While the guy in white is making his point the bald headed cop continues with his land acknowledgments.
Winnipeg Police: “One of our senior officers is a psychopathic serial criminal who—while maybe high on coke and mushrooms—sold drugs, extorted people and took grotesque pictures with dead women in their underwear. But before we get to that, let’s do a dozen land acknowledgments.”
Canada is the wokest country on the planet. Wokeness will destroy this country.
If you are so serious about these land acknowledgements, then give the land back to them, If not then STFU.
Indigenous OK Is Mandatory
Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday redefined his first major bill to mandate that industrial projects deemed fit for speedy approval “must” serve Indigenous interests. The legal text of Bill C-5 passed into law June 26 states only that Indigenous interests “may” or “can” be considered: “Core to the objective, these projects must advance the interests of Indigenous peoples.”
And gender ideology?! – So say Trudough.
This means must, shall and no ifs, ands, or buts. You see when things go south, and they will, Carney can lay the blame away from himself. Results of this? Nothing will get done.
In Canada, 1.4 million Indigenous and Metis people control the economic interests and health of 38.5 million people.
Canada is doomed unless we get rid of the current leadership in this country.
Ontario offers driver’s test in Punjabi, Somali and 30+ foreign languages
Better change all of the road signs then. If they can’t read English then they can’t read road signs either. What could possibly go wrong. Well:
“Caution: Bridge Is Out!”
With leaders like this, this country is fooked.
Following vid may be a tad long but it is humourous and accurately shows what a bunch of clowns we have for leaders in Canada. Enjoy:
Given that the majority of forest / wildfires are caused by human activity I think that we should bring back that cultural icon: “Smokey the Bear!”
Growing up I remember seeing signs like this all along rural roads, rural highways and concession lines. Subconsciously and subliminally it made one think and perhaps take precautions.
But not anymore. They have disappeared from our cultural landscape.
They should also bring back lighters and ashtrays in cars and trucks. I once saw a guy flick his butt of the window of his moving car because he no other option to rid himself of the burning ember. Most cars today do not have ashtrays or lighters.
Just saying.
Shakeyjay is out of here.
For more information on these and other books see the links at the top of the page. They are all available through Amazon.com or Amazon.ca
I am so tired of the MSM and their continuous fear mongering when temps hit 30 plus.
Typical weather map today by the woke UN:
We’re all going to die Virginia – until hell freezes over that is!
Or this:
From 1968. Percy Saltzman and his weather board and chalk.
Or this:
Dave Duval doing weather writing backwards.
Ah the good ole weather days when winters were cold and summers were hot, hot, hot. When weather meant a high or a low, a front or a trough. And when weathermen knew their stuff and were ambidextrous and creative.
30C is 88F. Just like your winter vacation to the Caribbean or Mexico;
32 is 89.6
34 is 93.2
No big deal. It is summer for effin sake. It is supposed to be hot. Here are some heat stats if you think today is somehow different.
1901 – 1901 eastern United States heat wave killed 9,500 in the Eastern United States.
1906 – during the 1906 United Kingdom heat wave which began in August and lasted into September broke numerous records. On September 2 temperatures reached 35.6 °C (96.1 °F), which still holds the September record, however some places beat their local record during September 1911 and September 2016.
1911 – 1911 Eastern North America heat wave killed between 380 and 2,000 people.
1911 – 1911 United Kingdom heat wave was one of the most severe periods of heat to hit the country with temperatures around 36 °C (97 °F). The heat began in early July and didn’t let up until mid-September where even in September temperatures were still up to 33 °C (91 °F). It took 79 years for temperature higher to be recorded in the United Kingdom during 1990 United Kingdom heat wave.
1911 – 41,072 deaths were reported during a heat wave in France.
1913 – in July, the hottest heat wave ever struck California. During this heat wave, Death Valley recorded a record high temperature of 57 °C (134 °F) at Furnace Creek, which still remains the highest ambient air temperature recorded on Earth.
1921 – Hottest July on record across Eastern Canada and parts of the Northeastern US, part of a very warm year in those places. Parts of the United Kingdom also saw recording breaking heat, also part of a very warm year. The Central England Temperature for July was 18.5 °C (65.3 °F), which was the 8th warmest since records began in 1659, and the warmest since 1852. The year of 1921 was the warmest on record at the time but has since been eclipsed by 15 other years.
1923–1924 – during a period of 160 such days from 31 October 1923 to 7 April 1924, the Western Australian town of Marble Bar reached 38 °C (100 °F).
1930s – Almost every year from 1930 to 1938 featured historic heat waves and droughts somewhere in North America, part of the Dust Bowl years.
