The non conformer’s Canadian Weblog

November 11, 2008

No RCMP ALCOHOLICS IT SEEMS

Too often mean, Dirty Cops, bad RCMP in the past gave me some undeserved traffic tickets, so now it is my turn to give them some well  deserved ones next as well… even that RCMP officer Benjamin Monty Robinson involved in Robert Dziekanski killing AND main suspect in drunk-driving-causing-death incident’RCMP officer Benjamin Monty Robinson, one of the four officers involved in the killing of Robert Dziekanski, has been caught drunk-driving and killing 21 year old Orion Hutchinson . http://abbink.blogspot.com/2008/10/rcmp-officer-benjamin-monty-robinson.html

 

Coquitlam RCMP officer charged for drunk driving. A B.C. RCMP officer has been charged with impaired driving after being stopped by members of his own detachment on his way from the Boulevard Casino in Coquitlam early Friday morning. The officer was released from custody on a promise to appear in a Port Coquitlam court on Jan. 10, 2010. The name of the officer has not been released, but police did say he has been moved to administrative duties pending the completion of the criminal investigation and a parallel internal investigation. Drunk driving is beyond stupid… *Especially* when it’s a cop.  I just can’t understand why anyone would drive drunk. Especially a police officer.  What the hell is wrong with these people? Not good. Way too much of this going on. The RCMP and police forces in general are really losing respect and credibility. This stuff sure doesn’t help. at least they didn’t try cover it up…yet. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2009/09/25/bc-coquitlam-rcmp-impaired-driving.html
0rcmprookie
 
 
Crash cop admits loaded firearm accusation By TONY BLAIS, COURT BUREAU The Edmonton Sun  EDMONTON — A former city cop who resigned in disgrace after running a red light and seriously injuring a man in a fiery crash has admitted he unsafely stored his loaded police gun.  (Douglas) Kurtis Brown, 31, yesterday pleaded guilty in provincial court to careless use of a firearm.  Crown prosecutor Kerry Hart said Brown was suspended from active duty after being charged with impaired driving causing bodily harm relating to a May 11, 2008, collision on 75 Street, near the Whitemud Drive exit ramp.  Later that day, following the 2 a.m. crash, officers went to Brown’s Mill Woods home to have him turn over his police-issued handgun, a Glock Model 22 40-calibre pistol.  Brown led the officers to the basement of the home where they found his EPS duty belt draped over a couch in one of the rooms, said Hart. Inside some pouches on the belt, officers located two 15-round magazines loaded with 40-calibre ammunition.  After the belt was turned over, officers were taken to a nearby room where Brown retrieved his Glock from a duffel bag, said Hart.  The pistol was loaded with a magazine containing 14 rounds and had one round already in the firing chamber and court heard the firearm was not secured in any way.  Brown ejected the magazine and the round in the chamber and handed the gun over without incident.  Brown did not appear in court yesterday, but he was ordered to be present for a Sept. 11 sentencing hearing.  On July 3, Brown was fined $18,400 on his earlier convictions for dangerous driving causing bodily harm.  At the time, Judge Michael Allen noted Brown’s “courageous” actions in pulling his trapped victim from his burning pickup truck and said jail was not required.  In April, Allen found Brown guilty of four counts of dangerous driving causing bodily harm after ruling Brown went through a red light driving in excess of 70 km/h.  Court heard Brown, a constable for three years who was off-duty at the time of the crash, was returning to his home with his girlfriend and their two other roommates after a birthday party at a downtown nightclub.  The impact forced Robert Wasyliw’s truck to flip — trapping the then 18 year old beneath the burning vehicle.  Brown had also been accused of impaired driving, but Allen earlier dismissed those charges after ruling the two breath samples provided by Brown would be excluded from evidence due to a breach of his charter rights.  http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Crime/2009/08/26/10612776-sun.html
 
Police tend to be charge, prosecuted for drunk driving only when there is an undeniable  accident now too?
 
