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Sunday, October 11, 2009

Sunday # 2

What's going in here? On Tuesday evening, at Cobourg Council, a letter is on the agenda from the local Lions Club. There has been a dispute between Council and the Lions Club over the repair of the building the Club leases from the Town. The Club feels that because the building is owned by the Town that they, the Town should be responsible for the upkeep of the building, as opposed to routine maintenance paid for by the Club. The Town feels that because the building may be Town owned, because of the way it was funded, years ago with a Wintario grant, that the Club should pay for all.
But back to the letter. The letter plainly states that unless the Town changes its stance and pays for the roof, the Lions Club cannot afford to do so, tells the Town that it has only two options: the inability to commit to future community projects, or to remove the Club's assets and vacate the building.

So what's the Town's response to the prospect of financial ruin for one of the community pillars? To receive this letter for information purposes. In other words to file, in file 13 - the round filing cabinet, to ignore the problem, in public. I say in public because of the absence of statements of intent from the Council. All we as members of the public, but having a vested interest, can do is hope that there is something going on behind the scenes. Unfortunately this file may be in the hands of "Sluggo" - Councillor "we don't want to set a precedent here" MacDonald. So the public faced with the prospect of watching the Lions Club move out of a building because they can't afford to repair and perhaps the ending of some of its service club activities will have to depend on moves being made behind the scenes, or do we?

Sunday # 1

Lou Rinaldi, that vertically challenged man who represents us with platitudes and apparent indifference to anything that cannot be put in a press release, is defending the provincial move to the HST. After reading much about it I now know what infuriates me about this cash grab. Never mind the fact that it will bite into my disposable income by taxing products which are currently not taxed, but the consumer will pay. This is not a progressive or fair tax. Businesses will be able to claim "input credits" and get rebates. Why should this be. It will mean a huge shift in taxpaying from business to consumer. Totally unfair.
"Business will thrive" says Lou, but at whose expense? If there's anything we know about consumer economics is that there is only so much money to go around and all these moves in taxation shifts do is to move the burden. If the HST and the elimination of Provincial sales tax is doing nothing other than allowing business to claim "input credits" which would not accrue any credit to business, just how will businees thrive as Lou claims. And more importantly why is the Chamber of Commerce all over this one? There is more to this than meets ny eye! The consumer is going to get hosed and they feel powerless to stop it. It will be interesting to see just how successful the NDP is going to be in the next BC by-election, with the HST as a central issue.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Another guest piece

From Deb O'Connor:

WOMEN HAVE BEEN SOLD A BILL OF GOODS

For years now we have been told that women have reached equality in all areas of their lives. We are free to go to school, then pursue worthwhile careers in the big wide world. All the doors are open.

Feminism has achieved its goals and isn't needed anymore, they say. Kind of like unions. But wait, if we take a closer look we see some of the same old barriers, same old thinking, still at play.
You see, in the course of becoming liberated, we failed to shuck those old fashioned responsibilities that have burdened us for so long. Free to work, sure, but when the liberated woman comes home she will likely find partner and children waiting for their dinner. Hope she went shopping on her way home! Then there's the housework, laundry, care-giving for kids and elderly parents and all the other domestic chores to do. Statistics tell us it's still primarily women doing them too.

It's all a crock. Now we are free to get heart attacks and ulcers, drink too much and work too hard, just like men have all these years. The only real liberator has been birth control, the one tool for womens' emancipation that matters. Make that the only tool that matters.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Just wondering?

This story relates the tale of a guilty plea by the Toronto Fire mucky-muck who was clocked at 150kph on his way to a funeral in Kingston. He was allowed to plead down to a lesser charge of speeding from Stunt Driving. Just wonder who else can do this? Definitely not your average soccer mom or Civic roadster!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

A guest piece

Submitted by William Hayes:

The Oct 1st issue of the Globe & Mail contained an opinion piece by historian Michael Bliss claiming “Conservatives have seized the central ground of the political spectrum.” Here’s a link:

Nonsense! No political party pursuing policies such as those noted below occupies the centre of Canadian political understanding:

· blocks progress in reaching international agreement on how to deal with climate change;

· refuses to ratify the Cluster Munitions Treaty;

· inhibits the export of inexpensive HIV/AIDS drugs to suffering 3rd world peoples;

· and, most recently, characterizes women as a “left-wing fringe group”.

We Canadians have a better understanding of the world and our place in it than these shameful Conservative policies.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Just a quick one!

Sent in by our man about Town, the cultural correspondent - WK. A small clip of Saturday's parade, a Cobourg cultural moment.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Observations from the night shift

Last week, as part of my semi-retirement, (That means that i will take anything that pays) I was driving an eighteen wheeler down the four nothing one for three trips from Ajax to Ottawa. Loblaws has decided, as part of a restructuring, the Ottawa National Gocers warehouse is to be reduced and the City of Ottawa will be reprovisioned from Ajex. Consequently convoys leave every night for a twelve to fourteen hour shift. I have been working that shift. It may have showed in less posts and probably less thoughtfulness in those posts.
So what are the impressions:
  • MacDonalds has two things going for it - a well designed top for the coffee cup that contains "Keep-me-awake" coffee and the biggest bargain of all $1.39 sandwiches. Sausage mcmuffins one day and bacon cheesburger the next.
  • Queen's Park stupidity - fancy shutting down 75% of the service stations on the 401 at the same time. Total insanity reigns and if the good citizens of South Cobourg object to people peeing in the Bay St bushes wait until we hear accounts of desperate peolpe urinating on the shoulders of the 401. Signs indicating gaps of 150 kms between service stations are signs designed to agitate any full bladder.
  • The lack of traffic on the road since the recession started.

Stop the whining about needing more Doctors

Report from the MSM
"What they are not taking into account is that it's an incredibly competitive environment. We are going up against communities that have deeper pockets and are wealthier and can put more money on the table," she pointed out. She being Tracy West, the Project Manager of the Physicians' Recruitment Committee.

That's the point - the allocation of Doctors to Ontario, after each one of them has absorbed great gobs of public money for their education, should not be a bidding war. The provincial government has it all wrong, and we are approaching the problem the Rotarian way. That is to go begging for money and then give it to people who don't need it but makes the organisors look good.
There is a disconnect here, we have a local Health Centre that can't get enough patients to fully employ the designed establishment and a local committee saying we need more doctors. So who to believe?

Thursday, October 1, 2009

No words yet just links

The power of the Internet and new media - take a look at this wonderful pic. Life on the modern picket line!

One from the professor - Robert Wasburn that is: here

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

A free for all

I will be unavailable to post regularly for the next two weeks so how about it folks - submit your opinion and really make this an open line show. Mail in the submissions to
theburdreport and I'll post it under your name or a nom-de-plume. Any topics will be fair game.