by MrBill » Thu 11 Jan 2007, 11:47:38
Dreamtwister wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think you underestimate Ottawa's ability to slither along on it's political belly. Even Jean Chretien, the most virulently anti-US Prime Minister in living memory managed to turn control of our military over to NORTHCOM back in 2002. Check it out:
I never underestimate Ottawa's ability to screw things up. Anyone who pays Canadian taxes and has seen how the country was run for much of the past 40 years knows about Ottawa's legendary waste, bureaucracy and inefficiency. However, I still believe in Canadians. At least most of them.
One super development for democracy in Canada these days is that now Alberta and BC have the same combined population as Quebec. That means Central Canada can no longer run the show on their own for their own benefit to the exclusion of the regions. Election night will not be decided by 8 p.m. EST. That is wonderful news and is a check and balance for Ottawa.
Other than that the Central Bank of Canada has been doing a decent job and the Federal government as well as some Provinces are also running balanced or surplus budgets. I cannot see ordinary Canadians selling out their future by endorsing a government that would enter into an Amero currency union with their fiscally challenged neighbors to the south.
And clearly anyone that slices and dices the numbers can see that the eurozone only works well for the have-not members at the expense of the payers into the EU budget. In otherwords, great for Italy, not so great for Germany. The price for stability in Europe maybe, but not a recipe for economic success. I do not think this lesson would be lost on Canadian policy makers, but I may be wrong, too?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.