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December 27, 2004



Compilation 2 -- The China Connection: Oil, Textiles, PM Martin, Sudan, Alberta Tar Sands, Cuba, South America

China invests heavily in Sudan's oil industry

China invests heavily in Sudan's oil industry Peter S. Goodman, The Washington Post

This is lengthy and informative. Correspondents Emily Wax in Khartoum, Colum Lynch in New York and special correspondent Jason Cai in Shanghai contributed to this report.

LEAL, Sudan, Dec 23, 2004 -- On this flat and dusty African plain, China's largest energy company is pumping crude oil, sending it 1,000 miles upcountry through a Chinese-made pipeline to the Red Sea, where tankers wait to ferry it to China's industrial cities. Chinese laborers based in a camp of prefabricated sheds work the wells and lay highways across the flats to make way for heavy machinery.

Only seven miles south, the rebel army that controls much of southern Sudan marches troops through this sun-baked town of mud huts. For years, the rebels have attacked oil installations, seeking to deprive the Sudan government of the wherewithal to pursue a civil war that has killed more than 2 million people and displaced 4 million from their homes over the past two decades. But the Chinese laborers are protected : They work under the vigilant gaze of Sudanese government troops armed largely with Chinese-made weapons -- a partnership of the world's fastest-growing oil consumer with a pariah state accused of fostering genocide in its western Darfur region.

[. . . . ] "The Chinese have every reason not to lose these oil fields and that is why they are committed to fighting the war by supplying the Sudan government the wherewithal," Akol said.

A recent report published in the state-controlled China Business News quotes a Chinese foreign affairs official as saying that Beijing "cooperates with the Sudan government" on security and has asked Khartoum to "send troops" to areas in which Chinese companies operate.

The exit of Canada's Talisman company from Sudan was largely a reaction to public pressure. China National Petroleum has felt similar pressures. In April 1999, the company announced plans to sell shares on the New York Stock Exchange -- the first Chinese state-owned firm to land on the Big Board. It was to be the largest initial public offering in the exchange's history, valued at $10 billion. But human rights groups said the deal would be the effective use of U.S. financing to aid the killing of innocents in Sudan. Eventually, CNPC restructured the transaction. It sold $2.9 billion in a newly created subsidiary, PetroChina, asserting that none of the money would be used in Sudan.

Ultimately, it may be peace that presents the Chinese firm with its greatest challenge. Under the terms of an agreement still being negotiated, oil contracts are supposed to remain secure. But three commanders of the southern Sudan rebel group said in interviews that the SPLA will seek to punish China once the rebels gain a formal decision-making role in the government.

The stakes could be considerable : Peace would allow the world's major energy companies to enter Sudan's oil patch. Moreover, roughly two-fifths of all known reserves -- oil worth more than $16 billion -- are now in rebel-controlled territory, according to the study by PFC, the strategic analysis group.
"The suffering of the people is on the hands of the Chinese," said commander Deng Awou. "The agreements for the Chinese company may be terminated."


More on China and the Sudan:

China's Lack of Fuel Sparks Crisis in Darfur

Chinese state councilor meets Sudanese guests

China leads opposition to stronger action against Sudan




China turns eye to Alberta oilsands

China turns eye to Alberta oilsands Dec. 7, 04

Calgary – A senior executive with a major, state-owned oil company in China says they are investigating investment opportunities in Alberta's oilsands.

Qiu Xianghua, a vice-president with Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration and Production, told a business crowd that the oilsands are a "remarkable resource."

Wilf Gobert, with Peters and Company, says high oil prices have triggered increased interest in the province's oilsands, but there may not be room for more major players. [. . . . ]

China, with 21 per cent of the world's population, has about 1.8 per cent of the world's oil supply, and it is a major consumer of raw materials.

"China therefore cannot develop its country relying on its own resources," Xianghua said. "China needs oil resources and has a big market. Canada needs a market, so to invest in Canada would be mutually beneficial and complementary to both countries."





Canada's global connections

Canada's global connections

Just read it. It is full of information. Note mention of Maurice Strong, Prime Minister Martin, arms, China, fiber optic air defense network, Panama Canal Ports, Gordon Securities, Bob Rae and his brother John, Jean Chretien, oil, Sidewinder. Judi McLeod has written an informative article.

