Tuesday, May 19, 2015

An Open Letter To Ontario’s Minister of Health.

 

                                                                     May 19, 2015

The Honourable Dr. Eric Hoskins                     

Minister of Health

Queen’s Park

Toronto, Ontario

Dear Minister Hoskins;

In case you missed it, an article appeared in this weekend’s Sun concerning the plight of 21 year old Paige Spencer of Toronto.

Ms. Spencer has suffered most of her young life from Lyme Disease went undiagnosed for many years resulting in her now suffering in late stage of this illness which, as you know, means it is no longer curable.

She takes “70 pills and up to six needles a day”.

The disease is apparently a most painful one – and can in extreme circumstances lead to paralysis.

The issue I am writing to you about today is not about the inability of our medical system to expeditiously identify her illness (although it is inexplicable), rather it is about your Government’s callousness in not supplying Paige with her needed medications under OHIP.

The report in the Sun indicates that she and her family must travel weekly to get the necessary medications there at a cost of “about $5,000 a month”.

The Spencer family has gone into debt to pay these medical expenses – re-mortgaging their home to the point where the father is concerned that they will soon lose it.

Unbelievable.

I could mention the gross mismanagement of taxpayer funds by your Government but that would only cheapen what is really at issue here.  To see this young lady suffer for so long – be denied the only medication of help to her and indebting the family… is all most inhumane.

And that Sir is the only matter that should concern you.

I am hoping that you personally were not aware of her situation but now that you are – am hoping that you will move immediately to see this young lady’s medications paid retroactively by OHIP.

Sincerely,

‘K.D. Galagher’

 

 

Monday, May 18, 2015

Rex Murphy Nails It Again.

 

Murphy is one of Canada’s current best columnists; that one of his employers is the left wing CBC shows just how good this guy really is. 

In his column in the weekend Post, he deals the issue of the left capriciously branding their critics as racist; – when reading it bear in mind that it applies equally to the left’s portraying all those who stand up for the traditional family as being homophobic:

“I’ve seen the captious phrase “white privilege” — a camp neologism by my reading — very often lately. It emerges from the intellectual marshes of social justice “educators,” a typical pseudo-concept from that roiling pastiche of academic pursuit.

At base this nonsense asserts that white people come equipped — habited as it were — with all sorts of advantage, opportunities, easy dealing, and in general a faster better reach for the good things of life than human beings less pale. The phrase has not surprisingly spawned a slogan — after all, what academic discipline doesn’t aspire to the abrupt short-thought of a bumper sticker? — Check Your Privilege. Which translates into a hectoring from social justice warriors, as they so deliriously style themselves, for white people to stand back and tabulate with tearful guilt the infinite advantages that result from their epidermal good luck.

Scholars of white privilege point to the cascade of superior opportunities that the accident of white skin colour invests in all those who have won the paleness lottery. It’s easier, for example, to get the right shampoo. Lest you think that example a sarcastic fancy, it comes in in fact from a list of “perks” that all whites own: “When I cut my finger and go to my school or office’s first aid kit, the flesh-colored Band-Aid generally matches my skin tone. When I stay in a hotel, the complimentary shampoo generally works with the texture of my hair.” How Martin Luther King passed by these outrages in his I Have a Dream speech is a perplexity doomed never to be untangled.

Here in Canada, white privilege has been with us for centuries. In my part of the country, Atlantic Canada, the white epidermis has been a pure passport to bliss and favour. For generations Cape Bretoners, for example, have revelled in the advantages that poured on their coal-dusted heads and corrupted lungs from generations of labouring under the earth, stooping with pick and shovel, in the murky, dank, mildewed hell of the coal pits. Privileged? I’ll say. How they lorded it over the folks selling haberdashery in the above-ground stores bathed in sunlight and fresh air. Forty years in a coal mine — if accident or early death had not claimed them — and the world was their grime-coated oyster. What were the odd mine collapses, early deaths, TB, and a lifetime working in darkness and danger compared to the privileges that came their way just from being white?

