And the prize goes to...
The Globe & Mail
which is today's Dumbest Newspaper in Canada for this headline: "Afghanistan still dangerous, PM says."
Really, The Globe needs Harper to inform the Canadian people that Afghanistan is still dangerous? To cinch the award, the G&M features an utterly vapid editorial on the meltdown by Marcus Gee in the business section.
Must agree, I always thought G&M was somehow shabby and non-professional. Plus that headline just kills it.
ReplyDeleteJulie
Dammit, I guess I have to forget about that vacation I was going to take to Kandahar! I got a really good price too!
ReplyDeleteBy the way Mound, every now and then I find myself back on campus and I've been following an interesting story in the Fulcrum.
ReplyDeleteYou might want to check out this link:
http://www.thefulcrum.ca/node/2524
If you dig deep enough onto the Fulcrum's website, you'll find a lot more details, but the link above should be enough to make your blood boil.
Opposition to military operations in Gaza being treated as anti-semitism. Does it sound at all familiar?
Blood boil? Not really, Fish. Universities have always been petrie dishes for impassioned, often angry, debates. I think that's one reason why parents like their kids to attend out of town schools.
ReplyDeleteIn my day the furor was over bilingual air traffic control for Quebec and it had the droit civil students up in arms.
But it all paled to my undergrad days in the States during Viet Nam. We had the Weathermen and the SDS on campus and the Panthers just off campus and the noise alone was enough to make your blood boil.
Point taken, but still a University of all places is supposed to nurturre ideas, not suppress them.
ReplyDeleteAt any rate, we haven't had too many riots lately, so I suppose this is all old news to you.
They're also up in arms over the student fed elections being contested and a lawsuit against the university. I'll continue to follow these stories.