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Direct Mail/Email Fundraising

Posted by Keelan on February 14th, 2007 Comments Leave a Comment

In my opinion, the Conservative Party of Canada is really good at fundraising through direct mail and email.

Living in Ottawa and being in the business I’m in, I’ve attended both Conservative and Liberal party events over the years.  Thus I receive mailings (letter and email) from both parties.

The Conservatives mailings seem to be more frequent (without being an annoyance) and deliver their message quickly and concisely.

The Liberals mailings seem to be less frequent and I tend to find the cover letters longer and not as well crafted.

I don’t have anything to support this, but I understand the Conservatives generate a lot more money through their direct mail fundraising efforts than the Liberals do.

 

More “things that make me wonder about Ottawa”

Posted by Stephen on February 13th, 2007 Comments Leave a Comment

Other than the city’s drivers’ fundamental challenge understanding the concept of merge lanes …

For about seven months now, I have been driving down Metcalfe street every morning to get to our office here at 55 Metcalfe.

And every morning, I find myself surprised, yet again, that there is a dumpster blocking an ENTIRE lane of traffic on Metcalfe — a street where we ban parking before 9 a.m. — at the corner of Metcalfe and Laurier.

I dare not suggest the new hotel — Hotel Indigo – doesn’t need to get renovated, but seven months of a dumpster blocking traffic?

I have two questions about this, given my temperment this morning:

How come I’ve never seen a story about this dumpster, which has been a constant irritant all these months, and

How much does it cost to take up a lane of traffic in Ottawa for seven months? Is there some way for me to find out?

My fear is that the permit to do this is something like $1,000, and therefore next summer we will see a host of RVers finally figuring out it’s cheaper to get a demolition permit and park on the street than it is to go to a campground.

So, to our new mayor, His Worship Larry O’Brien: end the madness, and clear the streets.

UPDATE: This morning, after I wrote this post, the dumpster was magically gone … but my questions remain, and my commitment to pursue them remains undimmed.

Questions whose time have come …

Posted by Stephen on February 13th, 2007 Comments Leave a Comment

I’m a little cantankerous today, and I like to be cranky in a big way, so here goes …

Why does Denmark get to have a colony that’s closer to Canada than it is to Denmark?

Why, for that matter, does France?

Why do trucks have to be on the road during rush hours?

Why would it cost me $10,000 to take my family to Edmonton on ViaRail when it would only cost $2,000 on WestJet?

Why can’t Ottawa maintain a team in a sport other than hockey?  I mean, I love hockey, but it would be great to have a summer sport with a team …

That’s it, for now, since I already feel less bitter, but there will be more …

Why I Like Rick Mercer

Posted by Keelan on February 7th, 2007 Comments 2 Comments

Obviously, I think the guy is funny, and while his show is satirical, I also think he’s a good journalist.  In particular, each week’s ‘Rant’ segment on the Mercer Report, while amusing, usually offers a pretty good view of current events in Canada and provides viewers with something to think about.

Today I came across John Boileau’s column ‘Comic Mercer turns serious’ in the Halifax Daily News.  I hadn’t heard about Noreen Golfman’s letter or Rick’s January 26th response to it until now.

After reading Boileau’s column and tracking down Rick’s submission to The Independent (below), I like the Honorary Colonel of 423 Squadron at 12 Wing Shearwater even more.

I’m glad Rick responded to the Professor’s letter rather than simply ignoring it – well done and well said.

COMIC MERCER TURNS SERIOUS 
Honorary colonel takes aim at nay-saying professor

By John Boildeau
Halifax Daily News
February 7, 2007

Although the Canadian Armed Forces were unified in 1968, a healthy rivalry still exists among the three services. Sailors like to poke fun at soldiers, who in turn look down on air personnel, who make jokes about sailors – and so on.

This week, I was fully prepared to skewer the air force over the appointment of comedian Rick Mercer as the honorary colonel of 423 (Maritime Helicopter) Squadron at 12 Wing Shearwater. Mercer joins other air-force honoraries such as singer Loreena McKennitt and hockey great Guy Lafleur.

In the army, honorary appointments are usually reserved for retired senior officers who have served in the unit concerned and frequently commanded it. Now I could poke fun at the air force for choosing someone without any military experience whatsoever – someone who makes his living by poking fun at others.