Operation Sidewinder, an American-Canadian operation set up to root out Chinese agents in Canada was shut down by former New Democratic Party Ontario Premier Bob Rae. Rae’s brother John was the campaign manager for Chretien and is a senior executive at Power Corp.




Oil fuelled a thriving economy -- The stock market year in review

Oil fuelled a thriving economy -- The stock market year in review Keith Woolhouse, Ottawa Citizen, Dec. 26, 04

[. . . . How] is it that Canada is riding the crest of an economic wave, its stock market outperforming most other global markets and the country being hailed as one of the world's most fiscally responsible?

The answer is oil, and China's demand for raw materials to fuel its industrial revolution, a fortuitous conjunction that helped make this a superb year for the land of the maple leaf.

[. . . . ] The one black mark against Canada is its lack of productivity.
For years, the cheap dollar hid the inefficiencies of made-in-Canada products. [. . . . ]

As the Economist magazine reported, it is not only 1.2 billion Chinese who should hope that their leaders succeed in bringing that nation's economy in for a soft landing.

"The rest of the world also now has a huge stake in China's continued economic health ... During the past three years China has accounted for one-third of global economic growth, twice as much as America. In the past year, China's official GDP growth rate has surged to 9.7 per cent. Even this may underestimate the true rate, which some economists reckon was as high as 13 per cent." [. . . . ]





Editorial: Will Martin urge China reforms?

Editorial: Will Martin urge China reforms? The Star, Dec. 26, 04

[. . . . ] The Communist Party functions as a self-perpetuating mandarinate.

Will Martin challenge that? In Beijing? In any meaningful way?

Not if his recent speech to the Canada-China Business Council's annual dinner is any indicator.
In a far-ranging address, Martin spoke of the more than 1 million Canadians who now claim Chinese origin. He described China as a "new global power" with a fast-expanding, market-driven economy and investment opportunities. He also forecast greater Canada/China co-operation in trade, public health, the battle against terror and the environment. He even rightly mentioned Canada's concern that human rights be respected. As Amnesty International reports, China still jails dissidents, harasses religious cults and censors the media.

But the word "democracy" never once fell from his lips. [. . . . ]





Martin urges more business with China -- Paul Martin's sons run his shipping company; how convenient.

Martin urges more business with China CTV.ca, Dec. 07, 04 via Phayul.com.

"We have to understand and engage with this new reality - a new China linked in new ways to an evolving world," Martin said Monday evening at the annual meeting of the Canada China Business Council in Toronto.

"And . . . members of our business community are at the forefront of this effort. Canadian businesses, large and small, should be doing what you have done - developing and implementing strategies for China."

Martin said the dollars to be made in China do not eclipse concerns about human rights abuses -- a topic he said he intends to bring up when he travels to China on a trade mission next month.

[. . . . ] Martin said China's economy is growing at about three times Canada's economic growth, and has fuelled interest in "our natural resources wealth."

Picking up on that line, Qiu Xianghua, vice-president of Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration and Production Corp, said in a speech Monday that China has huge energy needs.

Prime Minister Paul Martin said China's economy will soon be greater than that of the United States, and urged Canada to do more business with the Asian giant. [. . . . ]





Import backlog at Vancouver port an economic drag -- Even temporary trade disruptions have big impact

Import backlog at Vancouver port an economic drag By Stephen Poloz - Special to Business Edge, Dec. 23, 04: Vol. 1, No. 26. Stephen Poloz is senior vice-president and chief economist for Export Development Canada.

Is Export Development Canada funded by the government? Li Ka-Shing owns the old Expo site from the time of BC ex-Premier Van der Zalm (The spelling could be incorrect. Check.). Would you like to make a bet on the building, expansion, or whatever it takes to get new port facilities there?

Reports have been hitting the news lately of the overburdened port of Vancouver, where goods coming from China are piling up awaiting their transfer to a train bound for Eastern Canada. The situation is undoubtedly annoying - but there are significant implications for the economy, too.

