Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Saved By The Francophone Canadian Bell!

AllThingsOldFrenchAreNotNecessarily
NewFrenchAgainVille



So.

It would appear that, according to her press release at least, Christy Clark's lousy french is a major reason that she has decided not to run for the leadership of the Canadian Liberal Party:

...While we have come a long way, in a short time, there is simply not enough time to mount asuccessful campaign and for me to effectively connect with Francophone Canadians in their
language. I have worked hard at improving my French but it’s not where it needs to be, today...


Ignoring that use of the collective noun for the moment, one can only wonder if, perhaps, all that time Ms. Clark spent working hard might have been more effective if she had actually spent it Francophone Canada rather than, you know, France:



However, fortunately (or unfortunately depending on your point of view), Ms. Clark has also assured us that this press release is  not a 'you won't have Nixon....errrr...Clark to kick around anymore' kind of a statement because:

..Friends, I will continue to fight for Liberal candidates and am deeply thankful for the outpouring of support I have received from the grassroots over the past week.

We will meet again...


Oh boy.


_______
Of course,
as we have noted before, last summer was not the first time that Ms. Clark worked hard on something that may or may have not been learning french while in France.
All snark aside, if Ms. Clark were to run for the Fed Libs in the next election, is there any riding in Lotusland, Coastal Division, that she could actually win?


.

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Career Opportunitist, The One Who Always Knocks.

SheDon'tWannaMakeTea
AtTheCBCVille


Nevermind the con-party membership thing for the moment.

Instead, let's consider where Ms. Christy Clark was and what was she doing when she endorsed Jean Charest for the Conservative Party of Canada leadership in August of 2022.

The following is from a piece by Lindsay Campbell in iPolitics at from that time:

...At a conference held on Thursday (in Edmonton) by the centre-right organization Centre Ice Conservatives, Clark spoke about how there’s a need for a centrist party that’s willing to unite the country and listen to the opinions of all Canadians...

{snip}

...Clark, a keynote speaker for the conference, told attendees that as politicians move toward the fringes, Centre Ice Conservatives are part of “a special kind of activism” to preserve a middle political path and “bring Canada back together.”...


And what is Ms. Clark's 'special kind of activism' bit all about?

Well.

...Though Clark said politicians, in general, don’t know how to have constructive dialogue and listen to opposing views, she specifically put (Justin) Trudeau on blast for the way he approached the convoy protests and people opposed to vaccines...


Aaahhh...

Now I get it, it's all about that third way(ish), anti-woke, compassionate centrist conservatism.

Or some such thing.

****

In addition to agreeing to be their keynote speaker Ms. Clark doubled down and became a member of the Centre Ice Conservative's 'advisory council'.

But then, about a year later in the fall of 2023, when those same fine folks first dropped the term conservative from their moniker and then turned themselves into a brand new soccer ball-free national political party called 'Canadian Future', Ms. Clark lost all courage of any actual convictions she originally had (or did not have) and was nowhere to be found.

Natasha Bulowski of the National Observer had that story at the time:

...Canadian Future will be headed by a national council with a representative from each province and territory and it intends to hold a founding convention in 2024. The Centre Ice Canadians sports a team webpage that includes former Conservative MP Peter Kent and former Conservative Senate leader Marjory LeBreton. Former B.C. premier Christy Clark was once listed on the organization’s advisory council but is no longer there and did not return a request for comment...


So, what changed such that, suddenly, Ms. Clark was once again a life long Liberal?

I reckon it just might have something to do with Ms. Clark's oft-demonstrated penchant for being a career opportunist of the highest order.

Otherwise known as being, essentially, the anti-Strummer...




______
And who started up this centrist conservative thingy in the first place?...Why, none other than a guy who was once a BC Liberal bagman and Falconator backer named Rick Peterson who later went all in with the pre-Rustadian BC Cons. 
And yes, Mrs. Griffiths, the spelling mistake in the header was on purpose.


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Saturday, January 11, 2025

What Lesson Learned, Exactly?


Lessons?WeDon'tNeedNoStinkingLessons!
PoliticalExpediencyVille


In retrospect, it looks like, perhaps, Marky Mark had a premonition (and/or an mp3 file) that set him to thinking that something was coming down the tracks Thursday:




Because, low and behold, on Friday the CBC published a wee-bit of a fact checking piece base on Ms. Clark's soon to be released national radio interview on 'The House' in which the subject of her consorting with the Conservative Party of Canada came up:

Former B.C. premier Christy Clark — who is considering running for the federal Liberal leadership — is denying that she was previously a member of the Conservative Party, despite past comments where she said otherwise...