“Alcohol Consumption of alcohol in any location at the RCMP Centralized Training Facility (CTF) or D Block is forbidden and considered a breach of conduct. There are two messes on the Depot Grounds that are available for the consumption of alcoholic beverages: General Mess and the Officers’ Mess. Violation of the ban will be reported to Depot Division Security Administration. The Commissionaires at Depot are contractors acting on behalf of the RCMP and have the authority to enforce this policy. Any breach of conduct or willful damage to the premises will be reported to the appropriate authority and financial charges may be applied. If there is a breach of conduct, you may be sent home. In this instances, the full amount of tuition will still be charged to the appropriate Police Service, as well as all accommodation and meal costs incurred. A letter will be forwarded to the appropriate Police Chief /Commanding officer” and that is all? http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/clet/publications/course_candidate_orientation_booklet/i_e.htm
 
How come the Edmonton and Calgary Police alone also  now are solely  the alcoholics, for an RCMP spokesman said there are no alcoholic RCMP officers
 
I rightfully also do not believe anything the RCMP lying spin doctors say to me  anymore.. RCMP are known to be liars, alcoholics, incompetents and pretenders.
 
 
 what according to the bad RCMP spin doctors, there are only 3 alcoholic RCMP officers in all of Canada? for the rest they do not drink alcohol   or beer  but only milk, even when off duty?
 

Off-duty RCMP officer faces impaired charge following crash in The Canadian Press -  VANCOUVER, BC – An off-duty BC RCMP officer is facing charges of impaired driving following a crash in east Vancouver. Sgt. Tim Shields says the incident happened early Saturday morning and the officer has been re-assigned to administrative duties

Two Mounties accused of drunk driving Winnipeg Sun

all 20 news articles » 

 AND THEY ARE STILL ALLOWED TO HOLD THEIR JOBS?

 
 

 

Sask Mountie pleads guilty to 2 counts of drunk driving, loses licence for 3 years  REGINA – A Saskatchewan Mountie has been fined $3,500 and had his licence revoked for three years for impaired driving.

 

 

 
rcmp.off
 

 Here is something I recently read in the newspapers news that was hilarious, even  on the net, a  RCMP spin doctor, as quoted by  news reporter said  that the RCMP has only 3  court cases this year against alcoholic RCMP officers, and the rest of the RCMP officers are non alcoholic it seems, so they do not get tickets for drunk driving, for the RCMP officers they are  sober all the time too?? That was really funny. In the real world 40 percent of the persons often take drugs and alcohol, but not in the cops world? Ha ha ha.. that is a funny joke. Rightfully unbelievable.  

1rcmp

CP  Guilty police officer retires   Saskatoon police officer found guilty, fined $600 on impaired driving-related charges  Two weeks after being found guilty of impaired driving-related charges, a senior Saskatoon police officer has retired.  That means that Insp. Al Stickney won’t face any potential disciplinary measures from an internal review of the matter. Stickney was found guilty by a judge last month on a charge of having control of a vehicle while drunk. He was fined over $600 and lost his driver’s license for one year. In a press release, the Saskatoon Police Service says that because Stickney is retiring, it won’t hold an internal review into the incident in July 2007. During his trial, officers testified they saw him stagger towards a vehicle and get in but they intervened before he could drive anywhere. http://www.paherald.sk.ca/index.cfm?sid=199416&sc=4 this is just the tip of the iceberg..

 

0dirtycop3

VANCOUVER — The RCMP’s top B.C. spokesman blames an “internal communications breakdown” for his unit’s failure to learn until yesterday that yet another officer is facing impaired driving charges, and that he cannot be sure other officers in the province are not in similar legal difficulties. The department had said in recent weeks that three Mounties were facing impaired driving charges. Meanwhile, officers from New Westminster and Vancouver police have also been charged.  But Sergeant Tim Shields, who is in charge of the strategic communications section for E Division, covering British Columbia, said the division’s professional standards branch told him yesterday there was one more case, stemming from an incident in October of 2007. During a press briefing, Sgt. Shields said an “internal communications breakdown” fouled up the Mounties’ commitment to let the public know about officers in serious trouble. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20081210.BCCOP10/TPStory/National

