The problem with Blair is that he thinks (or thought) that he can influence Bush’s attitudes like he could with Clinton, he can't really manage it though so he has attached himself to an out of control train heading for derailment.Stuart Mackey wrote:I have observed the politics of Blair, Howard and Bush and have concluded that the three of them are homosexual lovers.
That is all.
Howard (au. PM) moves a toe into Iraq and moves against gays
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- TheDarkling
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Oh puh-lease. Conservative Party memberships were being vacuumed up by Alliance party members, and church groups were publicly exhorting their followers here in Ontario to vote for Harper.White Cat wrote:1) The party's leadership election method (each riding got the same weight, no matter how many members it had) was deliberately set up to make it impossible for the larger western membership to decide the outcome. Harper won not just because of his western base, but because he was supported by one-third of Quebec and Atlantic members and fully 57% of Ontario.
I live in Ontario, for fuck's sake. You don't. Trust me, 57% of Ontario does not like Stephen Harper. But the fundies all do, and the church groups were out in force exhorting fundies to buy up memberships and vote for him, since he's a worthless shit-for-brains fundie himself.2) I followed the Conservative leadership race very closely, and I never saw anyone even claim that religious groups were "buying up all the party memberships and block-voting for him". Source, please.
No, I live in Ontario and I know what happened here during the recent nomination process.(Perhaps you're thinking of Stockwell Day? There were stories about him doing that in both the 2000 and 2002 Canadian Alliance races.)
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
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"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
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- Col. Crackpot
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- BoredShirtless
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Source?Darth Wong wrote:Oh puh-lease. Conservative Party memberships were being vacuumed up by Alliance party members, and church groups were publicly exhorting their followers here in Ontario to vote for Harper.
Source?I live in Ontario, for fuck's sake. You don't. Trust me, 57% of Ontario does not like Stephen Harper. But the fundies all do, and the church groups were out in force exhorting fundies to buy up memberships and vote for him
- Darth Wong
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My fucking radio.White Cat wrote:Source?Darth Wong wrote:Oh puh-lease. Conservative Party memberships were being vacuumed up by Alliance party members, and church groups were publicly exhorting their followers here in Ontario to vote for Harper.
Me, asshole. I live here in fucking Ontario, and I know what the local church groups were saying on the radio and in the flyers I found on my goddamned doorstep. Drop the arrogant pissant attitude, numb-nuts. You think you know Ontario more than I do, from a thousands kilometres away based on what you read in the newspaper?Source?I live in Ontario, for fuck's sake. You don't. Trust me, 57% of Ontario does not like Stephen Harper. But the fundies all do, and the church groups were out in force exhorting fundies to buy up memberships and vote for him
Since when does someone have to provide a "source" for his own direct observations, fuckhead?
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
Howard's primary rival in Australia went -> Kim Beasley, Simon Crean(with Beasley making a failed leadership challenge), Mark Latham.Col. Crackpot wrote:isn't Howard's primary rival that old white guy who bragged about his 'bling-bling' and knowlegde of ghetto culture?
In Australia, choicing a party leadership is nowere near the circus it is in the USA, and most of the internal party politics goes on behind closed doors, giving any party you care to name in AUS politics the apearance of a united front.
Only went someone is positive they have a good chance of a successful leadership challenge will they make the attempt.
The AUS political system is a little wierd.
"Okay, I'll have the truth with a side order of clarity." ~ Dr. Daniel Jackson.
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"Reality has a well-known liberal bias." ~ Stephen Colbert
"One Drive, One Partition, the One True Path" ~ ars technica forums - warrens - on hhd partitioning schemes.
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The problem is that in doing what he/they have done they appear to have surrendered some of their freedom of foreign policy by linking themselves to an American policy in such a way that it is difficult to disengage without severe consequences at home. In doing this they have ignored the national interest without any tangible benfit.TheDarkling wrote:The problem with Blair is that he thinks (or thought) that he can influence Bush’s attitudes like he could with Clinton, he can't really manage it though so he has attached himself to an out of control train heading for derailment.Stuart Mackey wrote:I have observed the politics of Blair, Howard and Bush and have concluded that the three of them are homosexual lovers.
