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Jim Seggie said:Don't you Albertans know that Ottawa knows what's best for you?
Like the great Stewie Griffin once sang... "Establishment, Establishment, you always know what's best"
Jim Seggie said:Don't you Albertans know that Ottawa knows what's best for you?
RDJP said:Not sure how many of you actually live in the province, but sorry....it's not just another biased opinion (THIS time....someone write down the date ;D)
Everyone here thought it was going to be a Wildrose majority.....no one ever thought the PC's would come back in again.
http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/Numbers+tell+story+tight+Alberta+election+contest/6512883/story.html
EDMONTON - With a 61-seat majority handed to Premier Alison Redford’s Conservatives, it would be easy for a casual observer to think Monday’s provincial election was not such a contest after all.
But while the map may paint northern Alberta largely Tory blue and the southern part of the province outside Calgary mainly Wildrose green, a deeper look at Elections Alberta’s unofficial results show many tight races won or lost by just a few hundred votes.
“You look at the seat totals and it’s easy to think landslide, but it hides all the races going on at the constituency level,” said University of Alberta political scientist Lori Thorlakson, who is the lead investigator on an election study that will analyze Monday’s results and voters’ motivations. “They were pretty close. A lot of those I couldn’t believe how close they were....."
E.R. Campbell said:Not CBC, not bias, but journalistic stupidity of the highest order is reported in this artcle which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail:
My emphasis added
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/no-plans-for-thomas-mulcair-to-shave-his-beard/article2402968/
This is an interview on a national political/public affairs programme - it airs in the same Sunday morning serious time slot as e.g. "Meet The Press" and "Fareed Zakaria GPS" - and the guest is the Leader of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition, the prime minister in f'ing waiting, and numbnuts asks about his goddamn beard! Craig Oliver is both a fool and a waste of bandwidth. Who in their right minds gives a rat's *** about Mr Mulcair's facial hair? Does Oliver think other Canadians are as shallow and stupid as he is? He, Oliver, had precious, expensive seconds to ask Mulcair real, hard political questions but he's a TV journalist and this is Canada so we get juvenile bullshit.
Rifleman62 said:The always fair and balanced, ethical CBC has this headline. Any resemblance to the actual article or the truth? The CBC knows that this PM ALWAYS pays his own way.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2012/04/13/harper-baseball-trip.html
Harper's baseball trip hit taxpayers with $45,000 tab
By Louise Elliott, CBC News Apr 14, 2012
A blower's response:
http://paulsrants-paulsstuff.blogspot.com/2012/04/will-james-moore-once-again-defend-cbc.html
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Will James Moore Once Again Defend The CBC Over This Crap?
A perfect example of why the cuts to CBC were far short of where they need to be. In what no one could say is not a partisan attack against the PM, CBC gives Canadians a glimpse of paid top-dollar journalism for tabloid worthy news headlines.
In fact, the CBC itself outs itself only two paragraphs after the first, which includes this gem:
"Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Labour Day-weekend trip to Manhattan last fall, which included coveted tickets to a New York Yankees game and a Broadway show, cost Canadian taxpayers at least $45,000, documents reveal."
And if anyone took the time to read the entire story, they come to this:
"A spokesperson for the prime minister told CBC News that Harper covered the cost of both the flight and accommodations for himself, his daughter and two guests on the flight. He also covered the costs of tickets to the game for himself and his guests.
"Prime Minister Harper makes it a practice of reimbursing the government for personal travel," spokesperson Julie Vaux wrote in an email. "As the prime minister is prohibited from flying commercial for security reasons, he also compensates the government for the cost of an equivalent commercial flight. In this case, he compensated for the flight for himself, his daughter, and guests at the cost of a commercial fare for each."
It's time once again for everyone to start sending complaints to the CBC ombudsman, as well as James Moore, telling him this type of trash journalism should not be paid for by the Canadian taxpayer.
Thank you for your e-mail of April 20 addressed to Kirk LaPointe, CBC Ombudsman, drawing our attention to a CBCNews.ca story posted on April 14 under the headline, “Harper’s baseball trip hit taxpayers with $45,000 tab”. You described it as a “tabloid headline” and a “partisan attack” on the prime minister, pointing out that story reveals that the prime minster reimbursed the government for the cost of his and his guests’ travel.
