Tax Talk 48: World Taxpayers Conference w/ guest Troy Lanigan

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Apr 172014
 

Next month, nearly 200 delegates from around the world and across Canada will converge on Vancouver for the World Taxpayers Associations’ biennial conference. Some 68 organizations, spread across 54 countries – including the Canadian Taxpayers Federation – are part of the WTA. The CTF's president and CEO, Troy Lanigan, joins Tax Talk host Jordan Bateman to talk about it all.

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

Oct 032012
 

October 3, 2012

Re:      Bravo, Minister Ambrose!

Dear Mr. Prime Minister,

My name is Kari Simpson; I am a civil, informed Canadian. I am the mother of four responsible, accomplished, and now adult children whom I raised as a single parent; the oldest was 12 when their father became ill and passed away. I am also delighted to proclaim that my eighth grandchild is due in March. And yes, as my children were taught, my grandchildren are also being educated about their democratic and civil responsibilities to protect life and liberty. This includes voting.

I am also CEO of WOW Multi-Media corporation; President of a national organization called Culture Guard; host of RoadKill Radio News, an influential current affairs program on RoadKill Radio.com; a commercial pilot; and a feared and respected child and family advocate—among other endeavours. I do not attribute my successes to affirmative action or feminist gains, but rather to having the good fortune of coming from a long line of individuals strongly committed to the family unit, and made up of strong men and women who deal in reality, work hard, live responsibly and respect those who deserve respect.

I would like to add my voice to counter the noise created by the gaggle of feminist squawk-boxers who willingly display their ineptitude and their challenged view of reality by falsely claiming to represent me, my three daughters, and numerous other female members of our extended family, in matters that affect Canadian women.

My family’s work history details the events involving my great-aunts running mines in The Pas, Manitoba; my grandmother working to finance my grandfather’s inventions—some events going back 100 years ago, long before silly women started burning their bras.  The women in my family have accomplished these noteworthy successes, like so many others, without assistance from the state, or being given an unfair advantage by government programs crafted to discriminate against men; and they have done so without murdering our unborn children, abdicating our responsibilities as mothers, or requiring others to pay for our career choice expenses — e.g., daycare.

I have watched with growing distain the verbal assaults being hurled at Minister Ambrose by self-absorbed, feeble-brained radical feminists—both male and female — who operate from a platform that seemingly provides blinders and affords only a flat-earth view. The out-dated rhetoric of yesteryear relied upon by these squawking ninnies is about as useful as the shrill shriek of a faulty brake-pad, just before a crash.

Minister Rona Ambrose deserves enormous credit for her willingness to assure Canadians that she and 90 other elected leaders don’t fear seeking a factual, foundational understanding of the scientific realities associated with the genesis of life. She deserves the applause that is growing louder as more and more Canadians become informed about this intelligent, independently-minded stateswoman, who had the integrity to vote in favour of Motion 312—a vote to establish the truth.

You can appreciate how intellectually pathetic those 203 members are who voted against seeking to explore the scientific facts about human life. There has been no moment in the history of Parliament that so fully demonstrates the sad state of the factually-challenged cowards who wimpily kow-tow to the squawk-box bullies and shrieking ninnies. I find it ridiculous—and concerning—that elected officials would publicly demonstrate their willingness to embrace ignorance on such an important issue, clearly acquiescing to the unjustified fear generated by the natter of a few cultural terrorists.

You are right, Mr. Prime Minister: we don’t need a debate; we need a solution to an obvious problem—a problem that allows innocent children to be slaughtered. Canadians deserve to be factually informed. This violent crime against our nation’s innocent, unborn sons and daughters, Canada’s most vulnerable citizens, must end.

Please extend my deep appreciation to Minister Ambrose for establishing a credible and respectable standard in political leadership—for both women and men. Minister Ambrose, by courageously standing in support of Motion 312, spoke for me, my daughters, and my granddaughters—and on behalf of the overwhelming majority of informed women (and men) who abide in truth, act responsibility and deal in reality—something her ill-informed critics, parroting the retro-rhetoric-of-yesteryear, fear.

