Skip to content
Menu
Babel-on-the-Bay
  • The Democracy Papers
Babel-on-the-Bay

Category: New

The State of the Statues.

November 18, 2023November 18, 2023 by Peter Lowry

There are stupid people in this world who think they can upset long-standing statues with impunity. My favourite statue at Queen’s Park in Toronto is that of King Edward VII astride a horse. It is one damn fine horse. And as far as I’m concerned, the guy on the horse is just another horse’s ass.

I mention this as the Ontario government has wasted public money on a statue of the late Queen Elizabeth II. Why they should waste money on this is beyond me. I am confident there was no hue and cry saying; you must do this. It is not even a decent statue. I would swear that a man posed for the face. Queen Elizabeth had much softer features. I have always thought of her as something of a nebbish. Not as much as her son Charles but he was a prince only a mother could love.

And in this time of reminding Torontonians of our country’s colonial past, we have poor old John A. Macdonald all boarded up to protect him from the stupid people who would try to splash paint on him and tear him down. Tearing down Sir John because of the residential schools is a particularly dumb move. This is the guy that pointed the way to creating the Canada that exists today. If it had not been for Sir John, Canada would just be the back lot for the American or British Empire. Toss a coin for which one.

For my part, I suppose I should spring to the defence of Oliver Mowat. His statue is on the west side of the legislature building at Queen’s Park. He is an early relation. My paternal grandmother was a Mowat. Everything I have ever heard about that side of the family tells me not to expect much from my Mowat genes. My late friend Keith Davey had a laugh on me one time when he and wife Dorothy where at the Aberfoyle Market out in Puslinch Township. They found an 1893 copy of the front page of the Saturday Globe. It had a large picture of Sir Oliver Mowat, honouring how long he had been premier of Ontario. Keith gave it to me and said now he knew where my big nose came from. That front page was preserved for me and framed. It hangs on the wall today above my computer screen.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

Hype and Hypocrisy.

November 17, 2023November 16, 2023 by Peter Lowry

Canadians are going to need a truth and reconciliation commission to understand conservative leader Pierre Poilievre and his failure to debate legislation with honesty. The other day I was watching a television clip of his discussion on Bill C-234 which is now before the senate. This polyester politician can lie so routinely to Canadians, it makes your stomach turn.

To tell you about this, you should be aware that Bill C-234 was probably written on the request of the leader of the opposition’s office. The basic intent of the bill is to eliminate the levy on greenhouse gas emissions for all propane and natural gas used on farms to heat buildings. In simple terms, this bill would cancel out the effort the government is making to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across Canada, and all the while, to eliminate the expense for those who cannot afford it.

The most amusing part of the Poilievre speech was his claim that a chicken farmer, who spends $40,000 over the winter heating his hen house cannot afford the added expense of the carbon levy. To begin with anyone spending $40,000 to keep their chickens warm and cozy is doing it as a business expense. And any hen house that expensive to heat would probably be the equivalent in size to a 40-home subdivision. He is talking about a million-dollar business. And it would definitely be included in those businesses that should be moving to lower-cost heating systems.

What I did not understand in Poilievre’s speech was that he talked about the heating oil levy as only being omitted in the Atlantic provinces. The Atlantic provinces probably still have many homes that need to move away from oil heating. The moratorium on the oil heating levy applies to other provinces as well as in the Atlantic provinces. It is for three years to give people using home heating oil time to find more efficient methods of heating their homes.

But Mr. Poilievre does not seem to be paying attention to what is really going on and it seems more important to him to misrepresent what the liberal government is doing. Canadians are starting to become impatient with Mr. Poilievre. He wants to blame the liberals for everything and has no solutions of his own.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

Whose Mess Is It?

November 16, 2023November 15, 2023 by Peter Lowry

It was no fun. I recently spent some time digging into what the pollsters have been telling us. They can be such a dreary bunch. And if they don’t like something, they tend to lay it on. They sure have not been giving good news to liberals. They tend to blame it all on Justin Trudeau. We might as well blame him for everything else that is going wrong.

The other day, for example, we found that the Canadian Mint was going to introduce the new King Charles III Canadian coins. Not that many Canadians give a damn but how will they get those big ears on a dime? So, just blame Justin. He gets blamed for everything else these days. The first time I met Justin as an MP, he turned me off because I wanted to do something about the Canadian constitution. He sure doesn’t want to get involved in that circus.

I could always blame the conservative’s Poilievre. That poor schmuck actually wants to be prime minister. He is the one going around the country saying that “Canada is broken.” I guess I will never understand him. Imagining Canada with him as prime minister is a mean and cruel country.

