ModlrMike said:So at the end of the day our choices boil down to the following:
Two professional academics (Dion, Layton), a lawyer (May), or an economist (Harper). With global financial challenges facing us, I know who I would choose.
GAP said:I still wander away from all these polls with the feeling that there is much, much more support for the conservatives than is showing up in the polls...
Rodahn said:Hard to argue with the cognizant facts that the countries that have implemented the green shift (Sweden and Denmark, 44 & 43% economic growth respectively) tax have shown significant growth economic since doing so. As have other European union countries.
If the green shift is being used simply as a tax grab then yes I oppose it, however if it causes our lifestyle to wake up, then I for one would be for it, given the neutral tax benefit.
To bury ones head in the sand (when other economists disagree) with the current economic landscape is inane in my opinion.
ModlrMike said:Therein lies the flaw in the plan. The Liberals in their own material expect to generate 40B in tax revenue, but refund only 26B. Where is the other 14B going?
Rodahn said:Hard to argue with the cognizant facts that the countries that have implemented the green shift (Sweden and Denmark, 44 & 43% economic growth respectively) tax have shown significant growth economic since doing so. As have other European union countries.
Rodahn said:May I ask where you get your figures from?
ModlrMike said:Well, I'll admit I can't attribute my comment to a source. None the less, they've already dipped into the tax revenue to fund social programmes.
Rodahn said:And where does any government get the funding for social programs?
ModlrMike said:Yes, from tax revenues, however it is bad finance to fund programs from a tax that is designed to decrease as time goes on. If the GreenShaftShift tax is successful in reducing carbon emissions, then it will have the net effect of reducing the income it returns to the government. In addition, we were promised the tax would be revenue neutral. I am presuming that most of us infer that to mean that as much tax will be refunded to consumers as is collected from polluters. My other problems stem from the obvious requirement to increase bureaucracy in order to administer and control this money flowing from one hand to the other. Where is the funding for that coming from?
Artists themselves are the real 'censors'
Peer review groups that dole out arts grants keep things in the family
LICIA CORBELLA
CanWest News Service
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
Independent filmmaker Garth Pritchard is having some fun dreaming up gag titles for his next documentary on Canada's troops in Afghanistan. So far he's had to find his own funding, but other Canadian filmmakers making soft porn seem to be getting government grants.
"Maybe if I called my next film Red Light Districts of Kabul or Young Soldiers F-ing, I could get a government grant," jokes Pritchard, referring to films that received taxpayer funding entitled Red Light Districts of the World, where viewers are treated to the spectacle of prostitutes shooting bananas from between their legs, and Young People F---ing. And while Pritchard chuckles at his own joke, the reality of what he's saying is not funny.
Arts funding has become a huge federal election issue, particularly in Quebec. Artists and opposition politicians have been attacking Prime Minister Stephen Harper for cutting arts and culture funding, despite increases for the major arts agencies.
The artists and the politicians say the Harper government is "censoring artists" by cutting $45 million from some programs. Obviously, not funding something is not censorship. The artist is free to find another donor and create art.
But if cutting off or not providing public funding is their definition of censorship, let's use it. What none of these artists ever mention is that perhaps the biggest censors of all are the "artists" who dole out taxpayers' money.
What most Canadians don't recognize is that many government grant decisions are made by artists who sit on various boards. For instance, in the case of the Canada Council for the Arts, grant decisions are peer-reviewed, which means incestuous relationships often develop between grant clients. One peer doesn't want to turn down John's wonky idea because John might be sitting in judgment the next year. So there is a tendency for outsiders like Pritchard who don't fit the artsy template to get excluded.
I met Pritchard in December 2003 in Kabul, surrounded by children in a squalid internally displaced persons' camp. Over almost two weeks, as I patrolled with Canadian troops or watched them build schools or deliver food, I kept running into Pritchard, who despite his imposing frame, melted into the background, quietly recording our troops in Afghanistan.
Pritchard, a former Gazette photographer, was there thanks to the funding of an exemplary and wealthy Calgary family that felt recording this important part of Canada's history was vital. Why did he have to get funding from a private patron and not any of the taxpayer-funded programs designed to help Canadians tell Canadian stories to Canadians?
Perhaps Pritchard's documentaries shed too positive a light on our mission in Afghanistan. Or, perhaps, they're just not kinky enough. One can only speculate.
Despite being "censored," Pritchard has produced three documentaries - Waging Peace, Friendly Fire and Chasing Shadows - from his five lengthy trips to Afghanistan.
"I've applied to almost every film fund out there," Pritchard says. "So who are the real censors? It's not Stephen Harper."
Only the History Channel has aired Pritchard's documentaries, but it didn't pay anywhere near enough to cover even the cost of his trip.
