Hostage-Taking Incident Chinese Style
Written by Paul Fromm
Friday, 01 February 2013 09:47
*Hostage-Taking Incident Chinese Style*
****

** **

中國是不會答應綁匪要求的 China never gives into the demands of a kidnapper****

** **

*This is a Chinese short story. *****

*Watch closely or you will miss *****

*all of the adventure.*
這是發生在中國的真實故事。****

請仔細看,不然會錯過其中的精華。*
Demands of Kidnapper & *****

*CHINESE Negotiators **(綁匪與磋商者)*****

*
'I have 3 demands or I'll kill the boy!'
**我有三個要求,不然就殺死這孩子!**
*****

*Negotiators assess the situation *****

*from next door.
**磋商者在隔壁窗口評估狀況*****

*
Head Negotiator dispatched
**磋商頭子探出窗口**
*****

*Negotiations begin**磋商開始了* ****

****

*Negotiations concluded **磋商結束了**
**
They probably spent 35 cents (for Bullet).
**全程他們可能只花了**35**分錢*****

*(一顆子彈的成本)*****

- *In our country ( USA ), *****
- *we would shut the street down for 48 hours.* ****
- (在美國, 我們就封閉這條大街兩天) ****
- *Take 12 hours to try to talk him out of it.* ****
- (花十二小時勸和綁匪咨商) ****
- *Spend $5 million giving him a fair trial.* ****
- (花5百萬美金給綁匪公平的起訴與審判) ****
- *And pay his food and lodging for life.* ****
- *然後給他終生食宿** *****

*No wonder their products are cheaper than ours!!
**難怪中國製品比美國的便宜!!** *****

****
 
Three Allahs And You're Out!
Written by Paul Fromm
Thursday, 31 January 2013 04:28
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Three Allahs And You're Out!

Take a look at the 20-seconds video, but read this first.

The cameraman is filming his friend as he praises Allah and launches
mortar shots at British troops. Little does he know that current
mortar shell tracking technology can track the trajectory of a hostile
round and fire a retaliatory shot to precisely the spot from which the
hostile shell was fired. This only requires the hostile mortar to fire
2 to 3 rounds.

Count the number of mortar rounds the masked insurgent fires in the
video. See how well it works. If you listen carefully you can hear the
single round from the American artillery fired in the distance. It
comes just after the terrorist fires his third round and his fourth
round drops down the tube but that's as far as it gets.

No more "Allah Akbars" from THIS source! Isn't technology wonderful?

http://stormbringer.posterous.com/allahu-akbar-in-your-face (
http://stormbringer.posterous.com/allahu-akbar-in-your-face )

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Thoughts On Canada's Indian Problem
Written by Paul Fromm
Thursday, 31 January 2013 04:27
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Thoughts On Canada's Indian Problem
Any Canadian who has witnessed the intolerable buffoonery of the past
month can only shake their heads as Canada's indulgent,
special-privileges Indian policy comes across at the seams. Even some
of the usually barfingly pro-minority media are exposing some of the
hypocrisy and nonsense as the Canadian taxpayers are being set up to
be fleeced once again. Consider: * The "hunger" strike by
Attawapiskat Chief Theresa Spence. Well, it isn't quite a hunger
strike. The very portly Spence, who could certainly shed a few pounds
is drinking fish soup, tea and water. No, the diet may not pack on the
pounds but she's not about to waste away. The purpose of the hunger
strike that is not really a hunger strike? Spence was demanding a
meeting with Prime Minister Harper and Governor General Johnson to
discuss her demands for more aid to her reserve., The insolence! She
could seek a meeting without the blackmail. The whole hunger strike
has been a huge publicity stunt, with the often enabling media playing
right along and ambitious politicos like Justin Trudeau stopping by
for a photo op. Another visitor was former Prime Minister Paul Martin
who seems to have an Indian fixation, who proclaimed the phony hunger
striker |"an inspiration to all Canadians.” (National Post, January
7, 2013) Spence is ensconced in some sort of lean-to tee pee on
Victoria Island, conveniently close to the Ottawa media, and is
protected by burly handlers who now quiz visiting media as to whether
they are friend of foe. * Meanwhile, back on the Spence's
Attwapiskat reserve, with its population of 1,500 living in Third
World poverty on Hudson Bay, a recent audit reveals Spence's
bookkeeping is in utter shambles. The Toronto Star (January 7, 2013)
reports: "According to the audit, a Sept. 20, 2012, letter from the
accounting firm Deloitte to Attawapiskat Chief Theresa Spence and
copied to the Department of Aboriginal Affairs, says more than 400 of
the transactions it reviewed lacked proper documentation.