It would be a Canada with no place for charity. He wants dog-eat-dog capitalism. He doesn’t like rules—not even those promoted by the Marquis of Queensbury.

And what is that damn fool going to do about global warming. He hates spending money on things like water bombers to fight the out-of-control wildfires that are consuming our forests. What would he do about the floods that destroy our roads and bridges? The damn fool thinks he can solve all our problems with more police and longer prison sentences.

The conservatives are sure spending a lot on this guy. They have spent the last year trying to make him into something that Canadians would vote for. He sure squints a lot without his glasses. The wife and kids look like they came from central casting. Now, if they could only come up with a humanity pill for him. Frankly, I don’t think he is a very nice person.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to: [email protected]

Reap What You Sow.

November 15, 2023November 14, 2023 by Peter Lowry

Does it come as a surprise that the most serious antisemitic incidents in Canada since the October 7 war was launched in the Middle East, have taken place in Quebec? After all, why should we be surprised in a province that routinely promotes discrimination against people who speak languages other than French? As the kids said in the school yard: “He started it.”

The provincial government of François Legault should not be so surprised. This is a government that routinely uses the ‘Not Withstanding’ clause in Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms to try to prevent interference in their discrimination against their English-speaking citizens. And it is not as though it is racial discrimination. English and French speaking peoples are, for the most part, from the same racial origins. Many slurs in both languages have been slung over the English Channel over the centuries of history.

But that is no excuse for the suppression of English in Quebec. It is probably the only jurisdiction with more than eight million population today that does not accept English as the lingua franca of today’s world. The truth be known is that many educated francophones in Quebec want their children to learn English, as it will enable them to have more opportunities in their business career. And come to think of it, what percentage of the members of the Quebec legislature are able to communicate in English?

These are the people who regularly pass laws that limit the availability of English language education in the province. To add insult, they have raised the annual rates for English-speaking students from outside Quebec to attend their English-language universities and colleges to beyond reasonable.

And is our federal government standing up to this discrimination in Quebec. Of course not. The conservatives and the liberals are both thinking of an election in the next two years and are soft-pedaling the objections they might have to this Quebec bigotry. And what else do they have in mind, while they have the feds on the run?

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

Big Plans: Small Minds.

November 14, 2023November 13, 2023 by Peter Lowry

There must be some amused apparatchiks at the Ontario Legislature. These are the conservative ones in the premier’s office, charged with keeping Doug Ford out of harm’s way. To them, harm’s way is any commitment to give money to the city of Toronto. You tend to think of Toronto as some sort of orphan after Olivia Chow was elected mayor earlier this year. There is no question but former mayor John Tory was treated as the son Doug Ford had never had—treatment such as Chow does not get.

You have to admit that Doug Ford was hardly rooting for Olivia to be the last person standing out of 102 candidates for replacement mayor. The very fact that Ford had agreed to a working group to find funds for Toronto could be the full extent of his being agreeable for this year. In the meantime, Olivia Chow is bicycling herself to work every day at city hall—in high hopes that someone above her pay grade will pay attention to her calls to senior governments for funding.

At her frequent news conferences, Chow takes a positive attitude. Her big plans for Toronto require a big budget. She keeps her hopes alive. While the municipalities are creatures of the province, there is no guarantee that the conservatives consider her pleas to be worthy of their attention. The premier has told her she needs to raise taxes. He wants her to take the blame for the increase.

Did you notice recently in the list the media produced to show which municipalities were meeting their commitments on housing starts that Toronto was well ahead of the game. The province promised municipalities who met their targets would get extra funding. She is well within her rights to demand some of that prize money.

The situation with the federal government is different as it is more of a moral issue. Toronto is the destination that many immigrants want and subsidized housing is the only answer until these immigrants have been established in a job with decent wages. The feds also have people awaiting hearings on their immigrant status that need emergency housing and the city cannot continue to pay their bills.

Quite frankly, Olivia has put herself in a lose-lose position. She might as well increase taxes as well.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

Trying Trump.

November 13, 2023November 12, 2023 by Peter Lowry

The trial that Donald Trump and his co-defendants are currently undergoing in New York City is not a question of guilt or innocence. The State of New York knows that Trump and the others committed the offence. They know that Trump properties and other assets were overstated in value in a continued effort to deceive banks, lenders and fellow Americans as to the real wealth of Mr. Trump. This trial is seeking an appropriate penalty.

It has been obvious to observers for more than five years that Mr. Trump had a reason to conceal his real wealth. Where former American presidents were willing to release their financial figures, Mr. Trump refused. He lied to Americans. Any thinking person would realize that the only reason to hide the real figures is to cover up the fiction that he is a multi-billionaire. He has no bragging rights to such wealth.

