Which prov. do you dislike the most?

Which prov. do you dislike the most?

  • Quebec

    Votes: 6 20.0%
  • Ontario

    Votes: 4 13.3%
  • Newfoundland

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Nova Scotia

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • PEI

    Votes: 1 3.3%
  • New Brunswick

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Manitoba

    Votes: 2 6.7%
  • Saskatchewan

    Votes: 1 3.3%
  • Alberta

    Votes: 16 53.3%
  • British Columbia

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    30

hermanntrude

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jun 23, 2006
7,267
118
63
46
Newfoundland!
very true snfu. Thanks for bringing us back to the OP. I agree in terms of people. I just found the summer weather horrible in ontario, and i'd rather make a decision based on something arbitrary than not at all. Since it's not an important poll but a bit of fun to get us talking, I decided to contribute rather than abstein.
 

eh1eh

Blah Blah Blah
Aug 31, 2006
10,749
103
48
Under a Lone Palm
I think all of the provinces are interesting. Each province is home a diverse cross section of people. Each has their own interesting geographic attributes. Each offers their own contribution to the makeup of this country. I don't see a better or a worse.

refreshing. A view not dwelling on the negative. Like this whole thread. I haven't been everywhere but I must agree they all have their own charm.
 
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tamarin

House Member
Jun 12, 2006
3,197
22
38
Oshawa ON
Do I win a prize? I voted Alberta and I'm actually camped with the majority. Ouch, that hurts! And I did it strictly out of malice. Born of memories of old slights and old insults. Must be something in an easterner's heart that grows cold when mentioning the mountainous western kindgom.
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
THE BOMBING OF THE WARRIOR​

THE BOMBING OF THE WARRIOR



On the night of July 10 1985 the Rainbow Warrior had been docked in Auckland harbour for three days while preparations for the protest voyage to the nuclear test site at Moruroa Atoll were finalised.
On board the Rainbow Warrior that night were several of the crew and a number of local Greenpeacers. Martini (Gotje, first mate), skipper Pete Willcox, engineer Davey Edwards, Bene Hoffman, radio operator Lloyd Anderson, Rien Achterberg and Fernando Pereira were all having a drink in the ship's mess. Bunny (McDiarmid) was visiting relatives and Henk was at a meeting in the ship's theatre. All the skippers of the peace flotilla were there. Relief cook and peace squadroner Margaret Mills had baked a chocolate cake for Steve's (Sawyer) birthday. After the birthday celebration the assembled skippers met in the ship's theatre to discuss schedules and routes. Margaret, Pete and Lloyd were asleep in their cabins by 11:30, all the others either departed or were up in the mess talking...
At 11:49 an electric blue flash was seen in the water beside the Warrior, quickly followed by a huge explosion. 'Bloody hell... It's from the engine room,' shouted Davey Edward after he was thrown from his chair against the wall. As everyone raced from the mess, Davey ran to the engine room. He was hardly able to open the door. It was like a huge steam bath, with water hissing in through the gaping hole torn in the ship's side.
Captain Pete Willcox, jolted awake, stumbled down to the engine room. One look was enough. 'Abandon ship, everyone get the hell out of here!' he shouted as the ship keeled over towards the wharf.
Fernando Pereira was worried about his cameras. He called out that he was going below to get them. He was quickly followed by Martini, who couldn't find his partner Hanne Sorensen and was worried she might still be in their cabin. The two men skidded down the stairs together. Martini checked out the cabin in scant seconds and made for the deck again, then the wharf. Fernando was in his cabin when the second blast went off, barely two minutes after the first.
There was panic on the wharf. No one had seen Fernando come back up. Martini was still asking, 'Where's Hanne?' Someone said they thought she's gone for a walk earlier.
Elaine (Shaw, director of Greenpeace New Zealand) had just returned home from Piha when the telephone rang. It was a New Zealand Herald reporter who wanted to talk to her about the Rainbow Warrior. 'At one o'clock in the morning!' she snapped. 'Oh I'm sorry. Didn't you know? Your ship's been sunk.' Elaine slammed the phone down in shocked disbelief. Then it rang again - a local radio station this time. 'No, I don't know anything about it,' she said firmly, heart pounding, and hung up. She rang Steve (Sawyer) and the Piha contingent immediately set off for the city.
When they arrived the wharf area was already cordoned off and they were directed to the Wharf Police Station, where the crew,some wrapped in blankets, sat pale-faced and in shock. It was 2 am. The only good news was that Hanne had turned up safe after a walk into the city.
By 4 am divers had recovered Fernando's body. He had drowned, trapped in his cabin, the straps of his camera bag tangled around one leg.
As it emerged that the bombing was a deliberate act of sabotage, there was little doubt in Greenpeace minds who was responsible. Two days after the bombing the French Embassy in Wellington issued a statement echoing the flat denials emanating from Paris. 'In no way is France involved,' it declared. 'The French Government doesn't deal with its opponents in such ways.' But within a few days police had arrested French secret service agents Alain Mafart and Dominique Prieur as they tried to return their van to an Auckland hire company. While they were held in custody, the charter yacht Ouvea, carrying another team of agents implicated in the bombing, sailed to Norfolk Island and then disappeared a few days out to sea heading north for Tahiti. Her crew was reportedly picked up by the French nuclear submarine Rubis, which turned up in Tahiti on July 22 - the first time a French nuclear submarine had been known to enter the South Pacific.
The international outcry pressured the French Government into setting up its own inquiry. After less than three weeks the head of the inquiry, Bernard Tricot, a former Director-General of the Elysee Palace, announced, 'On the basis of the information available to me at this time, I do not believe there was any French responsibility.' The French agents caught in New Zealand were merely there to spy on Greenpeace, Tricot implied, not to bomb them.
Hostility towards the French Government grew after President Mitterrand threatened that any protesters at Moruroa that year would be arrested, and refused to meet with Greenpeace International director, David McTaggart. Rather than cool the growing international controversy, the transparently inadequate Tricot report served only to fuel the fires of indignation and further undermine the French Government's credibility, so that a second inquiry was ordered on 5 September, but it was already too late.
Following claims in the London Sunday Times that President Mitterrand had known of the bombing plan, and implicitly, therefore had authorised it, French Defence Minister Charles Hernu resigned and Admiral Pierre Lacoste, director of the DGSE, France's intelligence and covert action bureau, was sacked. Within days Prime Minister Fabius admitted French secret service agents had bombed the Rainbow Warrior under orders. It was, said New Zealand Prime Minister David Lange, nothing more than 'a sordid act of international state-backed terrorism'.
Charged with murder and arson, on 4 November Mafart and Prieur, just two of a much larger team of saboteurs, pleaded guilty in the High Court at Auckland to lesser charges of manslaughter and wilful damage and were each sentenced to ten years' jail. Their guilty plea ensured that the facts of the police investigation would never be made public. In June 1986, in a political deal presided over by the United Nations Secretary-General, Javier Perez de Cuellar, France agreed to pay compensation of NZ$13 million (US$6.5 million) to New Zealand and 'apologise', in return for which Mafart and Prieur would be detained at the French military base on Hao atoll for three years.
To cap it all, the two spies were both free by May 1988, after less than two years had elapsed, Mafart having been smuggled out