Consider that some 15 per cent of Canada's imports come from Asia, and most of those would pass through Vancouver. The total value of this stream is therefore on the order of $55 billion annually, or nearly $5 billion per month. The flow is not smooth, however - there is a disproportionate level of shipments in the second half of the year as retailers stock up for the holiday season. [. . . . ]





Editorial: China's dubious buy-in -- "Do Canadians believe it is wise to allow the government of China — or any other foreign government for that matter — to gain control over important parts of their economy"

Editorial: China's dubious buy-in Dec. 13, 04, The Star

[. . . . ] Control of major companies such as Noranda and Husky would give Beijing considerable leverage to try to pressure Ottawa into silence on issues like human rights abuses in China, its occupation of Tibet and its relations with Taiwan.

It would also allow Beijing to rob us of opportunities to expand our economy by shifting upstream activities, such as refining and processing and the jobs that go with them, to China.


Such concerns have led Anne Golden, president of the pro-business Conference Board of Canada, to suggest that a parliamentary review of the Investment Canada Act is urgently needed to ensure that Canadians have adequate protections against the dangers posed by takeovers by foreign governments.

That is wise advice.

Ottawa must take the appropriate steps to distinguish between foreign investments that strengthen our country and those that would put key parts of the Canadian economy under another country's flag.





APAC Minerals to Merge with Golden China Inc.

APAC Minerals to Merge with Golden China Inc. Canada News Wire, Dec. 27, 04

VANCOUVER, Dec. 23 /CNW Telbec/ - APAC Minerals Inc. (TSX-VEN: APC) is pleased to announce the signing of an agreement with Golden China Inc. ("Golden China") in order to consolidate exploration and development, operations and merchant banking opportunities within the Chinese mining industry.

The combined company will have cash and liquid securities on hand of in excess of Cdn$20 million (Cdn$16 million in cash; $4 million in liquid securities, based on current market prices), creating one of China's premier precious metal companies.

[. . . . ] About APAC Minerals Inc.:

APAC Minerals is an exploration company that owns or has interests in the mineral rich Golden Triangle in Southwest China and Inner Mongolia. The Company intends to explore and develop these properties, and to acquire additional properties worthy of exploration and development. Currently, the Company is completing a merger with Golden China Inc. in order to build critical mass in the Chinese mining industry.

About Golden China Inc.:

Golden China is a private company engaged in merchant banking in the precious metals sector in China, sponsored by the Kingsway Group. The Kingsway Group's parent company, Kingsway International Holdings Limited (TSX:KIH) is one of the leading middle tier investment banks in the Asia Pacific region. Kingsway Group's Chinese roots and global reach enable it to serve as a bridge between the major international financial centres and China's rapidly developing markets. Golden China has completed a "special warrant" financing at Cdn$1.00 per unit, that raised proceeds of approximately Cdn$20 million. Each unit consists of a special warrant that is exchangeable for one common share of Golden China and one half share purchase warrant exercisable at Cdn$1.50 other than those issued in exchange for shares of Mundoro Mining which consist of a full share purchase Warrant. It holds an approximate 5.2% equity interest in Mundoro Mining (TSX: MUN), and is developing a number of high potential opportunities within the Chinese precious metals sector. [. . . . ]





U.S. textile companies bracing for elimination of import quotas -- Canada's textile industry woes mentioned

U.S. textile companies bracing for elimination of import quotas Paul Nowell, CP, Dec. 26, 04

[. . . . ] According to the [textile] industry group, about 350,000 or one-third of the country's textile and apparel jobs have disappeared since 2001. Johnson predicts that as many as 650,000 jobs will be lost in the United States over the next two years if the quotas are completely eliminated.

Similar concerns are being expressed by Canadian textile companies. Ottawa announced Dec. 14 that tariffs on imported fabrics, now 10 to 14 per cent, will be eliminated unless the same fabric is made in Canada. Textile imports from China are up an estimated 18 per cent this year, accounting for one-third of Canada's cloth imports.

Job cuts are expected. Last week came an announcement that several textile mills in a Quebec town will close, impacting 700 jobs.

Right now, most of the major U.S. players are located in the Southeast, including companies such as Milliken & Co., Springs Industries, International Textile Group and others like Avondale Mills, Mount Vernon, National Textiles and Carolina Mills.
Some U.S. companies have already moved production offshore to Mexico and China.

Just this month, Greensboro-based ITG announced a partnership with China Ting Group, a Hong Kong-based manufacturer and retailer of textile products.

