Canadians Attending The Bilderberg 2012 Meeting

In the past, Bilderbergers kept the list of conference participants secret. Now they publish the list on their official website. The list of participants to this year’s conference, taking place in Chantilly, Virginia, USA, from May 31 to June 3, includes Canadians representing the intersection of corporate and political power in Canada.

Alberta Premier, Alison Redford, leads the Canadian cast, which also includes: Mark J. Carney (Governor, Bank of Canada); Nigel S. Wright (Chief of Staff, Office of the Prime Minister); W. Edmund Clark (Group President and CEO, TD Bank Group); Frank McKenna (Deputy Chair, TD Bank Group); J. Robert S. Prichard (Chair, Torys LLP); and Heather M. Reisman (CEO, Indigo Books & Music Inc.)

Continue reading

repostus bttn lng repost Canadians Attending The Bilderberg 2012 Meeting

From Montreal, An Open Letter To Canada’s Mainstream English Media

Written and published at Translating the printemps érable

Thank you; you are a little late to the party, and you are still missing the mark a lot of the time, but in the past few days, you have published some not entirely terrible articles and op-eds about what’s happening in Quebec right now. Welcome to our movement.

Some of you have even started mentioning that when people are rounded up and arrested each night, they aren’t all criminals or rioters. Some of you have admitted that perhaps limiting our freedom of speech and assembly is going a little bit too far. Some of you are no longer publishing lies about the popular support that you seemed to think our government had. Not all of you, mind you, but some of you are waking up.

That said, here is what I have not seen you publish yet: stories about joy; about togetherness; about collaboration; about solidarity. You write about our anger, and yes, we are angry. We are angry at our government, at our police and at you. But none of you are succeeding in conveying what it feels like when you walk down the streets of Montreal right now, which is, for me at least, an overwhelming sense of joy and togetherness.

News coverage of Quebec almost always focuses on division: English vs. French; Quebec-born vs. immigrant; etc. This is the narrative that has shaped how people see us as a province, whether or not it is fair. But this is not what I feel right now when I walk down the street. At 8pm, I rush out of the house with a saucepan and a ladle, and as I walk to meet my fellow protesters, I hear people emerge from their balconies and the music starts. If you do not live here, I wish I could properly convey to you what it feels like; the above video is a start. It is magic. It starts quietly, a suggestion here and there, and it builds. Everybody on the street begins to smile. I get there, and we all—young and old, children and students and couples and retirees and workers and weird misfits and dogs and, well, neighbours—we all grin the widest grins you have ever seen while dancing around and making as much noise as possible. We are almost ecstatic with the joy of letting loose like this, of voicing our resistance to a government that seeks to silence us, and of being together like this.

I have lived in my neighbourhood for five years now, and this is the most I have ever felt a part of the community; the lasting impact that these protests will have on how people relate to each other in the city is deep and incredible. I was born and raised in Montreal, and I have always loved this city, I have always told people that it is the best city in the world, but I have truly never loved it as much as I do right now.

The first night that I went to a casseroles (pots and pans) demonstration, at the centre of the action—little children ecstatically blowing whistles, a young couple handing out extra pots and pans to passers-by, a yoga teacher who paused his class to have everyone join—I saw a bemused couple, banging away, but seemingly confused about something. When we finished, they asked me, “how did you find us?” I replied that I had checked the map that had been posted online of rendez-vous spots, and theirs was the nearest to my house. “Last night we were all alone,” they told me. They had no idea it had been advertized online. This is what our revolution looks like: someone had clearly ridden around our neighbourhood, figured out where people were protesting, and marked them for the rest of us. This is a revolution of collaboration. Of solidarity.

The next night the crowd had doubled. Tonight we will be even more.

I come home from these protests euphoric. The first night I returned, I sat down on my couch and I burst into tears, as the act of resisting, loudly, with my neighbours, so joyfully, had released so much tension that I had been carrying around with me, fearing our government, fearing arrest, fearing for the future. I felt lighter. Every night, I exchange stories with friends online and find out what happened in their neighbourhoods. These are the kinds of things we say to each other: “if I loved my city any more right now, my heart would burst.” We use the word “love” a whole lot. We feel empowered. We feel connected. We feel like we are going to win.

