Canada

Bill Ayers Refused Entry to Canada

Posted by E!! on January 19, 2009
Random Bloggy Stuff / 1 Comment

So says the Toronto Star.

“I don’t know why I was turned back,” Ayers said.  “I got off the plane like everyone else and I was asked to come over to the other side. The border guards reviewed some stuff and said I wasn’t going to be allowed into Canada. To me it seems quite bureaucratic and not at all interesting … If it were me I would have let me in. I couldn’t possibly be a threat to Canada.”

Agree:  because Canada is already a socialist nation so Ayers-like covert bombing ops are not really necessary.

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True Stories from Canada

Posted by E!! on November 06, 2008
health care / No Comments

Remember my post on the unsustainability of the Canadian health care system?  Well here’s a link to an article including a true story from a Canadian woman suffering with cancer.  Read it and weep – for her.

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Report Finds Canada’s Present Health Care System “Unsustainable”

Posted by E!! on October 31, 2008
health care / No Comments

This article on the problems with the Canadian public health care system is worth reading. The opener:

TORONTO, ON – Provincial spending on health care is growing faster than revenues with six of 10 provinces projected to be spending more than 50 per cent of all available revenue on health care by 2036, says a new report released today by independent research organization the Fraser Institute.

The Fraser Institute’s piece quotes Director Brett Skinner:

“Over the past ten years, health care spending in nine out of 10 provinces has grown at an unsustainable rate. Unless governments find a better way to finance health care, then provincial governments will likely be looking at tax hikes, further rationing of medical goods and services, or ugly trade-offs with other important spending areas.”

Apparently Alberta is the only Canadian province that’s managed to keep its revenues apace with health care expenditures. How? Energy-driven revenue increases.

But in provinces without large energy resources, revenue has been increased through – what else? – increased taxes. Skinner points to Ontario’s “health premium” income surtax as an example of a provincial government trying to create new taxes to cover health care costs. Says Skinner:

“The tax burden cannot continue to rise over the long-term unless people are willing to accept declining rates of economic growth and lower standards of living. Trying to drive long-term revenue growth through tax increases is futile.”

The report concludes that Canada’s public health insurance system is not financially sustainable through public means and recommends several changes. You can read about them at the end of the piece.

All suggested changes have one thing in common: they are private sector solutions. I say we learn from our neighbors to the north and seek private sector solutions now.

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