My opinion quickly changed when I read a recent letter by Mercer published in The Independent, a St. John’s, N.L., newspaper. It was in response to a Jan. 12 column written by Noreen Golfman, a Memorial University professor. Mercer didn’t just skewer Golfman – he sliced, diced and served her up as chopped liver.

Poor sod’

In her letter, entitled Blowing in the Wind, Golfman sarcastically stated that her Christmas holidays were ruined, because every time she “opened a newspaper or listened to the news,” she was “compelled to reach for the box of tissues.”

She went on: “If it wasn’t a story about some poor sod’s legs being blown off, then it was an extended interview with some dead soldier’s parents.”

Mercer informed Golfman that “the ‘poor sod’ in question” had been a buddy of his for years Cpl. Paul Franklin, a medic. Mercer told Golfman he would “be sure to pass on to him that his lack of legs caused you some personal discomfort this Christmas.”

Mercer apologized for using Franklin’s name so much, but thought it might be nice if Golfman remembered it.

“This way,” he noted, “when you are pontificating about him at a dinner party, you no longer have to refer to him simply as the ‘poor sod,’ but you can actually refer to him as Paul Franklin.”

Golfman referred to the media coverage of Afghanistan as “cranked- up sentimentality,” and bemoaned the lack of criticism of the mission.

“Where,” she wondered, “are the protest songs of yesteryear?”

“Why should Canada honour its United Nations-sanctioned NATO commitments?” Mercer responded, stating he “would welcome debate on the idea that Canada should simply ignore its international obligations and pull out of Afghanistan.”

“Personally,” he added, “I would have thought that as a professor of women’s studies, you would be somewhat supportive of the notion of a NATO presence in Afghanistan … In case you missed it, Noreen, the Taliban was a regime that systematically de-peopled women to the point where they had no human rights whatsoever. This was a country where, until very recently, it was illegal for a child to fly a kite, or for a little girl to receive any education.”

Mercer expanded on this point: “To put it in terms you might understand, Noreen, rest assured the Taliban would frown on your attending this year’s opening night gala of the St. John’s International Women’s Film Festival,” and “would probably want to kill you three or four times over.”

‘Hug the troops’

Golfman saved her most biting criticism for Mercer.

“Just when did the worm turn?” she asked. “When was it suddenly acceptable for your garden-variety progressive, satire-loving celebrity to hug the troops, praise military actions and pass the ammunition, without so much as a hint of dissent?”

Mercer replied: “This worm has been doing this for a long time now, ” adding, “I am an entertainer, and entertainers entertain.”

Golfman ended by noting it was hard to see how the road to peace “can be paved with military offensives” and “there is something deeply disturbing about the unquestioning belief that it can.”

“In many instances in history, peace has been achieved exactly that way,” Mercer retorted. “The gates of Auschwitz were not opened with peace talks. Holland was not liberated by peacekeepers and fascism was not defeated with a deft pen. Time and time again, men and women in uniform have laid down their lives in just causes and in an effort to free others from oppression.”

Mercer ended his letter by stating: “It is unfortunate, Noreen, that in such instances people like yourself may have your sensitivities offended, especially during the holiday season, but perhaps that is a small price to pay.”

Well said, Col. Rick.

Here’s the full text of Rick’s January 26th submission to The Independent in response to Professor Golfman’s letter.

Poor Noreen Golfman. She wrote in her Jan. 12 column (Blowing in the Wind … ) that her holidays were ruined by what she felt were incessant reports about Canadian men and women serving in Afghanistan. So upset was Noreen that, armed with her legendary pen, sharpened from years in the trenches at Memorial University’s women’s studies department, she went on the attack. I know I should just ignore the good professor and write her off as another bitter baby boom academic pining for what she fondly calls “the protest songs of yesteryear,” but I can’t help myself. A response is exactly what she wants; and so I include it here. After all, Newfoundlanders have seen this before: Noreen Golfman, sadly, is Margaret Wente without the wit.

Dear Noreen,

I am so sorry to hear about the interruption to your holiday cheer. You say in your column that it all started when the CBC ran a story on some “poor sod” who got his legs blown off in Afghanistan.