Why don’t you write about this? This incredible feeling? Another example I can give you is this very blog. Myself and a few friends began it as a way of disseminating information in English about what was happening here in Quebec, and within hours, literally hours, volunteers were writing me offering to help. Every day, people submit translations to me anonymously; I have no idea who they are, they just want to do something. They come from everywhere. They translate what they think is important to get out there into the world. People email me corrections, too. They email me advice. They email me encouragement. This blog runs on solidarity and utter human kindness.

This is what Quebec looks like right now. Every night is teargas and riot cops, but it is also joy, laughter, kindness, togetherness, and beautiful music. Our hearts are bursting. We are so proud of each other; of the spirit of Quebec and its people; of our ability to resist, and our ability to collaborate.

Why aren’t you writing about this? Does joy not sell as well as violence? Does collaboration not sell as well as confrontation? You can have your cynicism; our revolution is sincere.

Sincerely,

The Administrator of Translating the printemps érable.

Quebec Student Protests11 From Montreal, An Open Letter To Canadas Mainstream English Media

repostus bttn lng repost From Montreal, An Open Letter To Canadas Mainstream English Media

Take Back Democracy! A Conference for Education, Solidarity and Action! June 1st to 3rd.

In 13 short days the Take Back Democracy! conference will begin here in the Ottawa area – 3 solid days of learning together what the 1% doesn’t want us to know, and fighting back against their destruction of hope, freedom and democracy.  The title of this conference alludes to the theft of the term democracy by the 1%, and their attempts to re-use it as a term to refer exclusively to the multi-house, majoritarian rule election-based type of institutionalized governmental system. Such as the Westminster system we suffer from here in Canada, originally designed by and for the British monarchy and ruling class.   That is not and cannot be democracy by itself.   Only when the true will of the people, in the absence of their deception, is being expressed, is a community democratic.

And right now, Canada is not what democracy looks like.

Everyone is invited, everyone is welcome!  Invite your friends, family, co-workers! For more information see our website:  http://www.occuconference.org .  More details will be up on the website soon, including programs and information regarding accommodations.  Printable posters and handbills can be downloaded here: TBDpostercolor1.jpg
TBDposterbw1.jpg  TBDhandbillsfrontbw1.jpg .  Please distribute and post these wherever and to whatever extent you can.

Update: We have a rough website up here: tbd.occupiedottawa.org. The information that is there is accurate, but please understand that site is very much under construction still.

repostus bttn lng repost Take Back Democracy!  A Conference for Education, Solidarity and Action!  June 1st to 3rd.

Book Reviews: The Thieves of Bay Street

thieves of bay street Book Reviews: The Thieves of Bay StreetIf we’re to believe the reviews,  then award-winning investigative journalist, Bruce Livesey, has written a book every Canadian Occupy activist should read. The Thieves of Bay Street: How Banks, Brokerages and the Wealthy Steal Billions from Canadians, portrays Canada’s financial industry as a haven for fraud.  The National Post tells us the book “exposes a gang of rogues who infected the heart of Canada’s financial core: corrupt corporate managers, derelict bankers, plundering stock brokers, hedge-fund manipulators, inactive regulators and distracted prosecutors.”
The blurb from Amazon.ca:
Beneath the veneer of stability that saw Canada’s banking sector through the financial crash of 2008, investigative reporter Bruce Livesey has uncovered a rampant failure of epidemic proportions. Though no large financial institution has recently gone bust in this country, white-collar criminals, scam artists, Ponzi schemers and organized crime, from the Hells Angels to the Russian mafia, know that Canada is the place in the Western world to rip off investors. And the fraudsters do so with little fear of being caught and punished.
Thieves of Bay Street investigates Canada’s biggest financial scandals of recent years. Readers will learn what banks do with investors’ money and what happens when they lose it. They will meet the bogus investment gurus, the brokers who lose money with both reckless abandon and impunity, the bankers who squander money in toxic investments, the lawyers who protect them and the regulators who do nothing to keep them from doing it again. And most importantly, they’ll meet the victims who are demanding that our vaunted banking sector finally come clean on its dirtiest secret.
About the Author:
Bruce Livesy is an award-winning investigative journalist. His writing has appeared in most major magazines and newspapers in Canada, including The Globe and Mail, Report on Business Magazine, National Post, Toronto Star, The Gazette, The Walrus, Canadian Business, Canadian Lawyer and The Financial Post.