“RCMP reveal year-old impaired driving case against Mountie   Last Updated: Wednesday, December 10, 2008 | 12:17 AM ET  CBC News Cpl. Tim Shields, who speaks for the RCMP in British Columbia, says better communication within the force is needed to keep the public informed about Mounties facing criminal charges. (CBC)  It has taken more than a year, but the RCMP on Tuesday released information about an impaired driving charge against one of their own. Richmond RCMP officer Kulwant Singh Malhi, 42, was arrested in October 2007 after a hit-and-run collision in Richmond, B.C., that occurred while he was off duty. He was charged in March this year with impaired driving, dangerous operation of a motor vehicle, and failure to remain at the scene of an accident. This case was never reported until Tuesday when a community newspaper inquired about Malhi’s appearance in Richmond Provincial Court, said Cpl. Tim Shields, a spokesman for the RCMP in British Columbia. Shields said he was never informed of Malhi’s case, even though the RCMP communications department should be the first to know about cases involving members of the force being charged with or facing impaired driving charges. “This obviously involves a complete lack of judgment. It is something that all of us recognize is a serious threat to public safety. Impaired driving is the No. 1 criminal cause of death in Canada,” Shields said. “I am in charge of communications for the RCMP for all of British Columbia, and I am doing everything in my power to ensure that if an RCMP member is involved in an incident such as this, that it will become public as quickly as possible,” he said.  Mountie accused of leaving crash scene The RCMP held a news conference Tuesday afternoon following Malhi’s court appearance in the morning. Malhi will be back in court on Jan. 15. The crash Malhi is accused of being involved in happened on Oct. 20, 2007. A black Nissan Ultima rear-ended a Honda Civic shortly before 3 a.m. at No. 4 and Francis roads, Shields said. No one was injured in the collision, but about 30 minutes later Richmond RCMP received another 911 call from a motorist about a Ultima being driven in an erratic manner southbound on Highway 99. The caller followed the vehicle to Delta and then Ladner, both suburbs of Vancouver, while staying on the phone with police, Shields said. The Ultima finally stopped in the driveway of a residence in Ladner. “Delta Police officers arrived minutes later, and the lone male occupant of the Ultima was arrested for impaired driving,” Shields said. The Ultima turned out to be an unmarked police vehicle. Other officers facing drunk driving allegations This is the latest Metro Vancouver police officer to be charged with impaired driving or facing similar charges. Const. Peter Hodson of the Vancouver Police Department has been charged with impaired driving and will appear in court on Dec. 29.  Const.Tomi Hamner of the New Westminster Police Service is scheduled to appear in provincial court on Dec. 17 to face a charge of impaired driving following a single-vehicle accident in North Vancouver in October. RCMP Cpl. Benjamin Montgomery Robinson is scheduled to appear in provincial court on Jan. 15 to face a charge of impaired driving causing death. Robinson is a member of the RCMP’s Vancouver 2010 integrated security unit. North Vancouver RCMP Cpl. Darren Baker will be tried on impaired driving charges on Jan. 27, 2009. His was charged after his vehicle was stopped last December by West Vancouver city police officers. Hodson, Hamner and Baker have all been reassigned while their cases proceed in court. Robinson, however, has been suspended with pay.”
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2008/12/09/bc-mountie-drunkdriving-charges.html

Alcohol, drugs main causes of deaths:  RCMP revenue generating  traffic tickets seem still to be the main focus , even in Alberta

“Reducing the number of impaired driving incidents is one of the RCMP’s top priorities.” But revenue generating  traffic tickets seem still to be the main focus of Alberta’s police forces. http://postedat.wordpress.com/?s=alberta+RCMP

Alberta Impaired Driving Statistics:

“Reducing impaired driving on Alberta’s highways will save lives, prevent injuries and lower insurance costs. In a national survey conducted by Transport Canada, it was determined that three per cent of drivers on the road between late night and early morning hours, Thursday through Sunday, were impaired. These offenders account for 33 per cent of traffic fatalities among drivers every year.

“There are too many irresponsible drivers who think they can drink alcohol and still drive safely, despite the fact that in 2006, 90 people were killed in alcohol-related crashes,” “  We will continue to target and arrest those people who put innocent members of the community at risk by driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.” Reducing impaired driving on Alberta’s highways will save lives, prevent injuries and lower insurance costs. In a national survey conducted by Transport Canada, it was determined that three per cent of drivers on the road between late night and early morning hours, Thursday through Sunday, were impaired. These offenders account for 33 per cent of traffic fatalities among drivers every year.
 
In Alberta in 2004, 1,138 of injury collisions involved drivers who had either been drinking or were judged to have been impaired. There were more than four and half times as many male drivers as female drivers who had consumed alcohol and been involved in a casualty collision. The majority of these drivers were males younger than 45 years old.
 
