Ryan Thunder wrote:Why is Ignatieff, who has spent less than a decade in Canada, now the leader of the Opposition?
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Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
Ryan Thunder wrote:Why is Ignatieff, who has spent less than a decade in Canada, now the leader of the Opposition?
If it wasn't good enough for him to live here before he decided to come back and run for leadership, it shouldn't be good enough for him now.Next of Kin wrote:Ryan Thunder wrote:Why is Ignatieff, who has spent less than a decade in Canada, now the leader of the Opposition?Riiiiight....we all know that to be a worthy leader of the opposition that one must have spent, at the very minimum, 11 years in Canada.
Recently, you twat, and consecutively.TheKwas wrote:Not to mention that Ryan can't even bother to get his facts straight. If you count up all the years Ignatieff has spent in Canada (he moved around a lot throughout his life), the figure comes out around 20 years, including most of his childhood.
Sorry, I'll retract that statement. You aren't a twat, and I shouldn't have called you one.TheKwas wrote:Don't call me a twat you go around making misleading and outright false statements. You're supposed to add qualifiers to statements while you actually make that statement, not afterwards.
Living in another country would qualify, I think. Especially when the first thing he did when he came back was make a beeline for the party leadership. It's like me using my first post to ask Mike if I could be a Mod.Besides, considering the fact that most of Ignatieff's time abroad was spent at Oxford and Harvard, exactly why does he need to have lived in this country for x% of his life in order to be an effective leader? Is teaching at Oxford unpatriotic or something?
Yes. Anybody else who lives in Canada has been contributing to Canada by being here, working here, etc.TheKwas wrote:Living in another country would qualify for... being unpatriotic?
Maybe so, but why would Mike go off to Vaul knows where to get a Moderator when he has a legion of good candidates here who are already familiar with the forum?Also, the Liberal party (or rather, certain members of the Liberal Party) reached out to him in England and asked him to come back to Canada as a leadership canidate. Rather than your comparison, it's more like Mike, in need of a new Mod, goes and finds one from off-site who is widely recognized as intelligent and in possession of the qualities that would make for a good addition to Mike's moderater team. Sure, it would perhaps be nice if we could find someone of his quality among the ranks of local posters, but ultimately it has little impact on his ability to be an effective Moderater.
I'm not even sure how to respond to this one. I actually threw out the line about patriotism mostly for giggles rather than expecting it as a serious argument. Seems really silly to me to judge the man's patriotism by how many years he lived in Canada, or even judging his ability to be leader by patriotism in the first place. Do you doubt that he will defend Canada's interests or try his best to improve conditions for most canadians?Ryan Thunder wrote:Yes. Anybody else who lives in Canada has been contributing to Canada by being here, working here, etc.TheKwas wrote:Living in another country would qualify for... being unpatriotic?
Why not? Why can't just Mike think that this character has the intellect and personality that would make him a better Mod than anyone currently on the board?Maybe so, but why would Mike go off to Vaul knows where to get a Moderator when he has a legion of good candidates here who are already familiar with the forum?
Oh? My sarcasm metre must be broken today.TheKwas wrote:I'm not even sure how to respond to this one. I actually threw out the line about patriotism mostly for giggles rather than expecting it as a serious argument.Ryan Thunder wrote:Yes. Anybody else who lives in Canada has been contributing to Canada by being here, working here, etc.TheKwas wrote:Living in another country would qualify for... being unpatriotic?
I don't doubt that he'll try to, no.Seems really silly to me to judge the man's patriotism by how many years he lived in Canada, or even judging his ability to be leader by patriotism in the first place. Do you doubt that he will defend Canada's interests or try his best to improve conditions for most canadians?
I would favour the candidates who are already on the board. It's like a slap in the face to them otherwise.Why not? Why can't just Mike think that this character has the intellect and personality that would make him a better Mod than anyone currently on the board?Maybe so, but why would Mike go off to Vaul knows where to get a Moderator when he has a legion of good candidates here who are already familiar with the forum?
Or, assuming that there are just as good candidates on the board, should he also favour whatever candidate happens to have the highest post count? Should post count be on an equal footing to intellect and Moderator ability?
Yeah. Voting together is one thing. Randomly deciding to act like a party without having to go through the hassle of getting elected so you can change the ruling party without consulting the population is another.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Parliamentary system is broken because it allows coalitions?
They don't need a not-party to do that.Adrian Laguna wrote:It simply boggles the mind how anyone could possibly say a coalition government is a bad thing.
"Oh no! The politicians are getting toguether, reaching across the aisle, and agreeing to spend more time running the country and less engaging in vicious infighting! What are we going to do!?"
No, that's the way it happens. The population was consulted when it elected the officials--the members parliament--into office, and if they believe it is in the best interest of their constituents, then they have the right, nay, the duty to enter into a coalition!Ryan Thunder wrote: Yeah. Voting together is one thing. Randomly deciding to act like a party without having to go through the hassle of getting elected so you can change the ruling party without consulting the population is another.