The companies plan to build a plant in Hangzhou, China, to dye and finish interior fabrics. The plant, plus a warehouse and a distribution centre, will be running by the end of 2005, ITG chief executive Wilbur Ross said. [. . . . ]



An industry unraveling

An industry unraveling Jeffrey Sparshott, Washington Times, Dec. 26, 04

Maiden, N.C. [. . . . ] Slashing jobs

The mills that make fabric and thread and the shops that cut and sew clothing have shed more than half of their workers in the past decade — to 685,600 in November from almost 1.6 million at the end of 1994, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That number will drop to 449,800 by 2012, the BLS projects, though other forecasts are more dire.

"I would guess that something like three-quarters of those [remaining jobs] would probably be lost in the next year or two," said Wilbur Ross, chief executive of W.L. Ross & Co., the global investment firm that acquired and merged Burlington Industries and Cone Mills into the International Textile Group earlier this year.


[. . . . ] Mr. Ross is expanding ITG's overseas operations. On Dec. 10, he announced a partnership with a Hong Kong company to build a dyeing and finishing plant in Hangzhou, China.

"China is by far the single biggest factor in the world in apparel," Mr. Ross said.

ITG this month also bought a Canadian wool company and plans to build a factory in Guatemala if a free-trade agreement with the country is approved by Congress. [. . . . ]


Wool -- Have you tried to find a pure wool sweater lately? Pure wool socks or fabric? What has happened that in a country as cold as Canada we have a choice of cotton or acrylic, neither one of which has the warmth of wool?




China market a growing dynasty -- Brisk business helps resurrect state's export market -- "Jobs continue to disappear"

China market a growing dynasty -- Brisk business helps resurrect state's export market Ross Wehner, Denver Post, Dec. 19, 04

[. . . . ] Southeastern states expect to continue losing positions in the clothing and fabric industries. North Carolina has almost 90,000 workers in the industry; and Catawba County, where Maiden is located, has one of the higher concentrations of textile and apparel workers in the state — about 5,400.

Layoffs in textile and apparel, as well as the furniture and fiber-optics manufacturing industries, have led to a surge in dislocated workers. The county's unemployment rate was 3.4 percent in January 2001, but hit 9.4 percent by that December. As of October 2004, the number of jobs in the county had declined by more than 10,000 since January 2001.

Most laid-off workers end up working for less money than they made in a textile or apparel factory
, according to a December report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Two-thirds of re-employed workers earn less on their new jobs than they did on their previous jobs, and one-quarter experience earnings losses in excess of 30 percent. [. . . . ]


Do read this. Canada is mentioned.

Canada is Colorado's No. 1 trade partner, followed by Mexico and Japan. But the growth rate of state exports to mainland China is the most dramatic.

"It is very possible that China could become Colorado's largest market over the next decade,"
said James Nelson, partner of the Denver-based law firm Lindquist & Vennum. Nelson, as Gates Corp. general counsel, helped the maker of machinery belts and hoses enter China in the mid-1990s.

Colorado is on track this year to equal or exceed its $6.6 billion total export record of 2000, mostly because of China.

"China has been the major contributor to that strong recovery," said Jim Reis, president of the World Trade Center Denver.


This is followed by "Expert Advice" on doing business in China.

Be patient and develop relationships: "If you are doing business in China, be prepared to go there quite a few times," said Arnie Clarke, of Laser Technology in Englewood.


Obviously, our last two Prime Ministers have taken this to heart.




Latin America is no joke

Latin America is no joke Stanley A. Weiss, International Herald Tribune, Dec. 27, 04. Stanley A. Weiss is chairman of Business Executives for National Security, a nonpartisan organization based in Washington.

WASHINGTON When 11 Latin American countries took the first steps toward a regional common market in 1960, dismissive U.S. officials predictably joked that the ill-fated Latin American Free Trade Agreement would generate "more tears than Lafta."

But no one was laughing this month in Peru when all 12 South American nations pledged themselves to an EU-style political and economic community. The South American Community of Nations - which by definition excludes Mexico, the United States and Canada - envisions a common market, a regional constitution and Parliament.

The display of unity in Peru was as much about South America as it was about the North - specifically the United States. A more unified group of South American nations is seen as a way to strengthen their collective bargaining power in trade negotiations with the almighty yankees.

