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Dr. seuss

Friday December 16, 2022

December 15, 2022 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Friday December 16, 2022

‘Stand on the side of the common people,’ Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre tells caucus

In a speech to his caucus ahead of the holidays, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said it is his party’s job to “stand on the side of the common people.”

Ahead of a closed-door meeting, Poilievre spoke to Conservative parliamentarians in front of the media, telling his MPs and senators that it is their job as the Official Opposition “always to stand on the side of the common people.”

“Their paycheques, their savings, their homes, their country,” Poilievre said, asking his caucus to spend some time during the break reflecting on how Conservatives can do that in the new year.

“I hope you have a wonderful break with your families, a time to renew and rebuild your energy to come back in fighting form on behalf of Canadians,” Poilievre said. “But it’s also a time over Christmas to think of the less fortunate, those who have less, those who are struggling more. Unfortunately, those people are more numerous than ever before.”

September 3, 2021

During his remarks, delivered first in French and then in English, the Conservative leader capped off his first fall sitting at the helm of the party by delivering a laundry list of ways he thinks Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the federal Liberals are failing.

From the cost-of-living crunch prompting some Canadians to turn to food banks, to young Canadians “stuck in their parents’ basements” because of housing unaffordability, Poilievre called for “legal limits” on federal spending to try to bring down inflation.

“The cost of government is driving up the cost of living,” he said, repeating one of his most-used talking points since becoming party leader.

Poilievre also spoke about public safety concerns, from the growing number of drug overdoses in Canada, to the ongoing contention over the Liberals’ gun control legislation Bill C-21 and their push to considerably expand the number of firearms that would be prohibited.

September 5, 2019

“So instead of putting time, money, and resources into attacking Indigenous people, hunters and farmers, Conservatives will protect those people’s rights and go after the real criminals to keep Canadians safe,” said Poilievre.

The Conservative leader also spoke about his concerns over the state of the Canadian health-care system, which he said was coming apart “at the seams.”

“It boils my blood to sit in a waiting room with my daughter, who’s got from time to time a migraine headache, while she waits and waits along with the other little children because of doctor shortages,” he said. Poilievre vowed that if his party was in power he’d work with the provinces to allow more qualified immigrants to practice medicine, more quickly.

“It is true that Canadians are hurting, but it is our job as the Official Opposition to turn that hurt into hope. To inspire people that a real improvement in their lives is possible, that the dream that brought them here as immigrants or the dream with which they were raised when they were born here, can be rekindled,” Poilievre said. “That is our purpose my friends.” (CTV) 

 

Posted in: Canada Tagged: 2022-42, Canada, Common People, Conservative, Dr. seuss, Grinch, Jagmeet Singh, Justin Trudeau, NDP, parody, party, Pierre Poilievre, slogan

Wednesday November 21, 2018

November 28, 2018 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Wednesday November 21, 2018

With no labour deal in sight, Canada Post warns of delivery delays into January

Canada Post says Canadians can expect delays of parcel and mail delivery into 2019 as a result of rotating strikes by its employees.

And it says the worst delays will likely be in southern and southwestern Ontario because of a backlog of hundreds of transport trailers sitting idle at its main Toronto sorting facility.

The Crown corporation has told its commercial customers that it cannot honour its delivery standards for any product because of the prolonged strikes.

The walkouts have created massive backlogs of mail and parcels just days before an expected rush of millions more parcels from Black Friday and Cyber Monday online sales.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau today repeated his call for both sides in the dispute to resolve their differences soon.

But he gave no indications that his government is prepared to force postal workers back to their jobs yet, saying only that he wants a deal, and that the government is considering what it can do to put an end to the labour dispute.

“We are, of course, very preoccupied with the fact that Christmas is coming, important shopping days are coming and we need to see a resolution to that,” Trudeau said as he arrived in Ottawa for a meeting with his cabinet.

“As I’ve said many times, all options are on the table,” he added when asked whether he was prepared to table back-to-work legislation.

Canada Post is dealing with a fifth week of rotating strikes by its unionized workers as both sides remain apart on contract negotiations. (Source: CTV News) 

 

Posted in: Canada Tagged: Canada, christmas, Dr. seuss, Grinch, letters, post office, postal service, presents, strike

Saturday, May 4, 2013

May 4, 2013 by Graeme MacKay

Saturday, May 4, 2013By Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Saturday, May 4, 2013

Ontario budget great politics. But does it make sense?

