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Political Crisis in Canada
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<blockquote data-quote="Prestwick" data-source="post: 231920"><p>The situation is very confusing at the moment. There are a few conflicting polls which either back elections or back the coalition. Some say that if there were fresh elections, Harper would be re-elected, others say that the coalition would be elected to government. </p><p> </p><p> The next 45 odd days will be crucial but also very unpredictable. Dion and Layton need to prepare for Budget day and how to respond to whatever it is that Harper has planned. Harper however has hamstrung himself because right now, he has frozen any ability to legislate or create any new emergency fiscal plan as this must be put before Parliament. If he does have to go back to Parliament before the suspension ends then that will be incredibly humiliating for him.</p><p> </p><p> Extraordinarily high stakes here.</p><p> </p><p> <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (DonBilly @ Dec 5 2008, 08:13 AM) <a href="http://index.php?act=findpost&pid=364950" target="_blank"><{POST_SNAPBACK}></a></div></p><p> </p><p> The 21st century may well be into almost its eighth full year but remember that there has been war and bitter discourse in the Balkans and Georgia followed by treaties and declarations unilaterally transferring land from one party to another.</p><p> </p><p> The first thing that has always irked me about the European Union is the idea that it can lecture people on the ideas of peaceful co-existence and it is this holier than thou attitude (as well as its general reluctance to actually get its hands dirty) that condemned hundreds of thousands to their deaths in the Balkans during the 1990s.</p><p> </p><p> Again, comparing a people like the Pied Noir who were generally a not very nice people clinging onto a dream that was rapidly vanishing and backing to the hilt a French regime which was as savage as it was brutal and which completely backfired in the end, to compare them with around 30,000 people who live peacefully with others on the penninsula, who democractically elect their own government and who are quite happy to share the bit of rock that they're on is frankly crazy. </p><p> </p><p> You can't compare the Pied Noir with the Gibraltarians. Its a silly comparison and it gives me a migraine just trying to work out how they are similar... unless the British Army has carried out any brutal reprisals or burnt any villages on the Gibraltarian penninsular in the last fifty years? In any case, please stop using it.</p><p> </p><p> My point at the end of the day is that this is set in stone. The only way you are going to turf these peace loving and friendly 30,000 people off of the rock is by invasion. And thats the bottom line.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Prestwick, post: 231920"] The situation is very confusing at the moment. There are a few conflicting polls which either back elections or back the coalition. Some say that if there were fresh elections, Harper would be re-elected, others say that the coalition would be elected to government. The next 45 odd days will be crucial but also very unpredictable. Dion and Layton need to prepare for Budget day and how to respond to whatever it is that Harper has planned. Harper however has hamstrung himself because right now, he has frozen any ability to legislate or create any new emergency fiscal plan as this must be put before Parliament. If he does have to go back to Parliament before the suspension ends then that will be incredibly humiliating for him. Extraordinarily high stakes here. <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (DonBilly @ Dec 5 2008, 08:13 AM) [url='index.php?act=findpost&pid=364950']<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/url]</div> The 21st century may well be into almost its eighth full year but remember that there has been war and bitter discourse in the Balkans and Georgia followed by treaties and declarations unilaterally transferring land from one party to another. The first thing that has always irked me about the European Union is the idea that it can lecture people on the ideas of peaceful co-existence and it is this holier than thou attitude (as well as its general reluctance to actually get its hands dirty) that condemned hundreds of thousands to their deaths in the Balkans during the 1990s. Again, comparing a people like the Pied Noir who were generally a not very nice people clinging onto a dream that was rapidly vanishing and backing to the hilt a French regime which was as savage as it was brutal and which completely backfired in the end, to compare them with around 30,000 people who live peacefully with others on the penninsula, who democractically elect their own government and who are quite happy to share the bit of rock that they're on is frankly crazy. You can't compare the Pied Noir with the Gibraltarians. Its a silly comparison and it gives me a migraine just trying to work out how they are similar... unless the British Army has carried out any brutal reprisals or burnt any villages on the Gibraltarian penninsular in the last fifty years? In any case, please stop using it. My point at the end of the day is that this is set in stone. The only way you are going to turf these peace loving and friendly 30,000 people off of the rock is by invasion. And thats the bottom line. [/QUOTE]
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