Sunday, October 04, 2009

Otter faking it?

Oil spills are particularly visible examples of our oil based system gone wrong. This is a topic that The Onion - America's Finest News Source brings to the public consciousness with their investigative report into the phenomenon of otters faking suffering due to oil exposure. Otters like environmentalists go overboard (pun intended) with their complaints about pollution destroying their environments.

According to Shell president Marvin Odum, the otter has been putting on "quite a show" in front of rescue workers and clean-up crews, and is making the 860,000-gallon, three-mile-wide toxic slick seem like a much bigger deal than it actually is.

"He's fine," said Odum, referring to the 40-pound sea creature, who was found washed ashore and appeared to be suffering from anaphylactic shock. "Trust me, before all of the cameras and reporters showed up, our little buddy here was having no problem at all cleaning himself off. Now, all of a sudden, it's severe spastic convulsions this and complete kidney failure that."...

Ollila went on to praise a number of petroleum-soaked seals, pelicans, and sea turtles in the contaminated area, commending them for remaining completely still and silent, and not "making a big production" out of the environmental disaster when rescue and camera crews arrived at the scene.

On a more serious note, oil spills present a particularly severe risk in the Arctic Ocean. The ecosystem is more vulnerable to disruptions, because there is a delicate balance of life that can exist in cold temperatures. The issue of Arctic sovereignty for Canada and other Northern nations is important here, because if the North West passage is owned by Canada then Canada can enforce environmental standards against ships that fly any flag. This way we can board, inspect, punish and deter rickety ships that travel with "flags of convenience". Maybe we can protect some otters too...

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Biking in Toronto

Biking is great for the mind, body, traffic, and the environment, but today I am feeling a little worried. Michael Bryant's car and Darcy Allan Sheppard a bike courier had a terrible encounter on the evening of August 31 that left Sheppard dead and Bryant's future tarnished. Whoever was responsible for this specific incident (Toronto Star), the frightening thing to me is that there are a lot more drivers out there that have less incentive to avoid hitting bikes than Michael Bryant. Michael Bryant has already resigned his position as CEO of Invest Toronto and will face serious political costs in addition to the potential criminal penalties that all drivers would face for driving dangerously. An example of someone with lots of rage, this off-duty police officer Darius Tierman:



I wonder about the road rage that we carry around with us when we are behind the wheel of a car. Inside the steel car cage we get aggressive, always in a hurry or trying to beat the guy in front of us.

Even if a driver would not actually run down a cyclist in cold-blood, the driver`s reaction times might be delayed because of a perceived slight by a cyclist.

So...saying all of that I set off for downtown Toronto equipped with helmet and courage. Here are some sites for bike advocacy, the Toronto Cyclist Union and a potential Cyclists' Bill of Rights.

Toronto's guide to biking. Don't mess with trucks.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Halifax Hopes - NDP Convention


There are several things I hope to learn and do at the 2009 NDP convention in Halifax this weekend:

1. Work on strategies to improve outreach (better than in Thunder Bay) to people who are sick of politics. Can we reach people through listening, advertizing, community groups and affiliations?
2. Learn about the policy making process. (Tim's policies would provide for local sustainable food and economic systems, an inclusive equitable social contract, climate action, and some serious steps towards bringing the partying back to progressive politics.
3. Get a picture with Jack Layton, Obama (long shot here), a sailor, a fish?
4. Improve my shmoozing skills and meet people from across the country to recharge my batteries.

I would like to see a name change if it brings a new vibe and new ideas: Democratic Party of Canada...sounds good

Remember the words of afore: "The new strong is Action Wool"

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Job Searching - Law


In the midst of job searching, things have gotten a little heavy. Here is to getting back on track and avoiding the lakes in the road. Q & A:

Why did you choose law as a career?
I chose law because I wanted to understand how things worked and how to change things for the better. I approach problems with the objective to persuade and explain so that people come to an agreement. Law gives a number of tools to solve problems: persuasive writing, strong oral arguments, research skills, alternative dispute resolution, and to my surprise time management skills. I see law as a career where I can continue to learn and make a difference in clients' lives.

