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Steve Carell

August 31st, 2005 | 2 Comments | Posted in Blog, Pictures, Political, Rants, Reviews

Steve Carell is a funny man and so was most of 40 year old virgin. No review for this movie because it’s just slap-stick. The eBay girl’s sixteen year old daughter was hot, eh? Though that rack was too big for sixteen. Creepiness aside that was interesting. After the movie we saw this fat guy with a back pack who kind of waddled and flailed his arms around when he walked or ran. I think he was following us at the end because we saw him again at the escalator on the other side of the mall.


So Ally’s leaving tonight and might have already departed for SeaTac. Someone just detonated a firework near my window. Anyway, I’ve said it enough already but safe journies and good trip to you <3. My phone vibrated near the end of 40 year old virgin and that’s why I was whispering. I don’t know how Andrew hung up on you but he’s an idiot sometimes, we’ll deal with him at 5ive.

Anyway, kids, this brought me great pleasure. Spot the difference.
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London Bombings

July 7th, 2005 | 1 Comment | Posted in Blog, Political, Rants

Our world has gone to shit. Not long ago we had a Canadian boy, a baby, shot in the head and killed. Not long before that, children killed in a Russian hostage situation. An attack on Spain’s train system, the attacks on September 11th, 2001, and now this.

Thirty-seven people have been confirmed dead as of now. Over seven-hundred people are reported injured, some seriously. Their injuries vary from smoke inhalation, burns, to severed limbs. It was first believed to have been some sort of power surge in the train system but police later discovered traces of explosive materials and that a packed double-decker bus had been destroyed.

* Between Aldgate East and Liverpool Street subway stations. (7 dead)
* Between Russell Square and King’s Cross subway stations. (21 dead)
* At Edgware Road subway station. (5 dead)
* On a bus at Woburn Place near Tavistock Square. (2 dead)

The slaughter of innocents will not achieve anything. It only lessens whatever credibility you’ve had before. If you haven’t found out yet, an al-Qaeda-linked group has claimed responsibility for this. It still hasn’t been verified but their is a great chance of it being them again.

A CBC timeline:

8:49 a.m. British transport police receive report on incident on Metropolitan Line between Liverpool Street and Aldgate.

9:15 a.m. Media reports say explosion reported and emergency services headed to Liverpool Street Station.

9:24 a.m. Transport police say cause of emergency could be a collision of two trains, a power cut, or an exploded power cable. Police report some minor injuries.

9:33 a.m. London Underground shut down. Passengers told a power fault across network is to blame.

9:33 a.m. Another incident at Edgware Road Station reported.

9:40 a.m. Transport police report power surge incidents at five Underground stations: Aldgate, Edgware Road, King’s Cross, Old Street and Russell Square.

10:02 a.m. Scotland Yard says it is responding to a major incident.

10:14 a.m. Reports of a bus torn apart by an explosion in central London.

10:21 a.m. Scotland Yard says there have been multiple explosions in London.

10:23 a.m. Transport police confirm explosion on a bus at Tavistock Place.

10:25 a.m. BBC says British Prime Minister Tony Blair, in Scotland for G-8 summit, is unsure if explosions are terrorist attack.

10:25 a.m. Two buses reported damaged in explosion. Eyewitnesses say a double-decker bus was blown into the air.

10:25 a.m. Transport union reports three explosions on buses.

10:39 a.m. All hospitals in London put on major incident alert.

10:49 a.m. Police report serious casualties, but don’t confirm any deaths.

10:51 a.m. Police say two trains stuck in tunnels at Edgware Road. Passenger says he saw bodies in the wreckage.

10:55 a.m. Reuters reports at least 90 casualties at Aldgate Station.

11:18 a.m. BBC speaks with London Metropolitan Police Commissioner Ian Blair. He says he knows of “about six explosions” on a bus and at Underground stations, calls the situation confusing and advises Londoners to stay put.

11:26 a.m. European Parliament President Josep Burrell blames terrorism for co-ordinated attacks and “confirmed deaths.”

11:30 a.m. Signs on highways into London issue warning: “Avoid London. Area Closed. Turn on Radio.”

12:05 p.m. Blair issues statement regarding “series of terrorist attacks in London.” Blair says he will go to London and that the G-8 summit will continue in his absence.

