WhatFinger

Arthur Weinreb

Arthur Weinreb is an author, columnist and Associate Editor of Canada Free Press. Arthur's latest book, Ford Nation: Why hundreds of thousands of Torontonians supported their conservative crack-smoking mayor is available at Amazon. Racism and the Death of Trayvon Martin is also available at Smashwords. His work has appeared on Newsmax.com, Drudge Report, Foxnews.com.

Older articles (2007) by Arthur Weinreb

Most Recent Articles by Arthur Weinreb:



The tree that couldn’t die

Perry Thompson and his wife Nora Graham had a problem. The roots of a large Norway maple got into the foundation of their home causing damage to the pipes, walls and floors.
- Friday, February 1, 2008

Blue hair and flip-flops

Proper modes of dress have been in the news lately. The city council of Vaughan; “the city above Toronto” where overtaxed Toronto businesses flee for refuge, recently debated a proper dress code for municipal employees. During a heated vote on Monday, the dress code passed and such attire as vinyl, tube tops and miniskirts are out. Boo hoo hoo cried some of the city councillors.
- Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Banning drive-throughs: we have to keep just one

A British Columbia municipal councillor introduced a motion to ban drive-through businesses from opening in his bailiwick of North Vancouver. The proposed bylaw also calls for preventing the only existing drive-through restaurant from ever expanding.
- Monday, January 28, 2008

Toll roads – at least we voted for them

The Residential and Civil Construction Alliance of Ontario has released a report this week on reducing gridlock in and around the province’s major centres. The report, written by Trent University Professor Harry Kitchen, recommends that tolls be imposed on the 400 series of highways, major expressways and just about any other road that Dalton’s little heart desires.
- Thursday, January 24, 2008

Keeping American guns out of Canada

In less than a week, two innocent Toronto men were shot to death in the city that was once known as Toronto the Good. First, 42-year-old John O’Keefe was shot while returning from a few drinks at his favourite pub. As he was walking past a Yonge Street strip club, a couple of patrons that had been ejected from one of A-Rod’s favourite haunts fired in an attempt to hit the club’s bouncer. Two arrests were quickly made.
- Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Young jihadis are now “criminals”

Last week, the U.K. announced that they will take steps in an attempt to prevent young Muslims from becoming radicalized. It has been apparent for some time in the West that murder and mayhem from Islamic terrorists is just as likely to emanate from the so-called home grown terrorists as they are from those in the Middle East.
- Monday, January 21, 2008

Increased user fees: what’s not to understand?

The city of Toronto recently announced an increase in user fees in some of the city’s recreational programs. Never being satisfied to resort to half measures when it comes to parting residents from their hard earned money, councillors will raise fees this year by a whopping 21 per cent. These fees will then be increased a further 10 per cent per year for the next six years.
- Friday, January 11, 2008

John Tory: Ontario’s Hillary Clinton

Ontario Progressive Conservative leader John Tory has something in common with US presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. No, it’s not their political philosophy, although that would be a good guess.
- Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Ontario:  another private property grab on the way

A recent study has shown that the incidence of drinking and driving is on the increase in Canada. It is no surprise that this fact elicited a response from Ontario Provincial Police Commissioner Julian Fantino.
- Monday, January 7, 2008

It’s cold out there – so let’s fix it

Currently Toronto and much of eastern Canada is in a deep freeze. The temperature in some areas is close to -20 degrees Celsius (4 F). The temperature combined with strong winds makes it just a tad nippy out there.
- Friday, January 4, 2008

 Canada readies to give U.S. deserters refuge

Since the start of the Iraq war in 2003, U.S. military deserters have been trickling into Canada and seeking refugee status, arguing that they face persecution if returned to the United States.
- Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Drinking, driving and zero tolerance

The Traffic Research Foundation, a Canadian organization, released a report that the percentage of Canadians who drive while exceeding the legal limit of alcohol in their blood is 8.2 per cent; significantly higher than the 5.6 per cent that did so in 2004. According to the Foundation, 90 per cent of people who drink and drive do so regularly.
- Monday, December 31, 2007

Mulroney-Schreiber: Forget the public inquiry

One of these days, Canada will be headed by a really fiscally conservative government. And the first thing that that government will do when they come into office is to have a public inquiry into why we have so many public inquiries.
- Wednesday, December 26, 2007

John Tory:  Why is it even a question?

A recent Nanos Research/Sun Media poll was taken that asked whether Ontario Progressive Conservative leader John Tory should stay or go. The respondents were evenly split; 39 per cent thought Tory should stay on as leader while the same percentage felt he should be replaced. Presumably the remaining 22 per cent; much like the way Tory ran the last election campaign didn’t have a clue.
- Monday, December 24, 2007

 2008:  The year of the nanny state

We are already living in a nanny state where governments at all levels take great delight in forcing people to live the way they want them to live; for their own good, you understand.
- Friday, December 21, 2007

The NDP: Democracy and the transgendered

Micheline Montreuil, a Quebec lawyer and former professor won the NDP nomination earlier this year to be the party’s candidate in a Quebec City riding. But recently, the party’s Quebec election planning committee voted to terminate her candidacy.
- Wednesday, December 19, 2007


The cost of the second Picton trial

Five years ago British Columbia pig farmer Robert Picton was arrested and charged with the murders of prostitutes who had gone missing from the Vancouver area. When all was said and done, Picton faced 27 counts (one was subsequently thrown out) of first degree murder making him potentially the worst serial killer in Canadian history.
- Wednesday, December 12, 2007

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