'An average of 81 per cent of files did not have adequate supporting
documents and over 60 per cent had no documentation of the reason for
payment,' the letter stated. As a result, said Deloitte, it could not
conclude the spending was done in accordance with government funding
agreements, or for its intended purpose. 'There is no evidence of due
diligence in the use of public funds, including the use of funds for
housing,' wrote Deloitte.
In our opinion, having over 80 per cent of selected transactions
lacking any or proper supporting documentation is inappropriate for
any recipient of public funds.' The Attawapiskat (
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/attawapiskat ) band council has
received approximately $104 million from the federal government
between April 1, 2005 and Nov. 30, 2011 for housing, infrastructure,
education and administration."
That works out to over $11,000 per year for every Indian on the
reserve. Where has the money gone? So bad are Spence's records that
the audit cannot say there was been corruption or theft. There is so
little documentation that no one seems to know where most of the money
went. This is a problem not just for the much put-upon Canadian
taxpayers but for the impoverished Indians in the Attawapiskat band
who do not seem to be benefitting from the taxpayers' largess.
Here's an idea. Instead of hotdogging it for media publicity with her
hunger strike, Theresa Spence ought to haul her backside to a
community college and take a course in elementary bookkeeping.

* Seemingly in retaliation for the media reporting on this audit,
Spence adopted a new information control tactic. The Huffington Report
(January 22, 2013) explains: "
A Global News TV crew has been threatened with arrest and removed from
Attawapiskat (
http://www.globalnews.ca/pages/story.aspx?id=6442784553&utm_source=facebook-twitter&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=community
), the Northern Ontario aboriginal community that has been thrust into
the national spotlight over its hunger striking chief and facing fresh
criticisms over its auditing practices.
Global National's senior investigative correspondent Jennifer Tryon
flew into the community with photojournalist Trevor Owens Tuesday
afternoon. Tryon had last been in Attawapiskat a year ago, and in her
words, "What a difference a year makes."
A year ago, Attawapiskat became nationally known when its chief,
Theresa Spence, declared an emergency over housing conditions that
sparked a national outcry. Spence is now at the centre of a the Idle
No More protests that have culminated in meetings between aboriginal
leaders and Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
In a blog post on the Global site, Tryon describes the crew checking
into their hotel, (
http://www.globalnational.com/pages/blogs.aspx?id=6442784673&blogid=6442450996
) only to be met by Attawapsikat's Acting Chief Christine Kataquapit,
who told them no members of the media were allowed in the
community:Tryon was told the media ban was on the orders of Chief
Spence, given the day after an audit was leaked showing poor
documentation of the band's finances." There were Indians eager to
talk to the CTV film team and some of what they had to say might not
have been favourable to their absentee chief.

* Police confirmed that the Indians were within their rights to ban
the media as theirs is "sovereign territory." This is utter fiction.
Attwapiskat is part of Canada. A sovereign nation -- say Russia,
France, the U.S.A. -- supports itself on its territory. The pathetic
Attawapiskat band are nothing but parasites. Authorities have too long
indulged the native "sovereignty" fiction.

* A CTV (January 8, 2013) reported: "Spence's ...common-law partner
and co-manager of Attawapiskat, Clayton Kennedy, said there are no
allegations of 'misappropriation or anything like that.' Kennedy
defended his and Spence's reported combined household income of about
$250,000 a year, saying: 'I think it's adequate for the job that is
being done.'" Adequate? The couple earn $250,000 between them to
manage the finances for their band in such a way auditors can make
neither head nor tail of it and the people remain in poverty.

