Monday, 29 December 2014

Los medios de comunicación son las entidades más poderosas del planeta. Ellos tienen el poder para hacer del culpable inocente y hacer del inocente culpable, y eso es poder. Debido a que controlan las mentes de las masas. .- Malcolm X




"Twelve sour grapes for Premier Wynne"

Apply Por Favor; Candice Malcolm. Los habitantes de esta provincia son más realistas, cuando tienen que participar en las peticiones de encargo penales, augurando nuestros deseos para una mejor gobernabilidad en la  administración racional de los fondos provinciales. Sí, la señora Kathleen Wynne; ella tiene pleno conocimiento de las tiranías cometidas en esta provincia, por los gobiernos provinciales anteriores. A continuación el “Mundo Hispano Hablante,” nos trae tres “Uvas Amargas”  (Sour Grapes) que gozan en esta provincia de impunidad total.                                                                                                                                            1.- Sour Grape. La inmolación de familias pobres solventado con dinero del gobierno provincial, a manos por de los trabajadores de las suciedades de ayuda a la niñez.                                              2.-  Sour Grape. Se considera en esta provincia un crimen accidentarse en los puestos trabajos, por lo tanto los trabajadores lesionados, están expuestos a recibir tortura mental infligida por especializados burócratas, que trabajan para el sistema de compensación.                                                                                                                        3.- Sour Grape. Discriminación, segregación,  y persecución, que son prácticas directas de las  instituciones del gobierno provincial y sociedades privadas, dirigidas hacia los grupos minoritarios.                                                                                                                        En esta provincia, tenemos otra gobernante con casta liberal, quizá ella nos trae, la misma agenda trazada por sus predecesores anteriores. La primera ministra de Ontario, señora Kathleen Wynne, debe saber al dedillo que tiene una responsabilidad con sus constituyentes, para que logre gobernar con equidad y transparencia. Como también parte de sus gestiones seria revisar las cartillas “de uvas agrias,” en lo que respecta a las asignaciones de sus empleados y fondos concedidos especialmente a consorcios privados. Como máxima representante en el parlamento provincial y siendo la voz de la  provincia de Ontario, tiene el legítimo e incuestionable deber, de denunciar en la oficina del "Fiscal General de Ontario," la malversación de fondos provinciales, concedidos para hechos delictivos; tanto para las instituciones provinciales como también consorcios privados. First posted: Sunday, December 28, 2014 05:48 PM EST Opinion Columnists