While I certainly regret you are disappointed in CBC, I must tell you, respectfully, that your view is not one I share. Allow me to explain why.
Over the Labour Day weekend last year, the prime minister and three guests took what was called a “private family trip” to New York to watch a Yankees game and see a Broadway show. As the headline said, accurately and fairly, that holiday trip cost the government $45,000.
Headlines are short, colourful, often provocative, and in a matter of just a few words are intended to attract a reader’s attention with what is new or unusual, and direct him to the story that follows to find out more. In this case, the most important aspect of the story was that the prime minister’s trip to New York to watch a baseball game had cost Canadians $45,000.
The story that followed quickly explained that the costs included $34,633 for the use of a government jet and $11,026 for the expenses of four employees from the Prime Minister’s Office who accompanied him on the family trip, for a total of some $45,000. The prime minister’s expenses, those of his daughter and three guests are not included in the $45,000 total.
However, the story pointed out, that $45,000 total did not include the costs of two more aides (the two each filed expenses of some $2,100, less air fare) and a defence attaché who were also on the trip. Nor did it include the costs of an unknown number of RCMP officers who accompanied the prime minister.
The story also explained under the sub-headline, “Harper reimbursed government for flight”, that since the prime minister is prohibited from flying on a commercial airliner that he had “compensated the government for the cost of an equivalent commercial flight” for himself, his daughter and two guests.
So, at the end of the day, while the private trip’s total cost to taxpayers would be reduced by the reimbursement of the cost for four tickets, that payment would be more than offset by the expenses incurred by the four staffers on the flight plus two more aides, a defence attaché and RCMP officers.
Thank you again for your e-mail. I hope my reply has reassured you of the continuing integrity of our news service.
It is also my responsibility to tell you that if you are not satisfied with this response, you may wish to submit the matter for review by the CBC Ombudsman. The Office of the Ombudsman, an independent and impartial body reporting directly to the President, is responsible for evaluating program compliance with the CBC's journalistic policies. The Ombudsman may be reached by mail at Box 500, Terminal A, Toronto, Ontario M5W 1E6, or by fax at (416) 205-2825, or by e-mail at
Sincerely,
Marissa Nelson
Managing Editor
CBC News.ca
Box 500, Station “A”,
Toronto, Ontario
M5W 1E6
cc. Kirk LaPointe, CBC Ombudsman
Thucydides said:Given the actual numbers of viewers the CBC has, I'm thinking the Maytag repairman gets more business than the CBC Ombudsman, which may explain his detachment from reality.
Redeye said:...
Notwithstanding that, controversy over travel expenses isn't new - and it was made fairly clear, I think, that flight costs include amortized capital costs etc and thus sound wildly exaggerated. I think that while the story is in a sense accurate, it still sensationalizes the event a little.
ArmyVern said:PM Harper did the normal thing, he reimbursed for the personal portion of the trip costs - voluntarily. Where are the comparisons? Did Chretien do this? Did Chretien or any other PM reimburse the Crown 100% of total trip costs?
That is what this article infers the current PM should be doing, but isn't and therefore, must be evil.
The bias would be even more so should it be shown that ex-PM Chretien or previous of same redside manner did not reimburse taxpayers any expenses. Where was the outrage then? The headlines from the CBC? Or even a simple statement to that fact in this article? Apparently, when 2 parties share a bedside manner - overlooking is allowed.
Jim Seggie said:It all boils down to this:
The CBC hates Conservatives.
Jim Seggie said:It all boils down to this:
The CBC hates Conservatives.
recceguy said:The sooner their funding stops, the sooner those leftist elitists will fade to oblivion. Just one more stepping stone on our country's move to the modern age.
There is no requirement for a State TV station here. It is Canada, not Canukistan.
Redeye said:What State TV station?
Jim Seggie said:It seems that the rest of the government agencies are being asked to transform, but CBC seems to be stuck....or am I reading it wrong?
I'm just going to assume that you didn't read any of the previous posts.....or the thread's title. It's about bias, not profit.bridges said:Those who think only profitable things are important will tend to think it should be de-funded.