Category: Canada

  • It Will not happen to me. Guess What? It Will! Chapter 8

    It Will not happen to me. Guess What? It Will! Chapter 8

    It Will Not Happen to Me! Guess What? It Wll !!!

    Chapter 8

    We as concerned citizens must rescue our governments from the privileged few or we will find ourselves as their slaves. Freedom of religion and Bilingualism: Please remember that these chapters are being written because the solutions written in Part One have not been implemented, or worse yet the world economies have collapsed. We are now in the 21st century and moving very fast as far as the standard of living has progressed. The problem is that we citizens must also change to survive. We must welcome change in order to improve on our freedoms. The shock of changing our life styles will be minor versus revisiting the dark ages. Even though those who are able are already dependent upon government assistance and suffer. Rebellion in various ways, individually and as motley groups, should be discouraged. The United States has been a good example of Freedom of Religion until the US Supreme Court banned the use of the word GOD and public prayer in schools. A better example is Turkey after WW II, which had as its First President, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who is now recognized as on the great men of the 20th century. Turkey has always allowed freedom of religion and many historical events and places are there. One of the main reasons Turkey is a noble and superb nation today is because of this man his freedoms. Just compare Turkey with its neighbors to the south. Another one of the major reasons for Turkey’s success as a nation is the separation of church and state. Arrafat’s statement “anyone wearing a fez tomorrow will lose their head.” The very next day one was wearing a fez. Religions that prophesy harmony and love should be respected. Ones that use force should not be. An individual has the right to choose one’s own beliefs. A Persian Rug made in Turkey has an “error” or mistake woven in it. They believe only God is perfect, so they purposely sew an error in it. If you cannot find an error, it probably was not made in Turkey. There is a lesson for the whole world to learn from Turkey. A nation must unite under one banner that allows freedom of expressions and feelings of the individual of his own rights. Bilingualism is another problem. Right now the United States is facing this problem. It had a similar problem with the South after the civil war and right into the 1930’s with the southern accent. Radio and television stopped that game. When a person came on national television and started speaking he became the butt of jokes. No one likes being laughed at and it soon changed to the normal language. A more serious problem is with the Spanish speaking population. Almost everything has become bi lingual. You make a telephone call to a business and the operator tells you to press one for Spanish. This slows a country’s growth down because a certain percentage of the population will refuse to learn the other’s language and barriers are built, both socially and economically. This is a self-defeatist attitude that can cause long-term problems. When I was a kid in the 1940’s and 50’s I had friends that were German, French, Greek, Italian, and Polish. When I was in their homes they would speak in their native tongue, especially when they were scolding my friend. I could tell by the look on his face or the tone of their voice. In public everyone spoke excellent English! A perfect example how bilingualism can slow down a nation is the Province of Quebec in Canada. It is a beautiful province with all kinds of natural resources. The Bank of Montreal was a major bank nationally. The Montreal Stock Exchange was a major exchange for the whole nation. The Quebec Hydro provided cheap power and they had people. In Canada people are important, for the farther north one goes the less people. The United States and Canadian border has to be the friendliest one in the world. Underneath all this prosperity the French citizens were simmering with anger. They felt they were probably being treated as second-class citizens. In some cases this was true because many of the schools were French only. In a major English speaking country this paved a road to poverty. If your education is not in the main stream of the nation that you live in then ones earning power becomes limited. Outside influences tend to be shunned and the power of wage earnings slips by. Exchange of ideas is of the uppermost importance for a thriving community. At first they wanted to secede and become a separate country. To make their point they started bombing mailboxes. The net result of this was that the wealthy middle and upper classes of society moved out of the province. The Bank of Montreal is just a regular bank and the Montreal exchange has been overpowered by the Toronto exchange. Statistically it rated 2nd behind the province of Ontario where the State Capital is located, but other provinces are growing faster. Who would want to locate a business in a province that spoke French when the rest of the nation is English speaking? A sad fact and tale was when Charles De Gaulle was president of France he saw an opportunity to come to Canada and promote France. He came to Montreal to speak and over a million Frenchman came to hear their legendary person. The problem was there was not a Frenchman around that understood a word he was saying. He was speaking proper French while over decades their slang French and become a language of its own. So Turkey is a positive example for nations to follow while Quebec is a sad example. Here is an example when one portion of society closes its cultural barriers to outsiders, or worse yet, refuses to blend in. If 10 percent speaks a foreign language in the nation it resides in, then it misses the opportunities that the 90 percent have or enjoy. Economically it is like swimming upstream just before the waterfall. The survivors that are able to grab a branch of freedom will soon meld into the “common good” of the nation. That majority that succumbs or tries to please the minority will find itself standing on a pile of cow manure. A nation should have a common language. Computers today can translate easily. A segment of a population that demands dual languages is hurting itself by not being able to exchange ideas freely. The free exchange of ideas is very important. While Adolf Hitler held book-burning celebrations in Nazi Germany, he could not kill the ideas gotten from those books. Even today in some parts of the world, the Bible has been memorized whereby services are held for worship. A STRONG NATION WILL LISTEN TO THE MINORITY, AND THE MINORITY WILL APPRECIATE THAT IT WAS HEARD, BUT THE MAJORITY MUST RULE FOR THE COMMON GOOD FOR ALL. This means that as in the case of the United States, it became the melting pot for all citizens to enjoy the fruits of everyone’s labor. This is what Senator Arthur Vandenberg did 1945 for the good of the country and the world. He backed the President of the United States on foreign policy while he was a member of the minority party. William O’Neil, ‘INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY’ Chairman and founder, wrote an article for the Paper on April 25, 2012 on page B5 on ‘How to Find & Own America’s Greatest Opportunities’. He is referring to stock investments, but his opening paragraphs are a superb summary for this chapter. “ We live in the greatest country in the world. How did it evolve? The U.S. system, that is how. It’s your freedom of speech, religion and the press. You are free to own property and keep arms. Every citizen over 18 is free to vote in elections every two and four years, and replace weak or failed leaders. You are free to work, learn, create, innovate and invent because of our way of life. We are a nation of innovators because of these freedoms. Our GDP per person is larger than any other country. That is why millions of people continue to come here to participate in our exceptional freedom and opportunity. Nothing can hold you back except your own attitude or level of determination.” Those three freedoms are most important. Freedom of speech, religion and the press go along way in building a healthy nation.

  • MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room

    MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room

    MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room

    steven chase

    OTTAWA— From Friday’s Globe and Mail

    For the third time in four months, Peter MacKay found himself facing accusations he’s spending public dollars too freely – an awkward track record for a Harper cabinet minister during an era of belt-tightening in Ottawa.

    A taxpayer watchdog Thursday released bills obtained under access-to-information law showing the Defence Minister’s travel expenses last year include a $1,452-per-night stay at a luxury hotel in Munich and a $770-per-night bill for accommodation in Istanbul.

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    See where Peter MacKay stayed

    Harper defends Peter MacKay’s use of a military helicopter

    Defence Minister Peter MacKay addresses air crew and technicians after inspecting a new Canadian military Sikorsky CH-148 Cyclone helicopter at 12 Wing Shearwater in Halifax on Thursday May 26, 2011.

    Peter MacKay under fire for ‘search and rescue’ trip

    Mr. MacKay’s staff managed to find far cheaper accommodation than their boss at the same Istanbul Ceylon Intercontinental, the Canadian Taxpayer Federation found. The aides stayed in $276-per-night rooms at the InterContinental – less than half what the minister was charged.

    The controversial expenses are more political grief for Mr. MacKay, who caught flak earlier this fall for asking a military chopper to airlift him from a fishing vacation and for racking up more flights on government VIP jets than any other minister but Stephen Harper.

    “Peter is becoming this Parliament’s crown prince of pork,” NDP MP Pat Martin said. “This government is broke. We can’t have a globe-trotting Minister of Defence, living in the lap of luxury like some kind of a Gucci-shoes Conservative gadfly from the 1980s.”

    Mr. MacKay defended the Munich bill as the cost of staying close to a major 2010 security conference he was attending in the German city.

    “Canada books rooms at the same hotel where the conference takes place, where the majority of participants stay,” he told the Commons. “Nation-to-nation meetings at conferences such as this advance the interests of Canada and advance the interests of the hardworking men and women who serve our country around the world. I was proud to represent Canada.”

    The same security meeting is taking place at the Hotel Bayerischer Hof in 2012, and rates for a room during the Feb. 3-5 period run as low as $364 a night if booked now.

    As for Istanbul, Mr. MacKay’s staff explained the difference in the cost of the minister’s room and his aides’ rooms by pointing out he needs a bigger space to host official visitors.

    Mr. MacKay has become a favourite target for opposition accusations of excess in an era where the government is trying to squeeze billions of dollars in savings from Ottawa’s deficit-ridden books. Repeated revelations about his spending have spawned speculation that players in the military are trying to undermine him as he prepares to recommend significant reductions in defence spending.

