keaimato

Canadian, U.S., and international politics; and life in general. Heck, whatever strikes my fancy...

Friday, September 30, 2005

Outstanding blog

 
Just what is the free-market alternative? Hong Kong was a beacon of freedom and still could be but things have been looking bad since Red China moved into town. People are singing from the same hymn book, only in different pitches of, 'How much state expansionism should occur this year?'

Maybe it's time that we all vote for the NDP and Ralph Nader and stop the Chinese water torture once and for all so that we can learn what the punishment will feel like in the end? Perhaps then we won't make the same mistakes again?
...
Today instead of playing the usual game of, 'who can best match the NDP's ideas' I figure we should discus a legitimate alternative to the hymnbook that New Democrats, Liberals, and Conservatives are all chanting from…

Election talk

New polling has the Liberals up 36-29 nationally, and 43-33 in Ontario.  That's half of what it was over the summer, and internal Conservative polling has the Liberals only up by 4.  What have they done to deserve this bounce?  Apparenly nothing works magic. 
 
The Conservatives are saying that a fall election is up to the NDP.  So who knows?   

Thursday, September 29, 2005

News roundup

The NDP in NB has picked a new leader.  Why is this news?  I dare not put it in the blog...
 
Late breaking news: Our military needs money.  Everybody knows it - even the Liberals.  But don't hold your breath that anything will change.
 
The US Senate confirmed John Roberts Jr. at the 17th Chief Justice of the United States today 78-22.  A big win for the President, but the real test is who he nominates for the last vacancy.  If it's anyone other than a true conservative acceptable to his base, it will be big trouble.  Out of control spending and the mess in Iraq are big wounds on a leader who can ill afford them.  Picking a moderate would outrage those who have thus far stayed loyal.  I don't think that will be a consideration for the President, who doesn't care about polls especially now that he doesn't have to run again.  But I'm still betting he picks the right person.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

New Governor General

I can't really bring myself to write much about our new head of state. It's much ado about nothing to me: the position is effectively powerless, and is no longer even symbolic of much. So I'll just link to people much smarter than I. Or not as the case may be.

Mark Steyn sums it up in the Western Standard:

Well, Michaëlle Jean is going to be Canada's next governor general, and there isn't a thing you or I or Buckingham Palace can do about it. So we'll all give a big Canadian shrug, and get used to it.

It [her speech today] was uplifting without being Pollyannaish, tender yet tough-minded, vigorous, audacious, even bellicose in spots.

Paul Wells must have live blogged the swearing in yesterday.

That's the nub of it. Michaëlle Jean's predecessor had so much to show Canadians about their country. Mme Jean has a lot to learn. I don't suppose anyone would wish her anything but good luck and great success as her Canadian education begins.

That is unless one should think that someone representing the Queen as the head of state of a modern nation should, maybe, perhaps, know something about the country already? Have a distinguished history of service to the nation?

Oh, and David Frum reminds us that some things never change:

"I know that our planet is fragile, and that natural disasters like the one that recently assailed our American neighbours, are a brutal reminder of that fragility... Such images we have seen before – from Darfur, from Haiti, from Niger. And this time they came from New Orleans, from the margins of an affluent society."

Except of course that the New Orleans evacuees will benefit from some $200,000 in federal spending per person and are not being hacked to death by enraged jihadists."

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Spending is a disaster part 2

So yesterday I said the Democrats should run as fiscally conservative - and apparently they are starting to. The article shows how this exact thing happened in the 50s, when "Ike turned out to be a big spender who pumped large sums of money into Social Security, foreign aid and schools. He also began Republicans' love affair with laying asphalt by launching the largest domestic infrastructure program in history, the interstate highway system." Gee, that doesn't sound familiar at all. David Frum highlights how bad things are for Bush right now, but reminds us that he is a risk taker and bold leader - not a master of detail. That may be true, but his biggest legacy is going to be expanded government and enormous debt. Congress too has lost it's fiscal sanity: the debt is $7.9 trillion, the baby boomers are going to retire, and nothing has done about the sustainability of social security, medicaid and medicare. It gets worse...since 2001 spending increased $300 billion as U.S. debt grew by $2 trillion. Andrew Sullivan piles on suggesting that Bush is a socialist - very good at spending someone else's money. Ugh. Is there hope? Maybe. Voices on the internet, in local newspapers, and within the Republican caucus are starting to shout. But really, things are pretty bad.
The president and Congress would like us to believe that we can fight a war, protect against terrorism and repair the damage done by natural disasters while continuing to enjoy low taxes. The reality is that, though we may not get all the government we pay for, we will pay for all the government we get.
It's going to have to get worse before it gets better.

