I've often said that the number one problem confronting policy-makers today, not just in Canada but throughout the Western world, is the general, and in my opinion cataclysmic, degradation in the quality of thinking that goes into the positions they take on issues and the policies that are derived therefrom. A prime example of this alarming trend is “Earth Hour” and the practices identified with this event.
Thursday, 19 March 2009
Sunday, 25 January 2009
Don't borrow more - Cut spending!
Recently, two very different approaches to public finances were highlighted in statements made by representatives of two provincial governments in Canada, ironically both liberals. In Ontario, Dalton McGuinty’s finance minister Dwight Duncan announced that the Liberal government would post a budget deficit of at least $500 million in 2009 despite the fact that he is dipping into the province’s reserve funds to the tune of another $550 million.
Wednesday, 14 January 2009
Better to remain silent and let people think you’re a fool
On January 12 The Guelph Mercury published a column by Geoffrey Stevens on the subject of abortion and the ongoing debate among members of the federal Conservative Party and its parliamentary caucus over what position the party should take on this issue. It’s hard to imagine a more inane analysis of the topic making its way into print in a mainstream newspaper, even a relatively small-town paper like the Mercury.
Thursday, 18 December 2008
No Virginia, we’re not all Keynesians now
With the showdown over who will ultimately hold the reins of power in Ottawa in at least temporary abeyance, people are now focusing their attention on what if any action the government should be taking in response to still developing global financial crisis. Almost everyone seems to agree that Canada needs an “economic stimulus package”. What should such a “package” consist of though, and how big should it be?
Tuesday, 16 December 2008
Harper must defend conservative policy, not play political games
Let me make one thing very clear right from the start – I do not approve of the federal Liberal and NDP parties’ attempt to topple Stephen Harper’s minority government and replace it with a coalition government of their own. But “coup d’état”? “Sedition”? A “subversion of democracy”? Now that Parliament has been prorogued and the crisis averted until at least the end of next month, can we all please, please take a deep breath and relax?
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