealberta

Council Member
Apr 19, 2005
2,004
0
36
Proud to be in Alberta
Numure wrote:
"By albertans? What are you talking about! The Oil is owned by foreign compagnies. With oil, you need do nothing, and they shall come. So stfu."

May I suggest you look at the history of the oil devlopment in Alberta before you embarass yourself again. Look up the Seaman brothers who came to Alberta from Sask in the mid 50's (even back then they were leaving Sask for Alberta :p )to develop the oilpatch. Harold Siebens and his son, from Alberta, became one of the first Canadian oil companies to dril in the North Sea. These are just two examples of the many Canadian Junior companies and a whole pile of Alberta independents that developed the oilpatch, at the time of very few multinationals. If you want to criticize Alberta, you had better get it right, until then, how about you STFU. :evil:
"