Mr. Trump is a property developer. Regrettably, there is a tendency in that business to over-inflate the value of properties to cover mortgages and loans needed to finance development projects. The truth has never been a Trump ally.

As much as we might want our politicians to tell the truth, Mr. Trump carried this penchant for creative falsehoods with him to the White House. While some people might assume that all politicians lie, the truth is that the voters would prefer that they were not told lies.

Americans have never before seen anything like the final days of Mr. Trump’s time in the White House. It was his time of denial. He denied that he lost in his bid for re-election. He claimed he was cheated. He asked loyal followers to join in insurrection. He instigated the January six attack on the Capitol He took classified documents with him when he had to leave the White House. It was not an orderly transition.

Mr. Trump is still complaining.

Mr. Trump still wants to be president. He is planning to run next year. He is planning to run despite the verdicts of the courts. He is planning to run despite many American Republicans who do not want him to be their candidate. The arguments will continue over the coming year.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

Communications Constricted.

November 12, 2023November 11, 2023 by Peter Lowry

Ontario premier Doug Ford tends to bluster. Take the recent meeting of the premiers in Nova Scotia, where he claimed that the federal carbon levy was “the worst tax ever.” What he does not seem to know is that it is really not a tax. When people in Ford’s position do not know the difference, there must be a failure in communications.

And it is not just Mr. Ford who is causing confusion. Mr. Poilievre the conservative Leader of the Opposition in parliament keeps urging everyone to axe the tax. And he knows the difference.

Mr. Poilievre’s problem is that he thinks it is more memorable if he says “Axe the tax” instead of “curtail the carbon levy.” What he never mentions is that this levy is distributed to those who can little afford the contribution it makes to inflation. Seniors and people with lower incomes get Climate Action Incentive payments four times each year. There is also a 20 per cent addition to rural Canadians who do not have the advantage of transit systems to save them money.

What confused the issue was the government decision to remove the levy on heating oil for the next three years to give more Canadians the opportunity to convert their heating systems to lower cost heat pumps.

But the problem is that Mr. Poilievre has no other solution. He is certainly hearing of all the problems with global warming and he and other conservatives do not seem to have any answers. In fact, when you stop to think about it, Mr. Poilievre seems to have lots of things he does not like. Yet, he seems to have no solutions for any of them.

The only conclusion to come to in this is that Mr. Poilievre is a very selfish person. His only effort seems to be to please himself. He thinks the prime minister’s job should be given to him. He does not care what Canadians need or want. All he offers them is greed and selfishness. He wants a country with out rules. He wants a country without controls. He promised the ‘Freedom convoy’ of truckers that he would give them a country with the greatest freedom—where they can block city streets or border crossing as they wished. There is no carbon levy on greenhouse emissions in Mr. Poilievre’s plans.

His only problem is that global warming is real. The wildfires are destroying our forests—and their lumber. The floods are destroying our roads and highways. The weather is inconsistent and destroying our farmers crops. Hurricanes and tornadoes are reaching farther with great intensity.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

Boys Will Be Boys.

November 11, 2023November 10, 2023 by Peter Lowry

They are trying to turn the Ontario liberal leadership into a boys-only club. Maybe I was a bit of a wus as a youngster but I always let the girls into our various club houses. And I hardly think that this last-minute deal between Nate Erskine Smith and Yasir Naqvi is going to be anything other than of a passing interest. The only worry is that Bonnie Crombie might note their intransigence when the liberals defeat Doug Ford and she might be reluctant to bring the guys into her cabinet.

All I know is if you get involved in as stupidly arranged a leadership contest as the liberals are running, anything can happen. Copying the conservatives’ style of leadership was a very bad idea. First of all, not all electoral districts are created equal. To give added strength to the few votes from low membership ridings is basically denying liberals who work to have a strong membership their rights to fairly chosen leader.

What Nate and Yasir are trying is the same style of stalking horse deal as Jean Charest and Patrick Brown were attempting in the last conservative leadership. I am not privy to knowing which one of Patrick Brown’s dirty tricks got him kicked out of the conservative race but it certainly cemented Pierre Poilievre’s lock on the leadership. There is a possibility that they kicked Patrick Brown out of that race because they were worried, he might accidently win.

But Bonnie Crombie can be confident of her position as top dog in chasing this liberal rabbit around Ontario. If I provided a morning line for this Liberal race, all I would be doing is restating the obvious. My reading across Ontario says that Bonnie Crombie is ready to do the job of liberal leader.