Monday, September 26, 2005

Spending is a disaster

A depressing account from Bob Novak on spending restraint within the GOP - restaint that does not exist.
 
And Mark Steyn weighs in with the usual clarity
 
Big-time Republicans tell me Bush's profligacy is doing a great job of neutralizing the Dem advantage in the spending-is-caring stakes. This may have been true initially -- in the same sense as undercover cops neutralize a massive heroin-smuggling operation by infiltrating it. But, if they're still running the heroin operation five years later, it looks less like neutralization and more like a change of management.
 
Whoever wins the Republican nomination for 2008 better run as a fiscal conservative - there is so much to be done and it will be so easy to run as an outsider to Washington's spending culture.  Better yet, I hope the Democrats run as fiscally conservative (a stretch, I know, but still possible).  That would really put the heat on the debt loving spendaholics in Washington.

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Radioblogger

It's hard to keep up with everything that happens in the media, but this is a great site covering the highlights.  Check out these two gems:
  • Don't get stuck on stupid - it's a movement...

    Male reporter: General, a little bit more about why that's happening this time, though, and did not have that last time...

    Honore: You are stuck on stupid. I'm not going to answer that question.

  • Ted Turner loves commies: You think I'm exagerating, but I'm not.  I usually don't like Wolf Blitzer, but he looks like the voice of infitine wisom by comparison.

    WB: But this is one of the most despotic regimes, and Kim Jung Il is one of the worst men on Earth. Isn't that a fair assessment?

    TT: Well, I didn't get to meet him, but he didn't look...in the pictures I've seen of him on CNN, he didn't look too much different than most of the other people I've met.

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

David Frum on Brian Mulroney

So the record is very far from perfect. But then it always is, isn't it? In politics, everything is a matter of balance, triumphs against defeats, courage against opportunism, human flaws against human nobility. And weighed in that balance, Brian Mulroney ranks among the very best leaders Canada has ever had, certainly the best since Louis St. Laurent. And if he ranks behind the very greatest, behind for example that boozy, cunning, patronage-dispensing old rascal John A. Macdonald--it may well be because Macdonald had the sense never to trust a Peter C. Newman. 

Monday, September 19, 2005

Katrina aftermath

I've been thinking about the massive failure of governments at all levels and the role of the private sector in a catastrophe. It seems to me that the private sector is better prepared, equipped and more able to deliver aid where it is needed. (Fascinating side note from the second article: Wal Mart has meteorologists? Yes they do). There are lots of really interesting stories of private companies doing amazing things both for their workers and for those in need. Yet clearly government has an important role in a disaster like this. A fundamental role of government is to help out in a major crisis. But the severity of this disaster was magnified by incompetence and bureaucracy at all levels, from the mayor and the police force to the president.

What we all need to take away from this is

  1. the state will not be there when we need them most in a disaster
  2. we are responsible for ourselves and our families, and for each other – waiting around for the government is a painful and sometimes fruitless experience
  3. modern governments move slowly, respond slowly, and are constantly bogged down in process, red tape, and good intentions.
  4. we have not learned much of anything from 9/11, and aren't very likely to learn much from Katrina. Governments don't learn, they can only be reformed. By others. Neither Bush nor this congress are up to the challenge – they're the ones who created the mess that is homeland security in the first place. Their solution is likely to be shuffle organizations around and create some kind new bureaucracy that oversees the existing mess...

Good news, if it holds up

North Korea agreed  Monday to stop building nuclear weapons and allow international inspections in exchange for energy aid, economic cooperation and security assurances, a breakthrough that marked a first step toward disarmament after two years of six-nation talks.

Is Clinton to be the next Carter?

I guess this is what losing all but three presidential elections in 37 years does to people...the democrats are being reduced to a bunch of sore losers.  Hopefuly we will see a serious candidate emerge in the next 6 months, and I don't mean Hillary.

Sunday, September 18, 2005

Iraq progress report

A little good, a little bad; a sobering look at our world in 2005 from VDH.

German election

Looks like the polls were off and it's going to be so close as to be unclear. At issue are badly needed economic reforms and relations with the U.S. David Frum recommends following the results here.

Update: yup, it's a mess

Roundup

Who knows how these all fit together? Only by the thread of my interest...