But in most Parliamentary democracies the whole point of voting is to vote for the party, and this is the accepted way that democracy works; the Anglosphere is the odd man out there, and not even in countries like Australia where party choice voting is the norm, for instance. You're simply completely wrong. And the idea that the Prime Minister of a parliamentary democracy could be replaced by a couple hundred people collectively is the silliest idea I've ever heard in my entire life.On the other hand, I'd rather we didn't have political parties to begin with. Representatives would vote with their interests in mind and not how the Party Whip told them to. The functions of the Prime Minister would be carried out by the representatives, etc.
Ryan Thunder wrote:They don't need a not-party to do that.
For the umpteenth time, this coalition does not give the Bloc any power -- it potentially gives them influence, which is another thing again. There's also talk that some extra tax dollars will find their way into their coffers (to the tune of a billion of them), if the leader of the PQ can be believed. I personally wish that all regional parties -- especially those with a separatist agenda -- could be outlawed, but that's a topic for another time.Phantasee wrote:I am opposed to the Coalition because it gives the Bloc power, which I am opposed to no matter what. I did hear an interesting perspective on it, though: apparently, one should consider that the Bloc, a seperatist party, is supporting two federalist parties in gov't. SHOCKING! And apparently a win for federalism.
I don't like coalitions because they change the ruling party while pretending not to be a new party (and thus bypassing all that fun electoral shit everybody else has to go through) and acting like a new party.Adrian Laguna wrote:Ryan Thunder wrote:They don't need a not-party to do that.What is that even supposed to mean? I honestly can't make heads or tails of what you're arguing other than the fact that you don't like coalitions because you just don't. I suspect it is because there is nothing else besides.
Have you not listened to any of the dozen times that it's been explained to you why you are wrong on this issue? They aren't acting like a new party, they are acting like a coalition.Ryan Thunder wrote:I don't like coalitions because they change the ruling party while pretending not to be a new party (and thus bypassing all that fun electoral shit everybody else has to go through) and acting like a new party.
SCRawl wrote:For the umpteenth time, this coalition does not give the Bloc any power -- it potentially gives them influence, which is another thing again. There's also talk that some extra tax dollars will find their way into their coffers (to the tune of a billion of them), if the leader of the PQ can be believed. I personally wish that all regional parties -- especially those with a separatist agenda -- could be outlawed, but that's a topic for another time.Phantasee wrote:I am opposed to the Coalition because it gives the Bloc power, which I am opposed to no matter what. I did hear an interesting perspective on it, though: apparently, one should consider that the Bloc, a seperatist party, is supporting two federalist parties in gov't. SHOCKING! And apparently a win for federalism.
Coalitions are treated like a single party so they can overthrow the government and install one of their members as the Prime Minister.Graeme Dice wrote:Have you not listened to any of the dozen times that it's been explained to you why you are wrong on this issue? They aren't acting like a new party, they are acting like a coalition.Ryan Thunder wrote:I don't like coalitions because they change the ruling party while pretending not to be a new party (and thus bypassing all that fun electoral shit everybody else has to go through) and acting like a new party.
Have you yet realized that your opinion isn't really relevant? And that stating that something is "only your opinion" doesn't make it immune to criticism?Ryan Thunder wrote:This is something that I believe is only properly done by either A: impeachment, followed by an election, or B: an election.
Oh no, my idea to do away with regional parties involves party subsidies, or rather the withholding and distribution of them. I posted something about it elsewhere, I think, but in brief:The Duchess of Zeon wrote:The Bloc could just reform as a national French Language Party, though, so banning regional parties would accomplish nothing, even if the branches outside of Quebec would all be bad jokes they could keep them running to keep up appearances.SCRawl wrote: I personally wish that all regional parties -- especially those with a separatist agenda -- could be outlawed, but that's a topic for another time.
Of course it isn't immune to criticism. Last time I stated my opinion of how I thought it should work, people beat me over the head with it as if I actually thought that was how it worked. Then I made it clear this was not the case, and they continued to "correct" me. This time, I decided to made it painfully obvious as a preventative measure.Graeme Dice wrote:Have you yet realized that your opinion isn't really relevant? And that stating that something is "only your opinion" doesn't make it immune to criticism?Ryan Thunder wrote:This is something that I believe is only properly done by either A: impeachment, followed by an election, or B: an election.
Then stop complaining when you get criticized for having ignorant opinions.Ryan Thunder wrote:Of course it isn't immune to criticism.
That's only because you continue to post, and continue to claim that your uneducated opinion on these issues matters.Last time I stated my opinion of how I thought it should work, people beat me over the head with it as if I actually thought that was how it worked. Then I made it clear this was not the case, and they continued to "correct" me.
Ryan Thunder wrote: Of course it isn't immune to criticism. Last time I stated my opinion of how I thought it should work, people beat me over the head with it as if I actually thought that was how it worked. Then I made it clear this was not the case, and they continued to "correct" me. This time, I decided to made it painfully obvious as a preventative measure.