That is all.
Via money Europe could become political in five years" "... the current communities should be completed by a Finance Common Market which would lead us to European economic unity. Only then would ... the mutual commitments make it fairly easy to produce the political union which is the goal"
Jean Omer Marie Gabriel Monnet
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Jean Omer Marie Gabriel Monnet
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- White Cat
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In this case, your "own direct observations" were the source I was asking for, since you didn't give any indication of where you were getting it from in your first two posts.Darth Wong wrote:Since when does someone have to provide a "source" for his own direct observations, fuckhead?
Ah, so your argument is based entirely on anecdotal evidence. I see.White Cat wrote:Me, asshole. I live here in fucking Ontario, and I know what the local church groups were saying on the radio and in the flyers I found on my goddamned doorstep.Source?
In that case, please explain how you got from "I saw some church groups advertising to support Harper" to "Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him" as your first post implied.
The claim that Harper is a "fundie" is also rather dubious, since he's been known to criticize the religious right ("Buchananism" is the word he's used for it) and apparently he quit the Reform Party in 1997 over fears that it was headed in that direction. (Source: a Toronto Star article from about a month ago which seems to have expired from their site.)
- Patrick Degan
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A direct observation is not "anecdotal evidence". If Darth Wong had said "I heard from somewhere that this is what these people say", that would be anecdotal.White Cat wrote:In this case, your "own direct observations" were the source I was asking for, since you didn't give any indication of where you were getting it from in your first two posts.Darth Wong wrote:Since when does someone have to provide a "source" for his own direct observations, fuckhead?
Ah, so your argument is based entirely on anecdotal evidence. I see.White Cat wrote: Me, asshole. I live here in fucking Ontario, and I know what the local church groups were saying on the radio and in the flyers I found on my goddamned doorstep.
When ballots have fairly and constitutionally decided, there can be no successful appeal back to bullets.
—Abraham Lincoln
People pray so that God won't crush them like bugs.
—Dr. Gregory House
Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
—The Doctor "Terror Of The Zygons" (1975)
—Abraham Lincoln
People pray so that God won't crush them like bugs.
—Dr. Gregory House
Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
—The Doctor "Terror Of The Zygons" (1975)
- Darth Wong
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You were asking me to cite my own direct observations as a source for my own direct observations? Are you on drugs?White Cat wrote:In this case, your "own direct observations" were the source I was asking for, since you didn't give any indication of where you were getting it from in your first two posts.Darth Wong wrote:Since when does someone have to provide a "source" for his own direct observations, fuckhead?
You are obviously too stupid to recognize the distinction between direct observations given as examples of a broad movement and anecdotal evidence used to prove a generalization. Clearly, you have been attempting to follow threads and noticed that people often characterize personal observations as anecdotal evidence, without bothering to learn that it is only particular kinds of direct observations used in particular ways which qualify as fallacious use of anecdotal evidence. It is an unfortunate reality of bulletin boards that we have to be plagued by imbeciles such as yourself who merely skim the surface of a concept before rushing to use it in an aggressive fashion.Ah, so your argument is based entirely on anecdotal evidence. I see.Me, asshole. I live here in fucking Ontario, and I know what the local church groups were saying on the radio and in the flyers I found on my goddamned doorstep.Source?
