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Thursday, August 31, 2023

I've got another side to Bartelman

Too much to say.

Former Ontario Lieutenant-Governor James Bartleman has died and the media is full of glowing reports of his accomplishments.

I've got another side.

Just after his tenure ended in 2006, I invited Bartleman to be the guest speaker at a Royal Commonwealth Society dinner and was thrilled when he accepted.  Little did I know his purpose in accepting was solely to trash Canada, the Commonwealth and all they represented.

With an Indigenous mother, Bartleman was a member of the Chippewas of Rama First Nation and attended a residential school.  That's what he trashed, the residential school system -- the very system that gave him the education that allowed him to succeed and become lieutenant governor!

He went on and on with such vitriol I was embarrassed and ashamed I had invited and introduced him.  He was the guest at the head table and I was sitting beside him, but it was so bad, I wanted to hide under it.  Here we were, a crowd of respectable, middle-aged members of a civil society, sitting there being accused of ruining his and many other's lives.

So, when I read in his obituary that he valued education above all else, I have to laugh.  "My mother insisted that we go as far as we could in school.  She instilled in us a pride of our native heritage," says 'The Globe and Mail' today.  

His greatest contribution was the establishment of the Lieutenant-Governor's Literacy Camps.  Wouldn't his experience and success at residential school have been his motivation?  Not from what he said in his speech because he described it as horrendous and ruinous.  

But wait, didn't that education enable him to go to university?  Didn't that education enable him to join Foreign Affairs and enjoy a 35-year career serving in 18 countries and regions across the world?  Didn't that experience enable him to become ambassador of Canada to Cuba, Israel, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the European Union and high commissioner South Africa and Australia?

So, folks, maybe he was having a bad day when he hectored us.  But I doubt it.  Bartleman took the perks willingly, but deplored the system that allowed him to get them.

Shameful.




Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Great job!

Illegals

The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) -- and I use the word "services" with very loose licence -- is trying to find 37,000 illegals of whom they have lost track.  37,000!!??@#%

These are people who strolled across the border illegally and solemnly promised, cross-their-hearts-hope-to-die to show up at their immigration hearings when summoned.

Fat chance.  As I type, there are 37,326 active immigration arrest warrants, of which 33,032 are to remove people from Canada.  Within that august group, 306 have Canada-wide warrants because they are deemed a danger to the public -- people who are members of criminal organizations, those engaged in human trafficking and smuggling, convicted sex offenders and those who have committed weapons and narcotics offences.

And it's only going to get worse because the last provinces that house illegals in their jails before deportation have just announced they're discontinuing the practice.  This means that even more will disappear, or as CBSA spokeswoman Rebecca Purdy naively put it, "They may disappear."  May?!!  They most definitely will.

Wait, no, scratch the above numbers.  Hold the presses!  'The Globe and Mail' just reported that the figure of mystery visitors is estimated to be about one million.  One million??!!$@#%@#  That's what economists are reporting.  Apparently StatsCan based its figures on the false assumption that students and visitors with temporary visas would voluntarily leave within 30 days of their documents expiring, so they didn't count them.

As I said, fat chance.  So, a million illegals are living in Canada and no one has a clue about how to find and deport them.  The agency's stated mandate is, "To ensure Canadians have the key information on Canada's economy, society and environment that they require to function effectively as citizens and decision makers."

Well, that isn't panning out is it.  Chief Statistician Anil Arora, 

Can't count

...you've clearly dropped the ball, so why the big smile?  You just got an F.

So, that's the result of Trudeau's insane and dangerous "Welcome to Canada" speech.  

Great job, Erin O'Gorman, president of the CBSA!  Great job!  Another woman who is a disgrace to our gender.  We all expect men in politics to be incompetent, but when women are, it's more pounced upon and disappointing.  Here's our girl Erin:

Another mess up.

The auditor general's report last year stated that, "The border agency had lost track of the whereabouts of a large number of foreign nationals facing deportation, sometimes for years.  The agency issued immigration warrants for their arrest, but seldom completed the required investigations to locate those with criminality."

How can they drop the ball so breathtakingly?!  "Case files were missing and there were delays in processing data.  Even high-priority cases were stalled, or inactive.  Missing travel documents, such as passports, meant people could not be deported, yet little was done to obtain these documents," the report went.