Where do you see yourself in five years?
I see myself working in labour, immigration or other areas of the law where I can apply my problem solving skills to the greatest effect. I hope to find a balance between work, community involvement and family. I will have argued cases in court and before tribunals and I will have participated in a number of alternative dispute resolution processes. I will also run a 1:45 half marathon.

If you were the Dean of the Law School what changes would you make?
If I were the Dean, I would create a program in the first two weeks of law school that would give a sketch of the legal system, how a case works and how the courses that we take relate. This would give a foundation for the rest of the program to build upon.

Here are some more questions from the Yale Law School site (pdf).

Good luck to other job searchers in this troubled employment climate!

Monday, April 06, 2009

Drum Set of Tim's Dreams

I never realized how much I wanted, nay, needed a Drum Machine. Now we can all access this terrific online fun courtesy of Ron Winter.







Monday, February 23, 2009

Deportation, Torture, and their cost to Canada

Torture is something that we are uncomfortable with. Collective ickiness or, perhaps, compassion prevents us from torturing sans emotion. But, when faced with terror, or in The Globe and Mail's (editorial board) case, cost, we look for ways to pinch our noses and send the bad people away from Canada.

This is wrong. Deportation to torture is wrong.

Torture has practical drawbacks (lies, distracting clues, encouraging enemies and retaliation against our own forces), but these fall outside the discussion of deportation to torture. We are not going to actually torture "them". We just want to get rid of inconvenient people that the we are told are dangerous. The government believes they are dangerous, but cannot prove or convict of a crime, even a crime of planning to commit a terrorist act.

But maybe the government and we, as citizens, can invoke our sense of self-preservation and send the bad guys to countries where they may face torture. Perhaps, deportation will allow us to avoid this dilemna:

...When suspected foreign terrorists are identified, they are taken before a court and, if found a danger to the nation's security, are ordered deported. But if they can make a credible case that they will be tortured in their home country, it's almost impossible to deport them. The result is they may be held in jail without criminal charge for several years. This is repugnant, but releasing those deemed a danger to national security seems untenable.

The Globe and Mail picks up on the judgment of the United Kingdom's Law Lords that said that deportation is OK as long as the government receives assurances from the state known to torture. They quote favourably:

“Very considerable efforts have been made at the highest political levels on both sides to strengthen these ties,” said an immigration tribunal's ruling, cited approvingly by the Law Lords. “It is barely conceivable, let alone likely, that the Algerian government would put them at risk by reneging on solemn assurances. Nor is there any reason to suppose that the British government would turn a blind eye if they did.”

Of course, the fact that assurances are sought makes clear that the country is likely to torture. Moreover, once a bad person is out of the Canadian court system he or she is out of mind and it is unlikely that the Canadian government would be willing to do much to protect them, given that it has failed to protect a juvenile Canadian citizen (Omar Khadr) suspected of "terrorist" like behaviour from torture and other breaches of international human rights and humanitarian law by the United States.

A "good faith assurance," based on "sound objective evidence," plus a method of verification makes the pill of complicity in torture easier to swallow. We are also told that deportation is a good approach because it avoids indefinite detention without trial. It also saves $600,000 per suspect (security certificate holder).

The easy thing, the cheap thing, the politically feasible thing is to deport the "baddies." But, deportation to torture is wrong because it makes all of us complicit. It undermines our civil society, the rule of law and Canada's vision of a constitutional democracy. Torture leaves scars on the victims, but torture scars those of us who awake to realize that we just passively let torture happen, those of us who expect to be protected by a reponsible government, by those of us who have to explain to our children how torture returned in the 2000s after the hard work of our veterans, volunteers, politicians and every day citizens of the 1900s.

One last disturbing point arose in the article where the Globe accused the Courts of "los[ing] their will" to hold individuals on indefinitely on security certificates. This statement is understandable coming from a victim upset about a criminal getting out of jail after serving their time. But, the Globe is a bit off base to claim suggest that Courts have an obligation to hold individuals on insufficient evidence forever. The men out on limited release under strict parol conditions have not been convicted, tried, or even presented with the evidence of any wrong doing.

