Politics


Harmful Books

For your edification Human Events has compiled a list of harmful books:

HUMAN EVENTS asked a panel of 15 conservative scholars and public policy leaders to help us compile a list of the Ten Most Harmful Books of the 19th and 20th Centuries.

They don’t really define harmful or to whom these books will be harmful but each listing does come with a brief rationale. Your mileage may vary….
And, as Radley Balko notes they don’t want to burn them they want you to buy them via their Amazon account link!
Update (6/1): Tom Traina has a suggestion for an addition to this list.


Political Fundamentals

Posting at Outside the Beltway Steve Verden sheds some light on the current senate rules folderol by reminding us that:

Of course, this is not in the least surprising since we are talking about politicians and we must always remember the primary law of politics:

Politicians: they lie.

Yes, even the ones you like and remember that little of what they do is in your interest.


Mr. Floatie

Stories from the British Columbia campaign trail:

The BC Liberals had 71 of 79 seats in the B.C. Legislature when the election was called. But many of its incumbents are ducking the all-candidates meetings that are a staple of politics here.
The Liberals’ absence is the object of mirth. When incumbent Lillian Trumper dodged a meeting in the Alberni-Qualicum riding or electoral district, a candidate from the BC Marijuana Party filled her empty chair with a flowering pot plant and an 18-inch glass bong.
A smiley-faced balloon was attached to the chair marked “Liberal” at a Victoria meeting boycotted by two Liberal lawmakers.
The best scene, however, came at a Friday candidates’ forum in the Victoria-Beacon Hill riding, where Carole James is running.
A man named James Skwarok showed up dressed as “Mr. Floatie,” a 6-foot-tall piece of excrement. He was protesting the Liberal government’s refusal to begin treatment of Victoria’s sewage. Skwarok claimed to represent a group called People Opposed to Outfall Pollution (POOP).
He wasn’t let in. But James said the sewage must be treated and that her party would look at the issue as a priority.
With other Canadian cities at last building treatment plants, Victoria may soon be the only major waterfront city in the United States or Canada to discharge all of its sewage raw and untreated. Eleven million gallons gets dumped into the Strait of Juan de Fuca each day.

British Columbia really does need to fix this problem! They could at least process this stuff and use it as fertilizer for more fields of BC Bud.