Sep. 11th, 2012

rfmcdonald: (photo)
The first picture was taken at the beginning of the trip, in the taxi with some of my relatives, the second picture taken on the second-last day.

Scabby the Rat (1)

Scabby the Rat (2)

I had no idea what the rat was. It was only later when I did my research that I discovered--here at Business Insider, here at Mental Floss, and, most authoritatively, here at Wikipedia--that these ugly inflatable rats are used by American unions to protest employers that make use of non-union workers.

This is one minor element of several illustrating for me how Americans can be so much more confrontational than Canadians. (This can be a good thing; this can be a good thing here.) Does anyone know if Scabby the Rat has ever appeared in Canada?
rfmcdonald: (Default)
Ford's testimony last week in his conflict of interest trial was profoundly depressing. By all appearances, Ford's defense against the conflict of interest charges lies in a wholehearted embrace of his own ignorance. Edward Keenan's "The people vs. Robert Bruce Ford" in The Grid, writing from the left, sets the stage.

Ford had outlined, and would repeatedly outline, his own understanding of the conflict of interest act—”How I define a conflict of interest is if it’s financially beneficial to the city and financial beneficial to me personally.” Therefore, since the actions he is here to defend or explain—speaking and voting on a motion pertaining to whether he should be forced to pay a $3,150 penalty imposed on him by the integrity commissioner—had no financial implication for the city, they were not a conflict. “Because it doesn’t benefit the city. It has nothing to do with the city. This is my issue personally.” This was, it is fair to say, a definition of conflict of interest that was new to almost everyone familiar with the term.

Yet Ford insisted he had held this interpretation for 12 years, and moreover he insisted that this was the correct definition. It was, he said, how he interpreted the Municipal Conflict of Interest Act.

Ruby had Ford read the relevant passage of the Act aloud in court. “It says nothing whatsoever about the city having a financial interest,” Ruby suggested, and Ford appeared to acknowledge that this was the case.

“I’ve never read it before.” Ford said.

“You have to have read it before! It’s the Municipal Conflict of Interest Act!”

“I’ve never read it.”

“I read it to you at the deposition,” Ruby reminded him, as he started to leaf through his paperwork to find the relevant page of the transcript of that conversation from earlier this summer.

“You read it to me. I’ve never read it,” Ford said.

A minute later, Ford repeated his understanding of the Act’s contents. “I always thought, for 12 years, and I still believe, that a conflict is when the city has a benefit and when I have a benefit. This is a personal issue and had nothing to do with the city.”

“You had no doubt that your interpretation of the Act,” Ruby said—an interpretation the mayor had just admitted was based on total ignorance of the Act’s contents complemented by an absence of any conversation he could recall with anyone about it—”was the correct one?”

“No,” Ford said. And after a pause, “I have said…” and then he repeated again his own interpretation.


Matt Gurney, writing in the right-wing, National Post, has an article simply titled "Rob Ford pleads incompetence" that completes the frame.

Ford’s situation isn’t complicated. He screwed up but can escape serious consequences by convincing the judge that it was a mistake made in good faith. He doesn’t even need to prove that it was — just convince the judge. And you’ve got to believe that the judge is extremely eager to be convinced of that, given that his alternative is to remove an elected mayor from office over a dispute involving a few thousand dollars of charity. No one, not even Ford’s critics, seems keen to see that happen.

Except Ford himself, apparently. On the stand on Wednesday, he repeatedly refused to agree that he’d made a mistake. Instead, he insisted over and over that he didn’t think he’d done anything wrong, that he intended to vote the way he did, and that he doesn’t agree that what he did was a conflict of interest. Ford maintains that it’s only a conflict of interest if he personally benefits in some way.

That makes a certain amount of sense on a superficial level, but even if we wanted to debate the merit of that argument, there’s one problem. Ford and the MCIA disagree, and the MCIA wins. Ford’s opinion of what a conflict of interest should be doesn’t matter given what a conflict of interest is.

[. . .]

The entire affair is taking on shades of those hotel commercials that suggest booking at their chain shows you’re an individual of unusual intelligence: “Do you know your responsibilities as a member of Toronto City Council?” “No, but I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night.” “Oh, OK. Case dismissed.”

Ford was freely elected in a fair election. He should not be removed from office because of a dispute over a few thousand bucks in charitable donations that went to a good cause. But his astonishingly cavalier attitude concerning his responsibilities as a public officer holder go directly to his credibility, and worthiness of winning office again. In short, when on the stand, Toronto’s mayor has pleaded incompetence.


Shameful.
rfmcdonald: (Default)
Notwithstanding Rob Ford's self-demonstrated ignorance and/or incompetence, he still has a hard-core of popularity thanks to his "everyman" posture. That, and his family's public parties.

The guests came, but the rain and protesters stayed away at an open outdoor barbeque hosted by Toronto Mayor Rob Ford and his family on Friday evening.

Dubbed "Ford Fest," the party held at Ford's mother's home at 15 Weston Wood Rd. near Royal York Road and Eglinton Avenue drew a crowd that at times made for standing-room only conditions in the backyard.

It was estimated that 5,000 people might attend. It's unclear how close the attendance came to that number, but the event drew a steady stream of partiers.

The barbecue is a tradition dating back 12 years when Toronto's mayor was a member of council. Since then it has become popular with Ford supporters and curious neighbours. The party is open to all, so long as visitors promise to behave.

CBC News reported that 150 boxes of burgers and 45 boxes of hot dogs were delivered to the Ford residence on Friday afternoon in preparation for the party. A beer delivery truck was also spotted.

Earlier in the day, the mayor sent out email invitations and put the invite on his Facebook page. Others were informed of the party via robocalls voiced by the mayor's brother, Coun. Doug Ford.

"I'd like you to join my family and me tomorrow at our annual backyard barbecue, Ford Fest. It's going to be a fun-filled evening with live music, dancing, barbecue and lots of beverages," Doug Ford said in the Thursday telephone message.

"We're going to celebrate Ford Fest in the backyard of Mrs. Ford with lots of fun, lots of rock and roll from my perspective. And [it's] a good night for the city," he said ahead of the party. "We're putting politics at the door and having a good time."


Torontoist's Jamie Bradburn is quite right to note that the success of Ford Fest is going to keep him going. So what if he left a meeting of the city's executive committee to coach a football game.

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford is defending his decision to leave a meeting of council's most important committee more than five hours early to coach a high school football game.

“We had our first football game up in Newmarket. If I’m not there the kids don’t play,” Mr. Ford told reporters at a United Way event at Nathan Phillips Square Tuesday. “Very few times it conflicts with my schedule. That’s why I had to leave two hours before [the game.]”

Mr. Ford, who chairs the executive committee, departed the meeting at 2:30 p.m. Monday, after the group had completed only one item -- the approval of a plan to speed up development in the Port Lands. The session continued until just after 8 p.m.

The mayor’s office did not respond to queries about Mr. Ford’s whereabouts on Monday, but his press secretary confirmed Tuesday morning that the mayor left early to coach football.

“It’s extremely rare that his football duties conflict with his council responsibilities,” George Christopoulos said in a statement. “There were no contentious issues remaining on [the executive] agenda and the Mayor felt comfortable leaving the meeting in the hands of other committee members.”

The rest of the mayor’s executive colleagues went on to deal with, among other matters, seeking a private operator for Casa Loma and revisiting the city’s anti-discrimination policy, a debate that grew so emotional Councillor Michael Thompson cried openly as he recalled the racial taunts to which his son was subjected as an eight-year-old boy.

Mr. Ford is well-known for his dedication to high school football in Etobicoke and across the city.


Bread and circuses.
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