Skeptical Eye

October 2, 2007

The Hour: Roméo Dallaire & Roy Dupuis

Filed under: CBC's The Hour, Roméo Dallaire, Rwanda — skepticaleye @ 10:55 pm

September 27th’s edition of CBC’s The Hour had an interview with Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire and actor Roy Dupuis about the recent film Shake Hands with the Devil, an autobiographical look at Dallaire’s efforts to battle civil war and genocide in 1993 Rwanda.

I advise that this film is a must-see for all secondary school history courses, as the topic is one of the more heroic events in modern Canadian memory.

September 30, 2007

Canada 10th Most Corrupt Nation, U.S. is 20th. Uh huh.

Filed under: Corruption, Crackpot — skepticaleye @ 2:22 pm

This is good for a laugh.

Berlin-based Transparency International’s latest corruption perceptions report listed Burma and Somalia as the two most corrupt countries in the world. Then comes Iraq, Haiti, Tonga, Uzbekistan, Chad and Afghanistan. The three least corrupt countries were New Zealand, Denmark and Finland. Australia came in 11th, just after Canada but ahead of the US, which was 20th on the list.

Riiiiight.

NDP Tackles “Positive Discrimination” Over Women with Stick/Carrot Riding Quotas for 2009 Election

Filed under: Discrimination, NDP — skepticaleye @ 12:01 pm

Michael Smyth of The Province reports that the NDP’s provincial council in British Columbia endorsed a quota system two weeks ago for women and other “under-represented groups” as riding candidates in the 2009 election: “Persons of colour, gay/lesbian/bi/transgendered people, youth, aboriginal peoples and persons with disabilities.”

Thirty per cent of ridings not currently held by the NDP would be designated as “women-only” seats, where only women would be allowed to seek the 2009 nomination.

Another 10 per cent of non-incumbent ridings would be reserved for the other under-represented groups.

Current NDP MLAs would be safe from the quotas, but if an MLA decides to retire, that seat would be automatically declared women-only “to ensure that women are running in seats where NDP candidates have previously been elected.”

As you might imagine, this could create some controversy. NDP nomination races are often hotly contested local tussles among long-time party activists and campaigners.

Some riding associations might not appreciate the party brass ordering them to run a female, gay or physically challenged candidate.

This could work against the NDP’s grass-roots foundation, and potentially lose valuable seats when the time comes, as well as severing candidates who are better qualified to represent the masses.

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