However, Canadians lucky enough to visit the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa have seen vignettes of Pritchard's documentaries in an exhibit called Afghanistan: A Glimpse of War, which also included photographs by Stephen Thorne, a Canadian photojournalist.
Dean Oliver, director of research and exhibitions at the museum, said the exhibit has been the institution's most popular one in recent history and will soon go on the road, first heading east to Newfoundland.
"The exhibit exceeded by a very wide margin what anybody thought we would get in terms of public interest," said Oliver, adding some of Pritchard's coverage is "very, very, touching and moving."
In other words, there is a thirst for this kind of storytelling that includes showing Afghan women risking their lives voting for the first time, while being protected by Canadian troops, or coverage of Canadian medics tending to a young boy who was badly burned in his family's home near Kandahar following a cooking stove explosion. All the little boy asked for after his pain was eased was for was a ballpoint pen. He died with it clutched in his tiny fist.
Why won't Canada's cultural community fund these documentaries? Ultimately, it comes down to this. These artists don't actually object to what they call "censorship" at all as long as they're the ones doing the "censoring." And they are.
That's why Pritchard can't get any cultural funding. He's just not kinky enough. It's time he sexed up his topic.
Maybe Babes in Burkas would get the cash flowing.
© The Gazette (Montreal) 2008
How Harper can stay the course and prevail
BRIAN LAGHI AND CAMPBELL CLARK
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
October 8, 2008 at 9:54 PM EDT
OTTAWA — It's ironic that the politician who prides himself on controlling the political agenda would be relying on something as volatile as the current financial markets to stabilize his election campaign. But even Stephen Harper's supporters say their leader faces limited options in dealing with the financial crisis and needs a little luck from the unpredictable TSX to get back his political groove.
Prevented from taking significant economic action by his repeated insistence that he's on the right path, Mr. Harper must hope that the market will deliver two days of relative calm before the weekend and soothe the nerves of Canadians anxious about their savings, home values and jobs. That may provide the kind of respite Mr. Harper needs from the battering he's faced this past week and take the edge off the recent momentum enjoyed by Stéphane Dion, underlined Wednesday by one of the Liberal Leader's best speeches of the campaign.
Senior Tories say they don't believe the Conservative Leader can completely change his strategy because to do so would repudiate his recent efforts to cast Mr. Dion as a panicky spender. Their best bet, said one Tory insider, is to hope for a relatively stable few days, followed by the calm of Thanksgiving. Under that scenario, Canadians would turn their minds to whom they believe would be the best prime minister and choose Mr. Harper.
“The market has to stay calm,” the senior Conservative said. “Harper is not in a position all of a sudden to be irresponsible with his rhetoric, and he shouldn't. We're not electing Oprah prime minister.”
But even if the market behaves, the next five days will bring several events that could have a significant effect on the vote.
On Thursday, Canada's new parliamentary budget officer, Kevin Page, is to release his report on the costs of the Afghanistan war. A big price tag for the military effort could cause a bump in the campaign, especially in Quebec, where the mission is unpopular. It could be a headache not just for the Conservatives, but also the Liberals, who initiated Canada's mission in Kandahar and backed its extension in Parliament.
A high price tag – the NDP estimates it will be more than $10-billion since 2001 – could be a boon for the NDP and the Bloc Québécois, who have called for Canada's immediate withdrawal from Afghanistan. They could tie the military effort to the Canadian economy and argue that it's not worth the cost.
“It's extremely important, particularly when we're in the economic waters we're in now and will be navigating in the next months or years,” said Ottawa New Democrat MP Paul Dewar.
On Friday, the government is to release new job figures. Significant job growth would be an opportunity for Mr. Harper to crow that the Canadian economy is more resilient than the opposition has claimed, but losses would only fuel his troubles.
TD economist Pascal Gauthier said his firm is forecasting modest growth of 15,000 jobs in September, perhaps fuelled by the public-sector. Looking forward, however, Canada could post job losses in future months.
As the weekend nears, the political parties will have to finalize their last-ditch ad campaigns, as most try to spend every remaining dollar of their spending limit reaching Canadians enjoying the weekend. One Tory said his party would try to bridge back to Mr. Dion's plans for a carbon tax under the Green Shift policy.
Tories are also buoyed by the fact that NDP Leader Jack Layton appears to be spending a significant amount of time trying to poach Liberal seats and are watching closely to see if Mr. Layton campaigns in ridings he feels he can steal from the Liberals.
Finally, the parties will have to deal with Green Party Leader Elizabeth May's advocacy of limited strategic voting to defeat the Conservatives. She said Wednesday that Canadians should think hard about the opportunity to unseat Mr. Harper and instead make Mr. Dion the minority prime minister, with Green MPs in the Commons.