The “poor sod” in question, Noreen, has a name and it is Cpl. Paul Franklin. He is a medic in the Forces and has been a buddy of mine for years. I had dinner with him last week in Edmonton, in fact. I will be sure to pass on to him that his lack of legs caused you some personal discomfort this Christmas.

Paul is a pretty amazing guy. You would like him I think. When I met him years ago he had two good legs and a brutally funny sense of humour. He was so funny that I was pretty sure he was a Newfoundlander. You probably know the type (or maybe you don’t) — salt of the earth, always smiling, and like so many health-care professionals, seemingly obsessed with helping others in need.

These days he spends his time training other health-care workers and learning how to walk again. That’s a pretty exhausting task for Paul … heading into rehabilitation he knew very well his chances of walking again were next to none, considering he’s a double amputee, missing both legs above the knee.

At the risk of ruining your day Noreen, I’m proud to report that for the last few months he has managed to walk his son to school almost every morning and it’s almost a kilometre from his house. Next month Paul hopes to travel to Washington where he claims he will learn how to run on something he calls “bionic flipper cheetah feet.” The legs may be gone but the sense of humour is still very much intact.

Forgive me Noreen for using Paul’s name so much, but seeing as you didn’t catch it when CBC ran the profile on his recovery I thought it might be nice if you perhaps bothered to remember it from here on in. This way, when you are pontificating about him at a dinner party, you no longer have to refer to him simply as the “poor sod,” but you can actually refer to him as Paul Franklin. You may prefer “poor sod” of course; it’s all a matter of how you look at things. You see a “poor sod” that ruined your Christmas and I see a truly inspiring guy. That’s why I am thrilled that the CBC saw fit to run a story on Paul and his wife Audra. I would go so far as to suggest that many people would find their story, their marriage and their charitable endeavours inspiring. Just as I am sure that many readers of The Independent are inspired by your suggestion that Paul’s story has no place on the public broadcaster.

Further on in your column you ask why more people aren’t questioning Canada’s role in Afghanistan. I understand this frustration. It’s a good question. Why should Canada honour its United Nations-sanctioned NATO commitments? Let’s have the discussion. I would welcome debate on the idea that Canada should simply ignore its international obligations and pull out of Afghanistan. By all means ask the questions Noreen, but surely such debates can occur without begrudging the families of injured soldiers too much airtime at Christmas?

Personally, I would have thought that as a professor of women’s studies you would be somewhat supportive of the notion of a NATO presence in Afghanistan. After all, it is the NATO force that is keeping the Taliban from power. In case you missed it Noreen, the Taliban was a regime that systematically de-peopled women to the point where they had no human rights whatsoever. This was a country where until very recently it was illegal for a child to fly a kite or for a little girl to receive any education.

To put it in terms you might understand Noreen, rest assured the Taliban would frown on your attending this year’s opening night gala of the St. John’s International Women’s Film Festival. In fact, as a woman, a professor, a writer and (one supposes) an advocate of the concept that women are people, they would probably want to kill you three or four times over. Thankfully that notion is moot in our cozy part of the world but were it ever come to pass I would suggest that you would be grateful if a “poor sod” like Paul Franklin happened along to risk his life to protect yours.

And then of course you seem to be somehow personally indignant that I would visit troops in Afghanistan over Christmas. You ask the question “When did the worm turn?” Well I hate to break it to you, but in my case this worm has been doing this for a long time now. It’s been a decade since I visited Canadian peacekeeping operations in Bosnia and this Christmas marked my third trip to Afghanistan. Why do I do it? Well I am not a soldier — that much is perfectly clear. I don’t have the discipline or the skills. But I am an entertainer and entertainers entertain. And occasionally, like most Canadians, I get to volunteer my professional time to causes that I find personally satisfying.

As a Newfoundlander this is very personal to me. On every one of these trips I meet Newfoundlanders who serve proudly in the Canadian Forces. Every day they do the hard work that we as a nation ask of them. They do this without complaint and they do it knowing that at every turn there are people like you, Noreen, suggesting that what they do is somehow undignified or misguided.

I am also curious Noreen why you refer to the head of the Canadian Forces, General Rick Hillier, as “Rick ‘MUN graduate’ Hillier.” I would suggest that if you wish to criticize General Hillier’s record of leadership or service to his country you should feel free. He is a big boy. However, when you dismiss him as “Rick ‘MUN Graduate’ Hillier” the message is loud and clear. Are you suggesting that because General Hillier received an education at Memorial he is somehow unqualified for high command? We are used to seeing this type of tactic in certain national papers — not The Independent.