In spite of the publicity generated around the illegals being shipped from Texas to New York, Washington and Los Angeles, the CBSA seems incapable of tracking the thousands New York is shipping to Canada.  Apparently, it costs $400,000 to arrest and process those arriving in Texas; no clue what it costs here in Canada, but millions.

Note:  One reason for the millions of illegals crossing borders all over the world might be that everyone now has a cell phone.  I know it sounds crazy, but in the past, no one knew what life was really like in rich countries.  Now they do and they want a piece of it.  Crazy?  Maybe not.      

On another file, the CSBA won the "Code of Silence" award last year for its failure to reveal the cost of the disastrous 'ArrivCan' app.  How about more than $54 million and it doesn't work!!??!!

Oh well, just another ho-hum day in the life of this government.

 

 

Picnicking with my dead relatives

I submitted the following as an essay piece to 'The Globe and Mail'.  It didn't get in, but I think it should have.  Anyway, as I have speculated, I think the senior editors there google me and don't like my blog -- even after a junior had approved it for publication.  (That pissed me off.)  That's the trouble with my name:  I'm the only one in the world with it.

Here is the essay:

Picnicking with my dead relatives

My grandmother's generation.


When my grandmother was still alive, no Sunday was complete without a visit to the family plot.  There, she would place flowers on my grandfather’s grave and pay respects to other family buried there.  As children, we were always expected to go along on these weekly, after-Church excursions – boring as I found them at the time.

 

My grandmother’s father had been an undertaker in Brockville and with the family name “Lord”, naturally, she was teased.  “The Lord came down to bury the dead,” her friends would say.  Nevertheless, she was very comfortable with death and trips to cemeteries. 

 

We always made an annual summer visit to Brockville to visit her parents’ graves and yes, we planted flowers there too.  She told stories of accompanying her father to the homes of the dead to help him lay them out in the family parlour in preparation for the wakes that would be held.  Claude Jutras’ film ‘Mon Oncle Antoine’ reminded me of the tales she would tell of these visits to the bereaved.  It both fascinated and scared me.

        

We were also expected to plant flowers at my grandfather’s grave every Spring.  For the bleak, cold winters, she had us plant small evergreens which we trimmed in the summer.  We would wander off, while she lingered, and drift through the neighbouring tombs and plots.  My imagination would kick in, as I wondered about those long-dead souls who rested nearby.  Some names I knew because their children and grandchildren were in some of my classes.  Some headstones were very simple, others tall and elaborate.  

 

Not far from our family plot were rows and rows of small tombstones marking the military men and women who had gruesomely died defending Canada.  No one ever seemed to visit those lonely, lost souls.   

 

But the graves that stuck with me were those of babies and young children, often adorned with concrete angels.  Many were younger than I, or the same age.  How could they be dead, I wondered?  Might I too die soon?  These were perplexing, existential thoughts of which I could make no sense.  My grandfather had been an old man, not a child.  That was normal in my world. 

 

Death is a part of life, my mother always said and she began taking me to funeral parlours when I was very young.  The memories I have of these visits were of the scent of flowers juxtaposed with the sight of old people dressed up in their finery and laid out in coffins surrounded by weeping relatives.  “Doesn’t she look wonderful,” some would say, as they approached the coffin.  No, she doesn’t, I would think.  She looks dead.

 

That cemetery was where my father taught me to drive.  “You can’t kill anyone here,” he always laughed as I navigated winding lanes and steep inclines fumbling with a standard transmission that required stopping and starting on hills without stalling.

 

Yes, I learned very young that death was indeed a part of life.  When my brother and father died, my mother bought another plot nearby; our original being full by this time.  Now visits to the cemetery were longer, as we had to visit and care for both sites.  I don’t know when it started, but one day my mother suggested we bring along some lemonade, a few sandwiches and a blanket.  Afterall, we were landowners there.  

 

Thus began a tradition of picnics with family members – departed and living.  Every nice day, someone would suggest a cemetery picnic and off we would go.  Early pictures are of my mother sitting on grass over the family plot helping to plant flowers.  Later she would rest beneath it.  Picnic fare consisted of her favourite sandwiches – cuccumber or tomato on white bread with the crusts cut off.  Trust the Brits to elevate vegetable sandwiches to a high art when meat was scarce.  

