Driving To Ottawa Part 4 Drive To Downtown Ottawa
Canada’s Biggest Newspaper Says Harry and Meghan Not Welcome in Scathing Editorial
Amin speculation that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle may make Canada their new home base, Canada’s largest newspaper “The Globe and Mail” made it clear they are not a fan of the idea in a scathing editorial, calling it unconstitutional.
From TheGlobeandMail
Britain is the inventor of one of the world’s great innovations in government: a monarchy that reigns but does not rule. Canada took that system and improved it, by pushing it one step further. The Canadian monarchy is virtual; it neither rules nor resides. Our royals don’t live here. They reign from a distance. Close to our hearts, far from our hearths.
And that is why, in response to the sudden announcement of a vague and evolving plan for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex – Prince Harry and Meghan – to move to Canada while remaining part of the Royal Family, the Trudeau government’s response should be simple and succinct: No.
You are welcome to visit, but so long as you are senior royals, Canada cannot allow you to come to stay.
This isn’t about breaking up with the Crown. On the contrary, it’s about maintaining Canada’s unique and highly successful monarchy.
On Monday, the British paper the Evening Standard reported that sources had told it that Ottawa had agreed to pay for security costs for the soon-to-arrive royal couple. When asked, Finance Minister Bill Morneau told reporters that was untrue, and that his government had not even discussed the matter. The dollars and cents of supporting a royal resident might be significant, but that’s not what’s really at issue. It goes deeper than the possibility of the feds having to find a few million extra bucks.
Canadians like their monarchy, and visits by the Queen and other members of the Royal Family tend to produce outpourings of public enthusiasm. But while the people who embody the Crown pay visits from time to time, they don’t set up a home on the premises. A royal living in this country does not accord with the long-standing nature of the relationship between Canada and Britain, and Canada and the Crown.
If they were ordinary private citizens, plain old Harry and Meghan from Sussex, they would be welcome. But this country’s unique monarchy, and its delicate yet essential place in our constitutional system, means that a royal resident – the Prince is sixth in the line of succession – is not something that Canada can allow. It breaks an unspoken constitutional taboo.
The concept of the Crown is at the centre of the Canadian system of government. Bills aren’t law until they receive royal assent; crimes are prosecuted in the name of Her Majesty by lawyers known as crowns; your passport asks foreign states for protection in the name of the Queen. All of that comes out of a constitutional order, more than a century-and-a-half old, based on the British model.
But though Canada borrowed from Britain, it isn’t Britain and never was. And this country long ago took steps to make that unmistakably clear.
Canada never had a class system with hereditary aristocrats like Britain, and Canada definitively broke with the idea of aristocracy when the Nickle Resolution of 1919 asked the British government to stop conferring titles on Canadians. What’s more, with the Statute of Westminster of 1931, Canada’s relationship to Britain was spelled out as one of equal, independent nations.
However, Canada kept the monarchy, and a head of state we share with various Commonwealth countries. The head of state’s representatives here are the governor-general and the provincial lieutenant-governors, who perform essential duties from opening parliaments to deciding who gets to form a government in minority situations. They’re as close as Canada comes to having resident royalty, but they’re not royalty. Instead, they’re merely temporary avatars for a virtual monarch who remains permanently ensconced across the sea.
Furthermore, since the 1950s, governors-general have always been Canadians. Princes are not shipped over here when no useful duties can be found for them on the other side of the Atlantic.
The Sussexes are working out their own personal issues, and Canadians wish them the best of luck. Canada welcomes people of all faiths, nationalities and races, but if you’re a senior member of our Royal Family, this country cannot become your home.
The government should make that clear. There can be no Earl Sussex of Rosedale and no Prince Harry of Point Grey. Canada is not a halfway house for anyone looking to get out of Britain while remaining a royal.
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Les St-Pierre / lancement du CD (2 de 2)!!
Lancement du CD au Earl of Sussex à Ottawa le 10 sept. 2013. Bravo la ''gang''. xox.
Tim McMechan-Lyleton, Manitoba
Interview with Tim McMechan of Lyleton, MB for the Demonstration And Investigation Into Livestock Systems Adoption Project.
Trees provide numerous and substantial benefits to crop and cattle production, and translate into big money. So why are more land owners not planting trees? This is the question that Upper Assiniboine River Conservation District and Rural Development Institute of Brandon University will be asking farmers. A successful application to the Agricultural Greenhouse Gases Program has made it possible to both develop a demonstration site as well as launch a social marketing research project that will engage livestock producers across Manitoba and the prairies.
A field demonstration site will be developed with a participating producer to show combined multiple rows of planted trees with a winter livestock feeding system. The tree rows will protect growing crops and shelter animals while feeding.
The attitudes of beef producers toward and their likelihood of adopting the livestock system will be investigated through a social marketing framework to discover related opportunities and barriers.
Royal baby special coverage: Duchess of Sussex gives birth to boy
Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex and wife of Prince Harry, gave birth to a boy today. The couple's first child weighed seven pounds, three ounces at birth, Buckingham Palace said. He's the Queen's eighth great-grandchild and seventh in line to the throne.
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Canadians Don’t Want Taxpayer Funds to Go to Accommodating Harry and Meghan
Most Canadians don’t mind if Prince Harry and Meghan Markle make Canada their new home, as long as they don’t have to chip in taxpayer funds to make it happen.
The vast majority believe that unlike in the U.K., the couple should have to pay for everything themself.
It’s hard to blame Canadians for this assessment since after all with their celebrity power, endorsement opportunities are likely already flooding the way of the Megxit couple.
FoxNews reports most Canadians are fine with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle setting up home in the Great White North — as long as they don’t have to pay for it, a new poll shows.
Exactly half of those polled by the non-profit Angus Reid Institute said they did not care either way if the Duke and Duchess of Sussex moved there for good, with a generous 39 percent seeming keen.
But only 5 percent believed taxpayers should help pay for whatever the family needed — with almost three-quarters (73 percent) adamant that the Sussexes should pay for everything themselves.
The responses varied across the country, with the family advised to keep away from Quebec. It was the least welcoming area, with17 percent “upset” if the Sussexes made Canada their home.
Either way, Canadians have been taking note — with 70 percent polled saying they were following the scandal closely. More elderly residents showed interest, with 88 percent of over 55s seeming captivated.
Meanwhile, amid speculation that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle may make Canada their new home base, Canada’s largest newspaper “The Globe and Mail” made it clear they are not a fan of the idea in a scathing editorial, calling it unconstitutional.
From TheGlobeandMail
Britain is the inventor of one of the world’s great innovations in government: a monarchy that reigns but does not rule. Canada took that system and improved it, by pushing it one step further. The Canadian monarchy is virtual; it neither rules nor resides. Our royals don’t live here. They reign from a distance. Close to our hearts, far from our hearths.
And that is why, in response to the sudden announcement of a vague and evolving plan for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex – Prince Harry and Meghan – to move to Canada while remaining part of the Royal Family, the Trudeau government’s response should be simple and succinct: No.
You are welcome to visit, but so long as you are senior royals, Canada cannot allow you to come to stay.
This isn’t about breaking up with the Crown. On the contrary, it’s about maintaining Canada’s unique and highly successful monarchy.
On Monday, the British paper the Evening Standard reported that sources had told it that Ottawa had agreed to pay for security costs for the soon-to-arrive royal couple. When asked, Finance Minister Bill Morneau told reporters that was untrue, and that his government had not even discussed the matter. The dollars and cents of supporting a royal resident might be significant, but that’s not what’s really at issue. It goes deeper than the possibility of the feds having to find a few million extra bucks.
Canadians like their monarchy, and visits by the Queen and other members of the Royal Family tend to produce outpourings of public enthusiasm. But while the people who embody the Crown pay visits from time to time, they don’t set up a home on the premises. A royal living in this country does not accord with the long-standing nature of the relationship between Canada and Britain, and Canada and the Crown.
If they were ordinary private citizens, plain old Harry and Meghan from Sussex, they would be welcome. But this country’s unique monarchy, and its delicate yet essential place in our constitutional system, means that a royal resident – the Prince is sixth in the line of succession – is not something that Canada can allow. It breaks an unspoken constitutional taboo.
The concept of the Crown is at the centre of the Canadian system of government. Bills aren’t law until they receive royal assent; crimes are prosecuted in the name of Her Majesty by lawyers known as crowns; your passport asks foreign states for protection in the name of the Queen. All of that comes out of a constitutional order, more than a century-and-a-half old, based on the British model.
But though Canada borrowed from Britain, it isn’t Britain and never was. And this country long ago took steps to make that unmistakably clear.
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Chance of a lifetime
Brookfield High School students got the chance of a lifetime Tuesday night when they sang on stage with rock band, Foreigner, during the Ottawa Bluesfest.
An Indian in Canadian Parties – Night Clubs - Vlog 3 - Indian Vlogger & Backpacker in Canada
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I will share the full detail about Canadian nightlife in the capital city Ottawa and the biggest city of Canada, Toronto. In this video, I will be visiting nightclubs in Canada and meeting people going to parties in Toronto. This video shows an Indian Vlogger’s Experience in Canada.
I am also visiting LCBO a liquor store in Canada and sharing prices of alcohol drinks in Canada.
In this video, an average Indian backpacker visits Canada and checks out lounges and bars in the city of Toronto and Ottawa. Visiting and sharing nightclubs and party places in Toronto.
This video will provide full information about
Prices of drinks in Canadian clubs,
Prices of food in Canadian lounges
Prices of whiskey in Canada.
Prices of cocktails in Canadian clubs
Prices of parties in Canada
Prices of club entry in Toronto
Prices of nightlife in Canada
Prices of parties in Toronto.
And so on.
Created by
Traveling Desi :-)
My Vlogging Setup
Cameras
Primary Camera for Self-shots and Night Shots
Secondary Vlogging Action Camera
My Phone for Pans, Tilts, and Hyper lapse
Stabilizers & Tripods
My Stabilizer Gimbal for the Primary Camera
My phone gimbal for hyperlapse and stabilized shots.
