Saturday, June 14, 2014

Poor, Poor Pitiful Keef.

There'sNoTrollLikeA
TeeVeeTrollVille


It would seem that the good Mr. Baldrey decided to troll pretty much all of #bced and #bcpoli late last night:




My suggestion for the between the brackets thingy...

...Stop trying to bully people for stating their opinion on the Twittmachine.

After all, I'm pretty sure they're entitled to it.

An opinion, I mean.


__________
And, in case you were wondering, the trolling worked...As such, the pity party is in full swing over at Mr. Thin Skin's twittmachine feed as we type...
Now is the time at the Gazette when we dance! (to the real Zevon thing)....





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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

SH

Poor long suffering, world weary Keith, the vigilance required to continually defend his dishonour both on twitter and on Sucking at the Edge must be taking its toll. Let's light the candles and alert the prayer chain!

In happier news, the CBC, for the second time I've witnessed, is getting up in Steve's business, has taken the gloves off and is Not! moderating comments re Steve's war on the herb...

http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/medical-marijuana-prescribing-doctors-should-be-reported-ottawa-says-1.2675444

Lew said...

I checked the categories for Pullitzer prize awards in journalism and didn't see one listed for largest number of twitter followers.

Keef is tweeting up the wrong twee.

Unknown said...

It's a lot easier to sit on your ass and tweet than it is do the stuff that journalists the world over do daily, namely, question what you've been told, research, constantly re-evaluate sources, remain strictly neutral and untainted, that sort of thing.

Grant G said...

I caught the very end of this week`s cutting edge of the ledge on CKNWyawn.....

The last caller said...

We need tax reform, every quarter banks are making billions in profit, big corporations too, all the money is being sucked upwards to the already extremely wealthy, surely banks and multinational corporations can afford to pay a little more, not small business but the big boys"....

To which both Keith Balderdash and Palmer said....

"You can`t spring taxes on the people, the NDP said they weren`t going to raise taxes and looked what happened to Gordon Campbell when he sprung the HST on the people, you can`t just raise taxes on the public"


I was shocked Ross...both Keith and Vaughn dodged the question and turned the theme upside down, the caller didn`t say tax the people, the caller called for taxing big profitable banks for education funding, the HST was a tax-break/tax refund for big corporations and banks and those taxes transferred to the public..

Un effing real..Keith Baldrey has dived deep into the sewer, soon, verysoon Keith Baldrey will be known as black face,....

Black faced from polishing Christy Clark`s shoes then kissing them...

Cheers

Anonymous said...

SH

Grant G, I heard that pathetic Friday the 13th spin-fest too...

For several months Good has been pontificating about the glut of teachers, the demands of the market blah, blah, blah. His cheerleaders naturally nodding. Deflect, deflect, deflect.

Earlier that morning, a teacher called into CBC's Daybreak South with Chris Walker re the strike, she got a an excellent sound bite in: she spoke of inequality and the concentration of wealth. I wonder how the Three Amigos would have spun that one?

I googled: "teachers strike concentration of power" and found the following essay that offers hope against the back-drop the Christy Liberal's own sloughing away of our public education system.

The Rebirth of the Chicago Teachers Union and Possibilities for a Counter-Hegemonic Education Movement (Hyper-link not working I see, will post in next comment)


"For nine days in September, Chicago belonged to the teachers, school paraprofessionals, and clinicians. On September 10, 2012, 26,000 members of the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) went on strike. It was the first teachers’ strike in Chicago in twenty-five years. While public and private sector unions have taken concessions and capitulated to cuts in wages, benefits, seniority rights, job protections, and much of what was won by the labor movement in the twentieth century, the CTU stood up to Mayor Rahm Emanuel, the Commercial Club of Chicago, and the billionaire hedge-fund managers who have set out to break teachers’ unions and dismantle public education. Chicago was a sea of CTU red. Teachers—and their parent, student, and community supporters—picketed at schools across the city, marched through neighborhood streets, and brought downtown Chicago to a standstill with mass rallies of thousands, day after day. There was no need to defend school entrances against scabs—there were none!"...

Anonymous said...

SH

Link re Chicago teachers:

http://monthlyreview.org/2013/06/01/the-rebirth-of-the-chicago-teachers-union-and-possibilities-for-a-counter-hegemonic-education-movement