Tax Talk 56 – Generation Screwed: The Book w/ Candice Malcolm

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Nov 132014
 

In Canada, paying for our government requires robbing Peter to pay Paul. But what happens when Peter retires? CTF Ontario Director Candice Malcolm explores that question – and the 3-Ds of Canadian public policy (debt, demographics, and dependency) in her new book, "Generation Screwed". Candice joins Tax Talk host Jordan Bateman to talk about the book, whether it bashes Baby Boomers, and how to get out of this fiscal mess. Plus our usual features – the Comment of the Cast and our Waste of the Week!

Tax Talk 53: New Brunswick’s New Premier, w. Kevin Lacey

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Oct 092014
 

Brian Gallant and the Liberals swept to power in New Brunswick this fall, rising an anti-resource message that may end up costing NB taxpayers dearly. CTF Atlantic director Kevin Lacey joins Tax Talk host Jordan Bateman to break down that result, with some bonus coverage of Nova Scotia's ongoing Bluenose II debacle. Plus our usual features – the Comment of the Cast and the Waste of the Week!

Tax Talk 51 – Stockwell Day Celebrates 15 Years of the Alberta Single Rate Tax

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Jul 242014
 

Fifteen years ago, then-Alberta treasurer Stockwell Day introduced a single rate tax in Alberta, and the table was laid for a decade of unprecedented prosperity in that province. At the World Taxpayers Association conference in Vancouver, Stockwell shared the Alberta experience with representatives of 25 different taxpayers associations from around the world.

Plus our usual features with Jordan Bateman – the Comment of the Cast and our Waste of the Week!

Tax Talk 44: Investigative Journalist Bob Mackin

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Mar 202014
 

Join Jordan Bateman, BC Director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, as he speaks with noted investigative journalist Bob Mackin about various topics. When the truth behind "mismanaged" public projects is exposed, one might start wondering: What is behind the blatant waste of so many taxpayer-funded projects? Incompetence, or waste-by-design to fill certain coffers?

Regular features include Comment of the Cast and Waste of the Week.

Mar 132014
 

This week we tune in to the 16th annual presentation of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation Teddy Awards, honoring the best of the worst of government waste. Tax Talk host and CTF B.C. Director Jordan Bateman presents the Sun News footage of the awards, featuring CTF’s federal director, Gregory Thomas.

Plus our usual features – the Comment of the Cast and Waste of the Week!

The Ron Gray Show, w. guest Rod Taylor of the CHP

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Nov 292013
 

Canada’s only pro-life federal political party defends two prisoners of conscience.

CHP Canada’s Deputy Leader, Rod Taylor, talks to Ron Gray about his party’s support for two Canadian prisoners of conscience: free speech advocates like Linda Gibbons (who has spent more time in Canadian jails than convicted sex murderess Karla Homolka; for what? For offering to help women considering an abortion, and to share her personal experience of the pain abortion causes) and Mary Wagner, who languishes in a Canadian jail because she gave roses to women planning abortions, and offered to pray with them.

Tax Talk 36: Reforming Canada’s Employment Insurance Program, w. guest Nick Bergamini

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Nov 282013
 

Earlier this month, the Canadian Taxpayers Federation issued a new report calling for changes to the Employment Insurance (EI) system that would allow Canadians to keep the money they and their employers pay in EI taxes in a personal unemployment account. Report author Nick Bergamini, the CTF’s Research Director, joins CTF B.C. Director and Tax Talk host Jordan Bateman to break down the current EI system, highlight some shocking regional inequities, and lay out the CTF’s idea to revamp it. To read the full EI report, click here. To sign our petition calling for changes, click here.

Plus our usual features – the Comment of the Cast (praising a politician who – gasp! – did something right!) and the Waste of the Week (an MLA who collects more in pension than he did in salary).

Tax Talk 34: Alberta-B.C. Oil Pipeline Agreement, w. CTF’s Derek Fildebrandt

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Nov 142013
 

CTF Alberta Director Derek Fildebrandt joins Tax Talk host and BC Director Jordan Bateman to talk about the BC-Alberta pipeline (sort of) deal. Does it really matter? What was accomplished? And is it good news for Canadian taxpayers or not? They also touch on the results of municipal elections in Edmonton and Calgary (hint: one of those cities has a much more fiscally conservative council than the other). Plus the usual features – the Comment of the Cast and the Waste of the Week (where your tax dollars this week are literally going up in smoke!).