Two points: 1) you asked for a source for my observations. I answered that no such source was necessary because an observation is just that: an observation. 2) I am not particularly interested in digging through my old newspapers to read all of the various articles about how Harper drew most of his support here in Ontario from the religious right, and how the entire conservative movement here is in crisis as a result of its Americanization at the hands of westerners such as yourself. If you believe that the public exhortations of church groups for people to vote for Stephen Harper were the only piece of evidence for weak support in Ontario for Stephen Harper, that is your perogative. The fact that Ontarians gave so many of their votes to the pretty blonde rich girl Belinda Stronach should have made something twig in your brain, but apparently not. And frankly, your contention to have superior knowledge about Ontario politics from a thousand km away based is still just as ridiculous now as it was when you first started.In that case, please explain how you got from "I saw some church groups advertising to support Harper" to "Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him" as your first post implied.
You obviously weren't paying attention during the furor over gay marriage. Albertans polled against gay marriage; Ontarians for it. And Harper proudly threw his hat in with the rednecks. On most of the key issues, Ontarians poll strongly against Harper's key platforms. Harper's only hope in Ontario is that Ontarians will be so disgusted with Liberal cronyism that they will hold their noses and vote for a man whose basic ideology clashes with theirs on numerous fronts.The claim that Harper is a "fundie" is also rather dubious, since he's been known to criticize the religious right ("Buchananism" is the word he's used for it) and apparently he quit the Reform Party in 1997 over fears that it was headed in that direction. (Source: a Toronto Star article from about a month ago which seems to have expired from their site.)
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
- White Cat
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*sigh* I will explain this again, using smaller words...Darth Wong wrote:You were asking me to cite my own direct observations as a source for my own direct observations? Are you on drugs?
1) In your first two posts, you claimed that Harper won the leadership because "religious fanatics bought up all the party memberships and block-voted for him." (You also included "western rednecks" in this, but seem to have conceded that point.)
2) You did not provide any sources to verify this in your first two posts.
3) After I asked you twice, in your third post you said that you had heard radio ads and seen flyers from church groups urging their followers to vote for Harper.
4) Therefore, your third post successfully provided the "source" I was requesting. Thank you.
Well, then please enlighten me as to how "I saw/heard some church groups in my area advertising to support Harper, therefore Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him" is not a fallacious use of anecdotal evidence.You are obviously too stupid to recognize the distinction between direct observations given as examples of a broad movement and anecdotal evidence used to prove a generalization. Clearly, you have been attempting to follow threads and noticed that people often characterize personal observations as anecdotal evidence, without bothering to learn that it is only particular kinds of direct observations used in particular ways which qualify as fallacious use of anecdotal evidence.Ah, so your argument is based entirely on anecdotal evidence. I see.
No, I asked for a source for your allegations about the reason for Harper's win. You then (eventually) provided me with your observations, which count as a source. See above.Two points: 1) you asked for a source for my observations.
Well, if you're "not particularly interested" in presenting non-anecdotal sources to back up your arguments, I can't force you to. Just don't be surprised when people refuse to take your allegations at face value.2) I am not particularly interested in digging through my old newspapers to read all of the various articles about how Harper drew most of his support here in Ontario from the religious right, and how the entire conservative movement here is in crisis as a result of its Americanization at the hands of westerners such as yourself.
What about the national religious groups who don't like Harper? And if we're allowed to use personal anecdotes as evidence, then I've heard about lots of religious people/leaders who consider Harper (and the merged Conservatives in general) to be no different than the Liberals on "moral issues."If you believe that the public exhortations of church groups for people to vote for Stephen Harper were the only piece of evidence for weak support in Ontario for Stephen Harper, that is your perogative.
I fail to see how getting "only" 57% in Ontario against Stronach (27%) and Clement (16%), both of whom are from that province, is evidence that Ontarians believe Harper is a fundamentalist, especially considering that Stronach had the money to buy thousands of memberships and was personally endorsed by prominent Ontarians like Mike Harris.The fact that Ontarians gave so many of their votes to the pretty blonde rich girl Belinda Stronach should have made something twig in your brain, but apparently not.
I contend nothing of the kind. In fact, looking back, the only claim I've made concerning Ontario is the 57/27/16% figure.And frankly, your contention to have superior knowledge about Ontario politics from a thousand km away based is still just as ridiculous now as it was when you first started.