Livesey also has extensive experience working in television. He spent six years as an associate producer at CBC TV’s the fifth estate and then as a producer working for the investigative unit of The Nationalthe fifth estate and CBC News Sunday. He has also worked outside Canada for a co-production of PBS’s Frontline and the New York Times and directed documentaries for Al Jazeera EnglishDiscovery Channel and Al Gore’s Current TV.

Livesey is a co-winner of a Dupont Award, one of the most prestigious U.S. television awards, a Canadian Association of Journalism (CAJ) award, and has been nominated for two Geminis and three National Magazine Awards, winning in 2008. He lives in Toronto with his wife. Thieves of Bay Street is his first book.

Livesey also writes a blog on economics for the Progressive Economics Forum.

repostus bttn lng repost Book Reviews: The Thieves of Bay Street

Next Occupied Ottawa GA: Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Occupied Ottawa22 Next Occupied Ottawa GA: Wednesday, May 16, 2012Next General Assembly of Occupied Ottawa, home of the global Occupy Movement in the Canadian capital:

  • When: Wednesday, May 16 at 7pm
  • Where: Confederation Park @ The Fountain

Everyone is Welcome!

General Assemblies consist of:

  • Committee announcements
  • Committee proposals
  • Individual announcements
  • and Individual proposals

You’re all welcome to join us and join in the democratic conversation on the issues of our time.

repostus bttn lng repost Next Occupied Ottawa GA: Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Study exposes secret Canadian bank bailout

CCPA logo 266 Study exposes secret Canadian bank bailoutThe Harper Conservatives are fond of touting Canadian banks as more stable than other countries’ big banks. They claim all the credit for Canada’s stability during the 2008-10 global financial crisis. And, we’re often told that our banks needed no bailout during the crisis. What a big Whopper! Canada’s big banks actually received $114 billion in support from the federal government and the Bank of Canada during the crisis, according to a report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).

In this press release, the left leaning think tank tells us:

The study reveals that Canada’s banks received $114 billion in cash and loan support from both the U.S. and Canadian governments during the 2008-2010 financial crisis. The study estimates that at some point during the crisis, three of Canada’s banks—CIBC, BMO, and Scotiabank—were completely under water, with government support exceeding the market value of the bank. Due to government secrecy, the study raises more questions than it answers.

The study: The Big Banks’ Big Secret: Estimating Government Support for Canadian Banks During the Financial Crisis.

Article source: Canadian Progressive World (http://s.tt/1axPi)

repostus bttn lng repost Study exposes secret Canadian bank bailout

May Day Solidarity Against Austerity

From www.MayDayOttawa.ca:

Take to the Streets to Stop the Cuts

May Day Against Solidarity Banner1 150x1501 May Day Solidarity Against AusterityJoin us in Solidarity Against Austerity

Take to the streets on May 1 to stop the cuts. Help bring the Maple Spring to Ottawa.

11:30am at Confederation Park. 12pm at the Prime Minister’s Office.

Your support is needed today to build a broad mobilization to stop the cuts to our public services and defend our rights. The recent Ontario and Federal budgets are a declaration of economic warfare on the 99%. We need to unite to resist this. We need to do so right now. And we need your help to make it happen. Canada is not broke. It’s about priorities.

Continue reading

repostus bttn lng repost May Day Solidarity Against Austerity

Elections Canada keeps rulings secret on 2,982 complaints since 1997

Federal politicians continue to fail to require disclosure of key information to ensure the Canada Elections Act is enforced fairly and effectively

Democracy Watch 300x90 Elections Canada keeps rulings secret on 2,982 complaints since 1997OTTAWA, April 16, 2012 - Today, Democracy Watch released its analysis of Elections Canada’s enforcement of the Canada Elections Act since 1997, revealing that the main problem is no one can tell whether Elections Canada has been enforcing the law fairly and properly because it has failed to disclose details of how it has investigated and ruled on 2,982 of the 5,018 complaints it has received about federal elections in the past 15 years.

All federal politicians who have served on the committees that have, at least once each year since 1997, questioned the Chief Electoral Officer of Elections Canada have been negligent by failing to notice and question this huge gap in Elections Canada’s reports.

“Politicians from every federal party, and the Chief Electoral Officer, have all said that it’s very important for Canadians to have faith in the fairness of their federal elections but Elections Canada continues to hide details about its investigations and rulings on almost 3,000 complaints it has received since 1997, and MPs continue to fail to demand this information from Elections Canada,” said Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch. “Without this information no one can tell whether Elections Canada enforces the federal election law fairly and effectively.”

