Ottawa - Friday, September 13, 2002 - by: Walter Robinson, Federal Director, Canadian Taxpayers Federation | |||||||
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speaking |
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Prime Minister's Office responded stating, | ||||||
wrongly |
“It is being wrongly reported today that in an interview broadcast on CBC television last night Prime Minister Jean Chrétien singled out the United States for responsibility for the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.” |
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transcript |
Prime Minister's Office released the entire transcript of the interview for Canadians to judge for themselves what they believe Mr. Chrétien was trying to say. So let’s take a look. | ||||||
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end of the |
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selfish |
Prime Minister Chrétien: “But I’ve said that it is a division in the world that is building up … For me, I think the rest of the world is a bit too selfish, and that there is a lot of resentment … You know, the poor, relatively get poorer all the time. And the rich are getting richer all the time.” |
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Prime |
In Canada, average incomes hover around $21,000/year but the Prime Minister hiked his own pay last year to a whopping $263,000 and when he retires in 2004, he will walk away with an annual indexed pension of $153,000 placing him in the top 1% of all Canadian income earners just on pension income alone. So yes, the rich are getting richer. | ||||||
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billions |
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meddlesome |
Well excuse me, heaven forbid Cabinet Ministers would actually be fired (a rare occurrence indeed) for breaking those meddlesome guidelines like fairly tendering contracts, avoiding real conflicts of interest or giving sensitive government work to former lovers. What is the nation coming too when we actually hold people to account for defrauding the public purse and breaking the laws of the land? | ||||||
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employment |
As for those stolen billions in scandals stateside, the Prime Minister forgets how his government has stolen $42 billion from workers and employers through the employment insurance (EI) scam or how the Government of Canada has stashed some $7.7 billion beyond the reach of Parliament in unaccountable foundations (as the Auditor General has noted) and Canada Inc.’s 15 million shareholders, aka taxpayers. | ||||||
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capitalists |
Prime Minister Chrétien: “Everybody don’t know when to stop … I said, you know talking, it was Wall Street, and it was a crowd of capitalists, of course, they were complaining that we have a normal relation with Cuba, and this and that, you know …” |
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cell |
A crowd of capitalists, is that like a cell of terrorists? Please! The Prime Minister conveniently forgets he has lived off the taxation of the fruits of capitalism for his forty years in public life. | ||||||
time to |
Prime Minister Chrétien: “And I said, if I recall, it was probably these words. When you’re powerful like you are, you guys, is the time to be nice … You know, you cannot exercise your powers to the point that of humiliation for the others. And that is what the Western world, not only the Americans, the Western world has to realize.” |
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not |
Exercising one’s power to the point of humiliating others. That sounds like the way the Prime Minister runs roughshod over his backbenchers. Our Prime Minister was not misquoted, he was merely projecting his faults onto others. | ||||||
Walter Robinson Federal Director |
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References: | |||||||
PM slammed, defended
for 9/11 remarks Last Updated Fri, 13 Sep 2002 10:59:26 |
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