 

Often, I would make egg or tuna salad, finishing off with peanut butter and jam and always, always a thermos of tea. Vegetables, fruit and dessert were added to the fare, as these events became more elaborate. 


As time went on, I began to pack elegant cocktails to replace the lemonade.  When my mother joined the departed gathering, no eyebrows were raised to this embellishment.  Often, we invited friends to join us, as we picnicked among many famous Canadians.  Sir Robert Borden, Canada’s eighth prime minister, John Rodolphus Booth, lumber baron, Sir Sanford Flemming, inventor of time zones, and Archibald Lampman, poet, are but a few. 


A nearby grave houses one of my bosses; another the son of a dear friend who tragically died at 24 of an epileptic seizure.  You never felt alone at that cemetery. 

 

As time went on, my husband and I thought it a good idea to get our affairs in order and purchase our own markers for the family plot.  Henceforth, picnics found us lounging on our own tombstones, contemplating the inevitable as we enjoyed lunches.  All that is missing on our stones are our dates of death.  Someone once remarked that on any headstone, the dash between the dates of birth and death tells the interesting part of the story.  Very true. 

  

When my mother-in-law died in England, we had her cremated and shipped over to join the gathering.  She now lies comfortably resting with my family, surrounded by the famous and infamous among the many species of birds and creatures that call the cemetery home. 

 

When we moved out west, we had one, final cemetery Caileigh.  It was a special moment and marked the end of my life of tranquil cemetery visits stretching back so many years.  We made one final trip around the grounds, saying goodbye to many friends and relatives and those lost soldiers nearby.  It was a sad moment, but the memories I have of picnicking with my relatives are ones I will cherish. 


Happily, I will be resting with them when my time comes; sadly there will be no one left to host picnics.   


Monday, August 28, 2023

Eritrean culture?

Getting sick of all the cultural festivals disrupting Toronto and causing great expense to taxpayers in the beautiful city in which I used to love to live. 

This goes on all over the world.

The latest is the Eritrean Cultural Festival, being held this week in that besieged town.  Naturally, they brought their wars along with the floats and costumes and a riot ensued injuring nine people who had to be taken to hospital for treatment.

Police had to be called out to settle everyone down -- costing even more money for the law-abiding burghers of Hog Town.  Twenty-two police were outrageously injured.  What will the hospital visits run?  They should not be given a permit next year.  Or ever again.

Same thing happens with these "festivals" in cities around the world.  Sweden and Germany have suffered the same fate, so these debacles are professionally orchestrated from afar.  Culture?  Hardly.  The point is to import tribal wars to countries where they know the rioters won't be killed by the authorities.  

That's the point and it's wrong.  Or maybe that is their culture:  War.

Same thing happens with Caribana in that overrun and besieged city.  And every Pride Parade anywhere.  As I have said, I can't bring my grandchildren to one because it's total porn -- not pride.


Another group that imports its wars is the Somalians.  There was a shooting at a wedding not long ago in Ottawa and two Somalian gang members were killed.  WTF?!?!  When you come here, leave you gang sh-t at home.

Leave your shoes at the door when you come to Canada.  Getting very, very old.  

An empty vessel

 

Her ass.

This is the exact chair into which Chrystia Freeland's ass...

Yes, this ass.

...was stuffed the other day at the Chateau Laurier.  Sitting at the bar (where else?), I noticed her yapping at a flunkie while flipping her hair around and blabbing non-stop at the poor guy.  

Naturally, I had to occupy it when she left -- just so I could blog about it.  So, there you are.  Blogged.

As you can tell, I am not a fan.  Married to a London School of Economics grad, I have absorbed too much depressing data for my own good about what a mess she and the hapless Trudeau are making of the Canadian economy.  The sad thing is the people who voted for this wrecking crew will just keep doing it.  

"The NDP are toast," said Bob Fife a while ago on TV.  He also came into 'ZoĆ©'s Lounge'...

...while we were staying there on our way up to the cottage and I stopped to say hello and remind him of the comment.