12:39 p.m. Reuters reports that an unknown group calling itself the Secret Group of al-Qaeda’s Jihad in Europe issues statement on website claiming responsibility for attack.

12:57 p.m. Home Secretary Charles Clarke confirms four explosions, three in subways, one on a bus.

1:00 p.m. G-8 leaders meeting in Scotland condemn attacks and say they will remain united in fight against terrorism.

1:30 p.m. Hospital officials report 190 people injured in explosions.

1:32 p.m. U.S. President George W. Bush, at G-8 summit, says he has told security officials back home to be extra vigilant.

1:42 p.m. London police official says traces of explosives found at two blast sites.

2:12 p.m. A U.S. law enforcement official says at least 40 people were killed.

3:27 p.m. London police confirm 33 fatalities from three explosions in the underground.

3:29 p.m. London Ambulance Service officials say 45 people are seriously injured.

The bus and train systems have been shut down today for further investigation and security reasons. Over three million people take the Underground system everyday. Thankfully only a small percentage of them were injured today. Let’s hope our brothers and sisters in the UK can find out those responsible for this and make sure that it never happens again. Like Matt said earlier today, people shouldn’t have to be afraid to take the bus or the train. What kind of garbage is this anyway? Leave the people alone, they have nothing to do with the “capitalist exploitation”.

Canada seems to have also been threatened but that’s not a certainty. We should expect to see tighter security on our public transit systems. The terrorists are getting exactly what they want now. The whole world’s afraid again.

If you have any Canadian relatives in London you can call: 1-800-606-5499.
This is the number for our Foreign Affairs unit in London. Be sure to include their name, date of birth, and passport number (if you have it) when you call.

Canada House, Consular Services, Trafalgar Square, London, SW1Y 5BJ, England, U.K.

Tel.: 44 (20) 7258-6600
Fax: 44 (20) 7258-6533
E-Mail: LDN@international.gc.ca
Internet: www.london.gc.ca

This attack hopefully has not over shadowed the tremendous achievement of hosting the 2012 summer olympics and the G-8 protests.

Be careful in the UK, Nuisance..

Think they’ll do anything?

June 6th, 2005 | No Comments | Posted in Blog, Political

Source: CBC

International court to probe Darfur war crimes
Last Updated Mon, 06 Jun 2005 21:34:33 EDT
CBC News

The International Criminal Court announced Monday it will launch a formal investigation into suspected war crimes in Sudan’s Darfur region.

The investigation is expected to be the largest handled by the court since it was established in June 2002.

The decision follows a vote by the United Nations Security Council in March to let the ICC try people accused of committing war crimes in Sudan’s Darfur region, the first case the council has referred to the ICC. The U.S., which opposes the ICC because it fears it could be used to launch politically motivated prosecutions against Americans, had agreed not to use its veto power on the Security Council.

UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has given the ICC a list of 51 people, including top Sudanese government and army officials, militia leaders and army commanders, suspected of slaughter and rape in Darfur.

The ICC is not expected to get help from Sudan, which has insisted on prosecuting any suspects itself. The UN says Sudan has done little to disarm the Arab militia.

Critics say the Sudanese government has been supporting the Janjaweed, Arab militias accused of attacking Darfur’s black residents and carrying out a brutal campaign to drive out the local population. The government denies the charge.

Tens of thousands of Darfur residents have died and more than 2 million have been displaced from their homes.

Human-rights groups and other observers – including former U.S. secretary of state Colin Powell – have condemned the violence as genocide.

Hotel Rwanda

June 3rd, 2005 | 2 Comments | Posted in Blog, Political, Rants, Reviews

So with this mess going on in Darfur now, God decided that I should watch Hotel Rwanda. Okay, maybe not but someone close to him/her… or not.

Hotel Rwanda

I’ve met quite a few Tutsi people as my mother’s office dealt with a lot of refugees and immigrants. One of them goes to a church that I occasionally show up at on holidays. This man, who seems nice enough, had his thumb cut off. I just had the oddest feeling of deja vu just now. Anyway, I’ve known quite a few sudanese people (I spent summers at immigration offices). Most of them were nice and some were really cool. There was this one guy I knew who was a freaking lion tamer. I thought that was hardcore and he played soccer without his shoes.