Fernando Pereira​
In the mid-1970s Fernando Pereira left his home in Portugal to avoid being conscripted into the armed forces, then embroiled in colonial wars in Africa and Asia. Fernando travelled to the Netherlands, where he eventually joined Greenpeace to turn his photographic skills to what he saw as a politically positive use. After fleeing war to work for peace, Fernando's death was a tragic and cruel irony.
http://archive.greenpeace.org/comms/rw/pkbomb.html






The time frame of French nuclear testing in the South Pacific has lasted periodically about 28 years. ... "South Pacific Anger Over French Nuclear Testing. ...
France's nuclear testing in Moruroa atoll, located at the Taumotu archipelago in French Polynesia, has angered South Pacific.

http://www.dogpile.com/info.dogpl/c...://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-18144600.html

http://www.dogpile.com/info.dogpl/c...http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9512/france_nuclear/



SPEAK ENGLISH OR PHUCK OFF!
 

selfactivated

Time Out
Apr 11, 2006
4,276
42
48
62
Richmond, Virginia
Well, you may think you're not stupid, but the thread is entitled " What PROVINCES..."...so..hmm.. stupid?? Kinda harsh.. Smart, well, let's just say I've read most of your posts and I'd never call you smart:)


Look Bubba you and I are going to go round if you dont learn some manners.........3 roseries and 3 nice things to say...........your just being mean
 

westmanguy

Council Member
Feb 3, 2007
1,651
18
38
Well people are voting Alberta out of PURE JEALOUSY.

Alberta has the largest economy in this nation.

Its population is soaring. People from all over the country are moving there and creating families.

Alberta also has right-to-center values, and since this forum has a high Liberal(evil people) ratio it doesn't suprise me you choose the Tory Blue province. (all ridings are Blue there)