Twelve sour grapes for Premier Wynne

Candice Malcolm Cinical
By
First posted:
Kathleen Wynne
Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne in her Queen's Park office in Toronto on Wednesday December 17, 2014. (Ernest Doroszuk/Toronto Sun)
There’s an old Spanish tradition on New Year’s Eve to eat 12 grapes at the stroke of midnight, making a wish for each grape.
The 12 grapes represent the 12 months of the year.
Each grape is thought to bring good luck and fortune for the coming year.
The tradition is still celebrated throughout the Spanish-speaking world, including Mexico, where many Canadians find refuge from the cold winter during this holiday season.
So, to any Ontarians participating in this custom, here is a plea to wish for better governance in 2015. In case you’d like to be a bit more specific, here are 12 Ontario taxpayer wishes for 2015.
1. No new taxes
The Kathleen Wynne Liberal government continues to emphasize the need for new taxes, but Ontario taxpayers know better. New taxes will merely enable more spending. By taking more from hardworking Ontarians, the government will just create more budget problems for households across the province.
2. Get to the bottom of the gas plants fiasco
It’s been over three years, and we are still learning the sordid details surrounding the 2011 election decision to cancel two gas plants to save some Liberal seats. The latest — deleting computer hard drives in the premier’s office at a cost of $10,000 to taxpayers — demonstrates the need for a judicial inquiry into this dubious scheme and elaborate cover-up. Typically, only after the expenditure was exposed did the Liberals belatedly decide to pay it back from party funds.
3. Accountability for all involved
Uncovering the details of the gas plant mess should lead to accountability for former premier Dalton McGuinty and his staff who presided over it. In a just world, someone would be facing punishment.
4. End the government liquor monopoly
Ontarians are capable of making responsible choices without the government controlling where and when we can buy booze.
5. Break up the Beer Store
While throwing out the archaic, prohibition-era Liquor Control Board, it’s also time for Ontario to do away with its bizarre, government-granted beer monopoly.
6. Scrap the Green Energy Act (GEA)
Ontario’s GEA has been a disaster. Enough is enough. Hydro ratepayers can’t afford to be the guinea pig for expensive experiments with inefficient, unreliable energy.
7. Cancel new wind and solar projects
Recent hydro rate increases are largely caused by the Global Adjustment which offsets and subsidizes hare-brained schemes like wind and solar farms.
8. Say no to carbon taxes
Wynne wants even more green schemes, including a possible carbon tax. This is merely an excuse for another massive Liberal tax grab.
9. Stop blaming the feds
Now that Stephen Harper’s Conservative government has confirmed Ontario’s equalization transfers are exactly what the formula calls for, there is no reason for Wynne to cry foul or blame the feds for her fiscal follies.
10. Ax the travel tax
Pearson Airport is already one of the most expensive in the world. Wynne’s new travel tax will more than triple jet fuel taxes, making it even more expensive to fly.
11. Freeze the sunshine list
The only way to balance the books in Ontario is by reining in spending. The number one expense at Queen’s Park is government employee compensation; a good place to start.
12. Balance the budget
All we really want for 2015 is a balanced budget in Ontario.
Happy New Year Ontario taxpayers; here’s to hope!
Happy New Year Ontario taxpayers; here’s to hope!
— Malcolm is the Ontario Director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation,

Saturday, 27 December 2014

Criminales Peligrosos en la Administracion del Sistema de Justicia?

"Mrs. Attorney General Madelaine Meilleur" About the crimes committed by the Judges?                   Ontario fails to track complaints against Crown attorneys  
                                                              

                                  El error más vil que puede cometer un tirano; es atormentar en mente, cuerpo, y alma, niños indefensos, y llevarlos ante la vista de un soldado que ha librado mil batallas.                                                Nadir Siguencia                                                                                                                                               Desafortunadamente, Crímenes de Estado siguen teniendo lugar en este país; violaciones de derechos humanos cometidas por el sistema judicial canadiense están bien documentadas y ocurren todos los días en el interior de las salas de audiencia. Pero los actores de estas atrocidades, no son sólo los abogados de la corona, también  jueces, consejeros de servicio, policía, abogados de la familia, y los traductores. La corrupción de los jueces y abogados de la corona en los tribunales de familia y penales son evidentes e inevitables, porque es el resultado directo de un gobierno y un sistema de justicia que comercializan deliberadamente con la sangre de los niños, madres, y padres de familia, y en muchos casos con otras personas inocentes . La administración de justicia en este país se caracteriza por su corrupción, amenazas, e intimidaciones, por parte de los jueces y abogados de la corona, y la falta de recursos para la defensa de acusados de cargos falsos. Ausencia de mecanismos disciplinarios internos para investigar, presentar cargos, y procesar; a jueces y abogados de la corona por sus crímenes, son factores en la continuación de las violaciones de derechos humanos, cometidas por el sistema judicial canadiense.

Criminales Peligrosos en la Administracion del Sistema de Justicia?

Ontario fails to track complaints against Crown attorneys
Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur says her ministry lacks a centralized system, raising questions about oversight of misbehaving prosecutors.