I don’t get how you can kill your own people. I don’t get how you could kill anyone at all actually. The film is really quite disturbing and they may have downplayed Canada’s role in it a bit but it’s worth a watch. It made me feel ill and that’s a rarity. It wasn’t the every day excessively gruesome fight scene. It just seemed real. I don’t want to believe that someone would use a machete against another human being but it’s all happening again. If not in Darfur, somewhere else. Horrible.

To try and lighten the mood a bit, I was at the mall trying pickup lines on the girls on rollerblades.

You just rolled away with my heart :(.

The BC Catholic and Ratzinger

April 30th, 2005 | No Comments | Posted in Blog, Political, Rants

So I’m looking through the library and find this newspaper called “The BC Catholic”. It was scary.

They supported Bill C-38 and seemed to really love the Hitler Youth Pope. So he was just a communications officer, eh? Communications officers relayed all the enemy positions and told troops where they had to exterminate targets. Nobody’s innocent in a war. Especially when you’re helping out with the genocide. So anyway, I look through their website and find a lot of anti-abortion material. I may not like the idea but it should be a woman’s right to decide and I fully support that right.

It’s also kind of funny that this newspaper costs money to get. Doesn’t the church have enough money already? Being the “official” newspaper for the “Archdiocese of Vancouver” shouldn’t you be loaded? I seem to recall them buying back two highschools for a few million dollars.

Okay, enough with the bashing. So the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy is only going to be on the first two books and it shouldn’t have anything to do with Milliways. I still haven’t seen it yet but I will! Itchy just verified that Vin Diesel somehow dies inbetween the first Triple X and the Second. What a stupid movie.

God. The new Coldplay single is awesome. It’s called: “Speed of Sound”, The lyrics are below. I can’t wait until they come back to Vancouver. I’ve got to see them again, they were wicked and so was The Music.

How long before I get in
Before it starts before I begin
How long before you decide or
Before I know what it feels like
Where to, where do i go?
If you never try then you’ll never know
How long do i have to climb
Up on the side of this mountain of mine

Look up, I look up at night
Planets are moving at the speed of light
Climb up, up in the trees
Every chance that you get is a chance you seize
How long am I gonna stand
With my head stuck under the stand
I start before I can stop or
Before I see things the right way up

All that noise and all that sound
All those places I have found
And birds go flying at the speed of sound
To show ya how it all began
Birds came flyin from the underground
If you could see it then you’d understand

Ideas that you’ll never find
All the inventors could never design
The buildings that you put up
Japan and China all lit up
A sign that I couldn’t breathe
or a light, that I couldn’t see
Some things you have to believe
Others are puzzles, puzzlin me

All that noise and all that sound
All those places I have found
And birds go flying at the speed of sound
To show ya how it all began
Birds came flyin from the underground
If you could see it then you’d understand
Oh when you see it then you’ll understand

All those signs I knew what they meant
Somethings you can’t invent
Some get made, and some get sent
Birds go flying at the speed of sound
To show ya how it all began
Birds came flyin from the underground
If you could see it then you’d understand
Oh when you see it then you’ll understand

msn

On an added note, the Daleks will show up on Doctor Who! But in episode 6. Katnew, I was going to send you episode 5ive but you’re nowhere to be found.

Xandi, Bukkake Robots! Porno in disguise! Featuring music by Theory of a Dead Man.

Dammit Steph, I can’t believe you just drove right by me!!

Better late than never

April 25th, 2005 | No Comments | Posted in Blog, Political

A very late response to my e-mail on Bill C-38 from Jim Prentice, M.P.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank-you for your recent
correspondence with regards to Bill C-38. I appreciate your thoughtful
comments and interest in this very important issue. I will continue to
listen to the dialogue of my constituents on this legislation.

Since the Supreme Court of Canada decision, I have embarked on an
extensive consultation process, fulfilling a commitment I made to my
constituents in Calgary Centre-North during the 2004 federal election.

I can confidently say, after consultation with hundreds of people, that
Calgary Centre-North reflects very diverse views and opinions on this
subject. Enclosed are my thoughts, as put forward on February 2nd 2005.

I encourage you to stay in contact with my office to voice your
comments.

Regards,
Jim Prentice

STATEMENT ON SAME SEX MARRIAGE
Jim Prentice, M.P.

February 2, 2005, CALGARY - Yesterday the Liberal government introduced
their much-awaited marriage legislation.

