WhatFinger

Beryl Wajsman

Beryl Wajsman is President of the Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal editor-in-chief of The Suburban newspapers, and publisher of The Métropolitain.

Older articles by Beryl Wajsman

Most Recent Articles by Beryl Wajsman:

Perfidy: the un and the goldstone libel

"Every day at the U.N., on every side, we are assailed because we are a democracy. In the U.N. today there are in the range of several dozen democracies left; totalitarian regimes and assorted ancient and modern despotisms make up all the rest.
- Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Iran - Anvil of Crisis

Every now and then the world kicks us all in our lethargic posteriors and we have to wake up. We are in such a time now. The revelations last week that Iran may be some sixty days away from having the enriched uranium capacity to have nuclear weapons capability, led Presidents Obama and Sarkozy and Prime Minister Brown to raise the alarm at the Pittsburgh G-20. Fen Hampson, director of Ottawa’s Norman Patterson School of International Affairs and a man not given to hyperbole, stated on Sunday that the current confrontation can be paralleled with the thirteen days of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Sadly, the world had plenty of warning, and did nothing.
- Wednesday, September 30, 2009

30 Canadian lawyers challenge biased UN Goldstone report

Thirty Canadian lawyers are challenging the refusal of a U.N. investigator to step down from an inquiry on the recent Gaza conflict, arguing that London School of Economics professor Christine #’s participation on the panel — after she declared Israel guilty prior to seeing any evidence — “necessarily compromises the integrity of this inquiry and its report.”
- Wednesday, September 16, 2009

The Big Green Lies

In the movie Wall Street, Michael Douglas’ character Gordon Gekko makes the point to his young protégé Bud Fox, played by Charlie Sheen, that the road to acceptance with many rich people lies in contributing money to zoos. There are many among the wealthy, Gekko said, who love animals far more than people.
- Sunday, August 9, 2009

No honour in murder

We need to take a step back and think about the use of the term “honour killings”. It has been much in the news of late as the horror of the deaths of the Shafia sisters sinks in.
- Monday, August 3, 2009

Kip

I’ve often said that the word vacation doesn’t exist in my life. I feel privileged to be able to do advocacy and journalism . You get used to not having normal routines. Perhaps I never wanted them in the first place. So you live your life out there – on the edge - available, attackable, accessible. And you get used to pretty much all sorts of tragic stories and appeals. But every now and then there is one that not only ignites a fury that propels you to act, but also floods you with sadness that moves you to reflect.
- Sunday, August 2, 2009

Tehran matters

The pictures flood us. They flood us with pride, poignancy and pathos. A people struggling to be free. The images come from around the world. From citizens of Tehran confronting the terror of theocratic tyrants, to students marching in the streets of Paris to Montrealers — some using walkers — standing up and being counted. The palpable reality of mankind’s transcendent yearning for redemptive change.
- Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The arrogance of authority

We have written passionately and often about the demonization of Montreal’s citizens by city authorities. The usual subjects concern nanny-state rule and regulation that seek to change our personal behaviour and taxes it through fines if we misbehave. The rules pummel us into infantilism and self-abnegation to the point where some of us actually think we are guilty of something even when we are not.
- Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Tour de WHAT?

Amidst the cattle corral cacophony that pervaded much of Montreal the past several weekends, serious questions arise about the salubriousness of bicycles and the sagesse of elected officials who champion their use — and abuse.
- Saturday, June 13, 2009

Where will it stop?

We have railed against the control state mentality of government for quite some time now. We have warned that the slippery slope of politically correct social engineering policies and politics is steep and swift in its descent into nothingness. Our use of the term nanny-state has become so ubiquitous that many said we were out of touch with the “new” Quebec.
- Friday, June 12, 2009

Montreal’s demonization of Bela Kosoian

When we crawled out of the mists of the jungles of history to create communities – villages, the origin of cities - it was not out of what today’s politically correct zeitgeist would consider a noble purpose. It was done out of selfishness. As it happens, one of mankind’s more creative instincts if husbanded properly.
- Thursday, May 21, 2009

They don’t even pretend anymore

Though we can’t be surprised anymore, we still need to condemn. The World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, commonly called Durban II, opened Monday in Geneva. Durban I, eight years ago, at least had the veneer of “respectability” however quickly disabused by the contents. This year’s incarnation didn’t even pretend. How could it? Two gangster regimes — Iran and Libya — co-chaired and co-organized it. The result was as anticipated. But the date was filled with pathos.
- Friday, April 24, 2009

Canada in Afghanistan

It was a mistake from the beginning to allow the recognition of state faith into Afghanistan’s constitution. It was an even greater error to allow the organization of faith-based political parties. Now the west’s encounter with Afghanistan will be put to an important test. And Canada has a profound role to play.
- Thursday, April 9, 2009

Broken promises: The Ala Morales affair

We can assume that the intentions of legislators and regulators have some socially redeeming intent. Our problems as citizens occur when laws and regulations are passed and the details of implementation are left to bureaucrats.
- Monday, March 23, 2009

The Israel ‘Apartheid’ lies

”Israel is not South Africa” ~Prof.Edward Said, author of “Orientalism” "The false equation of Zionism with racism is simply an Arab ploy to take the focus off of the real enemies of humanity. Zionism is a healthy form of nationalism." - Edward H. Brown, Jr., former chief United Nations representative for the Congress of Racial Equality
- Friday, March 13, 2009

The illiberal democracy of collective rights

Montreal lawyer Stéphane Handfield represents a U.S. citizen who is Cuban-born and who applied in English for immigrant status in July after arriving here from the United States. In December, he hired Handfield as his lawyer.
- Monday, March 9, 2009

The rock of our recovery

Martin Luther King, Jr. once wrote that, “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and adversity.” The same could very well be said of society. And particularly of our society today amidst the financial tribulations we face.
- Sunday, March 8, 2009

Let’s help real people, not fund fake profits

The current frenzy of economic stimulus packages sweeping around us like so many forest fires will not — and more importantly, should not — work. The reasons are threefold. First, they are stimulating the perpetuation of a false economy that has caused nightmares for tens of millions. Second, the packages are based on outdated Depression-era models without taking into consideration today’s much different realities. And third, they provide insufficient protection to get people through the tough three to seven years that are to come.
- Thursday, February 5, 2009

R-E-S-P-E-C-T

So, the Montreal police would like a by-law to enforce respect for them, especially at those nasty hours in the middle of the night when the clubs let out. It must be a harrowing experience to be called bad, bad names by inebriated citizens. My, my, my.
- Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Echoes of darker evils


“A little sincerity is a dangerous thing and a lot of it is absolutely fatal.” ~ Oscar Wilde The next time labour leaders in Canada want to know why there is such antipathy to their agenda in many quarters, they need look no further than the Canadian Union of Public Employees’ Ontario wing. Over the past ten days its president, Sid Ryan, has been up to his anti-Israel agitation for the second time in 30 months. This time he wants a boycott of Israeli academic institutions.
- Thursday, January 29, 2009

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