My contention is that seeing some local church groups advertising to support Harper is nowhere close to sufficient evidence that Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him. </broken record>
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Hardly. Ontario's rural rednecks were Harper's biggest voting block. The Alliance has never had a chance in Toronto. And why don't you check out the size of ridings? Out west, Conservative ridings have more memberships than they do in Ontario, which means that the scheme through which votes were counted exaggerated their level of support in Ontario by giving each riding an equal say in the outcome regardless of the number of members there. But of course, you gloss over all of that, don't you?White Cat wrote:*sigh* I will explain this again, using smaller words...Darth Wong wrote:You were asking me to cite my own direct observations as a source for my own direct observations? Are you on drugs?
1) In your first two posts, you claimed that Harper won the leadership because "religious fanatics bought up all the party memberships and block-voted for him." (You also included "western rednecks" in this, but seem to have conceded that point.)
More bullshit; the source was always my direct observation of the behaviour of church groups in this area. I merely clarified those observations in light of a nitpicking moron.2) You did not provide any sources to verify this in your first two posts.
3) After I asked you twice, in your third post you said that you had heard radio ads and seen flyers from church groups urging their followers to vote for Harper.
4) Therefore, your third post successfully provided the "source" I was requesting. Thank you.
Show me where I made that statement, moron. As I said already, I said that Ontarians do not like Harper's agenda based on my knowledge of Ontario politics, and I gave B as an example of A. You distorted that into "B, therefore A".Well, then please enlighten me as to how "I saw/heard some church groups in my area advertising to support Harper, therefore Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him" is not a fallacious use of anecdotal evidence.
It's not an "argument", moron. I stated a claim of fact: that the political climate in Ontario is far more hostile to western anti-gay bigotry and pro-Bush bullshit than the redneck contingent out west. This is supported by every polling result. Your only countervailing evidence to my observation of every talk show, every radio show, every newspaper article, every polling result on every goddamned social issue is to complain that I should be able to produce print versions of those observations because you don't trust my observations of my own province. Oh yeah, and your moronic claim that the conservative party vote is actually representative of Ontario's general populationWell, if you're "not particularly interested" in presenting non-anecdotal sources to back up your arguments, I can't force you to. Just don't be surprised when people refuse to take your allegations at face value.
The same could be said of religious groups who think Bush is not hardcore enough, moron. The fact remains that only Harper is pushing their anti-gay, anti-secular agenda.What about the national religious groups who don't like Harper? And if we're allowed to use personal anecdotes as evidence, then I've heard about lots of religious people/leaders who consider Harper (and the merged Conservatives in general) to be no different than the Liberals on "moral issues."
Stronach is a silly blonde rich girl with zero political experience, moron! How could she even get 27% of the vote unless even the conservative party membership was not particularly pleased with Harper, never mind the general population?I fail to see how getting "only" 57% in Ontario against Stronach (27%) and Clement (16%), both of whom are from that province, is evidence that Ontarians believe Harper is a fundamentalist, especially considering that Stronach had the money to buy thousands of memberships and was personally endorsed by prominent Ontarians like Mike Harris.
Which in turn relies upon the moronic notion that the conservative party membership in Ontario (after the mass conversion of Alliance party members to Conservative party members) is somehow representative of the general populationI contend nothing of the kind. In fact, looking back, the only claim I've made concerning Ontario is the 57/27/16% figure.
And your idiotic refusal to acknowledge the fact that Harper supports numerous anti-secular anti-gay agendas that the people of Ontario do not support in polls, but I guess you'll just quietly sweep that under the carpet in your moronic goal to prove that there is not a major difference between the political views of people in Ontario and rednecks in Alberta.My contention is that seeing some local church groups advertising to support Harper is nowhere close to sufficient evidence that Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him. </broken record>
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
- White Cat
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Hardly. Ontario's rural rednecks were Harper's biggest voting block. The Alliance has never had a chance in Toronto.