* When the story of the Attawapiskat substandard housing hit the
headlines over a year ago, in addition to an emergency government
response which sent a number of prefab houses to the reserve, many
Canadians spontaneously sent aid packages as well. The National Post
(January 8, 2013) Writer Jonathan Kay describes a CBC investigative
report by Adrienne Arsenault: "Perhaps the most pitiful scene in the
whole piece is the one in which Ms. Arsenault examines the masses of
boxes containing (apparently useful) donations from concerned
Canadians. Yet until Ms. Arsenault came around, no one had even
bothered opening them up: Ms. Spence complains that she couldn’t get
“volunteers” to do the job. That in itself is a damning indictment
of the state of civil society in Attawapiskat. We are always told that
the preservation of reserves is a great way to maintain First Nations
culture. But the opposite is true: The best way to destroy a group’s
spirit of civic solidarity is to turn the economy into an
outsider-funded cargo cult; whereby the locals’ only “job” is to
sit around waiting for handouts — to such extent that apparently
even rousing themselves to rip open cardboard and plastic is seen as
too taxing."

Again, perhaps Spence and her boyfriend co-manager, might do the band
lot more good if she abandoned her publicity stunt hunger strike, bot
some box cutters and started to ear her princely salary by opening the
aid boxes and distributing theirs contents equitably to her band.
* A group on Indians formed and called themselves "Idle no More." At
first glance, this sounds like a good idea. Does it mean that they are
leaving the unemployment that seems to dog so many reserves and are
heading to well paying jobs? No. Idle No More has launched a series of
demonstrations (legal) and blockades or roads and railways (illegal)
across the Dominion."protests that included a blockade of the railway
(
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/1310959--idle-no-more-aboriginal-protesters-march-across-canada
)between Toronto and Montreal that stranded more than a thousand VIA
Rail travellers on four trains. (Toronto Star, January 7, 2013)
* Policing, at least in Ontario, is notorious for refusing to enforce
the law where Indians are concerned., The OPP refused to enforce
repeated injunctions ordering radical Mohawks off land for a
subdivision they'd occupied in Caledonia, Ontario. Instead, the OPP
turned on local Whites, stopping them at random and demanding that
they account for where they were going. They also threatened to arrest
Whites carrying Canadian flags as a "provocation" in a protest against
the radical Indians. A few weeks later, the same OPP provided an
escort for Mohawks flying their flag in a demonstration supporting the
illegal occupation.
In this flare up the courts have fared no better. The police simply
regard Indian protesters as untouchables. The National Post (January
7, 2013) reported:" — Saying 'I do not get it,' an Ontario Superior
Court judge Monday bemoaned the passivity of Ontario police forces on
illegal native barricades and issued a lament for the state of
law-and-order in the nation.
'…no person in Canada stands above or outside of the law,' Judge
David Brown said in a decision that was alternately bewildered and
plaintive.
'Although that principle of the rule of law is simple, at the same
time it is fragile. Without Canadians sharing a public expectation of
obeying the law, the rule of law will shatter.'
Judge Brown was formally giving his reasons for having granted CN Rail
an emergency injunction last Saturday night, when the railway rushed
to court when Idle No More protesters blocked the Wymans Road crossing
on the main line between Toronto and Montreal.

That Protest Ended About Midnight The Same Night, But As Judge Brown
Noted Dryly, “not, As It Turns Out, Because The Police Had Assisted
In Enforcing The Order” He Granted.

When the judge read in the media Sunday morning that the blockade had
ended, he asked CN to submit an affidavit how it had happened.
As the same judge who last month watched — “shocked,” he said
later, at “such disrespect” — as Sarnia Police ignored his court
orders to end another Idle No More blockade on a CN spur line, he was
right to be skeptical.
And sure enough, what Judge Brown learned was that once the local
sheriff got a copy of his order, by about 10:30 p.m. Saturday, she
contacted the Ontario Provincial Police on scene.
The staff-sergeant there told her “it was too dangerous” to
attempt to serve the order – on all of 15 protesters.
But, the judge said, he’d made 'a time-sensitive order' precisely
because the evidence showed that the railway suffered 'from each hour
the blockade remained in place, yet the OPP would not assist the local
sheriff to ensure the order was served…
“Such an approach by the OPP was most disappointing,” Judge Brown
said, “because it undercut the practical effect of the injunction
order.
“That kind of passivity by the police leads me to doubt that a
future exists in this province for the use of court injunctions in
cases of public demonstrations.”