Likewise a lot of the early men and women who fled the Irish Famines — so white and pale from endless hunger they could pass as ghosts. Sure, they left a lot of their families either starving — literally — or past all emaciation and already into the grave. But they came to the East Coast as servants, went off to the holiday of a seal hunt, or chewed a living out of the thin soil and treacherous sea for generations. It was life as one big open-air picnic — diversified by endless corn beef and cabbage dinners, and the beautiful thought that they didn’t ever have to worry about money or goods, because they didn’t have any money and there weren’t any goods.

But they were white — so privileged crowned their every hour. Up at 4 a.m. to go to sea for the men, up earlier for the women to light the stoves, start the breakfast for their masters, and work their fingers to the bone serving their betters. A privileged life? You betcha.

War was always one of the crowning moments of white privilege. The poorest whites, the least educated, always went to war in the biggest numbers. And there their privilege was to crowd in rat- and rain-filled trenches, huddled next to dead comrades, and then to throw themselves “over the top” to face a frenzy of artillery and rifle fire, where loss of life and loss of limb was preordained.

The history of all peoples is an anthology of pain and sorrow, hardship and brutality, intermingled for the lucky ones with moments of delightful exchange

I think you could easily run through history, recent or distant, and find a hundred or a thousand more examples of such pernicious entitlement. But if I may drop the ironic mode, let’s not. Let us instead agree that the history of all peoples is an anthology of pain and sorrow, hardship and brutality, intermingled for the lucky ones with moments — mainly domestic or social — of delightful exchange: of weddings, summer gatherings, a little kindness here, a little success there.

The world, or the God who convened it, if that is your faith, has been bathed in hardships and worse — and exemptions to this fate were not set up by skin colour. And as we emerged from the bleaker, less barbarous times of our past, efforts were made to make life just a little friendlier, a little softer and more caring for all. Most of the good stuff and most of the bad came from particular historical times, corrupt or evil leaders, or just random chance. The gulags made no allowance for whiteness.

To even set up white privilege as a category is prima facie racist. It is to reduce the sum of a person, his dignity, his drive, his worth and his soul to the colour of his skin; it is to posit skin colour as the point of departure for all interactions with that person, to found judgments on that skin colour, to draw feverish and deliberately negative conclusions from it.

That such a pseudo-concept even exists, and has full annual academic conferences to elaborate on its tedious fancifulness, and undergraduate courses to inject it into half-formed sensibilities, testifies — one more time — to the modern university’s descent into fatuousness. That any institution which claims to be one of higher learning even allows such trivial exchange offends the dignity of expression, and purporting to offer “instruction” under its banner is just the latest fulfillment of Alexander Pope’s prophetic alarm: A little learning is a dangerous thing. Emphasis on little, very little.

Some universities have become parodies of themselves, shops of petty moral vanity, given to feverish exhibitions of their putative sensitivity and moral preciosity. Hence “trigger warnings” for Ovid’s Metamorphoses, the hysteria over “rape culture” and, as here, activist sideshows masquerading as academic courses. (Exhibit A, from Columbia University’s Spectator: “Ovid’s Metamorphoses is a fixture of Lit Hum, but like so many texts in the Western canon, it contains triggering and offensive material that marginalizes student identities in the classroom.”)

It is to the great shame of modern universities that they have debased themselves to the pursuit of these follies

The obsession of seeing everything in race-coloured terms is itself racist. Anti-racism pursed by zealots transforms itself into the very vice it deplores. This is the cost of identity politics, and its close bedmate, victimology enterprises — the desire to judge, define, represent and indict the individual by the group he or she belongs to. Every human being’s experience in its infinite particularities and potentials transcends category.”

It is to the great shame of modern universities that they have debased themselves to the pursuit of these follies, and that they do not cast this cant aside as being hollow, sublimely tendentious and utterly shameful to the idea of, or the aspiration to achieve, an educated mind. Wasn’t Doctor King’s most famous prayer that he hoped to see the day “when people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character?”

National Post

I concur…

‘K.D. Galagher’

 

Thursday, May 14, 2015

GRASSHOPPER IS FOUND DEAD…

In an apparent drug related incident:

 

OLD VERSION:

The ant works hard in the  withering heat all summer long, building his house, and laying  up supplies for the winter.

The grasshopper thinks the  ant is a fool and laughs and dances and plays the summer away.

Come winter, the ant is warm and well fed. The  grasshopper has no food or shelter,  so he dies out in the cold.

MORAL OF THE OLD STORY:
Be responsible for yourself and / or hard work has its just reward.

MODERN VERSION:


The ant works hard in the withering heat and the rain all summer long, building his house and laying up supplies for the winter.

The grasshopper thinks the ant is a fool and laughs and dances and
plays the summer away.

Come winter, the shivering grasshopper calls a press conference and demands to know why the ant should be allowed to be warm and well fed while he is cold and starving.

CBC, CTV, Global and City TV show up to provide pictures of the shivering grasshopper next to a video of the ant in his comfortable home with a table filled with food.  Canada is stunned by the sharp contrast.

How can this be, that in a country of such wealth, this poor grasshopper is allowed to suffer so?  The little guy in the White House points to Canada as an example of a country that allows its rich to gain at the expense of the poor.

Kermit the Frog appears on CBC News with Peter Mansbridge along with the grasshopper and everybody cries when they sing, 'It's Not Easy Being Green.'

People Against Poverty stages a demonstration in front of the ant's
house where the news stations film the group singing, We Shall Overcome.

Then Justin Trudeau has the group kneel down to pray for the grasshopper's sake.

Kathleen Wynne condemns the ant and blames Prime Minister Harper, former Premier Mike Harris, Bill Davis, Joe Clarke, Harold Ballard, and Conrad Black for the grasshopper's plight.

Justin Trudeau and Scott Brison explain in an interview with Wendy Mesley that the ant has gotten rich off the back of the grasshopper and both call for an immediate tax hike on the ant to make him pay his
fair share.

Finally, the Provincial Liberal/NDP coalition drafts the Economic Equity and Anti-Grasshopper Act retroactive to the beginning of the summer.

The ant is fined for failing to hire a proportionate number of green bugs and having nothing left to pay his retroactive taxes his home is
confiscated by the Ontario Government's Green Czar, Dalton
McGuinty, and given to the grasshopper.

The story ends as we see the grasshopper and his free-loading friends finishing up the last bits of the ant's food while the government house he is in, which, as you recall, just happens to be the ant's old house, crumbles around them because the grasshopper doesn't maintain it..

The ant has disappeared in the snow never to be seen again.

The grasshopper is found dead in a drug related incident, and the house, now abandoned, is taken over by a gang of spiders who terrorize and ramshackle the once prosperous and peaceful neighbourhood.

The entire Nation collapses bringing the rest of the free world with it.

MORAL OF THE STORY:

Be careful how you vote in the next
election  and / or hard work has its unjust reward.

As someone on the internet sees it…

‘K.D. Galagher’

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Bastion of Democracy and …

 

Sober Second Thought.

I am speaking of course of Canada’s illustrious Senate.

(Speaking of Sober Thought – I do believe by Elizabeth May’s drunken antics earlier this week she now qualifies for a Senate Seat or at the very least – Honourable Senator Status).

But back to the Senate itself.

The papers yesterday and today are awash with articles saying that our dear Senate is planning to deep six Michael Chong’s Bill intended to give greater powers to the average Member of Parliament.

All the Senate needs do is talk it out under the election is called this fall and the Chong bill dies on the order paper.

As was said in a famous movie – “they can’t handle the truth”  …. or in this case – they can’t handle democracy.

And why for heaven’s sake should they …after all they are but appointed hacks, flacks and ne’er do wells.

But don’t think for a minute the Senate is acting out of some sort of belief in their independence.

No sir – they are acting as the executioner for the Party Leaders in the Commons who were forced to support the Bill solely for public appearance sake.

Regardless of Party – Tory, Grit or Dipper – the last thing their Leaders want is empowered Back Benchers.