 

 

Males between 18 and 21 years of age were most likely to have been drinking before the crash (per 1,000 licensed drivers).
 
In 2004, at 10.4 per cent of the total, September was the month with the highest number of casualty collisions involving alcohol.
 
At 14.4 per cent, July had the highest number of alcohol-related fatal collisions. The most fatal and non-fatal injury collisions involving alcohol occurred on Saturdays in 2004. And the most likely time period for these collisions, on any day of the week, was between 11:00 p.m. and 3:00 a.m.
 
68 per cent of the alcohol-involved collisions are single vehicle with pick-up trucks being the most prevalent.

Eleven alcohol-related collisions occur on undivided roadways for every collision on divided roadways.

There were more than 380 deaths from traffic collisions in the Alberta RCMP jurisdiction for 2005; 26 per cent had alcohol as a contributing factor. “
http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/ab/news/2008/Edm_Traffic-Impaired_July29.htm
 
0why 
So the spins is that the RCMP themselves now are all angels, tea totters .. dream on..
 
 “Alcohol, drugs main causes of in-custody deaths: RCMP Last Updated: Friday, February 15, 2008 | 5:06 AM ET  CBC News  An internal RCMP report obtained by CBC News shows 80 people died while in police custody between 2002 to 2006, the majority due to alcohol intoxication or drug overdoses. ‘The leading cause of death was alcohol or drug overdose.’— RCMP internal report The 100-page report, written in December 2007, is the RCMP’s most comprehensive analysis of in-custody deaths and presents statistics ranging from the reason police got involved in the first place to where the death occurred. “The majority of subjects died at the scene of a complaint, which was most commonly a disturbance or drunk in public place call, or in a hospital within 30 minutes of initial contact with the police,” the report says. “The leading cause of death was alcohol or drug overdose.” Of the 80 people who died in police custody, most were men over the age of 30 who had been using drugs or alcohol and had a criminal record.”
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2008/02/14/bc-police-custody-deaths.html

National Impaired Driving Statistics:
Impaired driving is the leading criminal cause of death in Canada. Alcohol is involved in nearly 40 per cent of all motor vehicle fatalities in Canada.
One in every 33 drivers on Canadian roads at night are impaired. Statistics also indicate that impaired drivers are less likely to be wearing their seatbelts.
Young drivers under the age of 19 are 251 times more likely to be involved in a fatal collision with a blood alcohol concentration in excess of 150mg% (0.15 milligrams of alcohol in 100 mililitres of blood).
According to Transport Canada, drivers with a high blood alcohol concentration over 170mg% (0.17 milligrams of alcohol in 100 mililitres of blood) represent 64 per cent of nighttime fatal crashes.
Persons with a blood alcohol reading in excess of 170mg% (0.17 milligrams of alcohol in 100 mililitres of blood) are 461 times more likely to be involved in a fatal motor vehicle collision.