    While the Canadian Taxpayers Federation is avowedly non-partisan, several of its former staff members have become Conservative staffers, candidates or MPs. The group often criticizes the Conservative government from the right, urging it to be more fiscally responsible.

    The group’s national director, Gregory Thomas, said the organization requested the travel bills after news of Mr. MacKay’s fishing-vacation airlift broke in September, to “see what else he’s been up to.”

    Mr. Thomas suggested the minister’s colleagues “have to be a little choked” to read stories this fall about Mr. MacKay being nearly the top user of the government’s VIP jets, given that the Tories have tried to restrict overall use of the planes.

    via MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room – The Globe and Mail.

  • Feridun Hamdullahpur prepares to lead UW into the future

    Feridun Hamdullahpur prepares to lead UW into the future

     

    Robert Wilson/Record…

    WATERLOO — There is tranquility in the submerged moment.

    There is warmth in the wondrous, fish-filled waters of the Sea of Marmara, where a young boy from Istanbul can swim and snorkel and sail away the days of his youth.

    “You lose track of time,” said Feridun Hamdullahpur, recalling the childhood sanctuary he discovered by dipping beneath the surface of Turkey’s inland sea.

    “You lose your presence. You forget about it. You are so immersed in that environment because it’s so fabulously beautiful.”

    Maybe this morning will provide Hamdullahpur with another serene moment when the 57-year-old professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering is officially installed as the University of Waterloo’s sixth president at the Physical Activities Complex.

    He has already taken over for the departed David Johnston, Canada’s governor-general.

    But this is the instant where the former skydiver figuratively parachutes in to guide a world-renowned school of 30,000 students with 4,000 faculty and staff.

    Maybe he’ll get a skydiver’s rush during fall convocation ceremonies.

    “The first 5-10 seconds of your jump, once you are in a vertical position, after your chute opens, it’s silence,” he said.

    Hamdullahpur’s is an international man, educated in Turkey and Canada, bent on leading Waterloo into an increasingly international age of higher education.

    As he turns 58 on Nov. 3, he’ll be on a flight to the south coast of China where he’ll open a Waterloo office in Hong Kong. He takes off Nov. 2. He touches down Nov. 4. Technically, he’ll miss his birthday.

    But the cause is worthwhile.

    Hamdullahpur believes the university’s physical and intellectual presence must be felt around the world to reach out to alumni and potential new students.

    That’s the only way to stay on top with new universities emerging from India, China, Brazil, Singapore and Europe to challenge the established school powers.

    “The world has changed,” he said of the international push.

    “No reputable university on this planet will survive if we continue in our ways of how we attracted students and talent to our universities. Ten, 15, 20 years ago, we could sit in our offices and expect that people from around the world will come.”

    That’s no longer the case, he said.

    Waterloo already has a Dubai campus in the United Arab Emirates, along with local campuses in Kitchener, Cambridge and Stratford. On Saturday, the first 87 graduates of the school of pharmacy in Kitchener earn degrees.

    Hamdullahpur, the former school provost, is perhaps best-known for sacking the 2010 football season of the scandal-ridden Warriors.

    “It was a bitter pill for everybody but it was a necessary pill,” he said.

    “Education sometimes has hard lessons.”

    Hamdullahpur met his Canadian wife, Cathy, in Halifax in 1983, was former provost at Carleton University in Ottawa and wants Waterloo’s students to get to know him better.

    “It’s an open-door policy with me,” he said. “I’m not somebody who is sitting in his office whose name they can’t pronounce.”

    Hamdullahpur is the youngest of five brothers raised by a single mom. His businessman-father, Nasri, died of liver disease when Feridun was barely one. He didn’t know his dad. So Hamdullahpur, a father of two grown boys, said he will think of his mom on Saturday.

    Merziye, 92, preached humility and the value of education to her boys.

    She still lives by herself in Istanbul.

    “One very independent-minded woman,” Hamdullahpur said.

    He’ll also think of his oldest brother Perviz, who quit school when his dad died in order to run the family business and support his mother and brothers.

    He’ll remember Firuz, the brother he lost in a car crash nine years ago.

    When Firuz was old enough to go to matinees, his smaller brothers would give him money to go to the movies. Feridun and Riza were too young to go.

    When Firuz retuned, he would retell the entire move to a pint-sized audience.

    “We would just sit and listen,” Hamdullahpur said.

    On Saturday, about 2,000 graduating students will get a chance to sit and listen to him.

    jhicks@therecord.com

    via TheRecord – Feridun Hamdullahpur prepares to lead UW into the….