Ontario’s new budget may have squared enough political circles to keep Premier Kathleen Wynne’s government alive. But is it a credible economic blueprint for the province? That’s a different question.

The political question will eventually be solved by Andrea Horwath’s New Democrats. On Thursday, the NDP leader carefully hedged on whether her party would support Finance Minister Charles Sousa’s budget, saying she wanted to have “discussions” with Ontarians first.

But suppose for a moment that the NDP ultimately refuses to join Tim Hudak’s Conservatives in bringing down the Liberal minority government.

Suppose for a moment that Thursday’s budget is meant to be a serious document and not just something designed to let the Liberals live another day. What then?

First, note that this is ultimately a restraint budget. Wynne, like her predecessor Dalton McGuinty, has drunk the metaphorical Kool-Aid of the right, insisting that the only way out of the economic slump is to balance Ontario’s budget by 2018.

The Liberals have agreed to new spending demanded by the NDP. But they have also pledged to let overall spending grow on average by less than 1 per cent a year.

Translation: the new NDP spending increases are to be offset by unspecified cuts somewhere else. (Source: Toronto Star)

Posted in: Ontario Tagged: Andrea Horwath, Budget, Dr. seuss, Editorial Cartoon, Horton Hears a Who, Kathleen Wynne, monster, Ontario, Tim Hudak

Saturday, March 17, 2007

March 17, 2007 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, Hamilton Spectator – Saturday, March 17, 2007

Tim Hortons contest a litterbug

Rolling up the rim of your morning cuppa might win you an SUV, but critics say it is the environment that loses.

Tim Hortons customers across Canada began peeling back the lips of their coffee cups yesterday as the fast-food giant rolled out its annual Roll Up the Rim to Win contest.

But some environmentalists say what has become a beloved Canadian ritual since its introduction in 1986 promotes waste and propagates littering.

“People buy more cups of coffee and if they don’t win, they’ll just toss it,” said Don Dick, Alberta director of Pitch In Canada, a national non-profit organization concerned about the proliferation of packaging and its effects on the landscape.

“If they want people to buy their product, there’s better ways to go about it. [The cup] doesn’t melt down or disappear into our environment when it’s tossed away. I just fills up our garbage more and it also eats up our paper to make it.”

Mr. Dick suggests the company should turn to small scratch cards instead of using treated paper cups for the promotion and launch more customer-awareness campaigns. (Source: GPI Atlantic) 


Another one of my occasional society lifestyle rants. This one’s on those discarded roll up the rim cups you see all over the place in any urban space. It seems as though it’s a national issue according to this CBC Nova Scotia news clip I found. I’m not alone in my disgust it seems.

Here’s a shocking display of a pile of cups collected in one day at the University of Western Ontario.

Here’s an article about someone who at least used the losing cups to create art. Be sure to check out the photos. Can’t you just imagine that dried horton’s coffee smell?

It seems as though Tim Horton’s is concerned. At least they were 2 years ago.

* * * UPDATE March 15, 2008 * * *

FEEDBACK

Re: Editorial cartoon (March 15)

Yes, it’s that time of year again, when melting snow discloses just how many Tim Hortons cups have been tossed on the ground over the winter.

What a shame that so many people treat their city this way.

Don’t they realize that, in Hamilton, the cups, serviettes, food remains and tea bags belong in the green cart and the No. 6 plastic lids belong in the blue box for containers?

– Mary Lou Dickson (March 18, 2008)


I am SO disappointed in this roll up rim bull, that I’ve boycotted Tim’s from my daily lunch at work. The only thing is I work night shift and Tims is the only place open! So now I’m anorexic. ROLL UP THE RIM MADE ME ANOREXIC!

I rolled over 12 cups and didn’t win anything, (1 in 9 chance my foot!) so I emailed Tim’s and they comforted me with “thanks for your letter, keep on rolling, good luck” ! >:( How Rude.

– A (April 19, 2008)

Posted in: Canada, Hamilton Tagged: commentary, Dr. seuss, Feedback, Horton Hears a Who, litter, Roll up the rim, Spring, Tim Horton's

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This website contains satirical commentaries of current events going back several decades. Some readers may not share this sense of humour nor the opinions expressed by the artist. To understand editorial cartoons it is important to understand their effectiveness as a counterweight to power. It is presumed readers approach satire with a broad minded foundation and healthy knowledge of objective facts of the subjects depicted.

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