Will Manitobans surrender their children to the surrogacy of the state and accept this new level of servitude on behalf of their children? Do Manitobans hate God enough to embrace this idolatry and misguided spirit of indolence as their legacy? Or do Manitobans still love God enough to resist this assault on the messianic rule of Christ and the role of parents in administering this rule in the jurisdiction of the family?
MacLean’s – October 21, 2010
Public pensions for the private sector: NDP government announced it will provide a pension plan for all daycare staff in the province of Manitoba
By Peter Shawn Taylor
Pensions and toddlers don’t often go together. They do now in Manitoba. Last week, the NDP government announced it will provide a pension plan for all daycare staff in the province. An estimated 7,000 workers will qualify, including those who offer child care out of their home. It’s proving a controversial move.
National Post – Sept. 22, 2010
Manitoba judge seeks lawsuit dismissal
By Kenyon Wallace
The Frontier Centre For Public Policy – September 13, 2010
Cut-Rate Tuition is a Bad Deal for Taxpayers: Low Tuition in Manitoba and Quebec Does Little to Promote Access
By Ben Eisen
In Brief:
* University tuition levels vary widely from province to province.
One of the most dangerous steps in the direction from the Christian order of liberty and equity towards Humanism’s tyranny has already been embraced by most Canadians, by default if not by design, and it`s illustrated by a story out of Manitoba as recorded below. Most of what we believe is by default rather than design because most people do not know what they believe and why over against what they do not believe and why. To reach such a place takes a great deal of hard work. This step in the direction of tyranny that has become tolerated in Canada is the abandonment of the principle of equality before the law. Sure, Canadians today, including our politicians and judges, continue to verbalize a commitment to equality before the law. It’s easy to say the words. It’s much harder to have real substance behind those words. Most Canadians today, when they talk about equality before the law actually use this rhetoric to advance an explicitly unequal agenda, the agenda of affirmative action.
Toronto Sun – September 3, 2010
Lawyers say CBC went too far with bondage judge
By Brian Lilley
National Post – Sept. 3, 2010
fit to judge
By Alice Woolley, associate professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Calgary
I don’t know if ustream’s mucking about with my videos, or if it’s a random glitch, but you may have tried to access ChristianGovernance’s latest video commentary only to receive the notice that it’s status was switched to private, preventing your viewing. It has been switched back so you can now watch it. We apologize for the inconvenience.
We posted a new ChristianGovernance video commentary this evening. We look at how Christian governance is a breathe of fresh air, especially compared with our competition. What is our competition? An S&M judge in Manitoba. Tony Blair saying “Politicians are obliged from time to time to conceal the full truth, to bend it and even distort it.”
National Post – Sept. 2, 2010
Judge temporarily off bench over online sex photos
By Kenyon Wallace, With Files From The Winnipeg Free Press
A prominent Manitoba judge whose husband allegedly posted nude photos of her in bondage gear engaging in oral sex on an Internet porn site has been temporarily relieved of her duties. Lori Douglas, associate chief justice of the Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench Family Division, became the centre of a scandal on Tuesday following media reports that she is the subject of at least 30 sexually explicit photos posted online.