I didn't catch much of Bush's speech the other night, and what I did see was kind of disappointing. I'd like to see them look at other options for New Orleans, in the foolish belieft that building a city below sea level is just asking for trouble. But hey, I've been wrong before. Donna Brazile, the Gore 2000 campaign manager, wrote an op ed and is on W's side. Who can tell how these things will turn out. But if you want to get depressed, check this out, especially the last 2 paragraphs. Or this. What a mess...

Germany's election is today (Sunday) and it is very close. It shouldn't be - unemployment is over 11%.

Afghanistan is also having an election, albeit it in the face of much more challenge. It's wonderful to see how dedicated so many are to the (new) idea of democracy.

You wouldn't know it, but our soliders are actually killing people in Afghanistan. And they are good at it too. Way to go JTF2 boys! But of course, that makes them complicit in the illegal occupation and facilitates the evil war to slaughter civilians in Iraq. How big of a loser do you have to be before you can compete with George Galloway anyway? What a misguided fool. We were at the Canadian War Museum on Friday, and it was so refreshing to see the difference our troops made in both World Wars, and how respected our soldiers have been throughout our history.

Lastly, I caught half of CTV's Terry Fox movie tonight. I wish I had voted for him for greatest Canadian. At only 18 he set out to make a difference in the world, and he truly did. No excuses, no fan fare, just heart and courage. I wish we had more like him.

Saturday, September 17, 2005

Afraid of getting sued

A doctor trying to save life after Katrina was told to stop because he wasn't registered with FEMA.  How pathetic is that?

"I showed him (the U.S. Coast Guard official in charge) my medical credentials. I had tried to get through to FEMA for 12 hours the day before and finally gave up. I asked him to let me stay until I was replaced by another doctor, but he refused. He said he was afraid of being sued. I informed him about the Good Samaritan laws and asked him if he was willing to let people die so the government wouldn't be sued, but he would not back down. I had to leave."

Friday, September 16, 2005

Arnold re-upps

Thursday, September 15, 2005

Spending spree

It looks like President Bush is going to make a bad situation (Federal Government spending) and make it much, much worse .  What a terrible decision.  Find cuts in the highway bill, in the energy bill, heck in every will where there is pork barrel spending.  It's unacceptable how bad the White House and the Republicans have been on spending.  Absolutely brutal...

better late than never

Outstanding article by Charles K on what went wrong with disaster relief:
 
1. The mayor of New Orleans. He knows the city. He knows the danger. He knows that during Hurricane Georges in 1998, the use of the Superdome was a disaster and fully two-thirds of the residents never got out of the city. Nothing was done. He declared a mandatory evacuation only 24 hours before Hurricane Katrina hit. He did not even declare a voluntary evacuation until the day before that, at 5 p.m. At that time, he explained that he needed to study his legal authority to call a mandatory evacuation and was hesitating to do so lest the city be sued by hotels and other businesses.

2. The Louisiana governor. It's her job to call up the National Guard and get it to where it has to go. Where the guard was in the first few days is a mystery. Indeed, she issued an authorization for the National Guard to commandeer school buses to evacuate people on Wednesday afternoon -- more than two days after the hurricane hit and after much of the fleet had already drowned in its parking lots.

3. The head of FEMA. Late, slow and in way over his head. On Thursday he says on national television that he didn't even know there were people in the Convention Center, when anybody watching television could see them there destitute and desperate. Maybe in his vast bureaucracy he can assign three 20-year-olds to watch cable news and give him updates every hour on what in hell is going on.

4. The president. Late, slow and simply out of tune with the urgency and magnitude of the disaster. The second he heard that the levees had been breached in New Orleans, he should have canceled his schedule and addressed the country on national television to mobilize it both emotionally and physically to assist in the disaster. His flyover on the way to Washington was the worst possible symbolism. And his Friday visit was so tone-deaf and politically disastrous that he had to fly back three days later.

Don't forget Congress

5. Congress. Now as always playing holier-than-thou. Perhaps it might ask itself who created the Department of Homeland Security in the first place. The congressional response to all crises is the same -- rearrange the bureaucratic boxes, but be sure to add one extra layer. The last four years of DHS have been spent principally on bureaucratic reorganization (and real estate) instead of, say, a workable plan for as predictable a disaster as a Gulf Coast hurricane.