Meanwhile, Washington has been slow to respond to the new dynamics of the Americas. The United States must accept that it can no longer take Latin America for granted and ignore its needs.

American policy toward the region is "old fashioned and murky," says Rubens Barbosa, a former Brazilian ambassador to Washington. "The U.S. has not recognized the changes in the region after Nafta. There is a new economic geography in the Americas."

Indeed, always bound more by geography than ideology, America and its Latin neighbors are drifting apart. As Washington moves to the right, the rest of the hemisphere is moving to the left. [. . . . ]

In contrast, President Hu Jintao of China spent two weeks traveling the region signing $30 billion in trade and development deals with Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Cuba. Last year, China became Brazil's second-largest trading partner behind the United States. [. . . . ]





Castro hits oil

Castro hits oil Dec. 25, 04

[. . . . ] Castro said the deposit was located off the coast of Santa Cruz del Norte, east of Havana, during an exploratory drilling. He said production at the site could begin during 2006.

Cuba currently produces 75,000 barrels daily, about half of what it needs. It imports most of the rest, much of it on favourable terms from political ally Venezuela.

Oil specialists believe Cuba's waters in the Gulf of Mexico could contain large quantities of crude, just as those of Mexico and the United States do. Earlier explorations turned up only modest discoveries.





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Compilation 1

The disaster from India to Indonesia is all over the news. Absolutely devastating. There is no point in linking, given the proliferation of news reports. There was only one item related to it that might be of interest here.

Water surges into nuke complex:

Command Post: Water surges into nuke complex:
India:

India’s nuclear weaponisation facility at Kalpakkam was threatened by the tsunamis from the Bay of Bengal. Water from the sea entered the complex and a wall in the Kalpakkam Atomic Reprocessing Plant and the Madras Atomic Power Station caved in.

An army battalion stationed in Chennai was deployed to drain out the water and act on an emergency. Following a scare about the extent of the damage, a spokesperson for the Crisis Management Group in New Delhi said: “All precautions have been taken and the Kalpakkam atomic plant is fully safe.”





Beefed-up security curtails cross-border drug trade

Putting it in context, at least it's a step in the right direction. If they can get drugs through, they can get terrorists through. $257 million out of a $25 billion drug trade is still only 1% interdiction rate. Too bad the government wasn't really interested in Canadian security or else the success rate would be higher. The front line officers are doing their best despite the constraints on their budgets -- no shortage of funds for the gun registry or Parliament's renovations though.


Beefed-up security curtails cross-border drug trade Robert Matas, Globe and Mail, Dec. 27, 04

VANCOUVER — Major drug busts at Canadian borders have plunged by almost 20 per cent this year, a sign that pumped-up security measures have cut into the illicit narcotics trade.''We're making headway, shutting down criminal organizations,'' RCMP Constable Alex Borden said.

But authorities warned the drop may be temporary, until international criminal organizations find more creative ways to penetrate the country's ports, airports and border crossings.

"We find when we shut down one organization, another starts up," Constable Borden said. "There is always someone to pick up the slack because there is money to be made, a product to distribute and a large market demanding [the drugs]."

National statistics compiled by the Canadian Border Services Agency show that border officers made 866 significant seizures of drugs as of Nov. 30, with a street value of $252.7-million.

Previously, the number of seizures of drugs destined for Canada from the United States increased each year since 2000, peaking in 2003 with 1,063. The street value of drugs confiscated at the border last year was estimated at $600-million. [. . . . ]





Cocaine, hot guns seized -- Police charge four people after making London's biggest bust of the year.

"Nobody sits in their room and smokes crack. If they're into that, they're into other stuff to support their addiction," Arbing said, adding prostitution, robbery and weapons offences are often linked to drug use.


Cocaine, hot guns seized Kelly Pedro, London Free Press, Dec. 26, 04 (may be a copy of one from Dec. 6, 04)

[. . . . ] Police also found a kilogram of powder cocaine, worth $100,000 -- one of the largest single seizures ever for London police -- and $20,000 worth of crack cocaine.

The bust at 1207 Huron St., near McNay Street, came after months of work, some based on probes several years ago.