"I still feel that way," he confirmed.  That's why the Liberals stay in power because the NDP and the hopeless Jagmeet Singh prop them up at every turn ensuring they will not have to face the voters, until Singh is assured of a pension, because believe me, the NDP will get a severe shellacking.

It's all so depressing.

The Chateau was celebrating Pride Month and flags were everywhere:

What's with all the Pride celebrations?  It's getting a bit overbearing and frankly, meaningless.  Another sight to behold was a couple sitting beside us on the patio.  "They must be the grandparents," I said to B, noticing they were a little old to be pushing a pram.  On closer inspection, I realized it wasn't a baby, it was a dog in the carriage.  A dog!!  Must have declared it a service dog to be able to get away with it.  Can you see it peeping out the back?

________________________

What wasn't depressing was our family holiday at our old cottage, where we vacationed for 30 years.  Seven of us were jammed into a tiny two-bedroom abode for two weeks -- including three alpha males and two alpha females.  Surprisingly, peace held in our little hideaway between Gracefield and Maniwaki.  Here are a few snaps:




 






Probably our last visit.  Airports are becoming impossible for both of us.

This place is called The Gatineau Fish & Game Club and we have been members since 1983.  Brian served on the board for nine years and was president from 1998 to 2000.  Dinners are held every Wednesday and Saturday nights and while we were there, the governor of the Bank of Canada, also a member, attended one.  I was shocked at what a silly guy he was -- punching people's shoulders, giggling and other juvenile stuff.

I told B to approach and introduce himself.  I was hoping he'd ask him what he was doing with the economy.  I watched as Tiff Maclem shook B's hand, said a few words and then abruptly turned away.  B told me that Maclem had said, "So, you're a new member are you?"  No, 40 years.  "Where are you from?"  Calgary.  That's when Maclem gave him the back of his head.  Guess he didn't want a guy from the West debating economic policy with him.  B graduated from the London School of Economics; Maclem from Western.  

Nuff said.   


Saturday, August 5, 2023

More of the same

Thief in Chief.

More grand theft is taking place on the Frog Lake First Nation by those "managing" the money.  Chief Gregory Desjarlais, above, and his council are refusing to release financial documents to Indigenous activist, Hans McCarthy.  I have blogged this countless times, but here's yet another example.  

McCarthy, has asked Trudeau to help get accountability from his band's leaders.  Naturally, Trudeau has refused.  Afterall, one of the first things Trudeau did when he took office was cancel the financial accountability act for Indigenous bands.  That was wrong and it's leading to more, ahem, "irregularities".

Fighting for accountability at the Frog Lake First Nation, McCarthy is predictably getting nowhere.  He's in the same boat as former AFN chief RoseAnne Archibald, who was illegally dumped as national leader when she too called for a forensic audit of the AFN's finances.  It was bye-bye RoseAnne and the same stonewalling will befall McCarthy -- even if the courts rule in his favour.

Why does no one call this out?  

Frog Lake should be extremely wealthy because of its oil wells, but naturally, many of its members remain mired in poverty.  Here's the real deal:

In 2013, Frog Lake's trust fund, funded by oil revenues, totaled about $100 million, according to documents released as required by the First Nations Financial Transparency Act.  Documents now show only $3 million is left.  Where'd the other $97 million poof to?

McCarthy asked his chief and council for documents showing where the money went.  Did they comply?  Rhetorical.

So, he connected with the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.  Together they filed access to information requests to get documents from Ottawa.  Got nowhere.

Now, McCarthy and the CTF are taking Ottawa to court to force the government to release the important documents. This is about holding both the Frog Lake First Nation to account.  But it’s also about defending a clear principle: both the federal government and First Nations leaders have to be accountable and transparent.

Legal costs are estimated to be $45,000, so if anyone wants to contribute, go online and google the Canadian taxpayers foundation.  I intend to.

Remember Charmaine Stick, another Indigenous activist who partnered with the CTF?  I have blogged her several times.  She's standing with McCarthy, but to date, despite several court orders, the Onion Lake Band is still in defiance and refuses to release the financial records to Ms. Stick.

To this government, it's all "ho-hum, who cares?"