The way out of the quandary

From Monday's Globe and Mail

Canada should follow Britain's example and seek to deport foreign terror suspects, even to states that use torture, but only after officials at the highest levels – the foreign minister or prime minister – extract assurances of humane treatment from their counterparts in the other countries...

King Abdullah of Jordan gave his assurance to former prime minister Tony Blair in the case of Abu Qatada, an incendiary preacher, and the British Law Lords said that assurance passed legal muster. Mr. Qatada is appealing the ruling to the European Court of Human Rights. (The Law Lords' ruling also permits the deportation of two other terror suspects to Algeria.) ...

Here is the box: When suspected foreign terrorists are identified, they are taken before a court and, if found a danger to the nation's security, are ordered deported. But if they can make a credible case that they will be tortured in their home country, it's almost impossible to deport them. The result is they may be held in jail without criminal charge for several years. This is repugnant, but releasing those deemed a danger to national security seems untenable.

Canada appears to prefer the untenable to the repugnant. Its courts have lost their will to hold these suspected terrorists in jail. A half-dozen suspected al-Qaeda members have been released in the past few years by the Federal Court of Canada. The civilian spy agency CSIS spends nearly $600,000 to keep a round-the-clock eye on a single one.

The Law Lords' ruling challenges the conventional wisdom of Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch that if you have to ask for an assurance, it won't be worth the paper it's written on. Some Canadians may share the agencies' concerns; after all, the United States has said it asked Syria for a promise that Maher Arar would not be tortured. (An independent report by Stephen Toope, now president of the University of British Columbia, found that he was.) But the Law Lords stress that the assurance needs to be made in good faith. Further, there must be a sound, objective basis for believing the assurance; and there must be an agreement on how to verify whether the assurance was kept.

The Law Lords noted that Algeria wants international acceptance as a normal civil society, and that close and growing business and security ties exist between it and Britain. “Very considerable efforts have been made at the highest political levels on both sides to strengthen these ties,” said an immigration tribunal's ruling, cited approvingly by the Law Lords. “It is barely conceivable, let alone likely, that the Algerian government would put them at risk by reneging on solemn assurances. Nor is there any reason to suppose that the British government would turn a blind eye if they did.”

The purpose of Canada's security-certificate system is to deny a place in this country to those who put its security at risk. Britain's example shows that it is possible to do so within democratic norms.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Bush's legacy

Bush has been the subject of many headlines. These memories of Bush have been carefully collected by Teresa Neilson Hayden and show the breadth of Bush's legacy and shame.
The Bush administration is ending. If Bush & Co. didn’t entirely wreck the place, it was for no lack of trying. George himself achieved astonishing depths of failure. His most notable achievements were all unintentional, and he still doesn’t know what they were.

Oh yeah, and the headlines are from The Onion (America's Finest News Source)...

January 26, 2000: Bush Reaches Out To Hispanic Community With Generous Tip.
August 1, 2001: Bush Finds Error In Fermilab Calculations.
August 22, 2001: Bush Vows To Wipe Out Prescription-Drug Addiction Among Seniors.
September 26, 2001: American Life Turns Into Bad Jerry Bruckheimer Movie.
September 26, 2001: Hijackers Surprised To Find Selves In Hell.
September 26, 2001: God Angrily Clarifies ‘Don’t Kill’ Rule.
September 26, 2001: Hugging Up 76,000 Percent.
September 26, 2001: Arab-American Third-Grader Returns From Recess Crying, Saying He Didn’t Kill Anyone.
September 26, 2001: Not Knowing What Else To Do, Woman Bakes American-Flag Cake.
September 26, 2001: Bush Sr. Apologizes To Son For Funding Bin Laden In ’80s.

And you have to love George Struomboulopoulus of the Hour's comments about Bush's last remaining duties: find Bin Laden!




Great quote: "I know that humans and fish can co-exist peacefully..."