RICHARD J. BRENNAN / TORONTO STAR Order this photo
Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur acknowledges that her ministry has no centralized method for tracking complaints against misbehaving prosecutors.
By: Jennifer Pagliaro City Hall reporter, Jayme Poisson News reporter, Published on Tue Dec 16 2014
Ontario’s Ministry of the Attorney General has no idea how many complaints have been lodged against its nearly one thousand prosecutors from across the province, or how many have been disciplined for misconduct in recent years.
The lack of organized, accountable oversight, legal observers say, marks a “failure” by the government to properly scrutinize complaints against its Crown attorneys: public servants responsible for making important decisions such as who to prosecute for crimes and recommending sentences for those found guilty.
“Only with proper oversight can the public have confidence in our justice system and those who administer it,” Anthony Moustacalis, president of the Criminal Lawyers Association, said in a statement to the Star.
An ongoing Star investigation has discovered cases where Crown attorneys were the focus of sexual harassment complaints and other accusations of misbehavior. The Star’s stories were raised in the provincial legislature, and Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur was asked to provide an accounting of all complaints against Crowns and their outcome.
In a letter, written in response to those questions, Meilleur said: “The Ministry does not have a centralized system for tracking complaints with respect to Crown Attorneys. Therefore, to compile global statistics would require a search of each individual personnel file for all Crown Attorneys employed in over 60 offices across the province.”
Despite not having centralized information on internal complaints and their outcomes, Meilleur wrote that Crowns are held to the “highest standard” and “are expected to conduct themselves professionally and fairly at all times” in accordance with Crown policy and professional conduct rules dictated by the Law Society, the independent body that oversees all lawyers.
While the Law Society can investigate and discipline prosecutors, legal observers say complaints against prosecutors are often dealt with internally by the ministry — investigations that are kept secret and, now, evidently not tracked. (The Law Society, which represents nearly 50,000 lawyers of all types in Ontario, told the Star that over the past 23 years only nine of 2,200 disciplinary hearings have involved prosecutors.)
Meilleur’s letter says complaints to her ministry from staff or the public against prosecutors are dealt with by their direct superiors — either the head Crowns in their local office or a regional director.
“After a review, if the conduct falls short of expected standards, appropriate remedial or disciplinary action will be considered,” says the response.
Sylvia Jones, the Conservative MPP who raised questions about Crown oversight in the legislature this summer, called the Attorney General’s response “incredibly frustrating.”
Jones said the government is either not being honest about not having the numbers, or — what she said would actually be “more disturbing” — they don’t know how many complaints there have been.
“There’s no way for us to judge whether it’s good or it’s bad, because there’s no numbers,” said Jones. “How do you fix something if you’re not tracking it?”
Jones requested the information about complaints and disciplinary actions resulting from those complaints back in July, by way of filing what is called an order paper, which required a response from the ministry within four months. The ministry responded just before the deadline, on Nov. 24. (The Star asked for the same information in August, in hopes of getting it sooner, but was told by a spokesperson it would “not be appropriate” to respond to the Star’s request in advance of responding to Jones’ request.)
Jones filed the order paper after hearing about a Brampton Crown attorney who left his job in 2012 amid sexual harassment allegations.
A Star investigation found John Raftery was the subject of a group sexual harassment complaint while employed at the Brampton Crown office and received a hefty payment (double his annual salary, or nearly $370,000) after he suddenly left his job.
Raftery has declined to comment about the payout or the allegations of harassment during his time as a Crown.
In January, the former Crown-turned-defence lawyer was charged with assault and criminal harassment of two young women who worked at a Mississauga grocery store. Those charges were dropped in October after the Crown said there was no reasonable prospect of conviction.
That wasn’t the only recent case involving alleged misbehaviour by prosecutors.
In February, Toronto police charged a Scarborough Crown attorney with assault causing bodily harm after a late-night pub fight with a colleague. The charges were dropped in June, and the prosecutor entered into a peace bond stipulating he would not return to the pub for a year.
In April, another Scarborough Crown attorney was accused of threatening a youth witness outside a courtroom, putting the future of a schoolyard assault trial in jeopardy. A judge later ruled his conduct was “unprofessional,” “crude” and “reprehensible,” but did not abuse the court process.
The ministry has repeatedly said it does not comment on “confidential human resources matters.”
The Star has filed an access-to-information request, asking for any records related to alleged prosecutorial wrongdoing. The ministry denied the request, citing labour relations issues and solicitor-client privilege. An appeal to the province’s information and privacy commissioner was also denied.
One Crown attorney, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the response from the ministry is unacceptable.
“The system protects the worst Crowns, who suffer no consequences, professionally or financially,” the prosecutor said. “The reality is, when Crowns engage in bad behaviour it reflects poorly on all of us. The fact that Crowns are almost never disciplined and that (the Ministry of the Attorney General) doesn’t even see fit to track this information is really demoralizing to the rest of us who try and do a good job every day.”