{snip}

"I never got a membership and I never got a ballot," Clark told host Catherine Cullen in an interview airing Saturday.

"I came out and I supported Jean Charest and the reason I did this is simple: I thought it was vitally important that we stopped Pierre Poilievre."...

{snip}

..."I never got a membership and I never got a ballot," Clark told host Catherine Cullen in an interview airing Saturday.

A spokesperson for the Conservative Party refuted Clark's claims, saying they have records of Clark's membership from the 2022 leadership race.

"Christy Clark purchased a Conservative Party membership through Jean Charest's leadership campaign. That membership is no longer active," Sarah Fischer, the party's director of communications, said in an email.

When asked about Fischer's statement, Clark pushed back and insisted she had never been a member.

"Why don't they come out and show my membership or my ballot? They never sent me any of those — although I wouldn't put it past them to manufacture one of them," Clark told Cullen.

Following Clark's interview on The House, the Conservative Party provided a screenshot of a membership database that suggests Clark had membership from June 2022 to June 2023.

Clark's comments to CBC News also contradict what she had said during the time of the Conservative leadership contest...


And how did the good Ms. Clark respond?

Well.

Just as those of us who have been paying attention for the last twenty years, plus, might have predicted...




Shite, happens, indeed.

The real question, now is, what lesson did the good Ms. Clark learn, exactly?


(and please note that Ms. Clark, in the vTweet above, did not admit either that she had been a Conservative Party of Canada member or that she lied about it, multiple times, during and after a national radio interview about if and why she 'might' run for the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada)


______
Tip 'O The Toque
to reader Graham for the heads-up on all this yesterday afternoon....
You can, if you wish to subject yourself to it, listen to the part of the national radio interview concerned...Here...But don't complain that we did not warn you about exposing your auditory system to fingernails slowly sliding on down a blackboard for the one minute and twenty-five seconds concerned...
Post to follow?...Where, exactly, was Ms. Clark, and what was she doing, when she jumped on the Charest train back in oh so long ago 2022?



.

Friday, January 10, 2025

Sycophants on Speed Dial.

SmartLessIs
NotJustAPodcastVille



Alec Lazenby of postmedia has a piece up wherein a goodly number of  Christy Clark's former 'colleagues' extol her virtues as the potential leader of the federal Liberals.

It's a provincial story, in the classic sense, and it's really not worth the pixel ink that it's printed on.

But still, I couldn't lay off this bit:

“I think she certainly has the potential to be a dark horse in the race,” said Stephen Smart, general manager of Hill & Knowlton Western Canada and a former press secretary to Clark.

“I really think those who might dismiss her in this race out of the gate really do so at their own peril. She builds great teams around her. She has the potential to really get people on-board. She has been a member of the Liberal Party of Canada for a very long time.”


Ahhh yes...

The good Mr. Smart, the former political reporter who once ignored the conflicty position he put his employer at the time, the CBC, in, given his relationship with one of the members of Ms. Clark's team back in the day. This conflictyness was pointed out by the likes of Norm Farrell, was confirmed by the CBC's then ombudsman Kirk LaPointe, and was ultimately railed against by the likes of Keith Baldrey and other local corpMedia members and practitioners.

And then there was, once he became a full-time member of Ms. Clarks 'team', the time that Ms. Smart shut out legitimate reporters while ensuring that Ms. Clark got face time with the friendlies, all so as to make sure substance never got in way of a good old-fashioned carpool karaoke.

And, just to prove that the synergistic sycophancy never ends, please note that Ms. Smart now works for Hill and Knowlton, the big-time super-fine PR firm.

Gosh.

Now that I think of it.

Would it be unreasonable to wonder if  Mr. Smart's current employment status had anything whatsoever to do with Mr. Lazenby's story being placed in the pages of Postmedia print organs in the the first place?


______
And ya, I still have archives and I'm going keep using them!


.

Thursday, January 09, 2025

Liberal Leadership Race...Last Place Horses Jockey For Position.



AndThey're
OffVille



Remember that race card from Robert 'Send Me All Your Leaks!' Fife that had the two so-called outsiders, Mark Carney and Christy Clark, at the bottom of the odds list?

Well, Evan Scrimshaw has weighed in and he thinks that Ms. Clark has the edge:

...The difference between Carney and, say, Christy Clark - both nominal “outsider” candidates - is that everybody in the party knows Clark can do the basic things of both governing and campaigning well. There is little confidence in Carney, and his Globe op-ed has gone over like a bucket of warm piss - raising more questions about his instincts...