1936 – 1936 North American heat wave during the Dust Bowl, followed one of the coldest winters on record—the 1936 North American cold wave. Massive heat waves across North America were persistent in the 1930s, many mid-Atlantic/Ohio valley states recorded their highest temperatures during July 1934. The longest continuous string of 38 °C (100 °F) or higher temperatures was reached for 101 days in Yuma, Arizona during 1937 and the highest temperatures ever reached in Canada were recorded in two locations in Saskatchewan in July 1937.
1947 – record breaking temperature of 37.6 °C (99.7 °F) in Paris recorded on June 26, 1947.[10]
1950s – Prolonged severe drought and heat wave occurred in the early 1950s throughout the central and southern United States. Every year from 1952 to 1955 featured major heat waves across North America. In some areas it was drier than during the Dust Bowl and the heat wave in most areas was within the top five on record. The heat was particularly severe in 1954 with 22 days of temperatures exceeding 38 °C (100 °F) covering significant parts of eleven states. On 14 July, the thermometer reached 47 °C (117 °F) at East St. Louis, Illinois, which remains the record highest temperature for that state.
October 1952 – Romania was hit by very hot weather. Temperatures reached 39.0 °C (102.2 °F) on 2 October, with Bucharest reaching 35.2 °C (95.4 °F). Temperatures on the night of 2–3 October were also just under 26 °C (79 °F).
1955 – 1955 United Kingdom heat wave was a period of hot weather that was accompanied by drought. In some places it was the worst drought on record, more severe than 1976 and 1995.
1960 – on 2 January, Oodnadatta, South Australia hit 50.7 °C (123.3 °F) degrees, the highest temperature ever recorded in the Southern Hemisphere and Oceania.
1972 – heat waves of 1972 in New York and Northeastern United States were significant. Almost 900 people died; the heat conditions lasted almost 16 days, aggravated by very high humidity levels.
1976 – 1976 United Kingdom heat wave was one of the hottest in living memory, with temperatures exceeding 32 °C (90 °F) somewhere in the country for over two consecutive weeks. The heatwave was also accompanied by one of the worst droughts in British history, and reservoirs reached historic low levels during the heat wave that would not be seen again until the heat waves of the 21st century. The maximum recorded temperature of the heat wave, 35.9 °C (96.6 °F) at Cheltenham, Gloucestershire was at the time the third highest reliably recorded temperature in British history, with only the 1911 heat wave achieving higher reliably recorded temperatures.
1980 – estimated 1,000 people died in the 1980 United States heat wave and drought, which impacted the central and eastern United States. Temperatures were highest in the southern plains. From June through September, temperatures remained above 32 °C (90 °F) all but two days in Kansas City, Missouri. The Dallas/Fort Worth area experienced 42 consecutive days with high temperatures above 38 °C (100 °F), with temperatures reaching 47 °C (117 °F) at Wichita Falls, Texas, on 28 June. Economic losses were $20 billion (1980 dollars).
1981 – August 1981 heat wave in the Pacific Northwest.
1983 – during the Summer of 1983 temperatures over 38 °C (100 °F) were common across Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, and certain parts of Kentucky; the summer of 1983 remains one of the hottest summers ever recorded in many of the states affected. The hundred-degree readings were accompanied by very dry conditions associated with drought affecting the Corn Belt States and Upper Midwest. The heat also affected the Southeastern U.S. and the Mid-Atlantic states as well that same summer. New York Times represented articles about the heat waves of 1983 affecting the central United States. This heat wave was associated with the I-94 derecho.
1983 – United Kingdom experienced a heatwave during July 1983. This was the hottest month ever recorded until it was beaten in August 1995.
Temperature difference in Europe from the average during the European heat wave of 2003
1987 – prolonged heat wave from 20 to 31 July in Greece, with more than 1,000 deaths in the area of Athens. The maximum temperature measured was 41.9 °C (107.4 °F) at 23 July at the center of Athens and in the suburb of Nea Philadelphia, 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) northeast was 43.6 °C (110.5 °F) on 27 July, and were combined with high minima, with the highest being 30.2 °C (86.4 °F) in the center of Athens at 27 July and 29.9 °C (85.8 °F) at 24 July at Nea Philadelphia. The lowest minimum was 25.6 °C (78.1 °F) at the center of Athens. Moreover, humidity was high and wind speeds low, contributing to human discomfort, even during the night.
1988 – intense heat spells in combination with the drought of 1988, reminiscent of the dust bowl years caused deadly results across the United States. Official estimates report that 5,000 to 10,000 people died because of constant heat across the United States. Some estimates put total deaths at close to 17,000.
So there. The world is not going to end – as the UN would have us believe. To scare you even more the MSM will state: “It may be 30C but it feels like 42! BS! It is 30C. Cities are heat sinks and when near water they are humidity sinks as well.
My advice? Get out of the UN…Now! Turn off the TV weather reports.
