Archive for the ‘Word Press’ Category

Ontario Liberals threaten election after NDP 'breaks its word'

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty threatened to take Ontario to a general election Thursday if the opposition parties couldnt agree on a deal to pass the budget.

This is about Ontarios economic livelihood and our ability to continue steering the province in the right direction in these challenging times, McGuinty said in a statement.

Its absolutely imperative that we pass this budget. And if we cannot pass this budget, we will take it to the people in a general election.

Kelly McParland: C.D. Howe pokes a big hole in NDPs high-tax fantasies

A new wealth tax in Ontario, to take effect in July, will not raise anywhere near the revenue projected, and will cost the country dearly within a few years.

Alexandre Laurin, author of the [C.D. Howe Institute] report, notes that the ease with which high-income earners can adopt strategies to reduce their taxable income means the new levy will probably be applied to a smaller pool than anticipated by New Democratic Party leader Andrea Horwath when she strongarmed Dalton McGuintys minority government into adopting it, in return for allowing the Liberals budget to pass.

The government hoped the new tax an extra 2% on incomes over $500,000, which translates into a 3.1% increase when an additional surtax is applied would raise $470 million. Laurin estimates the number will be closer to $450 million initially, falling to zero by 2019 as wealthy taxpayers adjust, and a net loss of $200 million by 2027.

The NDP had appeared ready to support the minority Liberal budget in exchange for a new tax on incomes over $500,000, and to get more hearings into the fiscal plan before next weeks vote.

But on Thursday, McGuinty accused NDP leader Andrea Horwath of reneging on the deal.

Earlier today, the NDP turned their backs yet again on an agreement to pass our budget, McGuinty said. They joined forces with the PCs to gut the governments budget bill.

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Ontario Liberals threaten election after NDP 'breaks its word'

'V' word draws sanction in Michigan House

LANSING, Mich., June 14 (UPI) -- Two Democratic lawmakers were banned from speaking during Thursday's session of the Michigan House, a day after one used the word "vagina" during floor debate.

State Rep. Lisa Brown was sanctioned for using the term Wednesday during debate on abortion legislation.

Rep. Barb Byrum was banned from speaking Thursday following a disturbance in the House Wednesday, when she was not permitted to introduce an amendment to abortion legislation that would outlaw vasectomies except when necessary to save a man's life, the Detroit Free Press reported.

House Republicans banned Brown from speaking on the House floor Thursday after GOP leaders determined she had violated the decorum of the body when she ended a speech by saying, "Finally, Mr. Speaker, I'm flattered that you're all so interested in my vagina, but 'no' means 'no.'"

Republican Rep. Mike Callton said Brown's choice of words was "so offensive, I don't even want to say it in front of women. I would not say that in mixed company."

At a news conference at the Capitol Thursday, Brown said, "We're all adults here," and noted "vagina" is the medically correct term.

"If I can't say the word 'vagina,' why are we legislating vaginas?" she asked.

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'V' word draws sanction in Michigan House

Word misspelled on NV high school's diplomas

Four People Killed in Sacramento Home Invasion Four People Killed in Sacramento Home Invasion

Updated: Sunday, June 10 2012 3:12 PM EDT2012-06-10 19:12:34 GMT

Updated: Sunday, June 10 2012 1:51 PM EDT2012-06-10 17:51:03 GMT

Updated: Sunday, June 10 2012 1:41 PM EDT2012-06-10 17:41:04 GMT

Updated: Monday, June 11 2012 11:16 AM EDT2012-06-11 15:16:37 GMT

SPRING CREEK, Nev. (AP) - Students at a northeastern Nevada high school were surprised when they received their diplomas: the word "graduation" was misspelled as "graduataion."

Spring Creek High Principal Keith Walz told the Elko Daily Free Press (http://bit.ly/KHySBs ) that the misspelling on about 200 diplomas ordered from the Salt Lake City company Jostens was an "inadvertent mistake."

Jostens spokesman Bryan Durfey acknowledges the company was responsible for the mistake, and says corrected diplomas already have been sent by priority mail directly to graduates.

He says the company realizes it isn't going to be perfect, and its policy is to fix errors immediately.

The school will not be charged for the extra diplomas.

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Word misspelled on NV high school's diplomas

Word misspelled on Nevada high school's diplomas

SPRING CREEK, Nev.Students at a northeastern Nevada high school were surprised when they received their diplomas: the word "graduation" was misspelled as "graduataion."

