Tous les articles
Triés par date de parution
Pour un Québec scandinave
Par Pierre K. Malouf le 25 mars 2010
Les Québécois comprennent enfin que l’heure est grave. Ramenés au réalisme grâce au leadership exemplaire du premier ministre, ils sont prêts à payer leur électricité au prix du marché, à débourser quelques dollars supplémentaires pour faire garder leurs enfants dans les CPE, à voir augmenter la TVQ de 1%, à dépenser davantage pour envoyer leur progéniture à l’université, à être à jamais les citoyens les plus taxés en Amérique du Nord. Ils voient aussi venir d’un bon oeil les mesures d’austérité qui seront prises pour ralentir l’augmentation des dépenses publiques. Le bon exemple nous est fourni par les employés de l’État, qui, de bon coeur, vont se contenter de modestes augmentations.
Nous n’avons pas à tolérer l’intolérable
Par Djemila Benhabib le 25 mars 2010
S’il y a une chose qu’a révélée au grand jour cette épisode de la jeune femme égyptienne en burqa qui s’est auto-exclue d’un cours de francisation à cause de son attitude sectaire, c’est la grande incapacité d’un bon nombre de journalistes à décrypter le discours, les symboles ainsi que l’activisme des tenants de l’obscurantisme le plus réactionnaire du monde musulman, à savoir le salafisme.
Adding to the World’s Misery The Travesty of “Israel Apartheid week”
Par Noga Emmanuel le 25 mars 2010
Last month an ugly ritual event replayed itself: “Israel Apartheid week”. In Montreal, 500 local artists signed a letter in support of an international campaign for boycott, divestment and sanctions against the Jewish state: "to protest the Israeli state's ongoing denial of the inalienable rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties, [as] well as Israel's ongoing occupation and colonization of the West Bank (including Jerusalem) and Gaza, which also constitutes a violation of international law and multiple United Nations resolutions".
Afghan detainees – the real issue
Par Mischa Popoff le 25 mars 2010
In politics there are issues you can bludgeon your enemies with, but every now and then an issue arises that through its repetition will turn against you because a deeper issue lies within it. What the Liberals and NDP fail to appreciate as they attack the Conservatives over the Afghan detainee issue is that at a visceral level Canadians just don’t care about Afghan detainees because they’re the enemy. There, I said it.
Down and out in downtown Montreal
Par P.A. Sévigny le 25 mars 2010
As an advocate for some of the more vulnerable people across the nation, Liberal MP Marc Garneau couldn’t do much better than to use the downtown core’s Sac à dos to mount his campaign for sustained government support to help the poor, the sick and the destitute who live in the city’s downtown core. “Sustainable funding is crucial to the continued operation of organizations in Montreal like Sac à dos,” said Garneau,”…and everybody knows the demand for their services is increasing by the day. More and more people are using the city’s food banks and line-ups for the shelters keep getting longer and longer.”
“…more than just a meal”
Par P.A. Sévigny le 25 mars 2010
After twenty years on the front lines in the war against poverty on the mean streets of Cote Des Neiges, people at the MultiCaf project are still working hard to provide basic food security and social support networks for the district’s poor. Decades after the organization first opened its doors, MultiCaf is still working hard to help empower the local residents through an assortment of social action initiatives with a number of new programs aimed at feeding the poor and the disabled. As one of the borough’s foremost social and economic activists, Outremont businessman Francois Pilon said he was more than impressed with everything the MultiCaf people were doing in their district.
Israël n’a pas le choix
Par Germain Belzile le 25 mars 2010
Quelque 7000 obus de mortiers et roquettes tirés sur le territoire d'Israël depuis 2001. Des dizaines de milliers de civils israéliens ciblés par des attaques quotidiennes. Les alertes plus que quotidiennes qui terrorisent les enfants dans leurs écoles et leurs garderies. Quel gouvernement peut tolérer cela ? Depuis sept ans, les brigades d'Al-Aqsa (branche du Fatah), le Djihad islamique et le Hamas se sont armés pour atteindre leur but : détruire l'État d'Israël.
Les vraies vérités sur Israël
Par Beryl Wajsman le 25 mars 2010
Over the past month – from that annual hatefest called Israel Apartheid Week to the needless row over the Jerusalem buildings – we have witnessed a viral and venal campaign of disinformation about our one democratic ally in a a sea of theocratic tyranny. We want to devote this front page to setting the record straight. To fight the teachings of contempt. Here’s the real deal on Israel.