“Tiny number of police officers part of large drinking and driving problem- Ha Ha Ha  Sun Nov 9, 12:03 PM   VANCOUVER, B.C. - The numbers are staggering.  Mothers Against Drunk Driving says 75,000 people are arrested annually in Canada for drinking and driving. There are an additional 100,000 to 150,000 24-hour suspensions handed out each year by police, said MADD chief executive officer Andy Murie.  Sometimes the people who make those arrests, the front-line police officers who try to get the drunks off the road become – albeit rarely – part of the statistics.  “You might find 10 to 15 incidents a year involving police officers,” said Murie in a recent interview from his Oakville, Ont., office.  “The thing is that with the 10 to 15, because they are police officers and they get charged with a crime, it’s news.”  Often front-page news, most recently in British Columbia.  In recent weeks, the public learned that three B.C. police officers are facing drunk-driving charges – two members of the RCMP and a third from the New Westminster police department.  One of the off-duty RCMP members was arrested for drunk driving after a Jeep collided with a motorcycle, killing a 21-year-old man in Delta, B.C.  Other high-profile cases this year across the country include an Edmonton police officer facing one count of driving with a blood alcohol level above the legal limit and five counts each of impaired driving causing bodily harm and dangerous driving causing bodily harm.  In Saskatoon, a judge will decide the fate later this month of a senior member of the Saskatoon police service charged with impaired driving.  At his trial, two arresting officers testified that Insp. Al Stickney got behind the wheel after they observed him drunkenly staggering across the street.  “This year there’s been about 10 (arrests),” said Murie. “That’s pretty normal for a year.”  ..  the number of police officers caught drinking and driving is a tiny percentage of the total  ..   Benedikt Fischer, a criminologist at the faculty of Health Sciences at Simon Fraser University, said police officers are recruited “from the human race and despite the fact we expect so, human behaviour doesn’t stop on-or off-duty.”  Fischer also believes the number of police officers who drive drunk is probably higher than the arrest statistics indicate. Being a cop is part of a “professional or police culture” dominated by machismo and camaraderie where police officers spend a lot of time socializing with each other, said Fischer, and often it involves alcohol.  “Drinking among police officers is often quite extensive and excessive, probably more so than in other professions,” he said.  When an RCMP member in B.C. is identified as having a drinking problem, he or she gets to know Dr. Ian MacDonald, the regional health services officer for RCMP in B.C.  After an assessment, they might be referred outside the force to an independent addiction specialist.  Whether it’s determined they have a drinking problem or not, all RCMP members arrested for drinking and driving come to MacDonald’s attention and must have an assessment.  MacDonald also thinks that MADD’s numbers are low and that the number of police officers arrested for drunk driving is higher than 10 to 15.  “That strikes me as low. If you look at B.C., we might have two or three charges a year. And if B.C. is 10 per cent of the population, that would be 20 to 30 across Canada.”  Mark Berber, a lecturer in psychiatry at the University of Toronto and an assistant professor at Queen’s University, is also skeptical of the MADD figures.  “It’s surprisingly low considering the stress these guys and gals are under.”  Studies, he said, have suggested that police officers have one of the most stressful jobs and “unfortunately a small number may seek to reduce their anxiety and stress by having a drink.”  He has counselled police officers in his private practice.  “They have spoken about seeking relief from stress and through medication and also drinking,” Berber said.  RCMP members who get caught drinking and driving, in addition to the court process, must endure an internal code of conduct investigation, said RCMP spokeswoman Const. Annie Linteau.  Members appear before an adjudication board and the result could be dismissal, she said. ”  http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/081109/national/police_drunk_driving
 
“  We only read/see about the few due to the police buddy system which will leave all but the most blatant of the cops drunk (ie involved in an accident) either being escorted home, or not even bothering to perform the breathe analysis. Do you really think the public is so stupid to believe that the police are held accountable to their partners? I have seen this first hand and know it for truth. So MADD get off your horse and see the facts for what they really are, police covering up for police”  “ I get the uncomfortable impression that there is a level of spin coming from MADD over this matter! If anything, I would have expected MADD to have taken a highly reproachful attitude toward anyone in this profession(as they do to anyone in any other profession) who CHOOSE to drink and drive. Yes, it makes the news if it’s a cop and so does any other citizen who kills someone while drunk at the wheel. “” There is absolutely no excuse for anyone driving drunk,be they officers or not.We are all aware of the fact that it is illegal and should all be held to the same standard. As to lighter sentencing,police generally get booted off the force after conviction.  “
 
All alcoholics should be fired anywhere..
 
The way I see it.. The federal and provincial conservatives are also all still mostly immoral persons, do  see my blog on why Stephen Harper hides his religion.. so also are many of  the Federal, provincial Liberals, and also the cops, RCMP, CRTC, it seems they are all corrupted,   crooked? for they all support mainly the Businessmen, corporations  who they hope can support them with bribes.. and sadly this is an undeniable reality.. 
 
 
the  NDP and the   CBC for the present do try to support consumers, and their complaints but they have no real power too.
 
Complainers and whistle Blowers seem not be be liked anywhere.. Get used to it.
 
 
A good name is worth more than silver and gold, and a tarnished one cannot be accepted.. it is a clear loser and not a winner.
 
I learned long time ago important people do not like me, you embarrassing them in writing, posting their sins on the nets, for they send the police to my home 6 times now, a prime minister, a mayor, and a premier now too, and I next tell the police I want to contact the news media now about this and the police take off..  and they also threaten to sue me.. I tell them to go ahead I need the publicity..
they try to contact my employer but I am retired..
 
 
I like to write an email  letter of complaint  directly to a person, and also next send a copy to the news editors, politicians, but note  also to post the letter on the net and tell them all it is on the net.. even the last 2 decades, and from my experience that is the only thing that works effectively still.
  
  
Again my complaint  #1

Recently I had problems with my internet connection for a whole week, and I get different advice from the so called experts to last a life time too.. Trouble shooting problems with computers can be a complex undertaking caused by a very small unresolved problem even. A Bell technician finally after 2 years  showed up today at my home at 1:30 PM at Acanac’s suggestion and he reduced my internet, modem speed from 10 megs to 5 megs.. because he thinks the Acanac modem is the problem, it does not want to accept the 10 meg causing the recent past internet connectivity problem.. Somehow I doubted it .. there also had to be other factors elsewhere? Everything works great so far, web page connectivity and Utorrent download, so how can I complain, and let’s hope it lasts that way..

But I also suspect the peak line demands, capping, and line balance is part of the problem. The problem occassionally comes back. When it gets worse I will write even again to all.

Problems! These days 40 percent of Canadian Internet Customers are rightfully dissatisfied with the poor lies, support services from their internet suppliers, especially the biggest ones, such as Bell, Videotron, Rogers, . Why?
Servicing computers, providing technical support is not an easy business, even the so called experts often get it wrong.. 2 years problem with a brand new computer remained unsolved and why? the experts looked for complex problems.. and it next finally turned out to be a defective 15 dollars hard drive cable. By law the internet is unregulated.. and these supposedly consumer protection agencies now still all they can do is a useless pretentious mediation approach and next it is useless because Bell plays dirty, hardball still.. court actions cannot be enforced. And any experienced lawyer will tell you, you need to first in writing personally to ask the specific bad people to repent first, to first give them a chance to do so, before you can next go public, and try to shame them into action, and still that is the sole approach than works.. for in reality the pretentious CRTC, Cops, consumer agencies do not really care about helping the small fries.. they only care about themselves. So I practice what I preach to you as well.. I put it in writing on the net too, it is an embarrassing approach but still the only one that works.. http://thenonconformer.wordpress.com/2008/11/18/deceptive-unacceptable-unfair-business-trade-practices-unreliable-internet-access/
 
See also DEALING EFFECTIVELY with COMPUTER VIRUSES, Spyware, etc
http://anyonecare.wordpress.com/2008/11/03/dealing-effectively-with-computer-viruses/
 
My Complaint #2
About Politics- Political, corruptions, inducements, Christians, Alcoholics
The supposed past big news over the past decade by the liberals was  that several high profile Christian advocates are winning Conservative nominations across the country. The Globe &  Mail had a rational analysis of the situation in an editorial. so what!
 
It is difficult to understand the past media fuss about Christian activists helping to secure the nominations of at least eight Canadian federal Conservative candidates in the next election. It is  no less  difficult not to understand why no one opposes the election of Alcoholics, or the use of Alcohol to try to secure votes.. but they will oppose the election of Christian persons, It is not difficult to understand why some newspapers would splash a headline on the topic across their front page, thereby starting the entire insanity in the first place.
 
First off, let’s look at the problem with the current system. By signing up a group of people to pack a nomination meeting, the chances of nominating a candidate who the party and constituents do not want is dramatically increased.
 
With the current political nominating system it’s very easy to trade votes for money, booze, or favours, and it becomes about stacking meetings rather than being the “best” candidate. And  during the leadership race, we saw blatant restrictions of membership forms. If you didn’t support a certain candidate  ,it was impossible to get a membership form from the party, and when you were granted one, it would often take months to get it, or it would be mailed to the wrong address. Since it’s all about being on the membership list and it’s pretty easy to keep people off the membership list, abuse is practically encouraged. So why not switch to the primary system? Every Canadian could register with a party or as a non-partisan on their income tax by checking a box.  Sure, you could still truck in your church members to vote so long as they’re registered to the party in question but with many more eligible voters, it would become a lot harder to take over a riding or win a nomination. With a wider range of people voting, it would presumably allow for candidates the general population prefers to be nominated. It would also become impossible to restrict membership forms, leaving leadership races more wide open and democratic… considering the bad press all parties get through nasty nomination battles and leadership races, it would be a solution everyone would benefit from. Don’t forget a recall system too.
119. (1) Every one who(a) being the holder of a judicial office, or being a
member of Parliament or of the legislature of a province, corruptly
(i) accepts or obtains,
(ii) agrees to accept, or
(iii) attempts to obtain,
any money, valuable consideration, office, place or employment for himself or
another person in respect of anything done or omitted or to be done or omitted
by him in his official capacity, or
(b) gives or offers, corruptly, to a person mentioned in paragraph (a) any
money, valuable consideration, office, place or employment in respect of
anything done or omitted or to be done or omitted by him in his official
capacity for himself or another person,
is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding fourteen years.
 