Dear Reader – we are in desperate need of a shake-up.  We need to get rid of the Senate – roll back the all powerful PMO and curtail an out of control Supreme Court.

The voters took matters into their own hands in Alberta – it is now time that this same rise up occurs at the national level.

Michael Chong for Prime Minister, anyone?

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

It Has Come To This…

 

This coming Thursday is the second of two days set aside to decide who will lead the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario into the next and far off Election.

There are but two (2) candidates and although both are likely decent folk, in their own right, neither is qualified to lead the Province’s Tories.

I heard them both on radio today and the woman – Christine Elliott sounded much the same to me as our current Premier – Liberal Kathleen Wynne.

The second candidate – Patrick Brown sounded as if he were being interviewed for a low level position in a high-school government.

I have a vote which I have yet to cast but have sadly come to the conclusion that neither is worth the effort.

This at a time when the Governing Liberals have run amuck and are in desperate need of some well deserved comeuppance.

Ontario has lost its way as has its major parties.  None on the scene seem to be able to do / say anything to get us back on track.

A New Party?

I think not. 

We have become a society of ‘me firsters’ – we have fallen in love with Big Government which wastes our money, over-taxes and over-spends leaving it to future generations to pick up the tab.

I did tell you, did I not, how worried Kathleen Wynne is about the future and her grand-daughter? 

She of course is worried about the effects of Global Warming but too bad it is not in regard to something important such as as our withering economy.

Wynne need not worry – she can take comfort in the fact that neither Tory Candidate is likely to cause her much - if any - grief.

As I see it…

‘K.D. Galagher’

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

GOD …

 

AND HIS FOLLOWERS CAN TAKE CARE OF THEMSELVES.

As in the Supreme Court of Canada’s ruling last week that prayers have no place at municipal council tables across Canada.

The logical extension of this Ruling means that God no longer has a place in any of our Governments:

  • No prayers
  • No National Prayer Breakfast
  • Not in our Constitution
  • Not in our Anthem
  • Not at Remembrance Services

And so on.

But as per my title – it will not be God nor any of his true followers who will suffer from the Court’s edict; it will be society in general.

Canada, like America below us, was founded on Christian / Jewish principles.

In short, those principles have made our countries great and to me it stands to reason that without those principles to guide us, we, as a secular society, are doomed to decline.

Principles such as the worth of the individual, human rights, love and forgiveness will wither in an ever increasing ‘me first’ environment.

I am not saying the Court was wrong in its decision since I can see that for non-believers and even for many left wing believers – God in the affairs of government could be seen as discriminatory.

I am merely pointing our what society is losing in its quest for universal inclusivity.

As I see it…

’K.D. Galagher’

 

Thursday, April 16, 2015

It’s All About … Olivia.

 

As in Premier Wynne’s granddaughter.

So said our distinguished leader when she announced the Province’s latest folly  …the 2 billion dollar annual cap and trade tax.

She brought this stupidity in since she wanted “to tell her granddaughter Olivia that she did something positive about climate change”.

Too bad she is not equally concerned about leaving her granddaughter the massive Ontario debt – currently some $300 Billion Dollars – to pay off.

This from a Premier who, with her predecessor, lost 350,000 well paying manufacturing jobs to their totally misguided green energy program.

No less an authority than Warren Buffet is stated as saying that his decision to take Kraft out of Ontario was greatly motivated by Ontario’s inflated energy costs.

So now we have a new tax – Cap and Trade, which will further decimate Ontario businesses at a time when senior GM Union Officials are predicting the end of its manufacture in this province thereby creating further loss of jobs to the tune of 30,000 plus.

And I have yet to even refer to another of its major job loss initiatives – Ontario’s Retirement Pension Plan.

Having gone from the Engine of Canada to its Basket Case in 10 short years, Wynne and Company are making sure that our new have-not status will stay with us for many years to come. Indeed the very real danger exists that this status is now irreversible.

Some legacy to leave young Olivia.

As I see it…

‘K.D. Galagher’