jazzfish: Jazz Fish: beret, sunglasses, saxophone (Default)
[personal profile] jazzfish
21 days for Dreamwidth, #5

How about when you're not on the computer?
I do very little online when I'm not on the computer.

But seriously. Lately I've been doing a lot of reading, in preparation for the Big Move. (Specifically, reading the first 50-100 pages of books and deciding to purge them. I'm amazed at how many recently have made it past 50 pp only to flame out somewhere in the 90-110 range.) I talk to [personal profile] uilos and with other people I soon won't be seeing very often, I cook, I watch the occasional movie or DVD, I laugh at the cats. In the mornings I go running. And there's gaming, and writers' group, and theatre, and concerts. I keep busy.



So, the perky "Canadians" are having an election on Monday. This is reasonably good timing for me: it means I get to find out what the heck is going on with the Canadian political system before I get up there, so I'm not completely lost in the sea of acronyms, weird names, and strange electoral practices.

If you're interested in a reasonably short and entertaining run-down, I recommend Mightygodking's take on the likely outcome (spoiler: most likely, nothing will change!). Very briefly: the Conservatives are just short of a majority. For a couple of weeks it looked like they might be able to flip enough seats in Parliament to squeak out a majority, but thankfully the voters seem to have come to their senses. The Liberals (squishy centre-left party) appear to be coasting and hoping the Conservatives will all just go away. The pinko commie leftists vote for the New Democratic Party but thanks to the travesty that is first-past-the-post voting they don't have many seats in Parliament. There's no left-wing coalition to oppose the Conservatives because the last major party is the Bloc Quebecois, whose separatist agenda ensures that no one else will want to be seen talking to them.

However, for reasons that aren't entirely clear to me, or to anyone else for that matter, the NDP has been inching up in the polls, to the point where it's barely possible they'll end up with more seats than either the Liberals or the BQ. This would make me intensely happy: they'll have a lot of new MPs who'll get a chance to learn the ropes before the next election, when (in my ideal dream world) they can sweep to a majority, driving the blue menace into the sea. (Or, more likely, herding them all into the prairie provinces of central Canada. Not for nothing is Manitoba Alberta known as "the Texas of the north.")

(I note with mild disapproval that my riding will almost certainly be represented by the Liberal party, although my prospective MP seems decent enough if a bit clueless.)

It will be Interesting to see how things play out on Monday. Interesting for me, anyway.

Date: 2011-04-30 08:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tulip-tree.livejournal.com
Nope, the oil is mostly in Alberta, from what I understand. That's at least where all the controversy is. (It's mostly in "tar sands" where the oil is mixed with sand in the ground rather than being the kind of oil they pump out of the ground in various other places, so it's pretty much an environmental nightmare to extract it, but it's valuable, so they want to extract it...)

Email sent...

Date: 2011-05-01 06:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tulip-tree.livejournal.com
Also... my impression of the situation with the Bloc is not so much that no one wants to talk to them because they are separatists. Everyone knows that, but everyone also knows that they are a big enough presence in QC that the other parties usually have to at least talk to them when they need to form coalitions.

Even the separatist thing is complicated. Someone explained it to me this way: even though there's been a significant separatist movement among the French-speaking part of Quebec, there are also anglophone areas that don't want to secede, and much more importantly, the First Nations control a lot of the land with valuable natural resources in QC, and *they* don't want to secede. So even if the French did actually secede from Canada and try to make QC an independent, state, the First Nations regions would secede from QC and rejoin Canada, and QC would not be left with much.

So the Bloc officially has a separatist agenda, but it's evolved into more of a "we're looking out for Quebec's interests and want special treatment" agenda, which no one else particularly likes, but since they do get a lot of seats in QC (and they don't run candidates anywhere except QC) everyone else does kind of have to at least talk to them.

I might be wrong - that's just the impression I've gotten living here for the last few years.

Date: 2011-05-01 06:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tulip-tree.livejournal.com
Can't figure out how to edit my comment above... I also meant to say that at the very least, that's all an oversimplification (and not very flattering towards Quebec, which is generally a nice place with a lot of nice people in it... but some very weird politics.)

Date: 2011-05-02 01:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tulip-tree.livejournal.com
I was worried that *I* was coming across as too judgemental about Quebec, not that you were. :)

My theory on separation is that if it were actually a really good idea, they'd probably have figured out how to do it by now, but I really don't know enough about any of this to really know anything, either.

I think that a lot of this stuff is very engrained in society, too - it's hard to understand if you didn't grow up here.

Not a paid user, so that would explain the comment thing.

Profile

jazzfish: Jazz Fish: beret, sunglasses, saxophone (Default)
Tucker McKinnon

Most Popular Tags

Adventures in Mamboland

"Jazz Fish, a saxophone playing wanderer, finds himself in Mamboland at a critical phase in his life." --Howie Green, on his book Jazz Fish Zen

Yeah. That sounds about right.

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags