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Journeyman said:Play it? Danjanou owns land there.
(He probably still has a red Star Trek shirt too) ;D
So awesome
Journeyman said:Play it? Danjanou owns land there.
(He probably still has a red Star Trek shirt too) ;D
Journeyman said:Play it? Danjanou owns land there.
(He probably still has a red Star Trek shirt too) ;D
foresterab said:“To date, we have lost all or part of 10 days for our critical re-supply program for our Victor Mine,” Ormsby said in an e-mail to CBC News.
“A prolonged disruption to the program could jeopardize the health and safety of our employees and the future of the mine.”
57Chevy said:It's time to rethink the blimp...
...
there's room for certain kinds of them to play a new role in Canada, especially when it comes to reaching remote communities in the North, the transportation committee recommended in a recently released report.
"Hybrid air vehicles may one day provide a superior solution, as they can travel over snowfall, frozen water or impenetrable terrain, and require no roads or rail installations to operate," says the report.
...
John Ivison: Bernard Valcourt part of new Conservative strategy for dealing with aboriginals
John Ivison | Feb 22, 2013 7:48 PM ET
More from John Ivison
Bernard Valcourt, Canada's new Minister of Aboriginal Affairs, has to handle the most intractable file in government.
What’s the reward for selling the Conservatives’ unpopular employment insurance reforms in Atlantic Canada? The answer, it seems, is to be handed the job of flogging the government’s equally unloved native policies as Minister of Aboriginal Affairs.
Bernard Valcourt, who spent nearly six years in Brian Mulroney’s Cabinet, has been promoted to handle the most intractable file in government, following last week’s announcement that John Duncan had tendered his resignation for lobbying the tax court on behalf of a constituent.
Mr. Valcourt has been the Associate Minister for Defence since last July but that job has been hollowed out since the Auditor-General’s critical report on the F-35s, after which responsibility for most procurement issues moved to the Public Works department. In a deft piece of caucus management, Stephen Harper has moved Vancouver-area MP Kerry-Lynne Findlay into that all but redundant position – thus maintaining British Columbia’s Cabinet representation at four (James Moore, Ed Fast and Alice Wong being the others).
Related
Stephen Harper taps Bernard Valcourt as new Aboriginal Affairs Minister
Jonathan Kay: Natives hurting themselves with lawless diamond mine blockade
Get more of National Post's Canadian politics coverage
Mr. Valcourt also held responsibility for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, the burden for which will now fall on Gail Shea, the Revenue Minister, and La Francophonie, which will be handled by Veterans Affairs Minister Steven Blaney.
Government officials said that Mr. Valcourt was being “under-utilized” at Defence. “The Prime Minister has confidence in him. He has been to the rodeo more than a few times and is a very practical ‘in the room’ kind of guy.”
Mr. Valcourt was first elected as a Progressive Conservative in the 1984 election and held a number of Cabinet portfolios, including Consumer and Corporate Affairs, Fisheries and Oceans and Immigration. He has had his share of controversies, including being tossed from Cabinet in 1986 after being involved in a drunk driving motorcycle accident in which he lost an eye.
After leaving federal politics in 1993, he was elected leader of the Progressive Conservative Party in his native New Brunswick and served in opposition to Frank McKenna’s Liberals.
He will be a busy man in the coming months. There are already stirrings of another Caledonia-type crisis at the Attawapiskat reserve in Northern Ontario, where native protestors are blocking the ice road to the Victor diamond mine, in defiance of a court order.
He also inherits a situation where relations with First Nations are at an impasse over a new education bill and economic development issues.
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There are early signs that the government may be attempting a new strategy for dealing with Canada’s aboriginal leaders, who appear unable to agree among themselves about their priorities.
Earlier this week, Tony Clement, the president of the Treasury Board and the minister responsible for the FedNor, was announced as the government’s point man on the Ring of Fire mining development in Northern Ontario.
Meanwhile, Mr. Harper sat down with a number of native chiefs in Saskatchewan on Thursday. It suggests that the government will now concentrate on improving relations on a regional basis, rather than by trying to strike sweeping pan-Canadian deals with the Assembly of First Nations.
Think what you will of Parliament and the Harper government, the fact is, Canadians had a say in who represents them in that big building overlooking the Ottawa river.
At the UN, we have no say.
Yet Chief Theresa Spence of Attawapisakat, who recently appeared in court to defend an illegal road blockade, is off to seek the assistance of a United Nations body.
According to the Council of Canadians website Spence will ask the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination ” to stop C-38 and C-45.”
Excuse me!
The chair of this committee is from Russia, the vice-chairs are from Algeria and Guatemala. Other countries represented include Togo, Pakistan, Romania and Burkina Faso – not exactly the countries that I want Canada taking advice from.
I’ve been warning against the United Nations for some time (see the lengthy list of videos here). This organization is not the global force for good intent of keeping the peace – it wants power and it doesn’t mind interfering in the affairs of one of the world’s oldest democracies to do it.
The CERD will apparently hear the complaint on Tuesday. If a representative of the Canadian government is in attendance their sole response to every question should be, “That’s none of your damn business.”
The UN has taken Canada to court to keep violent foreign criminals from being deported, it reviews Canada’s criminal laws and makes recommendations for change, it lectures us on food, it is calling for a global tax on shipping – without allowing for democratic representation.
It’s time for Canada to leave the United Nations.
Larry Strong said:So her bluff was called in Ottawa, now according to a statement released, the International Indian Treaty Council along with Spence and the Mushkegowuk People of Attawapiskat First Nation have filed an 'Urgent Action' with the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD).
[size=12pt]Chief Spence asks UN to interfere with Parliament[/
Larry
E.R. Campbell said:So an overfed, corrupt, buffoon, being denied lucre by Ottawa, goes to beg at "top table" where the real fat, really corrupt, murderously dangerous buffoons hold power: the United Nations.
E.R. Campbell said:So an overfed, corrupt, buffoon, being denied lucre by Ottawa, goes to beg at "top table" where the real fat, really corrupt, murderously dangerous buffoons hold power: the United Nations.
my72jeep said:Now now at least, Mike said he will repay the money.
Larry Strong said:Seeings how the peasants were storming the walls, screaming for his blood his options were somewhat limited.
Larry
dapaterson said:...especially since the driveway to the house in PEI hasn't been plowed all winter...
Larry Strong said:Seeings how the peasants were storming the walls, screaming for his blood his options were somewhat limited.
Larry
Yet, as of last Christmas, he still didn't have a health card for the province he "lived" in....GAP said:But the one to his apt in Charlottetown was..... :nod: