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:


Canadians aren’t buying Dion’s carbon tax

A recently released Strategic Counsel commissioned by the Globe and Mail and CTV shows that the number of Canadians who think that the environment is the number one issue has fallen. According to the Globe and Mail, the environment dropped to third place from first last year with the high cost of gasoline and the economy generally overtaking it. Only 16% of those polled consider the environment the numero uno issue.
- Monday, June 30, 2008

Is David Caplan “fit” to be Health Minister?

A mini-cabinet shuffle was required last week after Energy Minister Gerry Phillips resigned from that portfolio for personal reasons. Furious George Smitherman went from health to energy, which was given a new super duper name so it would not look like George was being demoted. David Caplan replaced Smitherman as Minister of Health.          
- Thursday, June 26, 2008


Who’s responsible for Toronto’s gun violence?

As most everyone knows, Toronto Mayor David Miller is pushing to ban guns within the city of Toronto. The mayor’s proposals go so far as to use bylaws to ban gun clubs and the manufacturing of firearms within the city’s boundaries. These proposals, of course are aimed at law abiding citizens since guns in the hands of criminals are already banned because they are illegal under the Criminal Code. But banning guns sure sounds good when preaching to the converted. Within the last week, the following shootings have taken place in Canada’s largest city that was once known as “Toronto the Good”.
- Thursday, June 19, 2008

Memories of a justice system gone wrong

Last week, Ontario Superior Court Justice David McCombs ordered the taped interview of schoolgirl killer Paul Bernardo released to the public in its entirety.
- Monday, June 16, 2008

Bob Rae speaks for “President Obama”?

In a statement last week, Liberal MP Bob Rae showed how desperate the once mighty Natural Governing Party is these days. Rae said that Stephen Harper and the Conservatives are in deep doo-doo if Barack Obama wins the presidency next November because of the NAFTA leak that occurred earlier this year. It was leaked that Obama has no intention of renegotiating NAFTA and only said that he would in attempt to gain votes in states such as Michigan that have lost manufacturing jobs. Rae indicated that a President Obama would not be too pleased with the Conservatives which the former NDP Ontario premier referred to as “a Republican farm team”.
- Monday, June 9, 2008

 Toronto “if it only saves one life” crowd rides again

Toronto beachesThe city of Toronto has passed a bylaw controlling in-ground swimming pools. The new bylaw imposes the toughest standards in North America and will require all new in-ground pools to be fenced in on all four sides. And new fencing that is constructed around existing in-ground swimming pools will likewise be required to be placed around the entire pool. The purpose of course is to prevent people, especially small children from wandering into pools and drowning. Perhaps this bylaw is not all bad. All of the so called legal owners of in-ground swimming pools should consider themselves lucky that the social engineers haven’t passed a bylaw that would make these pools illegal. After all, more people have drowned in these Toronto pools than have been shot to death by legal gun owners. Thank you, City Hall.
- Thursday, June 5, 2008

“Gun-toting Yanks” not welcome in Toronto

Adam Vaughan, Guns, Americans Toronto mayor David Miller announced measures to be taken to keep legally owned guns out of Toronto, last week. The proposal calls for the use of zoning and other bylaws to prevent new gun clubs, firing ranges and firearm manufacturers from opening within city limits. The city also intends to cancel leases that Toronto holds with two gun clubs and it will be illegal for anyone to store firearms anywhere within Toronto’s boundaries. As a justification for these measures, the mayor points to the murder of John O’Keefe a few months ago. O’Keefe was innocently walking by a strip club on Toronto’s main street when he was killed by a disgruntled patron who was trying to take out a bouncer.
- Monday, June 2, 2008

Knife crime ignored while Toronto goes after legal gun owners

A week ago, Britain’s second most senior judge called for tougher sentences for knife crimes including that of simply carrying a dangerous blade. Sir Igor Judge said that crimes involving the use of knives were reaching “epidemic proportions” in Britain and that attacks where knives were the weapon of choice “have recently escalated”. According to figures from the Home Office for 2006, of 1,226 young people (under the age of 18) that were found guilty of carrying a knife, only 72 of them served any jail time.
- Thursday, May 29, 2008

Carbon taxes – even Jack Layton gets it

Last Thursday, NDP leader Jack Layton spoke at a fundraiser for an Ottawa homeless shelter. Layton took the opportunity to slam Stéphane Dion and the Liberals for their election plank of imposing carbon taxes on Canadians. The socialist greenie incurred the wrath of his global warming co-religionists when he spoke out against taxing all Canadians in order to save the planet.
- Monday, May 26, 2008

A perfect example of a government in action

Tomb of the Unknown SoldierAn interesting article appeared earlier this week in the National Post about the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Dr. Michael Pilon, a retired army major, has been trying to get the federal government to do something to protect the integrity of the monument. Pilon was the man who filmed a young person urinating on the Tomb on Canada Day two years ago. That incident caused an uproar throughout the country. Pilon has noted that many people use the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier as a bench and he’s found people fast asleep on the grave. One problem is that there is little signage and poor demarcation of what exactly the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is.
- Thursday, May 22, 2008

Dion misreads the public

Liberal leader Stéphane Dion finally announced to no one’s surprise that a carbon tax will be a central part of the party’s platform during the next election campaign. Taxes will rise on such products as home heating oil (but not gasoline) to discourage Canadians from emitting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, not to mention discouraging them from heating their homes.
- Monday, May 19, 2008

National security – it’s now a private matter

Recently facts began to emerge about the former girlfriend of Foreign Affairs Minister, Maxime Bernier. It has now come to light that 38-year-old Julie Couillard was associated with members of biker gangs.
- Wednesday, May 14, 2008


Eco-anxiety – a condition whose time has come

A recent Harris/Decima poll asked Canadians how they felt about the environment. The poll relied on respondents completing online questionnaires that may have resulted in responses different than if it was conducted by the usual telephone polling. The pollster received responses from 10,000 Canadians. Over three quarters (76 per cent) of those who filled in the questionnaire believe that the environment is not simply a fad and will be a dominant issue for years to come.
- Wednesday, May 7, 2008

The TTC is not an essential service

At some point, Toronto City Council will debate a motion to request that the provincial government declare Toronto’s transit system an essential service. The introduction of the motion follows the strike that didn’t materialize after a last minute tentative agreement that was reached and then the walkout with no notice when the employees failed to ratify it.
- Monday, May 5, 2008

The “why bother” society

Earlier this month, a British think tank, Reform, released a report entitled, “Shifting the unequal state: From public apathy to personal capability”. Reform describes itself on its website as “…an independent, charitable, non-party think tank whose mission is to set out a better way to deliver public services and economic prosperity.”
- Thursday, May 1, 2008


The Liberals – caught between a rock and a hard place

British peer Lord Desai was recently quoted as saying of his prime minister, “Gordon Brown was put on earth to remind people how good Tony Blair was”. The time will shortly come, if it is not already here that the same thing will be said of Liberal leader Stéphane Dion. He is well on the way to making Paul Martin, known not only in Canada but on the world stage as “Prime Minister Dithers”, look decisive.
- Wednesday, April 23, 2008

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