* Finally, as a further bit of lunacy, a Federal judge earlier this
month just added another million special people, declaring Metis and
non-status Indians to be "Indians" under the law and, therefore, the
responsibility of the federal government. The decision will almost
certainly be appealed. Jeffrey Simpson of the Globe and Mail (January
9, 2013) noted: "As there are 400,000 people who identify as Métis,
the financial obligations on the federal and provincial governments
could be extremely heavy, indeed.
Back when the Charter of Rights was being negotiated in the early
1980s, it was obvious that the status Indian leadership and that of
the Métis were superficially polite to each other but deeply
distrustful. The Indians did not consider the Métis to be fully
Indian (as, indeed, they were not and are not), and the groups’
treatment experiences within Canada had been different. The Métis,
however, saw similarities where status Indians did not, and were
anxious that the status Indians not receive constitutional protection
that escaped them.
And now the Federal Court says, in essence, that the two groups were
treated sufficiently the same, and were lumped together by governments
many decades ago, so they should be considered in a similar fashion
today. Which will mean endless negotiations, considerable litigation
and, if the Métis are ultimately successful, a huge additional
financial obligation on the government that status Indians can only
hope doesn’t come from what they’re receiving. If, indeed, the
government owes the Indians “hundreds of billions” of dollars,
according to one of their lawyers, what might Métis lawyers demand?"

So, now there will be demands for non-status Indians and Metis to be
"equal" to the Indians in terms of not paying HST or income tax,
having university tuition paid by the taxpayers for their children and
being exempt from fishing and hunting laws. More special privileges in
the pursuit of equality!
Will there be "compensation" for who knows what historical slight?
Only Canada's activist judiciary can tell and the losers will be the
non-Indian taxpayers. Equally wacky will be how to know if a person is
a Metis. They were the descendants of liaisons between French or
British trappers or traders and Indian women. Genetic tests are taboo.
The liberals hold that race is a "social construct". In other words,
it's just a convention. But, then who is a Metis? How much proof would
one have to offer to establish Metis status and be in line for the
special goodies? All these questions will undoubtedly occupy the
courts for years to come and enrich legions of lawyers. Only the
Majority taxpayers will be the poorer for this endless tomfoollery.

Paul Fromm
Director
CANADA FIRST

Thoughts On Canada's Indian Problem
Toronto Sun Editorial
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

When 82 First Nations chiefs and band councillors make more than the
prime minister, all while many of their people live in abject poverty,
something is horribly amiss. It's not new, but it is amiss.

In Alberta alone, for example, 47 chiefs and councilors made more last
year than the PM's $317,574.

We have serious reservations about that.(no pun intended)

Now, since the money these chiefs and councilors pocket is grant money
from taxpayers, auditing their books in search of ne'er-do-wells and
misappropriated dollars would normally receive no political push back.

But the Liberals need ink, don't they? They're a political
embarrassment in search of some buzz. So, looking for a headline
grabber, along comes Liberal aboriginal affairs critic Carolyn Bennett
to label the newly-introduced First Nations Transparency Act -- Bill
C-27 -- a "racist" and "paternalistic" piece of legislation. Well
done, Ms. Bennett. There's your news hit. Now please go away.

There is absolutely nothing "racist" or "paternalistic" about Bill
C-27, a vital and long-overdue piece of legislation that deserves
quick passage so that all Canada will finally get to know down which
hole the billions in First Nations' grant money goes.

From the outside looking in, and this is what raises many hackles, it
would appear that too many chiefs and not enough Indians are living
the good life on
the taxpayers' dime. Bill C-27 should clear up the mess up. Much like
the CBC vs. the Taxpayer, First Nations band members deserve
transparency and accountability from their elected officials, and they
are not getting it when their leaders refuse to come clean with where
the government's money goes, or how much goes into their own pockets.

What is "racist" about that?

Now, you may have never heard of the Glooscap First Nation reserve in
Nova Scotiabut you might be interested to know that one Mi'kmaq
politician there pulled in almost $1 million in pay in 2010, while
band councillors each earned between $210,000 and $260,000. Now, close
your eyes and try to envision just how big the Glooscap First Nation
must be to warrant such mammoth salaries. Give up? Well, in 2009, the
population actually living on the reserve was 87. We didn't drop any
zeroes.

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