What concerns me are the next steps. To build the liberal party for the next provincial election requires her presence in the legislature. It was tragic for the liberals last election when the liberal party leader had never had a chance to show his stuff mano a mano against Doug Ford.

And I am a left-wing liberal who has always been delighted to take donations to the party from developers. Our democracy is important to everybody. And I don’t think anybody who thinks they can buy you will respect you.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

The Brass of Brassard.

November 10, 2023November 10, 2023 by Peter Lowry

The city of Barrie, that sits in the middle of Ontario, has two conservative members of parliament. One of the two is Barrie-Innisfil MP John Brassard. He told the local Internet newspaper the other day how pleased he was to vote in parliament for a conservative motion to eliminate the carbon tax for all home heating fuels.

Mr. Brassard claimed that by defeating the conservative motion, the liberals were condemning seniors and young people to a life of misery because they would bear the brunt of increased costs to heat their homes this coming winter. And that tells me that Mr. Brassard is deliberately lying to his constituents.

What he is neglecting to mention is that the levy on carbon-based polluting fuels is considered the most effective method to encourage Canadians to opt for renewable fuels such as electricity. Nobody suffers unduly from the carbon tax as it is not really a tax. This is because the Carbon Tax goes back to the seniors and lower income earners in the form of Climate Action Incentive payments. There is now a twenty per cent top up in payments to rural households because of their increased fuel costs and lack of public transit alternatives.

Nobody expects Canadians to make the change to lower emissions of Greenhouse gasses overnight. That is the reason that the carbon tax increases gradually over time.

Even with the gradual growth in the levy, there was some imbalances in the system because not everybody can switch to non-polluting fuels as quickly as they want. Home heating with oil proved to be a special problem. This is already an expensive way to heat a home and there were price barriers for many to move to systems, such as heat pumps, to replace the heavy pollution of oil heating.

When this became obvious, the government declared a moratorium on the heating oil part of the plan for three years so that more aggressive programs by both the federal and provincial governments can lower the cost of conversion for lower income Canadians. In some provinces now, the combined federal and provincial support programs can provide free heat pump conversion for low-income Canadians.

The point of this is that, good or bad, the carbon tax is a method of getting Canadians to convert to lower greenhouse gas solutions. It is less than helpful for people with no solution to climate change to tell us to ‘axe the tax.’

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

A People Place.

November 9, 2023November 8, 2023 by Peter Lowry

When premier Bill Davis opened Ontario Place in 1971, he noted that it was “A stimulating and permanent symbol of the work and achievement of the people of Ontario.” Today, it sits fenced off and forlorn on Toronto’s lakefront, a nostalgic memory for those of us who were raising young families in Toronto during the late 1900s.

Closed for the last decade, Ontario Place has been the subject of much political hemming and hawing. It was not until the ignorant Doug Ford moved into the premier’s office at Queen’s Park that the set-backs started. It seems some European company wants to build a luxury spa on the west end of the artificial islands on which Ontario Place sits. Always mindful of the need for profit, Ford cheerfully sold off a piece of Ontario’s heritage. And it is all downhill from there.

On the premier’s behalf, we should note that he is not very smart and not exactly cognizant of the responsibilities of his office to the people of the province. Somebody must have told him he made a boo-boo. He hastened to try to rectify his error by offering to move the much-valued Ontario Science Centre to share the Ontario Place space with the European spa. Since the spa left a space on the islands of about one-third the size of the present Science Centre, this idea has met with little to no enthusiasm.

These islands are very much like the Navy Pier in Chicago. With more than 100 years of history behind it, nobody visiting the Windy City wants to miss spending some time seeing the ever-changing entertainments of the pier today. And it is the range of activities that make the pier a continual success.

In its good times, Ontario Place attracted crowds to the live shows in the forum and the IMAX films in the Cinesphere. The seven-storey high geodesic dome was a distinctive part of the Ontario Place when you were looking south from Lakeshore Boulevard or the Canadian National Exhibition grounds.

I have always been disappointed by the politicians who are unable to recognize the potential of this people place. It needs imaginative and daring management. It needs to keep up with its Toronto market’s interests, for both young and old.

-30-

Copyright 2023 © Peter Lowry            

Complaints, comments, criticisms and compliments can be sent to:

[email protected]

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • …
  • 475
  • Next

Categories

  • American Politics
  • Federal Politics
  • Misc
  • Municipal Politics
  • New
  • Provincial Politics
  • Repeat
  • Uncategorized
  • World Politics

Archives

©2025 Babel-on-the-Bay | Powered by WordPress and Superb Themes!