“Federal MPs have to stop being so negligent and start demanding regular, detailed reports about what all the key federal good government watchdogs are doing, and not doing,” said Sommers.

On March 12th, the House of Commons unanimously passed a resolution committing the federal government to introduce and pass a bill to enhance the Chief Electoral Officer’s investigative power and to restrict robocalls, and on March 29th the Chief Electoral Officer testified before a House committee. However, on both occasions MPs failed to require Elections Canada to disclose publicly the results and findings and rulings for each decision made on each past complaint.

Elections Canada head Marc Mayrand took a small step toward much-needed transparency when he disclosed at the House committee hearing that, in fact, a total of 800 complaints were filed by voters about false phone calls during the 2011 federal election from 200 ridings, and that 250 investigations have been initiated.

However, Mr. Mayrand continued to keep secret its rulings on 1,003 other complaints filed with Elections Canada by voters during the 2011 election, and on 1,979 other complaints that Elections Canada received during the 1997, 2000, 2004, 2006 and 2008 elections (as well as an unknown number of complaints filed in between elections since 1997).

The details of Democracy Watch’s analysis of Elections Canada’s reports on the 1997, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2008 and 2011 elections are as follows:

  • Overall, 5,018 complaints were received by Elections Canada during election periods since 1997, and Elections Canada provides at least a summary in its post-election reports of how 2,026 complaints were resolved (1,874 of these were summarized in Elections Canada’s report on the 2011 election (all resolved without major problems), 108 are described on its Compliance Agreements webpage, and 44 on its Sentencing Digest webpage);
  • Note that since 1997 Elections Canada has only required a compliance action in 108 cases (47 of which were in 2002), and has only won sentences in 44 cases (only 15 of which have been won since 2004) — this could indicate a very weak investigation and enforcement record, or that most complaints are not serious;
  • Elections Canada’s enforcement record is currently unknowable because it continues to keep secret details about how and when it resolved 2,982 of the complaints it received during elections since 1997;
  • Note that it is likely that Elections Canada has received many other complaints about which it has never issued public reports or rulings, as the above totals are only about election-related complaints (Elections Canada does not issue an annual report on enforcement of the Canada Elections Act);
  • Elections Canada’s report on the 1997 Election (Investigations section) stated that 257 complaints had been brought to the attention of Commissioner and investigations were underway;
  • Elections Canada’s report on the 2000 Election (Enforcement section) stated that 382 complaints had been brought to the attention of the Commissioner, with 251 resolved, and 131 remaining open;
  • Elections Canada’s report on the 2004 Election (Enforcement Section) stated 511 complaints had been brought to the attention of the Commissioner, with 419 resolved, and 92 remaining open;
  • Its May 2006 report on the 2006 election (section 4.2.4 Electoral Law Enforcement) stated that 329 complaints had been received, 231 had been resolved, and 98 remained open;
  • However, Elections Canada provided no details in either the 2004 or 2006 report about any of the complaints, whether resolved or still open;
  • In both its 2004 and 2006 reports (in the sections cited above), Elections Canada claims that: “As the cases progress, updated statistics on complaints, investigations and prosecutions appear in the Chief Electoral Officer’s periodic reports and publications, as well as on the Elections Canada Web site”. No updated statistics have appeared in any of the CEO’s reports or publications, nor on its website.
  • In its February 2009 report on the 2008 election (section 2.10 Electoral Law Enforcement), Elections Canada stated that 500 complaints had been received, but did not provide any details about the number of complaints resolved or still open;
  • In its August 2011 report on the 2011 federal election, Elections Canada did better by including a chart that categorized the 1,872 complaints it had received about accessibility problems (Report on accessibility subsection of section 2.4), and summarized how they had been resolved. Elections Canada also provided a summary of two situations about which it had received 2,956 emails (about interference in an advance poll in Guelph, Ontario), and 700 emails (about a radio interview during the blackout period just before election day);
  • However, its 2011 report provided no details about 1,003 other complaints Elections Canada received (Electoral law enforcement subsection of section 2.4), nor any details about how they had been investigated or what rulings had been issued.
- 30 -

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch
Tel: (613) 241-5179
repostus bttn lng repost Elections Canada keeps rulings secret on 2,982 complaints since 1997