Bruce Dowbiggin
You Had An Option, Canada. And You Settled For This?
John Turner: “I had no option.”
Brian Mulroney: ”You had an option, sir, to say ‘no’ and you chose to say ‘yes’ to the old attitudes and the old stories of the Liberal party.” Federal Leaders Debate 1984
It is Weasel Time in the urban salons of the 416/ 514/ 613/ 604. With the growing realization that everyone outside Canada—and more specifically Eastern Canada— sees Justin Trudeau as a punch line the guilty who repeatedly voted for him are suddenly trying to cover their tracks.
“I didn’t want to vote for him,” they explain. “But I had no option.”
Let’s pause to consider that. Since he was elected in 2015 which Justin Trudeau did you miss? RCMP Obstructor? Captain Blackface? The Kielburger Kid? Ethics Offender? Be My Teddy Bear? “She Perceived It Differently”? Mr. Dressup? The Chinese Vaccine Swindler? Race Baiter? Cucumber Pants? Bollywood Justin? The Wizard of Winnipeg Labs? I’ve Got Your Credit Rating?
Now let’s consider CPC leader Erin O’Toole. Okay, there wasn’t a lot there. But there wasn’t a moral deficiency a mile wide that embarrassed the nation as when Skippy goes swanning about the G7 or G20.
The ethics commissioner wasn’t repeatedly finding him guilty for taking free stuff. His policies could charitably called Liberal Lite. He was trying hard to make the 416/ 514/ 613 like him by abandoning conservative policies. The worst thing his enemies could throw at O’Toole was his wife serving him a beer after he had a jog.
So please, Trudeau deniers, you had an option. Don’t put the blame for prolonging this long national embarrassment on anyone but yourself. And the NDP.
But if you still need a reason to think JTPM is the worst prime minister of the post-war era— perhaps ever— consider his execrable performance during the Truckers Convoy. Convinced only Nazis could disagree with his godlike status, Trudeau— and Deputy PM Chrystia Freeland— insisted that the only way the convoy could have quickly raised nearly $10 million on two crowdfunding platforms was if nefarious foreign actors were funding the protest.
Taking their leader’s cue, clueless Liberal jackanapes promoted the same libel of foreign funding interference in the debate over emergency measures. Adding to the chorus were the PM’s poodles at CBC who doubled down on the myth of foreign interference, reporting that thousands of suspicious donations came from foreigners. The CBC lap dogs added, “The donations identified by CBC News are likely only a fraction of all the donations made by people outside of Canada.” (CBC has now withdrawn the story.)
Trudeau used the scare to justify freezing the finances of people he disagreed with, jeopardizing their livelihoods and threatening them with criminal charges. “If you’ve joined the protest because you’re tired of COVID, you now need to understand you are breaking laws,” he said, conflating mischief with treason. “The consequences are becoming more and more severe”.
In a move criticized by many Western democracies Trudeau suspended Canada’s cherished traditions of free speech and dissent to silence his blue-collar critics. And invented a coup by people who had no weapons, never interrupted the running of government, never kidnapped a politician and never even darkened the door of the House of Commons. But honked horns a lot.
It was all bullshit, as we learned last week with the visit to Parliament by FINTRAC official Barry MacKillop. McKillop said there was not a hint of foreign threat to Canada’s democracy in the donations. “It was their own money. It wasn’t cash that funded terrorism or was in any way money laundering,” he told a Parliamentary committee. “I believe they just wanted to support the cause.”
This supported an earlier report from the funding platforms that also contradicted the PM’s paranoid ranting. The truckers weren’t feeding at the trough of outside actors. They were just “fed up”. But Skippy attacked them with all the weapons in a PM’s arsenal. According to Department of Finance officials, as little as $20 in donations was enough to trigger a bank account freeze and an investigation under the act.”