Yours truly,

Kari Simpson
Host, RoadKill Radio News
RoadKillRadio.com
Email: karisimpson@telus.net
Tel:    (604) 514-1614
Fax:   (604) 514-1669

 

To:

Minister Rona Ambrose

The Rt. Hon. Stephen Harper
Office of the Prime Minister
House of Commons
Parliament Buildings
Fax 613-941-6900
e-mail: pm@pm.gc.ca                                             

Copied to:

Rona Ambrose
Minister Responsible for the Status of Women
House of Commons
Parliament Buildings
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6
e-mail: rona.ambrose@parl.gc.ca

Sep 202011
 

Contact Elected Officials!

Premier Christy Clark
Tel: (250) 387-1715, Email: premier@gov.bc.ca

George Abbott, Minister for Education –
Tel (250) 387-1977, Email: minister.educ@gov.bc.ca

Kevin Falcon, Minister of Finance –
Tel (250) 387-3751, Email finance.minister@bc.gov.ca

Ida Chong, Minister Community, Sport and Cultural Development –
Tel: (250)387-2283, Email: cscd.minister@gov.bc.ca

Demand that:

  1. All taxpayer funding be stopped to the Out On Screen Society
  2. Out In Schools must be Out Of Schools immediately!
  3. Minister Abbott issue a directive prohibiting homosexist and sex diversity activist’s political propaganda from being used or displayed in the schools. For example, information by: Pride Information Network, Egale, Options for Sexual Health (Won’t get Weird), Queer Film Festival, Out In Schools and Qmunity.

Contact Sponsors!

BC Arts Council
Tel (250) 356-1718, Email bcartscouncil@gov.bc.ca

Telus – Darren Entwistle, President & CEO –
Tel: (604) 697-8044, Email: Darren.entwistle@telus.com

Vancouver Foundation
Tel: (604) 688-2204 Email: paulh@vancouverfoundation.ca

Vancity
https://www.vancity.com/ContactUs/GeneralFeedback/

Demand that:

  1. They stop funding Out On Screen/Out in Schools, a program that exposes students to hard core pornography and games of “debauchery”
  2. They cease funding of groups or other initiatives that politicize the public education system.
  3. Advise corporate sponsors that you do business with that you will actively participate in and promote a boycott of their services if they fail to stop funding the Out In Schools program.

One more important contact!

Our tax-funded BC Place Stadium is about to grant a multi-million dollar contract to a corporation for the naming rights to the stadium, TELUS is said to be the leading contender! Do you want your stadium named after a corporation that facilitates, through the schools, minors being indoctrinated with sex activism and pornography?

Contact:

Pat Bell, Minister for Jobs Tourism & Innovation –
(Minister responsible for BC Place stadium)
Tel (250) 356-2771, Email: jti.minister@gov.bc.ca

Warren Buckley, President & CEO PavCo –
(Corporation that runs BC Place)Tel: (604) 484-5210, Email: awagner@bcpavco.com

Demand that:

TELUS be removed from the list of corporations in the running for this contract until such time as they publicly state that they have stopped funding and sponsoring the OUT IN SCHOOLS programs!

I’m coming out as a “homosceptic”

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Jun 132011
 

by Peter Saunders, (CC) 13 June 2011
Original Article Here

Dictionaries need a new word to describe disagreement with some of the key precepts of the gay lobby.

Last year’s election in the United Kingdom threw up some interesting results as a variety of issues took prominence in different constituencies. In particular we saw strong reactions to four conservative parliamentary candidates who had, either during the campaign or previously, held views which were judged as being “homophobic”.

