By Tom Barlettt
I need to make a confession. I regret to tell you that I misjudged the American voting public. I should have recalled that truism attributed to H.L. Mencken that, “no one ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public.” In this instance, the U.S. is about to go broke because a party has accurately discerned the greed of the majority of its citizenry.
ChristianGovernance eletter – September 21, 2012
Our humanistic age has such a preoccupation with data. That’s how people who pretend to be scientific justify their views. Thankfully – in one respect – the corruption in humanist research – the manipulation of statistics and the massaging of data to justify preconceived notions – is increasing. As a result, humanists are going too far and are being exposed.
Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation – Summer 2010
How Canadians are on the hook for Greece and maybe more
By Mark Milke
Canadians, especially those in the more productive and prosperous provinces, should now get used to bailing out not only profligate governments at home – think equalization payments to Quebec and the Atlantic provinces – but abroad.
The Social Planning Network of Ontario – October 4, 2010
Put Food in the Budget Launches Campaign to Urge Increase in Social Assistance
- Ontarians challenged to live on a diet similar to that of many people on social assistance in Ontario -
National Post – August 17, 2010
Young, able and living on EI
By Jessica Hume
If there’s one thing I learned living abroad for more than two years, it’s that non-Canadians love Canada. They think we’re socialist; so much nicer than our neighbours to the south. The grounds on which these feelings are based may be faulty, but our health care system and relatively low university tuition fees are just two examples that have led to our reputation as a country that truly takes care of its own.
Press release – August 10, 2010
ChristianGovernance submits federal budget recommendations to Finance Committee
RUSSELL, ON – ChristianGovernance today submitted its report to the federal Finance Committee with our recommendations for the 2011 budget. The committee invited Canadians to submit their recommendations for the budget as part of the pre-budget consultation process. The deadline for submissions is this Friday, August 13th.
I haven’t read the whole G-20 Declaration. The politicians and officials probably hope that most people won’t. But as I was skimming Annex I, “The Framework for Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Growth,” something caught my eye at Paragraph 12.