Brent Abrams, 22, of Scarborough, Jahvashala St. Louis, 24, Sadia Cruikshank, 25, and Omar Peters, 21, all of London, are charged with almost 90 counts of drug, trafficking and firearm offences. [. . . . ]





Ho Hum, Criminal Charges for Liberal Aides -- These indictments allege corruption of major government deals. So why the big yawn?

Don't miss reading the comments on the page! Why? Just read.


Ho Hum, Criminal Charges for Liberal Aides Barbara McLintock, The Tyee, Dec. 24, 04

[. . . . The charges] never mention the separate spur line agreement at all. They say that the exchange of favours that is at the heart of the case involve unspecified matters of government business "including a bid by OmniTRAX to obtain the operating rights of B.C. Rail from the Government of British Columbia." That sounds much more like the deal for the whole railway, even though OmniTRAX did not end up being the successful bidder for those operating rights. (CN Rail was the winning bidder.)

[. . . . ] Aneal Basi is Dave Basi's cousin and he has worked for the Campbell government for about three years. He is only just 24, and his previous claim to fame was as an exceptionally good field hockey player who made the Canadian national team. He was, until taking a leave of absence a couple of months ago, working as a "public information officer" in the transport ministry – the main home of the B.C. Rail deal. Although it might sound like one, this was not a civil service job. He was a political appointee, given the post through a cabinet order back in 2002. Indeed, the first mention of his name in connection with anything political occurs in March 2001 (just before the election) when he was introduced in the legislature by ex-finance minister Gary Collins as an enthusiastic Young Liberal. Collins, who quit cabinet and caucus just a week ago to become head of Harmony Airways, was also the person who handpicked Dave Basi, another enthusiastic Young Liberal, to be his chief ministerial assistant when he was given the finance minister's job in 2001.

Aneal's name had never surfaced publicly before during the year-long investigation. And the charges against him are particularly interesting. He faces two counts, both of money laundering. In essence, he is charged with helping Dave Basi to commit the offences of fraud and breach of trust, by laundering the money that he took. All of which begs those two key questions of: where did the money come from in the first place? And just how was Aneal Basi able to hide and launder it? But no matter what the answers are to those questions, the implication is clear: money actually did change hands, because there was money that needed to be laundered.

Who allegedly bought influence?

That leads to the other interesting question: just who are the persons on the other side of these clandestine handshakes, and why do their names not appear in the criminal charges, even as other potential accused? If Dave Basi was accepting money in return for using, or promising to use, his influence on provincial matters, someone must have been giving him that money. It would not be a huge leap to draw the conclusion that that someone must have known that they were also complicit in any criminal offence that was being committed. Yet no other names appear on the charges.
[emphasis ed's . . . . ]





Feminists and Equality -- It's all about revenge, not equality

It's all about revenge, not equality Lydia Lovic, Winnipeg Sun, Dec. 27, 04

One of the biggest lies perpetuated by modern-day feminists is the contention that feminism is about equality. Feminists aren't interested in equality. What they want is revenge.

[. . . . ] The truth is, equality isn't so important for feminists when the person seeking parity is a guy. Equal treatment only applies when it benefits women. And that's why feminism just doesn't add up.


Read the details between those two paragraphs. She makes the case very well.




The ordinary can be a comfort

The ordinary can be a comfort Bob MacDonald, Toronto Sun, Dec. 26, 04

PRIME MINISTER Paul Martin and his family were enjoying Christmas yesterday at a luxury resort in the Arab Muslim kingdom of Morocco.

[. . . . ] Oh, and Bush spent his Christmas with his family at Camp David
, near Washington. Unlike Martin, he's keeping his hand firmly on the levers of government throughout the Christmas and New Year's season.

It's called being in charge -- running the government.





Canadians of consequence -- well said!

Fisher's article was inspired by the CBC project "The Greatest Canadian" -- the saddest list possible for a publicly funded broadcaster, in my opinion. Fisher is worth reading on this.


Canadians of consequence Douglas Fisher, Ottawa Sun, Dec. 26, 04

[. . . . Northrup] Frye had had much to say about "greatness." He offers a score or so of choices for "the greatest" in the recent book, Northrop Frye Unbuttoned. The greatest book in the bible: Genesis. The greatest novel: War and Peace. The greatest form of prose: The Utopia. The greatest mind of modern times: Shakespeare.