During IAW we saw the usual collection of Islamist apologists and their fellow-travelers in academic, political and diplomatic circles seeking to portray Israel as an apartheid-era South Africa in relation to its Arab citizens.
We must not abandon Afghanistan
Par Lauryn Oates le 25 mars 2010
In the recent speech from the throne on March 3, Afghanistan was mentioned in only two instances, and not mentioned at all in the budget speech the following day, strangely sidestepping the subject of the country in which we have engaged with so closely for the last seven years.
This is perhaps not surprising, given the inability of any of the three political parties to take any leadership on what a Canadian contribution to Afghanistan after 2011 might look like, and the Afghanistan fatigue that sadly characterizes Canadian public opinion.
Canada can help imprisoned Chinese hero Gao Zhisheng
Par The Hon. David Kilgour le 25 mars 2010
Members of Gao Zhisheng's international legal team, on which I am privileged to work, have submitted a petition to the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, urging the UN to declare that the Chinese government's detention of Gao violates international law. Our team hopes that the UN will decide accordingly, but also that the Harper government and opposition party leaders will speak out on behalf of this extraordinary human rights lawyer, who 'was disappeared' by the Chinese party-state over a year ago.
A Conservative Budget
Par Robert Presser le 25 mars 2010
The game changing 1995 federal budget slashed transfers to the provinces and set in place five years of spending restraint. The resulting limited growth in federal government spending, coupled with falling interest rates that reduced the interest burden on Canada’s existing debt, allowed the federal government to move into surplus before the millennium and post a decade of surpluses which ended in 2009. The great shame of this period of fiscal nirvana is that it could have been even better for the Canadian taxpayer. The Liberals consistently under-estimated their surpluses and even after an orgy of last-minute spending in the final quarter of every fiscal year up until their defeat in 2006, they still exceeded their surplus predictions.
GREECE THE SKIDS
Par Robert Elman le 25 mars 2010
The “Canary in the coal mine,” is Greece, but is there an “ Elephant in the room?” Greece, like most of the PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain) has spent in a profligate manner, and has been less than humble in its demeanour. As you will later read , Greece’s dealing with her partners have been brought into serious question.
Greece became a member of the EU in 1993 with the signing of the Maastricht Treaty. There were very clear stipulations regarding Debt to GDP, Capital accounts, deficit to GDP and so on.
Piperberg's World
Par Roy Piperberg le 25 mars 2010
The private lives of public people
Par Dan Delmar le 25 mars 2010
Over one decade after American conservatives tried to demonize oral sex in the oval office, public figures are still being unfairly chastised for behaviour that should have remained private; behaviour that likely has no negative impact on their roles as politicians or professional athletes; behaviour that, while not admirable, is completely natural and may understandably result from attaining a certain level of success.
PHILIPPE CASGRAIN A renaissance man passes
Par Alan Hustak le 25 mars 2010
If Philippe Casgrain hadn’t gone into law he might have been actor.
Mr. Casgrain, who died Feb . 28 at 82 was one of those cultivated, old-world figures with a sense of panache. A specialist in commercial and environmental law, he often relied on his natural charm to argue a case. “I’m always anxious for the judge to take his seat in the courtroom so I can put on a show for him,” he once told a reporter, “You have to be as well prepared as any actor if you are going to be convincing and win any sympathy for your client.”
The discreet charm of Pascale Bussières
Par Alan Hustak le 25 mars 2010
There are actors, and then there are stars.
Pascale Bussières, the alluring star of at least 30 Quebec feature films, was never trained to be an actor - she was always too busy working before the cameras to bother going to a theatre school.
With her seductive eyes, luminous features and expressive face, Bussières can play almost anything.
Back to her roots: An affectionate history of Griffintown
Par Alan Hustak le 25 mars 2010
Brave is the writer who tackles a history of Griffintown; braver still the writer who would weigh in on the storied Montreal slum neighbourhood from her vantage point in Toronto. There is much to admire in Sharon Doyle Driedger’s enthusiastic, if somewhat disjointed history of the Irish experience in Canada. But for a book with the subtitle: How a Small Immigrant Community Shaped Canada , often the story she tells doesn’t have all that much to do with “The Griff.” Driedger holds forth with authority in some chapters, especially her telling of the 1842 canal workers strike at Beauharnois, the floods and on the Christian brothers influence on the neighbourhood.
