I would rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy

I would rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy
Scientifically, agnosticism makes more sense than strong atheism or theism, where we are certain one way or another.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Coats for Big Kids!

Politicians have a sense of entitlement that knows no bounds!

Tell ya why after you read this!

By The Canadian Press
Someone lifted Natural Resources Minister Christian Paradis's winter coat at a Conservative party fundraiser in Montreal last year.
(The jacket and an umbrella cost $740.68, after taxes and a $150 discount so the minister was understandably irked when the coat went missing.)
He ordered an aide to call the Tory riding association that hosted the cocktail to see if they would spring for the cost of a new coat, or at least part of it. But the Bourassa riding association refused.
Another call to construction boss and party planner Paul Sauve lasted mere seconds. He wasn't paying either.


Paradis says that's not how they do things in his rural Quebec riding. "If something like that had happened in my own riding, I would have been so embarrassed that I would have made sure that the minister was reimbursed," he said Tuesday. "That's the sort of pride that you see in our riding. I had to tell the association, 'well, you know, my coat was stolen........!'"
Paradis had to pay for a replacement himself.
(Sob!)
Listen folks, whenever I go to a restaurant or other public place there is a sign by the coat check that says "Not responsible for lost or stolen items!"

Does Christian Paradis think this doesn't apply to him because he's a big shot Minister in the government?

(Plus, with the money he makes, he should be paying for it himself!)

Your 'frugal' scribe;

Allan W Janssen

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Nobody Hurt at G20 Protests

Joe Friesen; The Globe and Mail


On the morning of June 26, the Saturday of the G20 summit, Adam Nobody heard about the protests, but wasn’t much interested.

Eventually, however, he wandered over to the designated protest area at Queen’s Park to see what was going on.

Bored, he went to buy some beer and a poster board to make his own protest sign.

When he returned to Queen’s Park he busied himself with his sign, a joking homage to an episode of Beverly Hills 90210, which read “Let Donna Graduate.”

“I thought it would be funny,” Mr. Nobody said.

As he finished writing, a line of police approached from behind.

He started to back away, and then an officer charged at him.

Mr. Nobody said he turned and ran. He threw away his bag, and then the officer dove and tackled him. Adam Nobody was face down, his arms held behind his back, and a police officer’s fist smashing into his face, a now infamous video shows.

He was under arrest.

(His case has become the collision point for those demanding a public inquiry into the policing of the G20 protests. -Ed.)

What Mr. Nobody says happened next wasn’t caught on tape.

He said in an interview with The Globe and Mail that after being led behind a police wagon shielded from public view, another officer asked him his name. “Adam,” he replied. He was again face down, an officer’s boot resting on his head.

“Adam what?” the officer asked, according to Mr. Nobody’s recollection.

“Adam Nobody,” he said.

He said the officer lifted his boot and kicked him in the face.

He kicked him again.

And again.

“Stop being a smartass,” the officer said.

“It’s my name,” Mr. Nobody said he told the officer.

The officer pulled the man’s ID from his back pocket. “Shit,” he said. “This guy really is a Nobody.”

Adam ended up with a shattered cheekbone, and a broken nose.

Blood poured from his head.

His eye was swollen shut.

The Special Investigations Unit, which is charged with investigating police, said the video of his arrest at Queen’s Park was evidence of a “probable use of excessive force,” but did not lay charges.

Toronto police chief Bill Blair said on Monday the video evidence of Mr. Nobody’s arrest, uploaded to YouTube, was “tampered with,” and that the missing seconds would explain why he was arrested.  He said on radio Monday that his impression was the police were dealing with a “violent armed offender.”

On Monday night, John Bridge, who shot the video of Mr. Nobody’s arrest swore an affidavit that said Mr. Nobody did not attack any of the police officers, and was not armed.

He was charged with assaulting a police officer, and obstruction of a police officer.

Mr. Nobody’s defence lawyer Christopher Murphy said the Crown withdrew the charges.

“They had no evidence,” Mr. Murphy said.

Mr. Nobody spent 31 hours in jail.

He spent three days in hospital. He went through several hours of surgery to repair his broken nose.

One of the key questions is who arrested Adam Nobody.

The officer listed on the arrest record provided a badge number that doesn’t correspond to anyone on the Toronto force, according to the SIU, or to any officer believed to have worked in G20 policing.

“The Chief of the largest police service in the country has made an allegation of fabricating evidence against Adam Nobody  in circumstances where, apparently, according to the arrest document, the police have falsified a badge number,” Mr. Falconer said.

“The police refuse to come forward to acknowledge who beat Mr. Nobody."

"This is the stuff of totalitarian regimes,” Falconer said!

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