So, to recap for our friends who thought there was no better option than Trudeau. The PM hid from protesters, slandered them as Nazis and women haters. When that didn’t work he fabricated a story that evil outsiders were helping the people in the Bouncy Castles to mount a coup against his government. Using CBC (and other accommodating media) he created a national panic to suspend civil liberties in Canada. One hapless Corp bingo caller suggested they were Putin stooges.
When the enormity of this disgrace emerged, Trudeau fired up the public-owned jet, took his deputy PM, foreign affairs minister and a battery of cameras with him for a Cook’s Tour of war-torn Ukraine. The only danger he faced was overexposure as he lined up photo ops with embarrassed soldiers and politicians.
Trudeau took his glazed smile and stuck it into the lens so Canadians could see him rally NATO for Ukraine. Well, rally is a little strong. Trudeau is a go-cart while the other G-& leaders are F1 cars. The only person Trudeau rallied was his pilot.
The closest he or his coterie got to real fire was from a lonely CBC reporter who was under the impression his job was to ask questions to which Canadians wanted answers. Finance minister Freeland, grand-daughter of a Ukrainian Nazi sympathizer (she also bossed the financial freeze of the truckers and their donors), harrumphed, “No one is asking why we are here!” Oh yes there are, replied the intrepid reporter.
Reminded that U.S. president Joe Biden was running America’s Ukraine effort from the White House while they were ignoring Canada’s soaring gas prices and inflation numbers, minister Joly said the plebes could never understand the intricate minds of luminaries such as her. Later Joly showed her grasp on Canada’ history: “ “Canada is not a nuclear power, it is not a military power, we’re a middle-size power”. Canada is “good at convening” she said. When tone deafness is an Olympic sport this crew will win the gold medal hands-down.
So when you hear the GTA chorus retreating from its Liberal crush, remember, “You had an option” last fall. Just ask the late John Turner.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster (http://www.notthepublicbroadcaster.com). The best-selling author was nominated for the BBN Business Book award of 2020 for Personal Account with Tony Comper. A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, he’s also a regular contributor to Sirius XM Canada Talks Ch. 167. His new book with his son Evan Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History is now available on http://brucedowbigginbooks.ca/book-personalaccount.aspx
Bruce Dowbiggin
On The Clock: Win Fast Or Forever Lose Your Chance
Play this drinking game. Every time some football analyst on TV says during the course of a game, “He’ll be a star for this team for years” take a drink. You’ll be tipsy in a hurry.
Maybe in the old days, Skip. But the concept of the players you’re loving now lasting very long with NFL, NHL, NBA or even MLB teams has come and gone. The new model was never more apparent as when the NFL No.1 seed Detroit Lions, replete with young stars, were blindsided from the NFL playoffs by upstart Washington’s rookie QB Jaden Daniels.
Heavily favoured Detroit (10 point favourites in some places) was loaded with superstars on their first contract. Jahmyr Gibbs, Jameson Williams, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Penei Sewell, Aidan Hutchinson (injured), Sam LaPorta, Jack Campbell and Ali McNeil (injured). Added to veteran QB Jared Goff and a sprinkling of veterans they seemed perfectly balanced.
Except the new mantra says you can only win a Super Bowl in this time of salary-cap hell with a HOF QB or a QB on his affordable rookie deal. Goff is neither, and to emphasize the mantra he threw four picks and fumbled once en route to the heartbreak loss. The dynasty turned into as ‘die-nasty”.
In the old days you’d just say “we will get them next year” and hope for better luck. But within two years the Lions will have to do a painful triage of their glittering young stars. You can’t pay them all, so who will go and who will stay? Adding to the misery of the salary-cap mandated chop will be can you get value for them in trades?
The Lions are far from the only ones dealing with leagues that value parity ahead of dynasty. In the NHL the Edmonton Oilers and Toronto Maple Leafs are hearing the steady tick-tock counting down on the NHL’s cap machine. The two clubs lost consistently for a decade to score top picks in the draft. Riding the skills of Conor McDavid and Auston Matthews they’ve brushed up against a Stanley Cup but have yet to do the deal.