Philip Lardner lost his candidacy for saying that homosexuality was “not normal behaviour” – sacked by party leader David Cameron. The uproar surrounding Philippa Stroud’s Christian beliefs about the issue was a major factor in her failing to take Sutton and Cheam for the Tories. Chris Grayling’s comments about Christians offering “bed and breakfast” being justified in denying double beds to gay couples staying in their homes almost certainly cost him a cabinet post.

Theresa May managed to hold on as Equality Minister after the election, despite over 70,000 people joining a Facebook group asking for her to be sacked on the basis of her past “homophobic” voting record, when she said her views on homosexuality had now changed.

Being judged “homophobic” can cost you dearly.

I’ve always been puzzled by the term “homophobia”. In the minds of most people it means being prejudiced against, or even hating, people who are homosexual. Wikipedia defines it as “a range of negative attitudes and feelings towards homosexuality and people identified or perceived as being homosexual”.

In keeping with this view, author, activist, and civil rights leader Coretta Scott King in a 1998 address, equated homophobia to “racism and anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry” on the grounds that “it seeks to dehumanize a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood”.

It is therefore understandable that “homophobic” is a label that no one wants to have. There is even an International Day Against Homophobia celebrated on May 17 each year. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton marked the day with a statement condemning the “terrible scourge” of homophobia and transphobia.

However when the term was first used it actually meant something quite different. The word homophobia first appeared in print in an article written for the 23 May 1969 edition of the American tabloid Screw, in which it was used to refer to heterosexual men’s fear that others might think they are gay. It has also been used to describe a fear of people who “come out” as homosexual.

These definitions are much more in keeping with the literal meaning. After all, a phobia is a fear: claustrophobia, arachnophobia and acrophobia being fears of closed spaces, spiders and heights respectively.

For many people “homophobia” is actually about “having a fear of being accused of being bigoted, prejudiced or discriminating against homosexual people”. This fear, which is increasingly common, causes people to take a defensive posture in order to avoid attracting disapproval or adverse publicity. This may take the form of changing ones public position, pretending to adopt views in accordance with the prevailing liberal consensus, actively denying ones real beliefs or simply abstaining from expressing an opinion when the matter is discussed.

This kind of “homophobia” is becoming increasingly common amongst those who belong to religious faiths which teach that sex outside marriage is wrong (ie. most world faiths) and it is not difficult to come up with examples of (often) prominent people in whom the condition is well advanced.

For people who don’t hate, dislike or fear gay people, but simply believe that sex between people who are not married (including all sex between those of the same sex) is morally wrong, we need a new term. I’d like to propose the term “homosceptic” – a term that is not yet in common use and hence arguably open to (re)definition. My Microsoft Word spell-check rejects it as a known word and a Google search for it throws up only 1,830 examples of its use in any context. (In the American spelling, homoskeptic, there are only 230 examples.)

The Urban dictionary defines a “homosceptic” as “a member of society who does not hate homosexuals, but generally does not agree with the principle of homosexuality in moral and ethical terms”.

I’d like to broaden this definition to include “being sceptical about the key presuppositions of the gay rights movement” such as the beliefs that:

    Homosexuality is genetically determined
    Homosexual orientation is always fixed
    Sexual orientation is a biological characteristic like race, sex or skin colour
    Feelings of same sex attraction should be welcomed and acted upon
    Offering help to those who wish to resist or eradicate these feelings is always wrong

Of course if you accept these “key presuppositions” you may well believe people who don’t to be ignorant, bigoted, prejudiced or even immoral. You might even feel that such people should not hold public office, publicly express their views or hold any job which involves having to condone, promote or facilitate same-sex intimacy.

But if you have some doubts about the truth of some or all of these beliefs – and suspect that they might be more “ideology-driven” than “evidence-based” – then perhaps you could argue that you are not “homophobic” but rather “homosceptic”.

Dr Peter Saunders is a former general surgeon and CEO of Christian Medical Fellowship, a UK-based organisation with 4,500 UK doctors and 1,000 medical students as members. This article has been cross-posted from his blog, Christian Medical Comment.