Rambunctious “Comedy of Errors”
Par Alidor Aucoin le 25 mars 2010
Centaur Director Peter Hinton’s totally off-the-wall staging of William Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors is a rambunctious, gender crossing romp. The pl ay is a ridiculously complicated two hour series of fast-paced, mad cap routines rooted in the mistaken identities of two sets of identical twins who were separated at birth, Antipholus of Syracuse (Marcel Jeannin) and Antipholus of Ephesus, (Andreas Apergis) and their twin servants, both named Dromio.
Letters
Par readers le 11 février 2010
Profiling yes, but do it right...
Thanks for your courage...
Keep the articles coming...
La poussière sous le tapis
Par Pierre K. Malouf le 11 février 2010
J’ai failli intituler cet article Mes prédictions pour l’année 2010. Je
me suis ravisé, car ma boule de cristal refuse de me révéler ce qui va
se passer cette année. Tout au plus me laisse-t-elle entrevoir ce qui
n’arrivera pas. J’ai dressé une liste de ces non-événements. Voici la
prédiction dont je suis le plus sûr : le gouvernement libéral dirigé
par Jean Charest ne prendra aucune décision douloureuse.
Attention : «douloureuse» n’est pas synonyme d’ «impopulaire». La
création d’une commission d’enquête sur la corruption dans l’industrie
de la construction serait accueillie favorablement par la population,
mais serait apparemment douloureuse pour M. Charest (je me demande
pourquoi).
Dévastation
Par Beryl Wajsman le 11 février 2010
La tragédie de l’Haïti continue à se déferler dans son ensemble. Les
leçons qu’elle nous enseigne au quotidien vont au cœur de notre
particularité. Si elle aura quelconque testament durable, ce sera de
nous rappeler ce que signifie être humain.
A story in scripture tells of two men. One, cool and detached, always
involved in his own affairs looking for ways to accumulate wealth and
power. The other, emotional and engaged, constantly involved in the
actions and passions of his time...
Montrealers’ Hallelujahs for Haiti
Par P.A. Sévigny le 11 février 2010
Trois semaines après que la terre s'est soulevée sous leurs pieds,
environ 200 000 personnes sont censées être mortes, écrasées sous des
tonnes de béton émietté. Port-au-Prince est en ruines et les survivants
fouillent les décombres pour de l'eau et un peu de nourriture. « Les
damnés de la terre » de Frantz Fanon a pris une nouvelle signification
alors que les images numériques de la catastrophe haïtienne
commençaient à faire chemin à travers les médias. À son crédit, la
planète a commencé à se rassembler et l'aide était en chemin...
Droits et démocratie : Harper a raison de faire le ménage
Par Beryl Wajsman le 11 février 2010
Les demandes de l’opposition fédérale pour une enquête sur la supposé influence négative du gouvernement Harper sur l'organisation Droits et démocratie sont inacceptables, mal conçus et corrosifs. Inacceptables parce qu’ils ne résonnent à rien de plus qu'une chasse aux sorcières cherchant un bénéfice politique sur la mort du défunt président de Droits et démocratie, Rémy Beauregard; qui est mort récemment d'une crise cardiaque. Mal conçu car ils démontrent une ignorance effroyable des lacunes de Droits et démocratie que ce gouvernement a essayé de corriger...
Reframing: A comment on the media controversy surrounding Rights and Democracy
Par David Matas le 11 février 2010
Remy Beauregard, the former president of Rights and Democracy, died of a heart attack the night of January 7, 2010. Some of the staff of Rights and Democracy in the name of all of them released a letter dated January 11, 2010 calling on the leadership of the Board of Directors to resign, accusing them of harassment of the former president. The accusation of harassment was directed against the chair and vice-chair of the Board, Aurel Braun and Jacques Gauthier, and the chair of the audit and finance committee, Elliot Tepper...
Chill, political foodies! There’s too much government already
Par Lorne Gunter le 11 février 2010
One of the worst by-products -- among many -- of the rapid expansion of government in the past 50 years has been the politicization of everything, including aspects of personal daily life that government has no business in. Relationships, child rearing, garbage collection, even the replacement of light bulbs have come under government scrutiny..
Harper prorogues Parliamentary backhanding
Par Mischa Popoff le 11 février 2010
If Harper prorogued Parliament merely to avoid answering questions about Afghan detainees there might be a basis for the indignity the opposition feigns. But Harper had a quick look at the polls before he called G.G. Michel Jean and you can rest assured that the tale of a terrorist who claims to have been roughed up after our soldiers handed him to Afghan authorities is destined for obscurity...
