ciroccoj: (failure)
[personal profile] ciroccoj
::seething resentment::

So it's not enough that Canada, despite signing the Kyoto Accord, was doing a miserable job of living up to it. Now we're not only turning our backs on the accord, we're also trying to make sure that internal dissent about that decision is silenced.

Why is it so difficult for people to get what we were all presumably taught in Kindergarten? If you make a mess, CLEAN IT UP. Don't whine that other kids also made messes, or that it's too difficult to clean it up, or that you don't have time to clean up because you have to go out and play.

And don't clap your hand over the mouth of the kid who tries to point out that you've left a bloody mess behind you.

Yeah, well. Harper and his buddies appear to have failed Sandbox Etiquette. What a shock.

Novelist scientist silenced as Harper Tories quietly axe 15 Kyoto programs
OTTAWA (CP) - A scientist with Environment Canada was ordered not to launch his global warming-themed novel Thursday at the same time the Conservative government was quietly axing a number of Kyoto programs.

The bizarre sequence of events on the eve of the Easter long weekend provided an ironic end-note to the week in which Prime Minister Stephen Harper introduced his first piece of legislation - aimed at improving accountability and transparency in government.

The day began with what was supposed to be the low-key launch of an aptly titled novel, Hotter than Hell.

Publisher Elizabeth Margaris said that Mark Tushingham, whose day job is as an Environment Canada scientist, was ordered not to appear at the National Press Club to give a speech discussing his science fiction story about global warming in the not-too-distant future.

"He got a directive from the department, cautioning him not to come to this meeting today," said Margaris of DreamCatcher Publishers.

"So I guess we're being stifled. This is incredible, I've never heard of such a thing," she said.

Margaris had driven to Ottawa from New Brunswick to attend the speech, where Tushingham was expected to talk about his novel and the science he based it on.

The novel imagines a world where global warming has made parts of the world too hot to live in, prompting a war between Canada and the U.S. over water resources.

"Due process for this event was not followed and that's why it was cancelled," said Ryan Sparrow, a spokesman for Environment Minister Rona Ambrose .

Publicity for the planned book launch identified Tushingham as an Evironment Canada scientist, Sparrow said, "and it was assumed that he would be representing the position of the department.

"We would not have objected to Mr. Tushingham's appreance if he had been referred to as a private citizen."

Harper says he was not aware of the details, but his government was elected on a platform that included developing a new plan to deal with climate change.

"I obviously not only hope, but expect, that all elements of the bureaucracy will be working with us to achieve our objectives," Harper said at an appearance in Wainright, Alta., Thursday.

The prime minister's comments might be seen as a clear warning to public servants thinking of straying from government orthodoxy.

Harper has been criticized for the tight control he wants to exercise on what cabinet ministers and civil servants say in public. He also opposes the Kyoto protocol, which many scientist believe could help slow global warming.

The scientific, or literary, muzzle was put on Tushingham just as the Tory government was preparing to quietly confirm it is killing off over a dozen research programs related to the Kyoto protocol.

Late Thursday afternoon, on the eve of a long weekend when governments traditionally dump bad news for the least possible public exposure, Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn issued a news release saying 15 programs were being eliminated.

Lunn said the programs had run their course.

"The new government under Prime Minister Stephen Harper is committed to putting an end to the massive increase in (greenhouse gas) emissions that Canada has seen over the past decade," said a release.

"To do that, we need a new approach to addressing climate change that is effective and realistic for Canada."

Harper said the Conservative governing platform "will include measures we're going to develop over the next year or so to deal with both pollution and greenhouse gases."

But cabinet documents obtained by the Globe and Mail suggest the cuts won't stop at 15 programs.

The newspaper reported Thursday that the Conservatives will cut 80 per cent of programs aimed at curbing global warming at Environment Canada.

Budgets in other government departments aimed at climate change will be slashed by 40 per cent, the newspaper reported.

Liberal MP Scott Brison was crying foul Thursday.

"It is clear the Conservative government has no plans to listen to expert advice from their own department and is willing to sacrifice sound environmental policy to partisan ideology," said Brison.

Under the Kyoto treaty, Canada is committed to a six per cent cut in emissions from 1990 levels by 2012. Yet emissions have risen by 30 per cent. Harper has said the target is impossible to meet.

Leading environmentalists from across Canada say the opposition parties should defeat the government if it abandons the effort to meet Canada's Kyoto commitments.

Canada can meet its emissions-cutting target under the Kyoto Protocol despite government claims to the contrary, activists from eight environmental groups told a news conference Wednesday.

Link to the article:
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/13042006/2/national-novelist-scientist-silenced-harper-tories-quietly-axe-15-kyoto.html

Date: 2006-04-14 06:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lonejaguar.livejournal.com
Thank you, Canada, for voting this jackass in purely because you "wanted a change." Now we're well on our way to being politically loathed just as much as our neighbour to the south.

Date: 2006-04-14 06:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ciroccoj.livejournal.com
Yeah, brilliant move. Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery and all that rot.

It's very small comfort right now that they're not a majority government.

Date: 2006-04-14 09:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lonejaguar.livejournal.com
And what I hate the most is people just voted because he wasn't Liberal instead of, you know, voting for issues. Blargh. At least the guy's doing everything he said he would (unfortunately), you have to give him that.

Date: 2006-04-14 11:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ciroccoj.livejournal.com
This brings back such pleasant memories of Mike Harris, too. I was driven to near-murder so many times when that man was elected and started to steamroll over everybody in his path, slashed social programs left and right, and people who'd voted for him had the nerve to howl "What is he DOING? Who does he think he is?"

"He's doing what HE PROMISED TO DO. What YOU ELECTED him for. He thinks he's the Premier, because YOU MADE HIM Premier!!"

I semi-respected the people who'd voted for him on the basis of his promises (same as I semi-respect people who elected Harris on his policies), but there were so, so many idiots who'd voted with their asses instead of their brains because Harris was "a change" from Rae's NDP. Or voted for Harris because Rae "hadn't done enough" for the workers or the environment or the schools. WTF???!!

I haven't asked my kids' babysitter who she voted for this time around, in part because it's not polite to do so but also because last election, she voted for the Tories because the Liberals "didn't care about the environment."

AAA!!! ::stab stab stab::

Date: 2006-04-14 11:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ciroccoj.livejournal.com
(same as I semi-respect people who elected Harris on his policies)
Ack - make that Harper on his policies.

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