The decision I have come to has been a difficult one. I have spoken to
many hundreds in my riding of Calgary Centre-North. I have met with many
community leaders including religious leaders from Calgary and
representatives of the gay community. I have held an open Town Hall
Meeting and I have done my best to understand the legal and theological
issues that this decision has raised.

For me, the marriage question is one of individual liberty - of
constitutional liberty.

Let’s be clear. I have been married to the same woman for 21 years,
reflecting my own personal definition of what marriage is. It is also
the definition of my own church, the Presbyterian Church of Canada.

It is not, however, the personal definition of many of our fellow
citizens who are homosexual and who have sought the protection of the
Charter to obtain civil marriage licences from the government.
Fundamentally the question is this: what right do we as a society have
to refuse gay Canadians something that the rest of us are entitled to -
namely, a civil marriage license.

Set aside the legal debate, and ask the very simple question. What moral
or political authority do we have to deny gay Canadians the issuance of
a government marriage license?

The answer in my mind is clear. We have no such right at all because
whether two people of the same sex marry, and how and whether their
gender enters into the relationship, is none of the government’s
business, providing they do no harm to anyone else.

“Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.”
- John Stuart Mill

I am a conservative, and this is the philosophy that guides me in public
life.

Each of us has the right to fashion our own life to suit our own
character without impediment from others, providing we harm no one else
and providing we accept the consequences of our own decisions.

If we have the right, as a society, to prohibit homosexual Canadians
from civil marriage because their idea of a marriage differs form ours,
do we have an equal right to prohibit some Christians, Muslims, or Sikhs
from preaching aspects of their faith, which are not shared by the
majority of Canadians? By parity of reasoning, would we not have an
equally valid entitlement to suppress the literature, political opinions
or political association of those who hold views different than our own?

These are the modern liberties of our western society. They are the very
liberties that underpin western society, and they are owed to each of us
equally and unconditionally.

The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ensures that all Canadians
must be treated equally at law, including the right to marry. Equally
the Charter protects the rights of religions to carry on their faith
according to their own doctrine.

The vote for Conservatives is a free one. Stephen Harper has shown
courage and leadership and his position has been very clear to
Canadians. It is particularly disappointing that Mr. Martin did not have
the strength of leadership to allow his entire Caucus to have a free
vote on this issue.

I have come to the conclusion that I will stand in defence of the
constitutional right of homosexual couples to civil marriage, even
though their definition of marriage is not my own. I will be equally
vigilant in defending religious marriage and religious freedom, for it
is equally clear that neither the Christian community nor the other
communities of faith can be compelled to accept or perform same sex
marriages. Religious freedom must stand sacrosanct and religious
marriage must stand as the exclusive preserve of our communities of
faith.

I intend to vigorously support the Conservative Party amendments that
would strengthen these protections of religious freedoms.
This decision has been a difficult one. My riding has a diversity of
opinions on this question. I appreciate that my decision will not make
everybody happy. I will be accountable.

In the final analysis, I have concluded that religious marriage is the
authority of the church and that jurisdiction must be jealously guarded.
But civil marriage, or governmental marriage, of two Canadians, must be
available equally to all. Therefore, I will be voting in favour of this
legislation and I will support Conservative Party amendments designed to
protect religious freedoms.

Success, for now

April 12th, 2005 | No Comments | Posted in Blog, Political

Gomery Update
It seems that the Liberals have lost the lead all over the country. The NDP have taken the lead for all four major western provinces :D! Though it seems the Conservatives are in the lead for Ontario. The Bloc have Quebec which isn’t really surprising.

The Liberals aren’t great and all but I don’t want a conservative government in power. Here’s to the NDP.

So, Harper is calling for an election in May but the Liberals are trying to postpone it til after Justice Gomery’s final report on the scandal. Though it seems Harper will have his way and we will have an election this May. If that happens, the Liberals will likely try and have another election this June.

Smile!

P.s. Down with Campbell.

And now you’re all up to date!

Bill C-38
Bill C-38 has been temporarily overturned by the House of Commons.

164 Against
132 For

The nay-sayers took it but the opposition is a bit too high for a society like ours isn’t it?

Marriage is a fundamental human right, whether you’re straight or gay. Let your MP know you support our Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

And Doctor Who’s on in a little bit so, I’m off.