Friday, November 11, 2011

Solemn Observation At Regina Cenotaph - But Gormley Will Be Name Calling As Usual On Monday Morning


Hundreds gathered at the Regina Cenotaph in Victoria Park for Remembrance Day observances this morning. There were no signs, no chanting, no protesting. All in all the occasion was solemn and respectful.

But don't expect respectful comments from John Gormley on his Monday morning radio show. He will resume disrespectful name calling and incitement to hatred of the Occupy Regina participants.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Gormley is doing his Remembrance Day show

Gormley is doing his Remembrance Day show and he's all choked up about those who have died serving in the armed forces. But there's a hard question we need to ask him - Will he condemn Harper for cuts to Veterans Affairs ?

Don't hold your breath. Gormley remembers those who died. It's too bad that he doesn't REMEMBER THE ONES WHO LIVED.

Conservatives are cutting veterans pensions and benefits

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Old male fat cats like Gormley, Mayor Ford and Mayor Atchison want to suppress your rights


Sorry boys. We have a legitimate permit to occupy Regina, Toronto and Saskatoon. When you're eating your next steak dinner and swilling your evening scotch, please remember that Canadians have rights that supersede your fat cat ideology. Deal with it.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

A very sound business proposal for John Gormley

Dear Mr. Gormley;

I wish to advance a very good business opportunity to you. I have modeled this plan on the current arrangement the Province of Saskatchewan has with PotashCorp. It is a plan that will make money for you, make money for me and will help to illustrate how well Premier Brad Wall is managing our natural resources.

I propose that you permit me to rent out your family home in Saskatoon. I am positive that I can find a good renter for the property and negotiate a very good rental amount.

I will ensure that the taxes are paid annually and that maintenance of the home is maintained.

In exchange, you will receive 4.5 cents for every dollar of rent that we are able to achieve! This is a sound proposal and you will certainly benefit from the $.045 from each dollar that you will receive!

Your ongoing advocacy for the current potash royalty structure in Saskatchewan illustrates what a great deal this would be for you and your family!

I eagerly await your affirmative response!

Sincerely,

SaskatchewWHINER!

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Gormley's phony 'snap poll' #2

After ensuring that Saskatchewan Party committee rooms are given advance information of the exact day and time of the phony poll, the results are:
Saskatchewan Party 97% NDP 3% green 0% Liberal 0%

Sunday, October 16, 2011

I'm in the 1%. But I support the 99% - By Brad Maher

(I expect Mr. Gormley to come on air on Monday morning still attacking participants of the various 'Occupy' events that were held around the world on Saturday. Here's a different viewpoint):

I'm in the 1%. But I support the 99%
by Btad Maher

"Last year, I earned a million dollars on Wall Street, but I'm sick of this society that skews the rewards for work so grotesquely.Sometimes, you've got to speak up. And for me, that time's now.

As the Occupy movement gathers critical strength around the globe, so the efforts to marginalise and stigmatise it grow as well. It's said to be a "mob" of socialists, or anarchists, or a leftwing movement driven by hopeless utopian idealism. It's said to be anti-capitalist, with the undertone that carries of being anti-American. This is classic wedge politics, designed to create camps of "us" and "them", to play off those who have done or are doing well by the system against those protesters who are said not to be. But this tactic fails in the face of a movement that defies such simple categorisation.

No one could possibly accuse me of being anti-capitalist, or socialist, or utopian. I've done extremely well out of the system. Last year, I earned the best part of a million dollars working in an allied sector to the financial services industry. I'm still only mid-career. Based on my previous earning history, I guess I could find myself earning substantially more than that over the years ahead. I don't know where precisely that puts me on the income distribution curve, but it must be in or very near the 1%.

I work in the very heart of the system that is the focus of the protests that have spread rapidly around the world under the "Occupy" banner. From the position of someone who has done about as well from the system as anyone, I am giving the protests my fullest support. There is something deeply flawed – even malignant – in our political economy, and indeed, in our system of social values. This movement represents our chance to change both.

That might suggest that I identify with the 1%, but in fact, I'm in total solidarity with the 99%.
My personal reasons are that I recognise that I'm a slave to the big machine as much as anyone. The personal cost of my chosen career is atrocious. For years, my personal life has been subservient to the needs of global capital, delivered over a BlackBerry that respects no hour of the day or night, no concept of a separation between working life and personal life, and to whose demands I am expected to respond 24/7.