He collected his papers and Nigel’s and placed them into a side
pocket inside of his duff el bag. He found the sextant on the chart table
and discovered that it was still in good operating condition. He decided
to take that as well. Nothing else though. The publications and manuals
were of no use to him now. He looked around. Anything else? That was
it. But there was something else. “Yes. A letter,” he thought. A letter that
Ted had written to him and had asked him not to open or to read until
he had reached Saipan.
“Cripes Ted. I almost forgot about that. But where did I put it?” He
rifled through some of the pockets of his shorts that he remembered
wearing in Hawaii. It was not there. “Where damn it, where did I put
it? Oh shit, I almost forgot.” He opened the small panel that contained
books that he and Nigel kept for their own personal use. It was secured
to the port bulkhead just aft of the shitter…or head in mariner’s parlance.
Two books were of note to Jim: Hawaii and Tales of the South Pacifi c.
Th ere, in the jacket of Hawaii, was the letter from Ted. He grabbed it,
sat down on the starboard settee, which had been his berth and began
to read.
Dear Jim
If you are reading this then you made it to Saipan safely. Congratulations. That is quite the accomplishment. You should be proud of yourself. Enjoy your stay there. I hope you can get out and enjoy all that Saipan has to offer you and Nigel, especially after such a long sail from Honolulu. Good luck with your continued adventures.
“Thanks Ted.” Jim said aloud.
I hope that you have a chance to see this small island nation for what it truly is. In my mind Saipan is a paradox of our creator.
“I will Ted. Paradox? How?”
On the one hand you will see the island as a tropical paradise or at least an oasis for the modern times that we live in, not unlike Hawaii, while on the other hand it was the scene of atrocities and a tragedy that were committed on a scale that is impossible for me to describe or to comprehend. I do not mean to say that to undermine the horror and the atrocities that were committed in Europe during World War Two. No, but the terror that was the Battle of Saipan, as part of the America’s war in the Pacific, was more in your face war fighting. It was up close and personal. Its impact affected every one of us who were involved in it…differently and personally. It was traumatic in every sense of the word. It was a shock. It belied our beliefs and sense of righteousness. It became a nightmarish facet of our existence. The tragedy that was Saipan was the extent to which the human condition can fall when evil is allowed to set its course. Even to this day, Jim, some thirty years on, it galls me and plays on my conscience. I have nightmares just thinking about it.
“Jeez Ted, what are you getting at here?”
For me Jim, Saipan represents not just a loss of my youthful exuberance and innocence but also a loss of confidence and faith in the human condition. Added to all of that, I lost some very good friends there, one in particular. I almost lost the love of my life too, indirectly. You see Jim, sadly, tragically, at such a young age, with the loss of my leg, I became cynical about life itself, human nature and the limitless capacity of my fellow human beings to inflict untold misery, cruelty and suffering on one another. My heart became hardened.
“Mother of God Ted, I am so sorry.”
It is probably difficult for you to see this now but Saipan in those days was a world of military fanaticism, of martial madness and of sheer dread. At its very core life on Saipan was underscored by an oppressor who ruled with the mindful and purposeful contempt for all that was good and sacred in this world of ours. Honor, above all else, was sacrosanct to them. Arrogance was a welcomed trait. Cruelty was commonplace. Life was cheap. The military rulers of Saipan could not understand compliance. Surrender was not in their lexicon. They had no respect for a defeated or conquered people. Surrendering without death was cowardice to them and was an anathema to their code of conduct: their Bushido Code – or Bullshit Code as I called it. Thus, the citizenry of Saipan, by their mere survival, had no human rights in the eyes of their conquerors. They lived their lives under a yoke of military oppression and disgust. They were considered lowlife and dogs by their military masters. Yet unquestionable loyalty to a foreign deity was demanded of them. Allegiance and devotion were expected to this foreign icon that was not of the spiritual form in the traditional supernatural sense but of a human physical stature and nature…in other words, their Emperor was considered a living gawd.
“Unbelievable Ted. I never knew this.”
The military presence that ruled Saipan in those days ruled by fear. They were fanatical in their beliefs and demanded the same from the Chamorro people and the Korean slave labor. To do otherwise meant untold suffering or certain death. Not surprisingly Jim, over time, the oppressed people of Saipan adapted and became dependent upon the military dictatorship for their subsistence, for their security, for their survival. Ultimately, they were brainwashed. They were brainwashed into thinking that their military masters had their best interests at heart. But they were also brainwashed against the very people who were committed to their liberation and freedom. Us! Consequently Jim, it was very difficult for us as liberators to undermine their mistrust of us and of everything that America stood for.
Sitting with you, drinking Oly’s and chit chatting on those numerous afternoons at the Ala Wai, was very enjoyable for me Jim and I do not begrudge those moments for a minute.