Gosh.

Did Marky Mark get to the good Mr. Scrimshaw?


_____
All snark aside,
we should probably give Mr. Scrimshaw a wee bit of a break...After all, he is an Ontarian who probably gets a good proportion of his takes on BC politics from the likes of Ron Obvious.




.

Sunday, January 05, 2025

Fifeing Towards Ottawa?


Kloutish
KlubbingVille


From deep within the bowels of the FifeMaster Flash's leak-laden account of Justin Trudeau's apparent coming resignation in Sunday's online version of the Globe and (nolongerEmpire) Mail:

...Liberal candidates who are possible leadership contenders: Ms. Freeland, Mr. LeBlanc, former housing minister Sean Fraser, Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly, Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne, Transport Minister Anita Anand, former central banker Mark Carney and former B.C. premier Christy Clark...


The behind-the-red-curtain machinations of Marky Mark aside, could it be all that marvellous Sorbonne-assisted french that catapulted Ms. Clark up on to the bottom rung of Mr. Fife's illustrious ladder?


______
Leak-laden?...Well, given that there were five anonymous sources underpinning the Fife Master's story, how else to describe it?
Klout Klub?...This!


.

Crawling Through The Bloggodome...



IAmMyOwn
AlgorithmVille



Interesting stuff that (mostly) popped up on the Blog Crawl, which is located stage left for those of you all not on their phones,  over the last little while:


Paul Krugman Unleashed: Crypto Is For Criming.

...If you go back to the 2008 white paper by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto that gave rise to Bitcoin, its main argument was that we needed to replace checking accounts with blockchain-based payments because you can’t trust banks; crypto promoters also tend to preach libertarianism, touting crypto as a way to escape government tyranny. Now we have crypto boosters demanding that the evil government force the evil banks to let them have conventional checking accounts...

...(T)he real reason banks don’t want to be financially connected to crypto is that they believe, with good reason, that to the extent that cryptocurrencies are used for anything besides speculation, much of that activity is criminal — and they don’t want to be accused of acting as accessories...

Relevance?...The Bitcoinlandic aspirations of our current mayor Mr. Sim.

****

City Hall Watch: Local (Lotuslandian) News Stories to Watch in 2025 (the following is just one of many worth considering).

...The Broadway Plan will see more proposals coming forward that will ask for density well in excess of the maximums put in place. One example is tower proposal at 1110 West 10th Avenue that has a proposed floor space ratio of 10.1, while the maximum under the Broadway Plan is 6.5. Such changes will essentially make this plan meaningless and a “free for all”. Staff have no intention to Pause the Plan (see video of the Pause the Plan rally here)...

Relevance?
...All (developmental big money) politics is local.

****

Jody Paterson's Closer Look: Lessons from the United Healthcare Murder:

...(O)f course, (United Healthcare CEO) Thompson wasn’t doing anything illegal when he ran his company hard on health-care claims. His shareholders and his big bosses might have loved him for it.

Yet millions of Americans have died, grown sicker or been bankrupted by the decisions of their health-care insurance providers. One study found that 36 per cent of the Americans surveyed had had at least one claim denied, and most of them had been denied multiple times.

What justice exists in such a system? Most companies would have an appeal process for individuals, but this 2023 ProPublica article says the appeal rate is one per cent. There’s court, but that’s money and time that few have. In truth, Americans have virtually no chance of justice against corporate decision-making around health care, yet their very lives are being ripped apart by the corporate direction being set by men like Thompson...

Relevance?...When it comes to public healthcare and justice for the public, universality matters for both.

****

A. L. Kennedy writing in the Guardian: In Hopeless Times We Can Never Afford To Lose Hope.

...Whether we dig out a new sub-basement to hell’s deepest circle (in 2025) rests partly in the hands of Elon “Space Karen” Musk, who’s busy gridlocking the US government, but will officially become the de facto Goblin King of Everywhere at roughly noon on 20 January. Thereafter, Xitter will shake off its remaining sane users and simply become a vast international Ouija board, amplifying the worst afterthoughts of the world’s worst people...

{snip}

...Our dying country and our dying world are mostly in the hands of underqualified nepo babies and grifters destined to fail upwards, abandoning every fire they’ve started, and kicking through drifts of our money like kids in autumn leaves. The future can seem bleak. And the majority can seem weak. But we’re not.

