Author: Jon Siemko

  • Michael Ignatieff power-hungry

    Ignatieff uses a lot of old liberal retreads in his reasoning. In short, he wants to make the government bigger and more intrusive in the lives of Canadians.

  • Ignatieff’s Candidate Crisis is a Question of Leadership

    Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff was a bit squeamish at the Comber Agricultural Fair on Sunday, avoiding a question about a recently resigned Liberal candidate, who is currently facing criminal charges. Steve Pickard, the disgraced Liberal nominee is the latest in a string of candidates who have said some controversial comments. Earlier this month a candidate for the Liberal party in Calgary said that the police are racist in some of their professional practices.

     How many candidates have to step out of line or be hauled in front of a police lineup before this becomes  an issue. If a leader cannot control his own candidates,  how can they be trusted to steer their ship of government. Surrounding yourself with quality people is the first and fore-most important act of any political leader. Until Ignatieff can display the ability to exterminate all the cockroaches from his party. How can Canadians trust Ignatieff with the important challenges and choices that you have to make in government.

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  • The Closing of The Liberal Mind

    This clip is another example of how there is an inherent difference between how Liberals and Conservatives approach politics. Liberals play the game of trying to squeeze everyone into one box or another,  to neatly fit the narrative of liberal victim or villain.

    It’s not who you are that matters it’s what you do that count. The idea that African Americans are being questioned for their authenticity as  Conservatives for participating in a tea party group should smack of irony. But it seems liberals are tone death to such things.