As every fan of the teams knows it’s a race to add the proper players to the roster to compliment the young stars before they get too expensive. McDavid is an unrestricted FA after 2025-26 and as the league’s top star he will command the maximum under the salary cap where ever he lands. If that’s Edmonton he and Leon Draisaitl will be added to Darnell Nurse, Zach Hyman, Ryan Nugent Hopkins as a large portion of the cap. Can the Oilers balance these stars and still pay defensemen and goalies?
Ditto the Maple Leafs who have Matthews, William Nylander, Mitch Marner, Morgan Rielly and Chris Tanev hogging the top end of the cap. Can they find the right pieces at a cheap price to create a team that will reach the Final, let alone win the Stanley Cup? And can they do it before their core players start to decline?
For those reasons, NHL teams and players were fixated on the news that there will be no more escrow deductions taken from players the rest of the season. That led many to surmise that the salary cap will be going up significantly for the next few years, allowing teams more latitude to complete rosters and elite players to be paid their worth to the league. Even if true the increases will be proportionate, forcing the same constraints of a cap at the top and bottom of payrolls.
None of these economic concerns seem to bother the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers. With just a luxury tax, not a salary cap, to restrain them the Dodgers have added Japanese star Riki Sasaki and bullpen ace Taylor Scott to their payroll in the past week. This in addition to two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell. Their payroll now exceeds $370 M. For 2025. By comparison the Pittsburgh Pirates sit at just $77 M for 2025 and the fans are outraged demanding the owner sell.
The Dodgers justify the spending because they are building a global brand. While the competing leagues constrict their payrolls to pay service to parity, MLB is allowing the Dodgers to take a soccer attitude to their payroll. The arguments for parity are pretty weak when you consider that their have-nots are happy to take the bounty of great TV/ digital/ logo revenue but refuse to improve their teams.
Which leaves us with the Toronto Blue Jays, definitely a large-market team trying to spend like one. Monday they announced the signing of FA Anthony Santander, who had 44 homers for Baltimore last season. This follows an offseason of humiliation where the team has made no progress signing its superstars Vladdy Guerrero and Bo Bichette.
Like NFL Lions or NHL Maple Leafs, the clock is ticking on their core players as they become prohibitively expensive. Should they sign both? One? Or trade them to get value before they scram to LA or New York? Right now they seem caught between bad options.
Meanwhile the underwhelming Jays management was punked— yet again—in pursuit of a high-profile Japanese FA. The very visible failure left many wondering if it was the market or the management that is holding back Toronto. Which might be another drinking game. Take a drink every time the Jays management swings and misses on a high-profile free agent. You’ll be in detox pretty soon.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster. His new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed Hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org. You can see all his books at brucedowbigginbooks.ca.
Bruce Dowbiggin
No, Really. Carney Is An Outsider. And Libs Are Done
The recent appearance of Liberal-leader-in-waiting Mark Carney on the Daily Show has delighted a small segment of the Canadian voting pool and enraged a goodly part as well. During his nuzzle session with a highly uncritical Jon Stewart Carney announced that he was running to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader and then prime minister for however long that lasts.
(If this distinction seems trivial we would recall that then-CBC vice president Kirstine Stewart once upbraided us for saying her actor husband was supporting Trudeau’s bid to be PM. A choleric Stewart said we’d got the story wrong. How so, we asked? He’s supporting him to be Liberal leader, she thundered. Not the PM. As if this were a distinction worth making.)
Back to Carney. To understand the gravity of his announcement on the Daily Show one must remember that for a generation of concussed Liberals and NDP hacks Stewart’s show from 1999 to 2016 was the Yankee Stadium of talk shows. In their estimation, Stewart was Reggie Jackson, mashing the fastball, while CBC’s At Issue panel was Jesus Ramirez, striking out on the curve in A Ball.