  • Amnesty International seeks George W. Bush’s arrest

    Amnesty International seeks George W. Bush’s arrest

    bush arrest
    Amnesty International accused Bush of 'responsibility for crimes under international law.' | AP Photo

    By TIM MAK

    The human rights group Amnesty International called on Canadian authorities Wednesday to arrest former President George W. Bush when he attends an economic summit in the province of British Columbia next week.

    The group accused Bush of “responsibility for crimes under international law including torture.”

    Amnesty International asked that Canada either prosecute or extradite Bush for violations that they allege took place during the CIA’s secret detention program between 2002 and 2009. The organization wrote a 1,000 page memorandum addressed to Canadian authorities to make the case for human rights violations by the 43rd president.

    “Canada is required by its international obligations to arrest and prosecute former President Bush given his responsibility for crimes under international law including torture,” Susan Lee, Americas Director at Amnesty International, said in a statement.

    The Canadian government responded to the request with critical words for Amnesty International.

    “I cannot comment on individual cases… that said, Amnesty International cherry picks cases to publicize based on ideology. This kind of stunt helps explain why so many respected human rights advocates have abandoned Amnesty International,” Canadian Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney told POLITICO, noting that Amnesty International had never sought a court order to bar Cuban dictator Fidel Castro or Tongolese dicator Gnassingbé Eyadema from Canada.

    “Perhaps this helps to explain why Salman Rushie has said that ‘it looks very much as if Amnesty’s leadership is suffering from a kind of moral bankruptcy,’ and why Christopher Hitchens has written about the organization’s ‘degeneration and politicization,’” Kenney added.

    Bush cancelled a visit to Switzerland in February after facing similar public calls for his arrest by the other human rights groups.

    Amnesty International said that Canada was obligated to arrest Bush under its commitments to the UN Convention Against Torture. The human rights organization objected to the Bush administration’s “enhanced interrogation techniques” and violations they characterized as “cruel, inhuman and degrating treatment and enforced disappearances.”

    “A failure by Canada to take action during his visit would violate the UN Convention against Torture and demonstrate contempt for fundamental human rights,” said Lee.

    www.politico.com, 12.10.2011

     

  • A taste of Turkey

    A taste of Turkey

    By Rita DeMontis ,Toronto Sun

    TORONTO – They’re talking Turkish at the Cheese Boutique this week. Toronto’s iconic cheese shop in the city’s west-end celebrates the foods of the Turkish and Ottoman Palace with the help of three acclaimed chefs from the landmark Ciragan Palace Kempinski Hotel in Istanbul, who will be showcasing their talents in a series of cooking demonstrations and food dishes that promises to be one of the best culinary experiences to come to the city.

    The event is taking place all week to Sept. 26 and features cooking classes with the George Brown culinary students and a special evening gala. Plus this coming Sat. Sept. 24 Cheese Boutique will be celebrating all things Turkish with specialty foods and appearances from the chefs to offer a true gourmand experience for everyone.

    The three chefs are famous for their work with the Ciragan Hotel Ottoman Palace, the only Ottoman Imperial Palace and hotel by the Bosphorus (known as the Istanbul Strait that forms part of the boundary between Europe and Asia). It’s considered one of the most prestigious hotels in the world that has hosted countless eminent figures including heads of state, royalty, artists and such celebrities as the late Luciano Pavarotti, Robert De Niro, Ray Charles, Sophia Loren and Oprah Winfrey to name a few.

    The chefs — Hasan Hüseyin Bozkurt, Eray Erdogan and Ahmet Kara — will be presenting some of the finest dishes from the hotel, including the hotel’s award-winning Tugra Restaurant , which serves the best of traditional and modern Turkish and Ottoman cuisine in dinners.

    CHEESE BOUTIQUE, 45 Ripley Ave. 416-762-6292, Cheeseboutique.com.

    via A taste of Turkey | Home | Toronto Sun.

  • Will Harper ever visit Turkey?

    Will Harper ever visit Turkey?

    By Peter O’Neil

    Postmedia News Europe Correspondent

    When Prime Minister Stephen Harper decided to visit Greece following the G8 summit last month in France the furrowed-eyebrow reaction from some analysts was: “What about Turkey?”

    Neighbouring Turkey, which Mr. Harper has never visited since taking office in 2006, has a booming economy, has more than seven times the population (78.8 million), and is an increasingly important western ally and regional power broker in the Middle East and North Africa.
    Neighbouring Turkey, which Mr. Harper has never visited since taking office in 2006, has a booming economy, has more than seven times the population (78.8 million), and is an increasingly important western ally and regional power broker in the Middle East and North Africa.