Really. Well, let's look at the results for metropolitan Toronto:
Harper won ten ridings with a majority, eleven ridings with a plurality (two of those were very close), and only lost one. He totaled 48% in Toronto (Stronach got 31%, Clement got 22%).
And why don't you check out the size of ridings? Out west, Conservative ridings have more memberships than they do in Ontario, which means that the scheme through which votes were counted exaggerated their level of support in Ontario by giving each riding an equal say in the outcome regardless of the number of members there.
So what? He still got 57% in Ontario itself. The system couldn't have exaggerated Harper's support in Ontario; in fact, it downplayed his support nationwide by giving less weight to the high-membership ridings where his support was the strongest. (FWIW, I read somewhere that if you disregard the 100-points-per-riding system, Harper got something like 60-65% of the national membership vote.)
But of course, you gloss over all of that, don't you?
Excuse me? I was the one who pointed that out to you in my very first post!
Well, then please enlighten me as to how "I saw/heard some church groups in my area advertising to support Harper, therefore Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him" is not a fallacious use of anecdotal evidence.
Show me where I made that statement, moron.
As I said already, I said that Ontarians do not like Harper's agenda based on my knowledge of Ontario politics, and I gave B as an example of A. You distorted that into "B, therefore A".
Nice bait-and-switch. You know very well that I'm talking about whether Harper's victory was mainly/signifcantly because "western rednecks and religious fanatics bought up all the party memberships and block-voted for him", not whether Ontarians like his policies.
Oh yeah, and your moronic claim that the conservative party vote is actually representative of Ontario's general population
I contend nothing of the kind. In fact, looking back, the only claim I've made concerning Ontario is the 57/27/16% figure.
Which in turn relies upon the moronic notion that the conservative party membership in Ontario (after the mass conversion of Alliance party members to Conservative party members) is somehow representative of the general population
I never claimed anything like that.
The same could be said of religious groups who think Bush is not hardcore enough, moron. The fact remains that only Harper is pushing their anti-gay, anti-secular agenda.
And your idiotic refusal to acknowledge the fact that Harper supports numerous anti-secular anti-gay agendas that the people of Ontario do not support in polls
One position does not an anti-secular agenda make. Yes, Harper is against gay marriage, but he is also in favour of gay civil unions, which the fundamentalists oppose. What are the other religious/social conservative policies does Harper have? (And I'm sure you won't forget to provide sources...)
but I guess you'll just quietly sweep that under the carpet in your moronic goal to prove that there is not a major difference between the political views of people in Ontario and rednecks in Alberta.
I never claimed that, either. (Although now that you mention it, I saw at least one source that had Albertans and Ontarians polling within the margin of error on gay marriage.)
Stronach is a silly blonde rich girl with zero political experience, moron! How could she even get 27% of the vote unless even the conservative party membership was not particularly pleased with Harper, never mind the general population?
1) Harper beat Stronach and Clement on their own turf. (Historically, voters seem to be more likely to vote for someone who's from their area. I can't say I think this is the best way to decide, but whataya gonna do...)
2) Stronach had the support of prominent Ontario politicians like Mike Harris and Bill Davis.
3) Stronach used her money to buy thousands of instant memberships in Ontario and Quebec.