Need to know even more about survival? Drop in at a refugee support centre like the splendid Refuweegee and talk to the expats from countries other than Britain, people who have endured the unimaginable and not abandoned hope. Talk to domestic abuse survivors, to street homeless people, to people who are mocked and hated for simply existing. They’re still here – alive, against the odds. We’re all still here with an unmet obligation to help and learn from one another...

Relevance?... Self evident.


______
Image at the top of the post?...That 'Space Karen' reference, above, as public art, at the corner of 10th and Market in the City once roamed by a writer, Dashiell Hammett, whose characters would most assuredly wipe the floor of such creatures if they were around today.


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Friday, January 03, 2025

Oligarchigal Overdrive.


DogeDiving
InTheShallowEndOfTheSelfDealingPoolVille



By now you may have heard that his most highly excellent and most exquisitely exalted US'ian government-contractor-in-chief, Mr. Elon Musk, has gone to rhetorical war against the looniest of the MAGA goonery that is calling for the mass deportation of skilled immigrants who came to the country on H-1B visas.

Ostensibly, according to Mr. Musk at least, these workers are vital to the interests of the American tech industry because:

...“The number of people who are super talented engineers AND super motivated in the USA is far too low,” Musk wrote on X on Christmas. “If you want your TEAM to win the championship, you need to recruit top talent wherever they may be.”...


But is that the real reason why companies like, say, Tesla hire huge numbers of workers through the H-1B program?

Perhaps not, as noted in an NY Times OpEd piece today by Farah Stockman:

...Most H-1B visa holders are lower-paid labor, not top talent. In May, Musk laid off more than 14,000 Tesla workers, including many H-1B visa holders. Reddit threads filled with laments by workers who had moved to the United States from India only to be let go with no warning. They were desperate to remain in the country, but because H-1B visas are owned by the employer, they had few options for doing so...


Imagine that!


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Thursday, January 02, 2025

It's The Grid Storage, Stupid.


BridgeFddlin'
WhileRomeBurnsVille

'It's the economy, stupid.'

If you are old enough, you likely remember the one liner, above, that is supposed to have, especially according to the flack who coined it, James Carville, contributed to the election of the oldest living US'ian president, William Jefferson Clinton in 1992.

But never mind the bollocks, or a guy named Ross Perot, because I figure the time has come to re-work that one liner into the snowclone that is the header at the top of this post because, according to those commie-pinko, tree-huggers at the Economist:

Energy storage for the electrical grid is about to hit the big time. By the reckoning of the International Energy Agency (IEA), a forecaster, grid-scale storage is now the fastest-growing of all the energy technologies. In 2025, some 80 gigawatts of new grid-scale energy storage will be added globally, an eight-fold increase from 2021...

{snip}

...The IEA predicts that in 2025 the combination of solar-photovoltaic generation and battery storage will be cheaper than the cost of coal-fired power in China, and new gas-fired plants in America...


And likely cheaper, too, than any of these other 'bridge' fuels we here in CanuckistanMikitaVille are constantly being told, by those who will profit most, must be extracted, shipped, exploited and burned as fast as possible before the large scale transition to renewable energy can be made economically not stupid.

OK?


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Wednesday, January 01, 2025

What Fresh Hell Is This?


Enshittification
OverdriveVille


Happy New Year.

Which means that it is now the year that the worsening of all things online will continue at warped speed:

Meta is betting that characters generated by artificial intelligence will fill its social media platforms in the next few years as it looks to the fast-developing technology to drive engagement with its 3bn users.

“We expect these AIs to actually, over time, exist on our platforms, kind of in the same way that accounts do,” said Connor Hayes, vice-president of product for generative AI at Meta. 

“They’ll have bios and profile pictures and be able to generate and share content powered by AI on the platform . . . that’s where we see all of this going,” he added.

Hayes said a “priority” for Meta over the next two years was to make its apps “more entertaining and engaging”, which included considering how to make the interaction with AI more social...


Now.

I know that Norm Farrell, NVG, DS, and Dr. Beer 'N Hockey are on the level because I've actually met them, in person, in real life.

And I think I met GarFish in a past life.

And I've known Danneau, and Graham, and eaf, and EE, and TB, and Scotty on Denman, and Lew E, and Chuckstraight, and JP, and Keith, and Grant G, and just about all the rest of you who have been stopping by here occasionally since the days when AI grifterians like Sam Altman were still in short pants and/or were about to quit Stanford. Thus, I'm pretty sure you all are real as well.

But what do we do when a new commenter shows up now? 

Do we have them to send us imprints of their retinas and, maybe, cheek swabs just to be sure they're something more than neural-networked gobs of goo in the machine?


