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There are disturbing signs that the Canadian state is being seriously unhinged.
The first batch of government-grown weed from Health Canada's very own pot farm deep in the underground of Flin Flon is scoring very poor reviews. Health Canada hemp makes those who have tried it throw up. This is very sad. Health Canada can't manage a good stone. Shakes my confidence in the order of things. Should have sublet the task to HRDC. Here in Ontario, there's an election on, and the Tories have accused the opposition leader of being "an evil, reptilian kitten-eater" from another planet. If the Tories are on pot, and I think in kindness we must assume they are, it's a couple of dozen grades above what Hemp Canada has on its shelves. However, for the real proof that we've entered in to some bizarre world, it's just necessary to turn to the federal Liberals - not the unraveling of the 1999 resolution on marriage, though that's a feast for the epicures of inconsistency - - but the ever closer moment of the investiture of Paul Martin as the juggernaut of choice in what a very few very foolish people still call the Liberal leadership race. We're very close to a constitutional anomaly that only a kitten from outer space, reptilian or otherwise, fortified with the best pot Flin Flon has to offer can possibly appreciate, to wit one government that can't be defeated under the current rules being headed by two leaders, both of whom, depending on how you twist common sense or parliamentary logic, can claim to be Prime Minister, and Canada - poor battered state - is to have the luxury of both of them under the current understanding for the next three months. The honourable speaker recognizes honourable Jean Paul Martin Chretien, Prime Minister of Canada. In our system, the person recognized as the leader of the party holding a majority in the House of Commons is Prime Minister. That will very soon be Paul Martin. But Mr. Chretien is already sworn in and seems determined he must continue as that office's only ornament until well into February. This might be an attractive concept in some two-for-one sale down at Wal-Mart, but it's not the way to run the country. Two prime ministers jumping up at question period is probably one annoyance too far, not to mention all the wear and tear on poor Stephen Harper's attention span, but this is the Liberals, remember, and when it comes to the pure politics of this country and ensuring their hold on it, these lads don't smoke pot, and they leave all the strange visions from outer space to the other players. My guess is it's a game they're playing. The P.M. - that would be Mr. Chretien - advises he will be staying on to hold that whip until the last minute. The other P.M. - that would be Paul Martin - goes along with it because, for now, it costs him nothing and it allows him to duck a lot. But come the coronation in November, I think they'll have all this tidied up. Mr. Martin will enter into full office, and Mr. Chretien, well, he'll have time on his hands, maybe a one-person royal commission on that lotus factory in Flin Flon. For The National, I'm Rex Murphy. Pubdate: Wed, 17 Sep 2003 Source: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (Canada Web) Webpage: http://www.cbc.ca/national/rex/rex_030916.html Copyright: 2003 CBC Contact: letters@cbc.ca Website: http://www.cbc.ca/ |
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