4) Hello, my name is Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Really. Well, let's look at the results for metropolitan Toronto:
Code: Select all
(Order of percentages is Clement/Harper/Stronach)
35005 Beaches—East York 26 44 31
35015 Davenport 29 41 30
35016 Don Valley East 16 62 22
35017 Don Valley West 24 51 25
35019 Eglinton—Lawrence 37 39 24
35022 Etobicoke Centre 17 59 24
35023 Etobicoke—Lakeshore 22 51 26
35024 Etobicoke North 20 43 37
35068 Parkdale—High Park 29 43 28
35080 Scarborough—Agincourt 13 53 34
35081 Scarborough Centre 14 59 27
35082 Scarborough—Guildwood 13 55 32
35083 Scarborough—Rouge River 34 40 26
35084 Scarborough Southwest 15 60 25
35077 St. Paul's 34 43 23
35093 Toronto Centre 25 38 37
35094 Toronto—Danforth 22 45 33
35095 Trinity—Spadina 25 42 33
35100 Willowdale 19 55 25
35103 York Centre 20 56 24
35105 York South—Weston 17 46 37
35106 York West 14 19 67
And why don't you check out the size of ridings? Out west, Conservative ridings have more memberships than they do in Ontario, which means that the scheme through which votes were counted exaggerated their level of support in Ontario by giving each riding an equal say in the outcome regardless of the number of members there.
So what? He still got 57% in Ontario itself. The system couldn't have exaggerated Harper's support in Ontario; in fact, it downplayed his support nationwide by giving less weight to the high-membership ridings where his support was the strongest. (FWIW, I read somewhere that if you disregard the 100-points-per-riding system, Harper got something like 60-65% of the national membership vote.)
But of course, you gloss over all of that, don't you?
Excuse me? I was the one who pointed that out to you in my very first post!
Well, then please enlighten me as to how "I saw/heard some church groups in my area advertising to support Harper, therefore Harper's leadership victory was mainly/significantly due to religious fanatics block-voting for him" is not a fallacious use of anecdotal evidence.
Show me where I made that statement, moron.
When I pressed you for a source, you eventually offered up the ads you'd seen, and nothing else.In his very first post, Mike wrote:[Stephen Harper] won the Conservative Party nomination after a shitload of western rednecks and religious fanatics bought up all the party memberships and block-voted for him.
As I said already, I said that Ontarians do not like Harper's agenda based on my knowledge of Ontario politics, and I gave B as an example of A. You distorted that into "B, therefore A".
Nice bait-and-switch. You know very well that I'm talking about whether Harper's victory was mainly/signifcantly because "western rednecks and religious fanatics bought up all the party memberships and block-voted for him", not whether Ontarians like his policies.
Oh yeah, and your moronic claim that the conservative party vote is actually representative of Ontario's general population
I contend nothing of the kind. In fact, looking back, the only claim I've made concerning Ontario is the 57/27/16% figure.
Which in turn relies upon the moronic notion that the conservative party membership in Ontario (after the mass conversion of Alliance party members to Conservative party members) is somehow representative of the general population
I never claimed anything like that.
The same could be said of religious groups who think Bush is not hardcore enough, moron. The fact remains that only Harper is pushing their anti-gay, anti-secular agenda.
And your idiotic refusal to acknowledge the fact that Harper supports numerous anti-secular anti-gay agendas that the people of Ontario do not support in polls
One position does not an anti-secular agenda make. Yes, Harper is against gay marriage, but he is also in favour of gay civil unions, which the fundamentalists oppose. What are the other religious/social conservative policies does Harper have? (And I'm sure you won't forget to provide sources...)
but I guess you'll just quietly sweep that under the carpet in your moronic goal to prove that there is not a major difference between the political views of people in Ontario and rednecks in Alberta.
I never claimed that, either. (Although now that you mention it, I saw at least one source that had Albertans and Ontarians polling within the margin of error on gay marriage.)
Stronach is a silly blonde rich girl with zero political experience, moron! How could she even get 27% of the vote unless even the conservative party membership was not particularly pleased with Harper, never mind the general population?
1) Harper beat Stronach and Clement on their own turf. (Historically, voters seem to be more likely to vote for someone who's from their area. I can't say I think this is the best way to decide, but whataya gonna do...)
2) Stronach had the support of prominent Ontario politicians like Mike Harris and Bill Davis.
3) Stronach used her money to buy thousands of instant memberships in Ontario and Quebec.
4) Hello, my name is Arnold Schwarzenegger.