Double standard

Tags

, , , , , ,

In the process of electing a new speaker of the House of Commons, first-past-the-post isn’t good enough.
MPs will continue voting until someone wins with more than 50% of the vote.
Why can’t we have the same standard to elect our MPs?

Going postal

Tags

, , ,

Graffiti by design

Within a day, we’ll find out if Canada will be without lettermail service.
Canada Post Corp. and its union are reportedly back at the bargaining table to hammer out a last-minute agreement.
If I was a postal worker, I’d be hoping a deal is done long before 12:01 a.m. ET Friday morning.
Depriving Canadians of postal service in this age will only serve to prove how much we can get along without a lettermail monopoly.
Already, electronic transactions have overtaken the use of cheques and the payment of bills on paper.
Volunteers are standing at the ready to deliver benefit payouts to the needy.
The Alberta government is ready to turn their offices into mail depots.
Some magazines are preparing contingency plans where they’ll deliver their content through their websites in the event of a postal strike.
Need packages delivered from purchases online? Businesses are already switching to private parcel providers to make sure you get your goods. Some are even eating the cost so consumers don’t have to foot the bill.
There might be some noticeable disruptions in smaller communities not served by private operators, but the vast majority of Canadians will simply find a way to get by without.
And once a strike ends, they might learn life was just fine without Canada Post, thank you very much.
So while the postal union has its heart set on sweet arrangements for lifetime banking of sick days (unheard of in most workplaces) and on pensions, among other things, fighting for those gains might eventually cause its members to be out of work in the long run.
Be careful what you wish for.

Water rising

Tags

, , , , , , , , ,

Lots of rain, plus spring melt and you start to get scenes like this.

Water rising

The lower pathways on both sides of the Bow River @ Centre St. were closed to the public because of this.
Of course the situation is much worse in lower-lying areas across southern Alberta this weekend.

Incommunicado



Incommunicado, originally uploaded by Ricky Leong.

Kind of ironic to see on a government building, isn’t it? Shot in Sunnyside, Calgary, on May 13, 2011.

Appeal to calm and reason

Tags

, , , ,

After this weekend’s assassination attempt on Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, which resulted in six other being shot to death and about a dozen more injured, some voices in the political wilderness appealed for a moderation in the political debate.
The suggestion was met with something less than moderation by a few commentators, who suggested that the Tucson tragedy was being manipulated to silence free speech and political opposition.
I humbly posit it’s possible to have a full and open political debate without a free-for-all.
Calling people names, making fun of their cultural or political heritage or making veiled threats are absolutely unnecessary.
However, I would also suggest it is someone’s right to be a jackass if they so choose.
The words extremist and compromise and rarely uttered in the same breath.
It would be a good bet to expect the extreme elements in all parts of the political spectrum will continue to spew their vitriol, regardless of whatever appeal to calm is extended to them.
It might be better to call on to the ordinary person’s good sense to ignore those errant voices.

Happy New Year

Tags

, , , ,

Bring on 2011

Merry Christmas 2010

Tags

, , , , , , , , ,

Holy day approaches

Fire in the sky

Tags

, , , , , , , , ,

Spectacular sunset over Calgary on Tuesday, Dec. 21, 2010:

Fire in the sky

World of glass

Tags

, , , , , , , ,

Spotted in the (relatively) new wing at Trudeau International Airport in Montreal:

World of glass

Duckett going under makes news … down under

Tags

, , , , ,

The dismissal of Stephen Duckett as the president and CEO of Alberta Health Services is top news in Australia’s The Age newspaper:
DuckettInOz