May 062013
 

Kari Simpson joins Ron Gray to update her case and to talk about the need to bring about changes to Canada's justice system. Since going public with her case, Kari has been inundated with other troubling cases that demand remedy. Clearly the justice system is broken and needs to be fixed. Drive For Justice is expanding to cover more cases, including an in-depth look at the circus that has resulted in the Justice Lori Douglas matter that is before the Canadian Judicial Council. Buckle-up – this is going to be a hot ride!

Apr 232013
 

Kari Simpson and Ron Gray continue their recent discussion with Jim Hnatiuk, leader of Canada's socially and fiscally conservative Christian Heritage Party. As former leader of the same party, Ron Gray has intimate knowledge of the party's history, and his successor Mr. Hnatiuk spells out the current state and plans for the future. Tune in to hear Kari Simpson's rationale for her suggestion that the party would serve the public better if it changed its name to the all-inclusive, all-welcoming (and more accurate) name of "Canadian Heritage Party".

Clare L. Pieuk: But that was then and this is now Chief Justice McLachlin!

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Nov 232012
 

by Clare L. Pieuk

Let me begin by asserting that Canada has a strong and healthy justice system. Indeed, our courts and justice system are looked to by many countries as exemplary. We have well-appointed courtrooms, presided over by highly qualified judges. Our judges are independent and deliver impartial justice, free of fear and favour. The Canadian Judicial Council, which I head, recently issued an information note on the judicial appointments process in which it affirmed these long-standing principles on which our justice system is based. Canadians can have confidence that judges are committed to rendering judgment in accordance with the law and based on the evidence. Corruption and partisanship are non-issues. In all these things, we are fortunate indeed.

Remarks of the Right Honourable Beverley McLachlin, P.C. Presented at the Empire Club of Canada Toronto, March 8, 2007 (The Challenge We Face).

Good Day Readers:

Since that statement was made there’s the Douglas Inquiry and the shocking allegations concerning the conduct of British Columbia Supreme Court Justice Mary Marvyn Koenigsberg (federally appointed) in Simpson versus Mair & WIC the subject of a series of videos on www.DriveForJustice.com. There is also the case of a third federally appointed Justice CyberSmokeBlog is unable to discuss.

… We have well-appointed courtrooms …

Don’t think so! What good are they if the public is unable to hear Justices, counsel and witnesses half the time? Such is the case in Manitoba Queen’s Bench and the Federal Court of Canada in Winnipeg.

During the Douglas Inquiry on more than one occasion the audio system broke down leaving lawyers scrambling to try to fix it. At times it functioned like that one would expect to find in a third world country. Was any thought given to having an audio expert available in the event of such a contingency? Of course not! Witnesses and even counsel had to be constantly reminded by Chair Alberta Chief Justice Catherine Fraser to speak louder or sit/stand closer to their desk microphones because lapel microphones where not being used.

A veteran Toronto reporter at the Douglas Inquiry who has covered many, many Federal Court proceedings there noted it was deja vu all over again.

It has been said when you send a letter to the Supreme Court of Canada it disappears into a big, black hole never to be seen or heard from again.

That has been CSB’s experence on three previous occasions the most recent of which is reprinted below.

An open letter to Chief Justice McLachlin
Sunday, August 12, 2012

The Right Honourable Chief Justice of Canada
Beverley McLachlin, P.C.
Supreme Court of Canada
301 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0J1

Dear Chief Justice McLachlin:

The assumption is made you were accurately quoted.

We would like to offer our views regarding The Globe and Mail article based on The Manitoba Law Courts where our experience lies. There is no reason to believe it is any better or worse here than in other jurisdictions throughout Canada. In fact, it’s likely a poster child or microcosm of what ails courts across the country.

1.0 Barriers To Legal System Must Be Lowered If Public Confidence Is To Be Maintained

Barriers to entry can take many forms. Why cannot standard legal documents such as Statements of Claim/Defence, Affidavits, Motions, Motion Briefs, to name but a few, not be registered, filed and expensed online? Is the technology not already in place? What economic impact does this have on litigants who are in a different Canadian jurisdiction much less outside the country?