So for Stewart to grant time to an unknown Canadian banker who still thinks Greta Thunberg is relevant was intriguing. Or someone paid someone. In any event, the gotcha’ line from the chat was Carney, formerly governor of the Banks of Canada and the UK and now advisor to PMJT, repeating Stewart’s suggestion that he was the “outsider” in the race to succeed Trudeau.
For most sentient Canadians this was an epic humblebrag for the billionaire son of a former governor of the Bank of Canada whose wife does investment business with Trudeau eminence gris Gerry Butts. If Carney was an outsider what constituted an insider? It was to laugh.
Social media— that part not consumed by the visit of Alberta premier Danielle Smith and gadfly investor Kevin O’Leary to Mar A Lago— boiled with sarcasm and dismissal. Those wily Liberals aren’t going to fool us now, just as we are on the cusp of Pierre Poilievre taking power. No doubt Carney’s team— including PMJT— laughed in derision.
The Liberals culture club think that, if they could pass off Skippy as remotely capable, they can dress up Carney as an outsider for gullible Canadian voters.
But Carney may have accidentally have tripped over the truth. He is now an outsider. You see, the dotty Libs think the machine that selected/ elected Skippy in 2015 still works. CBC, G&M, Macleans, TorStar would decide the candidates and curate the process. Sadly for Butts, Telford and Skippy the Family Compact has been supplanted by social media both here and in the USA.
The turning point of Trump’s victory in the U.S. presidential race was him pivoting away from the staged debates and ponderous Sunday morning shows of legacy media toward not just podcasts by Joe Rogan but also those of under-30 stars such as Theo Von, Adin Ross and Lex Fridman, among many. The cred he gained from the Gen X demo helped him sweep the Dems away. Elon Musk breaking the DEMs censorship strategy on Twitter (now X) also sent a shot at Team Kamala that the game had changed.
While Canada doesn’t have as many counter-culture podcasts as the U.S., there are enough young voters ignoring Canada’s chattering class to bury the Libs under Carney or the rest of the Goof Troop. No one with a pulse and a vote under 50 buys the old rag bag. It’s over for guys as exciting as a carrot expecting to harvest younger Canadians. They’re playing to an empty hall with the bespoke Carney.
This ironic twist is that all this is lost on Woke nobs who brag about their hip sense of humour. Who follow Stewart and MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow to keep up with Trump Derangement. Who record SNL Update to hang on the sophomoric stylings of Michael Ché and Colin Jost. Who can recite extended bits from Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Now they are the punch line. The outrage over the Mar A Lago visit by Smith and O’Leary is a perfect example of their dissociative thinking. The staged pictures had “blood boiling” in many progressives. “@OrbitStudios Jan 13 So… Kevin O’Leary is arrested immediately for treason the next time he sets foot in Canada, correct? I’m absolutely being serious here.” And that’s a mild response.
These armies of Liberal bots fumed over the treachery of talking about the economy with the man about to become the U.S. president again. Awareness much? None of the howler monkeys reacted this way when heroes like PMJT and his cabinet burned clouds of carbon to lobby the eunuchs of WEF, EU and Davos in Europe. They were hot on selling out Canada to the globalist gang’s climate narrative, and they couldn’t get there quickly enough. Crickets from the bot community.
But this is different, of course. Sure. In the past their pals in the Ottawa Press Club could protect these hypocrisies, burying unfortunate stories by segueing to David Suzuki saving seals or Margaret Attwood decrying the medieval treatment of Canadian women in the 21st century.
But social media obliterated the insider game. So much so that Trudeau and his cabinet cronies began banning speech as fast as possible. But it’s too late. Like the ghost leg syndrome, the script to shove an unelected climate crazy into the PMO will seem real to the Libs. But don’t be fooled. The end is nigh for the old way. Just look at Stewart’s ratings to see just how dead it really is.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster. His new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed Hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org. You can see all his books at brucedowbigginbooks.ca.
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