_____
Image at the top of the post?
...Header originator Dorothy Parker working her typewriter far from the madding Algonquin Roundtable crowd at her farmhouse in Bucks County PA...The guy sitting by the window is not Paul Newman. Instead, it's her then husband Alan Campbell... The photo was taken in 1937, the year the two of them worked with collaborator Robert Carson to write the screenplay to 'A Star Is Born'.

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Political Man Yells At Clouds...And Wind And Rain.


MayNoneOfYourWishes
ComeTrueVille


Just catching up on any and all Kevin O'Leary-free year end dumbness...

The following is from the BC Conservative Party's Transportation 'Critic':





Gosh.

Given that he does not appear to have the courage of his bridge convictions, what is the good Mr. Bhangu actually suggesting - a big, beautiful weather wall paid for by the left-sided ferry takers from the Republic of Van Isle, perhaps?


.

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

T'was The Night Of Christmas, And All Through The House...



NotAStudentWasStirring
NotEvenAnExamMouseVille



Took the picture, above, looking down on the empty study area in the place of my day job just after the last final exam on the last weekend before the holiday break started.

I was in the lab that day culling vials old cell lines from the liquid nitrogen tanks. That's my job these days, doing the gardening when new cells come and the pruning when we're done with them.

Truth be told, the star kids doing the real work, the intricate stuff, don't want me getting in the way gumming up the works.

Anyway.

Now that the night before has past, here's a fantastic, tree- and bauble-free,  Christmas story for the ages by Paul Auster, one of my most favourite of all authors who passed away a year ago last spring:





We're on The Republic of (South) Vancouver Island for the holidays...Have the best time possible everybody and talk to you all soon!


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Saturday, December 21, 2024

Rail Hoppin' Pipe Dream On Tracks That Don't Even Exist.


CascadiaCalling
NotMackinVille


Keep on dropping those drips into a massive $100 billion budget bucket and pretty soon you will be talking about real money:

The dream of high-speed passenger rail connecting Vancouver to cities in the Pacific Northwest inched a little closer on Thursday, with the announcement of millions of dollars in new U.S. government funding.

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Railroad Administration announced $US49.7 million for planning on a proposed Cascadia High-Speed Rail project. Washington state has kicked in a further US$5.6 million...


And then there is British Columbia's micro-drippage:

Since discussions began in 2018 on proposed high-speed rail service through Cascadia corridor, B.C. has provided $900,000 in development funding to explore this connection between Portland and Vancouver...


Now.

While they do play a half-dozen or so big time college football games a year there, why the heckfire would anyone want to lay out an additional ten or twenty billion to push the line all the way south to Eugene anyway?



_____
Speaking of trains and tracks
and all that...Meanwhile, very sadly, in Stanley Park...



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Friday, December 20, 2024

Hat Day!


RowUpon
RowVille


Littler (but now pretty much fully big), e. started her project a little over a week ago.

In fact, last weekend when the two E's and me went out for our traditional mad scramble shopping day, e. was dragging a huge bag of yarn along with her.

And then, on Wednesday, she sent us the picture above.

Why 18 different hats?

Because that is precisely how many kids e. is working with these days.

As you can imagine, when I saw the videos her charges joyously receiving their hats, one by one, with explanations of why their particular design and colour scheme had been chosen for them alone, I became extremely verklempt in the best of all possible ways

Here are all the hats in a stack, which I also get an immense kick out of:



****

It turns out that e.'s project was inspired by a teacher, Madame T, who did a similar thing for the entire class when she was a little kid.

Speaking of which, here is the actual littler version of said kid of mine, which was recorded not long after the seed was planted by that most ingenious of memory makers, Madame T...







.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Who Goes Quisling?


TheCaving
ClassVille



A few days ago, we noted that ABC News turtled when it settled a frivolous lawsuit from an authoritarian politician bent on running the free world by the 'rules' of professional wrestling.

That settlement was first reported last Saturday, Dec 14th.

And here's what happened five days earlier:

...Debra O'Connell, the Disney executive who directly oversees ABC News, dined with Mr. Trump’s incoming chief of staff, Susie Wiles, in Palm Beach last Monday, according to two people briefed on their interaction. The dinner was part of a visit by several ABC News executives to Florida to meet with Mr. Trump’s transition team...


Now.

As Charlie Angus recently noted, quislings can never be trusted to act in the public's interest when the going gets tough.

OK?


____
The post's title
comes from a very famous, and still highly relevant, essay by Dorothy Thompson for Harper's in August of 1941...And, yes, you got that date right.