Tuesday, 23 December 2014

Everything you wanted to know about Canada but were afraid to ask. Todo lo que usted requiere conocer a cerca de Canadá, pero Uds. Estaban asustados para preguntar.





“Latino-Americanos residentes en Canadá; despertemos que nuestros hijos están predispuestos  a la destrucción, en las escuelas primarias y colegios de secundaria públicos,  por falta de disciplina y una educación de calidad”
Alerta! “Radio Comunitaria y su Complicidad en el Lavado de Cerebro” Eiffiel : Se debería mostrar esto en las escuelas primarias para enseñar a los niños cómo trabaja el gobierno. Metodo claro que hace falta en el plan de studios: P   Eiffiel They should show this in elementary schools to teach kids how the government works. Way more clear than anything in the curriculum: P 

Ábranse las puertas de nuestras escuelitas públicas Carajo!
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                          


                                   in reply to Zamolxet                                                                                                                                 I honestly never got the opportunity to learn the Canadian constitution and politics during my pre-postsecondary years. And I’ve been in 2 different middle schools and 1 high school since I've been a Canadian. It’s a shame honestly because learning about our government is essential, and its actually interesting learning about Canadian politics and governance. Like you said, if you want Canadians know this stuff, they either have learn on their own, or, like me, take some college classes.  SLMN    Sinceramente, nunca tuve la oportunidad de conocer la Constitución y la política canadiense, durante mis años pre-post secundarios. Y he estado en 2 escuelas intermedias diferentes, y 1 escuela secundaria desde que he sido un canadiense. Es una pena, sinceramente porque aprender acerca de nuestro gobierno es esencial, y su aprendizaje realmente interesante acerca de la política y el gobierno canadiense. Como Ud. dijo, si los Canadienses   quieren conocer estas cosas, ellos tienen que aprender por su propia cuenta, o, como yo, tomar algunas clases en la universidad.

   Suzanne Marion                                                                                                       Embarrassing to know that Canadians are becoming just as dumb as Americans; when it comes to NOT knowing how our government is run. We need to educate more Canadians about our system of gvt., not get into shouting match with ignorant Americans,                   among others. ... as tempting as that may be... Vergonzoso saber que los canadienses se están convirtiendo en tan tontos como los americanos; cuando se trata de conocer cómo se administra nuestro gobierno. Necesitamos educar a los canadienses más sobre nuestro sistema de GVT., No entra en gritos de partido con el los americanos ignorantes, entre otros. ... Por muy tentador que eso puede ser

MourninGlori 

Thank you for your rendition of our political system; you make it sound so ridiculous, which it is. Has anyone ever sat back and looked into the amount of money it takes to keep this mourning Democracy system ticking; I’ll bet you it's in the billions of dollars. No wonder we have such a deficit. If we were to take in all of our elections, the cost of MP's, MLA's, Civic Gracias por su interpretación de nuestro sistema político que; lo haces sonar tan ridículo, que se encuentra. ¿Alguna vez alguien se sentó y miró en la cantidad de dinero que se necesita para mantener este sistema de democracia de luto y tictac; Voy a apostar que está en miles de millones de dólares. No me extraña que tengamos un déficit de este tipo. Si fuéramos a tomar en todas nuestras elecciones, el costo de los parlamentarios, los ejes de acción, Civic