You end by saying you personally cannot envision that peace can ever be paved with military offensives. May I suggest to you that in many instances in history peace has been achieved exactly that way.

The gates of Auschwitz were not opened with peace talks. Holland was not liberated by peacekeepers and fascism was not defeated with a deft pen. Time and time again men and women in uniform have laid down their lives in just causes and in an effort to free others from oppression.

It is unfortunate, Noreen, that in such instances people like yourself may have your sensitivities offended, especially during the holiday season, but perhaps that is a small price to pay. Best wishes for the remainder of 2007; may it be a year of peace and prosperity.

Why, dear City of Gatineau, does my car attract your affections so …

Posted by Stephen on January 25th, 2007 Comments 2 Comments

Let me start off by saying this: I like heading across the river to Gatineau — I worked there for a year, and I enjoy the restaurants, Gatineau Park, and the whole ambiance.

What doesn’t thrill me is the idea that, as someone driving a car with Ontario plates, I think I am much more likely to get a parking ticket, or to get stopped for traffic violations, than someone with plates from la Belle Province.

A night two weeks ago was the final straw — I pulled into a Gatineau parking lot at 6:30 p.m., paid the meter, put my ticket in the window, and then, when I came out two hours later with time left on my purchased ticket, there it was — a parking ticket from Le Ville de Gatineau.

This one followed on one from the week before Christmas, when I got one as I was parked in a row of cars, all with expired meters (including mine, I confess), but the one car — the only car out of at least 15 — in the parking garage two weeks ago with a parking ticket on it?  Mine, with the Ontario plate.

Do I view this as a grand conspiracy?  I do not.  But it does drive me nuts that I got two tickets in a month in situations that I felt indicated unfair treatment from a friend and neighbour.  If every car in the line had gotten a ticket last month, I probably would have put down this month’s ticket as an accident.  Instead, this month’s ticket led to this post — and a request:

Am I wrong, or do others perceive the folks on the other side of the river as quickdraws with parking tickets for out-of-province plates?

The only time I’ve ever been pulled over in what I have to say was a random fashion (I wasn’t speeding that time, cop just asked to see my licence and registration, then he wished me a good day) was in Montreal, and the only time I’ve ever been pulled over out of a line of cars in the fast lane was just outside Quebec City.

I won’t be paying this current parking ticket — I’m sending a copy of my paid receipt, and the ticket, to the mayor’s office, and to the ticket folks, but it still irks me that I feel like I was deliberately targetted, in a parking garage, because of the province of origin of my car.

Just a thought — it wouldn’t kill us, on both sides of this provincial border, to be a little more neghbourly to each other this winter …
Let me close with this free advice to Le Ville de Gatineau: when I was younger, the City of Charlottetown decided not to ticket out of province plates with parking tickets for meter violations in downtown (they stopped after a couple of years, but the principle was, I believe, sound and correct).  Instead, they issued a “Welcome to Charlottetown” ticket, wishing the visitor all the best in Charlottetown and reminding them to please pay the meters but we did hope they enjoyed their stay …

Naming files/attachments

Posted by Keelan on January 22nd, 2007 Comments 1 Comment

Why can’t people name their files/attachments properly?

Whether its a Word document, an Excel spreadsheet, a photo/image, a PDF, whatever… given it a name that identifies what it is, to everyone, not just you.  How hard is that?

I just got an email with a file attached that I needed to save.  It was called ‘DEF_CA_MKit_07.pdf”.  So, of course, I needed to rename it to save in on our system so my colleagues and I would be able to find it later without having to open it to know what it was.

The attachment was a 2007 media kit/ad rate sheet for a Canadian publication.  We’re going to get a whole bunch of these over the next few weeks.

Why didn’t they name the file ‘Name of Publication – Canada Media Kit – 2007′ or something like that?  It would have taken the same length of time – seconds.

My particular favourite is when people send photos that clearly have been labelled with the default name given when downloaded from the camera (e.g. IMG021.jpg).  Come on!  Rename the thing before you send it out!  And it wouldn’t kill you to put a date on it.