Spring Creek High Principal Keith Walz told the Elko Daily Free Press ( http://bit.ly/KHySBs) that the misspelling on about 200 diplomas ordered from the Salt Lake City company Jostens was an "inadvertent mistake."

Jostens spokesman Bryan Durfey acknowledges the company was responsible for the mistake, and says corrected diplomas already have been sent by priority mail directly to graduates.

He says the company realizes it isn't going to be perfect, and its policy is to fix errors immediately.

The school will not be charged for the extra diplomas.

In a similar incident, diplomas at a Maryland high school are being reprinted because they contained a misspelling of the word "program."

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Word misspelled on Nevada high school's diplomas

It's time to stop using the word 'Asians'

Is it time to stop using the word "Asian"? In recent weeks Britain's Sikh and Hindu communities have complained angrily about the use of the misleading term in reporting of the Rochdale grooming convictions of men of Muslim Pakistani descent. Headlines like Asian grooming why we need to talk about sex crime, Child sex grooming: the Asian question, and Grooming offences committed mostly by Asian men, says ex-Barnardo's chief show the problem.

Obviously Sikhs and Hindus and other "Asian" non-Muslims, including Jains, Zoroastrians, Christians and Buddhists, dont want to be associated with sexual grooming of vulnerable white girls. The vast majority of Muslims dont want to either. The girls targeted in Rochdale, Derby and now in Luton are all non-Muslim. This is nothing new for British Hindus and Sikhs, who have complained about targeting of their girls for decades; Indians refer to the practice as "love-jihad".

Judge Gerald Clifton, who sentenced the men in Rochdale, indicated they thought the victims were worthless and beyond any respect. He asserted that one of the motivations behind this was they were not part of your community or religion. This is not the first time that this has been suggested: at a Hindu Forum conference in 2007, the then Metropolitan Police commissioner, Sir Ian Blair, revealed how the police were working to clamp down on aggressive conversions of vulnerable girls. The following year, a blog site called "Sikh4aweek" which called on Muslim "soldiers" to "hunt" down Sikh university students during freshers week was forced to close following complaints to the police and Google. The common denominator: targeting of non-Muslim girls.

It is for the Muslim community and its leaders to decide what is behind the trend, and what to do about it; but it is time for politicians and the press to bear in mind that in the context of these sex crimes, as with violent extremism, female genital mutilation, forced marriage and honour killings, the vague term "Asian" serves no purpose. Worse, it besmirches entire swathes of Britons with roots in the Indian subcontinent. Its encouraging to hear some brave voices filtering through the political minefield: Baroness Warsi recently hit out at the small minority of Pakistani men who see white girls as fair game; last year, Jack Straw braved criticism for his claim that some Pakistani men see white girls as easy meat. But the problem continues: commentators are unwilling to label the perpetrators "Muslim", opting instead to hide behind the fudge of "Asian".

Lessons can be learned from Britain's own colonial history. The Empire's attitudes towards natives may have been problematic from a modern perspective, but it was careful to distinguish between the different inhabitants of the subcontinent. In Charles Allens book Soldier Sahibs: The Men who made the North West Frontier, the Indian-born historian quotes the soldier Herbert Edwardes, who was dispatched to a distant corner of the Sikh Empire in the mid-18th century. He describes four main groups in a mountainous district called Banu:

"The mongrel and vicious Bunnoochee peasantry, ill-ruled by Mullicks, and ill-righted by factions; the greedy Syuds and other religious mendicants, sucking the blood of the superstitious people; the mean Hindoo traders, enduring a life of degradation, that they may cheat their Muhommudan employers; and the Vizeree [Waziri] interlopers, half pastoral, half agricultural, wholly without law, but neither destitute of honour or virtue."

As Edwardes discovered, people of the Indian subcontinent have various cultural, traditional and religious affiliations: identities are both convoluted and complex. They shouldnt be oversimplified for the sake of political expediency. Of course we have to be careful not to label all Muslims sex offenders: but it is simple cowardice to pretend that grooming is not a problem for the Muslim community, but Asians in general.

Hardeep Singh is a freelance journalist and broadcaster and the Press Secretary for the Network of Sikh Organisations

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It's time to stop using the word 'Asians'