6. The American people. They have made it impossible for any politician to make any responsible energy policy over the last 30 years -- but that is a column for another day. Now is not the time for constructive suggestions. Now is the time for blame, recriminations and sheer astonishment. Mayor Nagin has announced that, as bodies are still being found and as a public health catastrophe descends upon the city, he is sending 60 percent of his cops on city funds for a little R&R, mostly to Vegas hotels. Asked if it was appropriate to party in these circumstances, he responded: "New Orleans is a party town. Get over it."

Sunday, September 11, 2005

4 years ago today...we remember

Friday, September 09, 2005

More Katrina

Katrina shows that the US is woefully unprepared for major terrorist attack

Bush showing weakness (Buchanan), his adminstration has blundered (let's get the lawyers out of disaster relief - Novak), but W will bounce back (Morris)

Mark Steyn admits he was wrong:

Readers may recall my words from a week ago on the approaching Katrina: "We relish the opportunity to rise to the occasion. And on the whole we do. Oh, to be sure, there are always folks who panic or loot. But most people don't, and many are capable of extraordinary acts of hastily improvised heroism." What the hell was I thinking? I should be fired for that. Well, someone should be fired. I say that in the spirit of the Mayor of New Orleans, Ray Nagin, the Anti-Giuliani, a Mayor Culpa who always knows where to point the finger.

For some reason, I failed to consider the possibility that the panickers would include Hizzoner the Mayor and the looters would include significant numbers of the police department, though in fairness I wasn't the only one. As General Blum said at Saturday's Defence Department briefing: "No one anticipated the disintegration or the erosion of the civilian police force in New Orleans."

Deadly Bureaurocracy by Bobby Jindal points out: Sometimes, asking for forgiveness is better than asking for permission when it comes to the Feds...
And finally, a heart felt account from NRO by someone who calls New Orleans home.
So I'm angry: at Nagin, at Blanco, at Bush, at Chertoff, at FEMA, at the thugs and looters, at the clueless and judgmental national media, at the congressional pork barons, at Hastert (almost rabidly so), at the whole conglomeration of incompetents that failed to anticipate the easily anticipatable disaster, failed to respond well or at all to the disaster once it befell, and failed to report and analyze and comment on it with fairness or understanding once the disaster metastasized.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

Wrong answer

Canadians want to nationalize the oil industry because of high gas prices...I'm sure the government can do a much better job.  Think gun registry...

Katrina roundup

Lots of articles out there (thanks Mick), and lots of blame to go around.
  • What happened - a detailed account of the aftermath, if you can stand all the commentary
  • Magic markers and better local response - relying on the feds won't cut it
  • Why rebuild? Legitimate questions about rebuilding a city below sea level.

Friday, September 02, 2005

Katrina aftermath 2

It's hard to know if things are improving fast enough, but at least everyone's attention is focused. With the black caucus and NAACP making noise about the poor not being important enough, and the mayor of New Orleans complaining about the lack of busses and slow response time, this picture of buses underwater on September 1 is rather...interesting (via drudge). It's easy to just blame the feds...

David Frum has a good round up making the (unfortunately necessary point) that everything isn't W's fault. And here is the comforter in chief on a tour. Oh, and we are trying to do our part, which is really good to see. Even if we aren't exactly speedy...

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Gas prices

In Regina gas has jumped to as much as $1.22/L. To find the lowest price, check this site out - it's outstanding. There are corresponding sites for all major centers.

Here's how the price of gas breaks down (from CAA):

Katrina aftermath

Already the boo birds and complainers are out, complaining about response time, crime, and so on. I watched about 30 seconds of CNN last night and was so disgusted we turned to CTV Newsnet. Taking advantage of someones grief and emotional turmoil for ratings is so callous. ("If you could say one thing to the head of FEMA, what would it be?" the reporter asked to an obviously upset women who's house was destroyed)

Indeed the reports of looting and violence, squalid conditions, and lack of food and water are disturbing. But Americans are generous and capable. In the end this will go down as a difficult period where North Americans rallied together. And who knows what will happen after

For the most comprehensive list of charities involved in relief efforts, check Instapundit. I'm overwhelmed with how long it is...

Update: Former Presidents Bush and Clinton are going to spearhead fundraising efforts, like they did for the Tsunami rebuilding. I think they need a cool team name, like BClint or CBush, or maybe just FPDD - Former Presidents Dynamic Duo. Send me your suggestions...

Gaza pullout leading to thaw?

Personally I didn't think it would make much difference either way, but the Gaza withdrawal is having positive results: Pakistan is "engaging" Israel in talks, and Jordan's King Abdullah is expected to visit Israel in the next little while.