Why are Daily Dockets not displayed electronically?

2.0 Not Enough Judges, Lawyers Are Expensive

If there are not enough judges whose fault? Surely, in any jurisdiction there must be qualified candidates lined up to share in the salary, pension, benefits and other perquisites of a judicial appointment.

In the past, you are on the public record as urging the legal profession to undertake more pro bono work as one way to increase public availability to the courts. Is there not another. Many litigants are well-educated. How many lawyers are prepared to allow them to draft as many of the legal documents required as possible, of course, subject to their final approval?

3.0 Action Committee On Access To Justice In Civil And Family Matters

Our preliminary research based on discussions with litigants here, as well as reading about problems with Family Court in the United States, Australia and just about anywhere else one chooses to turn, is they’re in a mess. In short, a major re-think of the current business model is required .

We have not examined closely the aforementioned Committee but does it at least have some layperson direct involvement/input or, as so often happens, it is the legal system examining and passing judgment on itself in the absence of any citizen/taxpayer oversight? For example, what provision exists for men/women who have been through a divorce or child custody case to outline their experiences firsthand?

4.0 No One Will Solve This Alone

The “silver bullet” referenced in your comments could well turn out to be those citizens and taxpayers who must suffer through the inefficiencies a system that is in dire need of re-shaping. Who better to ask than the users who, in the end, are obliged to pay the cost.

5.0 Courts Have To Be Adequately Staffed

As previously noted, that is but half the equation the other being technology. The Supreme Court of the State of Indiana is about to embark on a year long pilot project that would see automated cameras and recording equipment replace the traditional court clerk in several courtrooms. Any jurisdiction anywhere in Canada experimenting with anything evenly remotely similar? Probably not.

6.0 Appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada

In the case of RCMP Officer Monty Robinson, it should be noted a petition to the Supreme Court of Canada is no guarantee of a Hearing. It decides not you.

Finally, Chief Justice McLachlin if there is one change you could make that would be everlasting it would be to do what you can to improve the audio in courtrooms. Time and time and time and … again we have attended Queen’s Bench and Provincial Court Hearings where it is impossible, even sitting in the front row, to often hear Justices/Judges, much less lawyers and witnesses.

We were reminded yet again at the recent Douglas Inquiry where the Committee had to constantly remind Counsel and witnesses to speak louder – that is, when the audio equipment was not malfunctioning which, to date, has occurred several times. And how many millions of dollars will it cost before it has concluded?

Canadians like to pride themselves on having an open court system but is it really if the public gallery cannot hear half the time? If you can bring about the use of lapel microphones by Justices/Judges, lawyers and witnesses, you will have solved a seemingly simple but to date impossible problem.

And for that you will get our vote as the greatest Chief Justice in the annals of the Canadian judiciary.

Respectfully,
Clare L. Pieuk

Media Citizen Journalist
Blog Master
www.CyberSmokeBlog.blogspot.com
pieuk@Shaw.ca

Sun News: A Clash of Rights

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Nov 212012
 

Ezra Levant hosts Chris Schafer of the Canadian Constitution Foundation, who explains the difference between fundamental rights and phony rights and the clash of rights between a woman and a Muslim barber. The issue – now before a Human Rights Tribunal in Toronto – is whether or not a Muslim barber must be forced to go against his own religion by touching a non-related woman patron.

Culture Guard: Seeing Is Believing – Abortion is Murder

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Oct 052012
 

Kari Simpson speaks with Jonathon Van Maren of the Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform. Mr. Van Maren's organization has engaged in a long-term campaign to inform the public about the true facts of abortion and the killing of innocent human babies. Hundreds of thousands of babies each year, murdered because they are "inconvenient" while hundreds of thousands of childless couples would cherish raising these children. While many proclaim that this Canadian Holocaust is a "woman's right", growing numbers are seeing this senseless slaughter for what it is.

Growing Conservatism

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Jun 282011
 

With Terry O’Neill & Kari Simpson!

Show #107, Part 2, audio only:

Download Show #107, Part 2, audio only

8:15 – 8:45 pm: Conservatives are coming out in force! To talk about this is JOSEPH BEN-AMI, BlogStar and self-declared, unrepentant conservative and one of the leading forces behind the CANADIAN OBSERVER! Check it out here. (Yeppers RKR is adding another recommended link!)