    Neighbouring Turkey, which Mr. Harper has never visited since taking office in 2006, has a booming economy, has more than seven times the population (78.8 million), and is an increasingly important western ally and regional power broker in the Middle East and North Africa.

    Greece, with just under 11 million people, is staggering under a debt so vast it is barely able to assert its own sovereignty, let alone exert regional influence. Its trade with Canada is tiny and shrinking.

    “We should be paying closer attention to Turkey, which is the Mediterranean’s economic tiger and the region’s only Muslim democracy,” said Fen Hampson, director of Carleton University’s Norman Paterson School of International Affairs.

    “Turkey has a key stabilizing role to play in the Middle East and North African region. Its GDP is fast approaching the $1 trillion mark.”

    There are also business interests who would like to see Canada’s rapidly growing trade relationship with Turkey flourish even more, particularly those seeking major government contracts, said Gar Knutson, an Ottawa lobbyist and former Liberal MP who sits on the board of the Canadian-Turkish Business Council.

    “I think the prime minister at some point should go to Turkey. They’re an important NATO ally; it’s a quickly growing economy. We have lots of interests there,” Mr. Knutson said.

    Mr. Harper’s aides have told the media that Canada has important historical and people-to-people ties with Greece, and there has been a long-standing invitation to Mr. Harper from Prime Minister George Papandreou.

    Politics is another factor, since the Conservatives have long wooed the large Greek diaspora in Canada.

    But Turkey, say Mr. Harper’s aides, is one of the countries the prime minister wants to visit.

    “We did our best in a minority government situation to travel to as many countries as possible,” spokesman Andrew MacDougall said in an email this week.

    “Of course, we haven’t had the opportunity to visit all the countries we would like to visit, including Turkey. We look forward to doing so at some point in the future.”

    But the idea of a Harper visit to Turkey is fraught with domestic and foreign policy sensitivities due to decisions dating back to Mr. Harper’s time as official Opposition leader.

    During that period he embraced the politically active Armenian-Canadian community’s claim that atrocities committed against their community in Ottoman Turkey starting in 1915 constituted genocide.

    Plenty of politicians around the world have responded to the Armenian lobby effort, resulting in some 20 legislatures in various countries passing motions recognizing that genocide took place. Among them was the Canadian Senate, in 2002, and the House of Commons two years later.

    But, according to Turkey, Canada’s Conservative government is the only one in the world to officially embrace the genocide narrative as official government policy.

    Turkey objected furiously in 2006 when Mr. Harper formally stated the new policy, but some diplomats said a thaw had started to develop prior to the 2011 election campaign.

    In April of 2010, for instance, Mr. Harper issued no statement to the general public to mark the anniversary of the tragedy. And recent high-level visits include a 2009 trip to Turkey by Lawrence Cannon, then minister of foreign affairs, and another last year by Defence Minister Peter MacKay.

    Furthermore, Export Development Canada has just announced the opening of a regional office in Istanbul to help Canadian exporters break into the relatively thriving regional market, and there have been preliminary talks on possible free trade negotiations.

    But then Mr. Harper issued an election campaign statement on the genocide, almost identical to the 2006 declaration, that got almost no mainstream media coverage in Canada but deeply angered Turkey.

    Mr. Harper’s “wrong and unfair” judgment was based on “one-sided information” that came after a number of initiatives to improve relations, said an April 27 statement from the Turkish foreign ministry.

    The government’s position was also “based on narrow political calculations” and “dealt a blow to these efforts,” the statement declared.

    Rafet Akgunay, Turkey’s ambassador to Canada and a former senior foreign policy adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said there has never been a discussion initiated by either government regarding a possible Harper visit.

    “I don’t want to comment on such assumptions. If he wants to visit Turkey I’m sure my authorities would consider it accordingly,” Mr. Akgunay told Postmedia News.

    But he described Mr. Harper’s genocide position as a “major obstacle” standing in the way of improved relations.

    While one senior Turkish foreign affairs official in Ankara told Postmedia News this week that Mr. Harper would be welcome, another former senior Turkish diplomat familiar with Canada said he doubted his country would agree to set out the welcome mat for a foreign leader who would likely inflame nationalist sentiment.

    Mr. Hampson said Mr. Harper should try to find a way to mend relations.

    “Turkey is far too important a country to shun or ignore or make hostage to our own domestic politics.”

    via Will Harper ever visit Turkey? | Posted | National Post.