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Welcome to Evilness Monday, April 07 2025 @ 06:50 MDT
Tuesday, April 03 2007 @ 09:54 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,735
 Stephen Harper wants an election. He wants it bad. He and his party are so into election mode they've probably hired the caterers for the victory party. All the signs are there. The Tories are spending money like it's going out of style. A huge negative ad campaign against the Liberals, a new fully equipped and staffed 17000 square foot "war room" in Ottawa, and budget largess that would make any previous government blush in shame. There's no denying it, the Tories are in campaign mode right now. Unfortunately for Harper and the Conservatives, they're the only ones in the country who really want an election.
Monday, April 02 2007 @ 01:45 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,521
 In my surfing of the blogosphere and the news services I've noticed some things. One of which is the ferocity that the opposition parties attack one another. The Liberals attack the Block, NDP and Greens; the NDP attack the Liberals, Greens and Block; and so on. Same in the blogosphere, the Liberal bloggers attack the NDP bloggers and so on. I understand the reasoning, each party and their supporters are trying to steal votes from the other. There's one major problem with all this though. In the oppositions', and their supporters', vigor in trying to trash the other they're unwittingly, or wittingly, providing support to the Conservatives.
Saturday, March 31 2007 @ 06:58 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 2,067
 Well it's the end of week one with the new Macbook. So far I've successfully installed Windows and partially installed Linux. So it is now tri-boot, with the cavaet that Linux doesn't yet boot fully, which I'm still working on. Other than that the new computer works great. There's only one problem, and it's a bug in Mac OS X that's truly annoying. It seems that there's issues with the WPA drivers for the wireless card. Now from what I've seen on Apple's it's a widespread problem that has people up in arms. For example, for my network, the bug prevented me and Mrs. Evil from connecting to Google. Everything else worked fine, unless they linked to Google of course. So if you need WPA, you may want to wait till Apple gets this bug fixed. I've gotten around the problem by using the less secure WEP protocol which does work. Other than that, I've no complaints about the computer.
Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 01:47 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,683
 Via an article by Gwynne Dyer there's an interesting article by Gregory Paul. The article, which has the ponderous title of Cross-National Correlations of Quantifiable Societal Health with Popular Religiosity and Secularism in the Prosperous Democracies - A First Look, looks briefly at correlations between religion and and various societal indicators. It is a fascinating work. Briefly, it shows that countries that have high religiosity, are also high in things that western society considers bad while those countries that are more secular, tend to less nastiness. So for example, the United States scores the highest in absolute belief in God, also scores highest in areas such as teen pregnancy and infant mortality, where as countries such as Sweden who have lower rates of absolute belief in God have lower rates of teen pregnancy and infant mortality. Most of the axis studied show a correlation between something undesirable in society and religiosity.
Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 10:31 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,756
 It would seem that the opposition parties have basically re-written the Conservatives' so-called "Clean Air Act" in such a way that it's now a completely new piece of legislation. The question is what will Stephen Harper, who opposes most of what the opposition has put in the reworked bill, do? Harper could make the Clean Air Act a confidence motion, in which case the passing of the massively rewritten bill would force an election. This is a possibility, as Harper is currently enjoying the benefits of the budget bounce in the polls. Or Harper could let it pass, but then he and his government would be forced to do things for the environment that the Tories just don't want to do. The Conservatives could also simply withdraw the bill, preventing it from coming to a vote in the first place and avoiding what could be a big mess.
Wednesday, March 21 2007 @ 10:04 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 2,146
 So we have the new federal Conservative budget. I've looked at it and am generally unimpressed. Though there's lots of spending, which wasn't a surprise with Harper throwing money around like it's going out of style, none of the spending has any real vision to it. It just gives the impression that Harper's trying to buy our votes because he's desperate to stay in power. The budget has provided me with some amusement though, but more on that later.
Monday, March 19 2007 @ 12:06 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,665
 Given that federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty will simply re-use the shoes he bought last year does this mean, like everything else the Harper government has come up with since January he's going to re-use a previous Liberal budget? I think that is unlikely, give that Harper's been breaking the bank with pre-budget spending announcements there's not much left to surprise people with the budget. What seems to be certain is that the budget that is being proposed (or what at least has been announced/leaked) is not likely to match up with what Canadians want from the budget.
Friday, March 16 2007 @ 02:33 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,901
 For a party that campaigns on law and order, they sure have problems following even the rules they set out for themselves. Rob Anders has had his nomination overturned by a Calgary court. The court cited the fact that the Conservative Party didn't follow it's own rules when it set up the nomination "meeting" nor when it disqualified candidates. These guys are looking less and less trustworthy every day.
Thursday, March 15 2007 @ 01:49 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,873
 Perusing the blogosphere I came across a piece from Cathie From Canada. Now the gist of her post is that with the Tories eliminating the climate change group of Environment Canada and focusing more power in the PMO. What I'm writing about is something that got me thinking at the end of her post where she writes:
"Maybe the opposition parties should just pass next week's budget - and let Harper start explaining why he isn't actually capable of fulfilling all of the promises he has made." This got me thinking that all this spending might just be bluster in the hopes that the opposition forces an election on the budget.
Wednesday, March 14 2007 @ 10:15 MDT
Contributed by: evilscientist
Views: 1,882
 Over that past couple of weeks, Stephen Harper has been on a spree of spending announcements. Now this isn't unusual for federal politicians anticipating an election after all nothing garners votes faster than bribing voters with their own money. What make this spending spree notable is that Harper was elected on a platform of fiscal responsibility. At the rate he's going with handing out cash and tax cuts, the federal government will head back into deficit territory.
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