A charismatic leader is someone who really cares about the good welfare of all the people in Canada equally, French or English, easterner or westerner, or whatever, and not another pretender, Christian imposter, Alcoholic, liars, self centered, greedy persons that we seem to too often have instead..
so don’t be stupid NOW again,
and don’t select a Liberal leader who
- is a pretender Christian,
- a liar,
- an alcoholic,
- or one who cannot speak english, never mind read it.
but note above all it has to be one only from Quebec..
TRUDEAU’S SON Justine IS TOO YOUNG, and INEXPERIENCED STILL.
for without the support of the Quebec voters, without a PM from Quebec, you next cannot hope to have a majority government as Harper keeps on finding out.. again and again!
 

I STILL DO OFTEN LOUDLY, RIGHTFULLY COMPLAIN ABOUT BIG BAD CORPORATIONS, BAD GOVERNMENTS, BAD POLITICIANS, BAD MANAGERS, BAD CIVIL AN PUBLIC SERVANTS, BAD PROFESSIONALS TOO ANYWAY.

MANY PEOPLE DO INITIALLY TELL ME I AM WRONG IN MY EFFORTS, ATTEMPTS, AND THEY  ARE THE SAME PEOPLE WHO COME AND ASK ME NEXT FOR HELP WHEN THEY ARE ALSO ABUSED. I OFTEN NEXT  ASK WHY THEY COME IF THEY BEFORE WERE NOT SUPPORTIVE OF WHAT I DID. THEY OFTEN REPLY, CAUSE NO ONE CAN HELP THEM EFFECTIVELY.

IT IS NOW MORE  RARE BUT I DO ALSO NOW STILL GET BULLIED BY RELIGIOUS BULLIES, ABUSERS TOO.. not just by bad cops..
 
 
The WRONGFULLY STILL Unrepentant  bully’s problem is that he or she is one of those bad persons  who only feels truly alive when voicing hostility and contempt for his “enemies.” Without that, he or she starts gasping for air. It’s his nature.. self-destructive” .. clearly these immoral  Bully, Basher of others, Abusers of others has a disappointed, deflated ego, negative self worth,  most likely related to past unresolved guilt, as a result  of  that   the bully, he or she, tries falsely to   build  their ego up by bashing, hating others, by being an antagonists against  his proclaimed enemies, which too often also  is most people , for  he or she no longer trust anyone, and Abusers this is a common very typical approach, fact in the character build up of Bullies, Bashers, but their approach is futile, the subsequent feeling of self worth dissipates too quickly, are actually replaced by guilt,  and his ego, self worth likely needs to be recharged with new hate.. and is replaced with more and larger hatred of the others.  I have seen this type of wrong behavior not just in bad managers, bad politicians, bad persons, but  in alcoholics, and most often in Albertan rednecks ,but also  in religious   fundamentals evangelicals who promote hated towards Pentecostal Christians as well, and  now as well as the crooked pastor wrongfully  fighting for control over others. Public exposure and prosecution of these bad persons here too services everyone’s best interest.

The internet itself is one of the most powerful weapon, for the pen is mightier than the sword..   free sites such as http://www.wordpress.com which is tied to the effective Google search engine..   http://www.blogger.com/ and  http://tripod.com/

 “Why Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper keeps his religion  so when now too often even a professing Christian Canadian Prime Minister buys alcohol for others to elicit support. Will they also give out playboy too now?
 
(Rom 8:29 KJV)  For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren. (Rom 12:2 KJV)  And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.
   
 

 

 

 

Blog at WordPress.com.