What if this happened in Canada?

Can you imagine if a natural disaster on the scale of Hurricane Katrina happened in Canada? What similarities can we draw and what differences can we discern?

First of all, Canada is not prone to hurricanes but a similar flooding disaster could happen in Vancouver.

As with the Asian tsunami that befell Southeast Asia last year, an oceanic earthquake off of the coast of Vancouver could submerge most of the city and wash away many victims.

The current outcry by many observers on the left describes a slow response by President George W. Bush and they decry erroneously that America was largely unprepared due to the number of national guardsmen in Iraq. The same armchair critics on the other hand describe that Canada does not require a military and that Conservative efforts to increase defence spending is brutish and unbecoming of Canadian ‘values’. The same people would declare that Canada’s military deficiencies would be adequately supplemented by our American friends. Not a single part of this illogical equation adds up.

Would our current leadership be decisive in handling such a natural disaster? The current Canadian Liberal leadership has been wholly unprepared and dithering on defence issues ranging from BMD to the lacking expression of military ability when it comes to defending our Arctic sovereignty against the likes of a country like Denmark.

For the past twelve years, as stewards of Canada’s national defence, the Liberal Party of Canada has allowed the erosion of our military spending has placed our defence and disaster relief capabilities in the dire position of complete collapse. Queen’s professor Douglas Bland mused as much in his study titled “Canada Without Armed Forces?”.

Whether rightly or wrongly, George W. Bush is likely to face significant questions of leadership for the speed of the federal/state/local response to the disaster that struck the Gulf States in the southern US. One does not require a considerable extension of thought to determine with adequate certainty that if an analogous distaster befell a major populated area in Canada, this country would be grossly unprepared to address it with the speed and unequivocal response required to protect the lives of this nation’s citizenry.

This question needs to be addressed now by our country’s government. We cannot allow certain failures of this magnitude to be the footnotes in the post-mortem report of a devastating natural disaster.

Kanye West says something stupid

Mike-Myers-wtf.jpgPoor Mike Myers. The man behind Austin Powers looked very much like a deer in the headlights when Kanye West departed from the script during NBC’s telethon for Hurricane Relief. Kanye turned political and accused President George W. Bush of “not caring about black people”. Myers is visually uncomfortable when West goes on his rant and gives a helpless “oh come on now” glance towards the rapper when West finally utters the ridiculous claim.

As Ben Stein noted in the Spectator yesterday:

“George Bush is the least racist President in mind and soul there has ever been and this is shown in his appointments over and over. To say otherwise is scandalously untrue.” — Ben Stein

Kanye’s ridiculous rant obviously lacked any positive effect whatsoever and merely injected vitrole into a humanitarian effort at the expense of the other volunteers who took the time to raise money for the non-partisan Red Cross. Unfortunately, people likely tuned out after being disgusted by West’s comments and ultimately these comments hurt the relief efforts.

Kanye West on George W. Bush (.mov)

Meanwhile, Back in Canada…

I thought that Paul Martin put an end to the practice of appointing partisan Quebec Liberal supporters to the bench. Perhaps he thought nobody would notice.

I did.

Remember this pledge by Paul Martin in March 2004?

“We have declared all-out war against waste and mismanagement. We will put an end to cronyism” — Paul Martin

Today, Paul Martin couldn’t be more ignorant of the concept of cronyism as he appointed André Wery to the Superior Court of Quebec:

Prime Minister Paul Martin today announced that Her Excellency the Governor General has approved his recommendation that the Honourable André Wery be appointed Associate Chief Justice of the Superior Court of Québec

Associate Chief Justice Wery has served since 1997 as a judge of the Superior Court of Québec. He received a bachelor of Laws from the University of Montreal in 1974 and was admitted to the Barreau du Québec in 1975. Prior to his initial appointment to the bench, he was a partner with the firm Desjardins, Ducharme, Stein and Monast.

This appointment is effective immediately.

Let’s take a look in the Elections Canada database for donations by André Wery. Yes, Wery is a Liberal partisan:

1995: $342.45 to the Liberal Party of Canada
1996: $1,340.69 to the Liberal Party of Canada
1997: $346.79 to the Liberal Party of Canada

Judges aren’t even patronage appointments! Isn’t the judiciary supposed to be without bias? Wasn’t this a cornerstone of the corruption found in Adscam?