I leave you with this dissection of "greatness" by Frye: "There is no such thing as a great man; it's only that some men can do jobs well that we think important, and greatness always relates to the job and never to the man .... Everyone agrees to call Beethoven a genius, but he was only a man with a knack for writing music." So there!





Kojo soccer shocker

Kojo soccer shocker Philip Recchia, Dec. 26, 04, NY Post,

December 26, 2004 -- Well before Kojo Annan became embroiled in an ugly financial scandal, he was lying about his work experience, demonstrating poor business judgment and hiding at least one other scandal from his father, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, The Post has learned.

The most brazen deception occurred five years ago when he claimed to own a top-ranked Nigerian soccer team — which is in fact state-owned — while taking over a lowly Swiss team.

And when the man he appointed to run the Swiss team's operations was jailed for embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars, Kojo didn't breathe a word of the scandal to his father. [. . . . ]





The Notwithstanding Clause Has Been Used in Quebec so, why tell TROC not to use it? -- Poisonous Fruits Of Bilingualism -- "the first use of Section 33, the "notwithstanding clause" of the Constitution"

Poisonous Fruits Of Bilingualism Barry Cooper, National Post (Canada), March 14, 2003, Comment; In Calgary, A16, Arizona State University website

[. . . . ] By drawing so much attention to Quebec and the language issue, the federal government had legitimized a limitless sense of grievance. Ottawa unawares had enhanced separatism.

[. . . . ] Remember what happened: In 1974, Bill 22 made French the sole official language in Quebec. It was followed by Bill 101; by acrimonious litigation; by the first use of Section 33, the "notwithstanding clause" of the Constitution; and by growing anglophone impatience. Terrorists firebombed a coffee shop in Montreal in the name of linguistic purity. Following the Canadian Grand Prix auto race, Jacques Villeneuve ran afoul of the law by naming his nightclub after his own nickname, "Newtown." The United Nations Human Rights Commission then got involved, objecting to the language police measuring the size of English and French letters on commercial signs. They thought Quebec had violated freedom of expression, which the UN was sworn to uphold. Such were the first poisonous fruits of government action on the bilingualism front. [. . . . ]





Dutch doctor defiant over killing newborns Government to approve new protocol protecting physicians who euthanize

Dutch doctor defiant over killing newborns Government to approve new protocol protecting physicians who euthanize wnd.com, Dec. 26, 04

[. . . . ] Voluntary euthanasia is already legal in the Netherlands for anyone above the age of 12. Between 4,000 and 5,000 people have been euthanized since 2002.

"It makes you shiver to see babies suffer such enormous pain caused by their deformities, especially when you know that life expectancy is extremely low," says Verhagen. "Right now in all countries doctors are forced to find a solution behind the curtain. We want to shine a spotlight on this, to have clear rules so that no doctor is left facing a murder charge."

In 1997, tacit legal permission to euthanize was granted when the government refused to sentence a doctor found guilty of medically killing an infant. But Verhagen and other doctors want explicit permission and that's why they've been reporting their "crimes" to the authorities. [. . . . ]


It is one thing to be horrified at the taking of a life--newborns with severe disabilities--when you do not look after that life; it is quite another to know the toll it takes. Those who demand that these children live must expect to join in taking care of them. I don't have much time for the right-to-lifers who talk--but do not have to act--caring for the babies who never become independent children, teens or adults, caring 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, for years and years and years. The toll on the whole family involved is enormous.

I have a very hard time with this one though, on the other hand, I believe that from the moment of conception, that joining of cells is life.




Differentiating Militant & Moderate Islam

Differentiating Militant & Moderate Islam

The discussion on Sharia Law earlier in the week brought out opposing viewpoints on Islam and its philopsphy. This excerpt from an article by Daniel Pipes on militant versus moderate Islam ran in the Jerusalem Post on November 26, 2003 and helps to define these issues in the context of western values: [. . . . ]

If militant Islam is the problem and moderate Islam is the solution, as I often argue, how does one differentiate between these two forms of Islam?

It is often useful to ask questions. Such questions might include:


The questions concern: violence, modernity, secularism, Islamic pluralism, self-criticism, defense against militant Islam, goals in the West -- all with questions that need to be answered. The Canadian Coalition for Democracies is always worth checking.



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