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who employs me
I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

Any views expressed here are my own.
View Article  The parallels between the climate and credit crises

CBC Radio's The Sunday Edition had a panel this morning on the climate crisis (which I sort of listened to in a sleepy haze after doing some Nuit Blanching).

The credit crisis in the United States has been building for years. I can remember having lunchtime conversations in years gone by marvelling at the reckless amounts of debt that Americans seemed prepared to carry and speculating this couldn't end well, yet there was little public discussion of the problem or about how policy-makers should respond.

Many commentators saluted the "resilience" of the U.S. consumer without noting that it was all being done with borrowed money.

And now, the bill is becoming due. Years of economic pain will be the likely result.

To my mind, we're running a climate deficit by pumping carbon into the atmosphere to keep today's economy propped up (in part so we can buy stuff we don't really need by using borrowed money). The longer we put off meaningful action on reducing emissions, the greater the bill will be -- and as this post shows, things are getting worse globally instead of better.

 Andrew Weaver, a prominent Canadian climate scientist, suggested during the Sunday's panel that maybe a mini-catastrophe might be needed to capture people's attention. Others have previously made that argument.

Think of it as having your credit card publicly rejected in a very crowded restaurant. Except if you use the European heat wave of 2003 as an example, about 35,000 people died. That's a tragedy, not just an embarrassment.

Unless the science is very, very wrong, we will have to deal with our climate crisis at some point. The question the world must ask itself is how bad does it wish things to get before acting in a collective, meaningful way.

View Article  Palin column wasn't written as satire: Mallick

From the NYT:

Ms. Mallick, Mr.  (CBC Ombudsman Vince) Carlin wrote, was unable to present evidence to support her suggestion that that Republican men were deficient sexually or that Ms. Palin’s supporters were “white trash.”

After receiving Mr. Carlin’s report, John Cruickshank, the publisher of CBC News, removed Ms. Mallick’s column from the network’s Web site (it is still available at www.heathermallick.ca) and promised in an online posting to improve the editing of opinion items.

Both Mr. Cruickshank and Mr. Carlin said that the column would have worked if it had been labeled as satire, but Ms. Mallick disagreed.

“It wasn’t satire though; it was straightforward political commentary, admittedly with jokes,” she said by e-mail. “I had no idea anyone would take the remark about sexually inadequate Republican men literally!”

View Article  The insider's game

In the movie Wall Street, financier Gordon Gecko lays out the game for struggling stockbroker Bud Fox (Charlie Sheen), who he is trying to seduce into breaking securities laws for him, after first thrashing Bud in squash. In the process, Gecko let Bud know that he knew a hot inside tip had Bud had given him originated with Bud's father:

The public is out there throwing darts at a board.

I don't throw darts at a board. I bet on sure things.

Read Sun Tzu's The Art of War: "'Every battle is won before it's ever fought.'" Think about it.

You're not as smart as I thought you were, Buddy boy. Ever wonder why fund managers can't beat the S&P 500? Because they're sheep -- and sheep get slaughtered.

I've been in this business since '69 (Note: The movie was released in late 1987). Most of these Harvard MBA types don't add up to dogshit. Give me guys that are poor, smart and hungry -- and no feelings. You win a few, you lose a few, but you keep on fighting. ...

Now you stop giving me information and start getting me some.

I've also got a post on the famous 'Greed is good' speech.

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