Burqa tolerance points to a leadership vacuum
Par Dan Delmar le 11 février 2010
The lack of political courage across all levels of government and most political parties is nothing short of shameful. The burqa (or niqab) is possibly the most offensive garment on the face of the earth: A head-to-toe covering worn by women who practice an extremist and some say perverted form of Islam. It is a symbol of repression, misogyny and, as French president Nicholas Sarkozy said last year, “debasement.” It should not be tolerated in any civilized society...
Activists and diplomats unite to help Sun Youth’s Haitian relief
Par Alan Hustak le 11 février 2010
Sometimes tragedies do bring out the better angels of our nature. And
they bring together new allies in common cause to help those who are
always at the forefront of relieving human suffering.
Much money has been raised for Haitian relief. World leaders meet at
conferences to discuss reconstruction. Great concerts are held. All
this is just and right.
Adopt Haiti
Par David T. Jones le 11 février 2010
Washington, DC…Even before the seminal January 12 earthquake, Haiti was in trouble. It was the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere with per capita income of less than $2 per day ($660/year) where 1 percent of the citizens held half of Haiti's wealth. Even before the earthquake, statistics indicated that only a third of the population could access electricity and only 11 percent had piped water. No city had a sanitation system; life expectancy at 61 years was the hemisphere's lowest, and the UN Human Development Index placed it 149 of 182 countries with all below it being African states. The best and brightest of its citizens long ago escaped...
Haiti can rise
Par Jessica Murphy le 11 février 2010
In 2006, Canadian-Haitian intellectual Georges Anglades penned the
tongue-in-cheek novella, 'What if Haiti declared war on the USA?'
It explored a Haiti so totally destroyed in a war against imperial
powers it's given a chance to climb out of three centuries of adversity
by starting from scratch.
Sadly, Anglades and his wife Mireille died in the January earthquake
that ravaged the country they loved and worked throughout their lives
to improve...
The politics of climate change
Par Alan Hustak le 11 février 2010
Everyone in the non-stop debate on climate change has an opinion, but
how much consideration has been given to the potential seismic shift
in international diplomacy that can be attributed to global
warming? What happens to nation states, to the realignment of
political boundaries, and to shifting corporate interests as we become
even more dependent on fossil fuels, and as forests disappear, farmland
is exhausted and sources of fresh water evaporate?
Le multiculturalisme au service de l’intolérable
Par Pierre K. Malouf le 11 février 2010
La Déclaration universelle des droits de l’homme adoptée par l’ONU en 1948 fut mise à mal dès le début. Aujourd’hui, l’utopie universaliste est surtout menacée par l’islamisme, qui ne sévit pas qu’en pays musulman. Il est en train de s’implanter en Occident, où ses adeptes s’ingénient à imposer leurs traditions religieuses aux dépens des libertés individuelles, celles dont leurs femmes devraient jouir, et les nôtres également, qu’ils cherchent à détruire. C’est le cas notamment de la liberté d’expression. «C’est pourtant sur ces terres, écrit Caroline Fourest, au coeur même des démocraties, que l’universalisme risque de succomber à force de tolérer les idées les plus intolérantes au nom du droit à la différence.»
Time to shine the light on Uzbek sadism
Par Lauryn Oates le 11 février 2010
In the vast emptiness of the Kyzyl Kum desert that covers western
Uzbekistan, there is a dark prison called Jaslyk. The very name causes
local people to shudder. There, inmates are jammed into cells, 16 in
each, sometimes forced to stand for days on end, forbidden to speak out
loud.
One day in 2002, two men were being tortured in Jaslyk. Their names
were Muzafar Avazov and Khusnuddin Olimov. Submerged in boiling water,
they were literally boiled alive, a form of torture otherwise unknown
since the likes of 14th-century Scotland or the Roman Inquisition...
Piperberg's World
Par Roy Piperberg le 11 février 2010
Bubble, Bubble…Canadian Debt Trouble
Par Robert Presser le 11 février 2010
Canadians can rarely feel smug when comparing themselves to their US
neighbors, but when it comes to our banking sector our airs of
superiority are justified. While the Obama administration contemplates
an overhaul of financial industry regulation and punitive taxation of
banking executives’ bonuses, Prime Minister Harper announced in Davos
that Canada has no intention of “micro-managing” Canada’s banks.