It's an appalling treadmill. The moment I stop running to keep up with it, I'll be discarded without a second thought. This is in a career I was always taught, from knee height, would be a worthy one to aspire to.

I've chosen this life, of course, and I'm compensated for that financially. But I'm not part of the truly rich for whom taxes are optional, and for whom ever-increasing property prices are a source of entrenching their wealth. Thank God, my earnings permit me to live without the fears of the next energy bill, or phone bill, or medical emergency. But I'm really just another wage slave – as difficult as that may sound to believe. After paying my taxes, and the rent on a small apartment in the big and expensive city where the work is, I'm still struggling to get on to the property ladder, after having only recently paid off my student debts.

Of course, I have discretionary income. And here's the funny thing: having some money has given me an incredible insight into the worthlessness of its pursuit. Truly, I do not understand the attraction of accumulating vast wealth, in the pursuit of luxury goods, expensive cars and multiple properities. What are people who covet these things saying about themselves? Are their lives so wholly meaningless that they're unable to take joy from simple pleasures, like reading a book, riding a bike, or spending a day among friends? What kind of emptiness needs to be filled with a $5,000 handbag, or a garish, half-million dollar sports car.

I don't make these criticisms from a position of envy, as someone who can't afford them. I say this as someone who can afford to indulge just about any of it. But I've never felt anything other than embarrassment at the thought of possessing such glaring advertisements of personal worthlessness.

I'm not saying there shouldn't be reward for effort, or risk-taking. I'm certainly not arguing for a rigid socialist system of equal wealth distribution. But are these the summit of our values, of our aspirations of society? Do the spoils need to be so unevenly split? Why do we tolerate a system where we know the very richest can manage their affairs to avoid paying their taxes, all to advance their accumulation of meaningless quantities of mundane material objects?

There is something wrong with our value system that encourages people to aspire to those riches. But there's something more fundamentally wrong in our political and economic system that permits them to do so while the vast majority of people languish in poverty, or are barely keeping their heads above water after paying their taxes, their student debts, their rent and basic necessities.

And these flaws are even more glaring when the system is constructed in such a way as to privatise most of the wealth of the financial system in a tiny number of hands, and yet socialise its losses among ordinary working men and women.

For as well as I've done out of the system, I don't want to live in a society with these values, which relies on such a heavily manipulated political economy to deliver such staggeringly unequal wealth. We have enough wealth as a society that no one should ever be just one medical or dental emergency away from homelessness or hunger. There is no reason why social security cannot co-exist with a system that still rewards entrepreneurship, innovation, risk-taking and hard work.

But we will not achieve that until we win our democracies back from overwhelming corporate influence, in pursuit of a bankrupt value system. So I'm lending my support to the Occupy Wall Street movement. And I'm also calling on our thinkers, creatives and other professionals like me, to bring their own talents and perspectives to the discussion, to discredit the worthlessness of our materialistic value system, and the moral bankruptcy of our political economy which is in hock to its service."

Friday, October 14, 2011

Tutorial for John Gormley on what 'occupy Wall St' is all about


Mr. Gormley loves attacking the 'occupy Wall St.' movement by calling the participants "hippes", "dirty hippies", "hacky sacker's", "bongo players". He should watch this short video.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Gormley's phony 'snap poll'

In a few minutes, Sask Party hack, John Gormley will be hosting his first radio 'snap poll' of the 2011 Election. What happens is this, John let's voters call in to state who they will vote for. Having been forewarned, the Saskatchewan Party war room lines up a number of their staffers and hacks who flood Gormley's call in show with 'Saskatchewan party votes'.

So lame. But what else would you expect from Rawlco Radio??

Here are the 'results' of the 1st phony Rawlco 'snap poll' of the campaign:
SASK PARTY 78% NDP 16% GREEN 6% LIBERAL 0%

Monday, August 29, 2011

Johny Gormley says Lefties are crazy. I guess he doesn't watch Ezra Levant





What's funny is that Johny's tweet above is to the guy that runs this Sask Party blog. See we know all about little Johny's playmates.

John Gormley and his yipping groupies normally hate Murray Mandryk



This is too funny. Right wing open mouth show host, John Gromley, and his yipping groupies normally hate leader post columnist Murray Mandryk.

Today they love him!

More hatred for Murray Mandryk from gormley's pals in the Saskatchewan party caucus offices


Note- the link from gormley's tweet doesn't work because he can't spell worth spit.