Jim smiled at that memory.
I thank you for giving me the time of day. In a lot of respects, I saw myself in you. I was jealous of your youth but for my lost youth. Your exuberance, your wonderful naivety and your boundless energy took me back to a time where my own innocence and sense of invincibility fostered. I possessed some sensitivity in those days Jim and a vulnerability that many would perceive as a weakness, especially as a Marine. I didn’t look at it that way. I viewed these traits as strength for I saw the beauty in all living things and had empathy in spades to do what I thought was right. I possessed faith in a higher power. I had faith in God. I guess I was a sensitive soul.
Read about the Battle of Saipan in my book Kurofune, or Jim’s adventure in Red Jewel. For more information on these and other books see the links at the top of the page. They are all available through Amazon.com or Amazon.ca
My wife calls me little Joe. You know, that guy from Li’l Abner who walks around all the time with a cloud over his head:
Joe…I can’t pronounce his last name…Joe Btfsplk
I am not sure this is a correct description of me but consider this:
When I drive somewhere I hit almost every red light. It gets worse if I am late for something or I am in a hurry;
If things are bad, when I am around, they are really bad;
If I pick the shortest line at a checkout it is sure to be the longest wait;
I always get stuck beside an elderly woman who is trying to make change with the cashier with pennies that she has trouble finding in her change purse;
I always seem to find the cashier who cannot count or make change without a calculator;
When I want to go golfing it is sure to rain. But when I realize this and I prepare for rain, it is always sunny – and I am sweating in my rain gear;
When I go sailing there is no wind. When I try to flash up the outboard engine because there is no wind, it never starts. When I take down the sails, the wind pipes up;
My lawn mower won’t start. So, I take it in for repairs and when the technician pulls the cord, it starts immediately;
When I go into the passing lane with my car, the inside lane, curb side, goes faster;
I always get stuck behind the guy doing 10 miles below the speed in the inside lane. When I try to go around him in the passing lane…well…the inside lane starts to pass me…again, as the guy going below the speed limits turns at the next exit!;
When I go to the pool after not being there for some time, it is down for annual maintenance. When it finally opens and I do go, some dumb little shyte, drops a “sweet marie” in the shallow end. Out of the pool everyone;
People do things in moderation so I can do them in excess;
In accordance with my law of physics whenever I do some action there is always an opposite and equal reaction;
I am put on hold all of the time;
When I go into a line for (insert service here) there is always a group of people ahead of me. Yet when it is finally my turn for service, there is never anyone behind me and then the clerk puts up her “closed” sign. So I stand in line, get to the front…it is my turn…then closed…repeat!;
Whenever I have a group BBQ over at my home, rest assured that the propane tank will be empty. And if I preplan and ensure that the tank has enough gas rest assured assured (again), that the regulator will be tits up;
When I put on a tee shirt it is always backward. And, when I know this and take precautions by turning the tee around before I put it on it will always be put on backwards;
No matter how I take precautions I always spill some food on my clean tee or on my clean shirt. If I take precautions by wearing a bib it will bite my ass by spilling something onto my tee or shirt when I take the bib off;
I remember playing roulette. I observed at first: red, then red, red and then red again. So I played red and it came up black. I played black even and it came up red odd. What are the odds of that?;
Theory is the bane of my learning experience, practically speaking in my case;
Last November I went to Oktoberfest. Nevertheless, it was great….no lineups. I showed them!;
In spite of everything, people say that I am a wise fool. I other words, I am an oxy moron!;
I went into an organic health food store the other day and picked up a case of shingles; and
In that same health food store I also got sick to my stomach.
I pull into a gas station with 16 pumps, half of which are available. I pick one, get out of my car only to find out that the pump I selected is out of service. By the time I got back in my car to move, all of the other available pumps are taken;
A local college asked me to take an aptitude and skills test. I agreed and took the test. The results came back and indicated that I was “good for nothing.” I wasn’t fussed about it at all, as all of my teachers in school said the same thing about me. I thrive on consistency. In my case…BAD;
One time I had to go really, really bad. I rushed into the men’s room and there before me were four stalls. I picked one but…yes…you guessed it…it was out of service and two others were plugged. Just as I was about to enter the last one some dude beat me to it;
Her glass is half full, his is half empty. But mine? Well, it broke into a million shards; and
But that’s ok for if it wasn’t for bad luck I would have no luck at all;
It’s not so bad being me in my self deprecating style!
By the way, Li’l Abner was launched in 1909 and continued until 1979. It survived two world wars, the great depression, dust bowl and many other catastrophes. In that regard I don’t seem to have it all that bad.
Out!
All available through Amazon.com or Amazon.ca. Support a struggling Canadian author. Real cheap but great reads. Check out the links at the top of the page for more information about these books.