Tripod for this Primary Camera
Chargers, Hubs, and Plugs
My World Plug
USB Charging Hub
Powerbank
Managing Extremely Big Data
Hard Disk One
Hard Disk Covers
My Headphones
Post Production
Editing Software iMovie
Editing Done on High-Speed SDD Drive
Mic for Voice Over
The computer I use for editing and my only machine.
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Royal baby Archie christened at Windsor Castle
Prince Harry and Meghan's son, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, was christened at Windsor Castle Saturday.
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For more than 75 years, CBC News has been the source Canadians turn to, to keep them informed about their communities, their country and their world. Through regional and national programming on multiple platforms, including CBC Television, CBC News Network, CBC Radio, CBCNews.ca, mobile and on-demand, CBC News and its internationally recognized team of award-winning journalists deliver the breaking stories, the issues, the analyses and the personalities that matter to Canadians.
Pat's Two Step Ivan Hicks and Sussex Avenue Fiddlers
Ivan and his group played this tune when he went out west to the Canadian Nationals. He posted it on Facebook. There are other tunes to go with it but someone requested just this tune for learning purposes so here it is. Pat's Two Step was written by John Arcand from Saskatchewan famous for Metis and Quebec style fiddling and tunes.
What Disturbs Our Blood by James FitzGerald
For more info, see James FitzGerald's website:
Or purchase from Chapters.ca:
A withdrawn boy is born into the Toronto home of his late grandfather. a brilliant yet tormented pathologist of Irish blood. LIke his friends Banting and Best, Dr. John Gerald FitzGerald was a Canadian hero. His vaccines saved untold lives, and he transformed the idea of public health in Canada and the world. What so darkened his reputation that his memory has been all but erased?
As the boy watches his own father, also an eminent doctor, plunge into a suicidal psychosis, he intuits some unspeakable secret buried deep in the family unconscious. Growing into manhood, he knows that he must stalk an ancient curse before it stalks him. To set himself free, he must break the silence and put words to the page. His future lies in the past.
Video directed by Christine Buijs
The Royal family of England
June 15, 2013 procession for the changing of the guards at Buckingham Place. In this video:
Carriage 1: Duchess of Cornwall, Duchess of Cambridge (Kate) and Prince Harry.
Carriage 2: Duke of York (Prince Andrew) and Princess Beatrice and Eugenie.
Carriage 3: Earl and Countess of Wessex (Prince Edward) and Lady Louise.
PM Stephen Harper at Government House
Prime Minister Stephen Harper spoke outside the main entrance of Rideau Hall in Ottawa Saturday morning. PM Stephen Harper met with the Governor General to ask him to dissolve Parliament and start the process for a spring election.
Meghan and Kate they pay their respects at the Cenotaph
Meghan and Kate they pay their respects at the Cenotaph
The Duchess of Sussex and the Duchess of Cambridge wore pensive expressions - and modest attire - as they paid their respects at the Cenotaph this morning.
It is the first time that the Duchess of Sussex, 37, has attended the official Armistice Day service at the Cenotaph and she was placed on a separate balcony to Kate, 36, who stood side-by-side with the Queen and the Duchess of Cornwall.
The pregnant Duchess, who is expecting her first baby with Prince Harry in the Spring, looked deep in thought as she observed the one-minute's silence to mark 100 years since the end of the First World War.
Wearing what is thought to be a black Givenchy coat with shoulder-cap detail and a black velour pill-box hat, Meghan opted for an all-black ensemble for the historic event.
The 37-year-old wore her hair tied neatly back in a bun and simple stud diamond earrings. On her coat, the Duchess of Sussex wore just one, single flourishing poppy.
While the Queen, Duchess of Cornwall and the Duchess of Cambridge stood just metres away, Meghan joined the German president's wife Elke Büdenbender as the pair watched the German leader lay a wreath to remember the lives lost in the First World War.
Appearing nervous at times, Meghan was seen fussing with her hair as the wreath-laying service began.
Meanwhile, the Duchess of Cambridge appeared on a separate balcony, standing side-by-side with the Queen and Camilla.
The Queen, 92, asked Prince Charles to once again take on her duties as she observed the service from above.
The Duchess of Cambridge opted for a military-style outfit by Alexander McQueen, with silver buttons and a cream-collar for the sombre event.
She wore a striking black velour hat tilted to the right, and cluster pearl earrings. The Duchess wore her hair french braided and then pinned neatly into a chignon.
Wearing three paper poppies clustered, Kate also had a deep-red metal poppy brooch pinned to her coat, as did the Duchess of Cornwall.
The mother-of-three appeared emotional as Britain fell silent to remember its war dead, biting her lip at one point and looking straight ahead as the Reveille blasted out to mark the end of the commemorative silence.
The Prince of Wales led the rest of Britain in remembering Britain's war dead, taking the role historically held by his mother Queen Elizabeth for the second year in a row.
The Duke of Cambridge, the Duke of Sussex, the Duke of York, the Earl of Wessex, the Princess Royal, the Duke of Kent and Prince Michael of Kent all laid tributes to Britain's veterans.
In a historic act of reconciliation, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier also laid a wreath, marking the first time that a German leader has taken part in the annual proceedings since the Cenotaph was inaugurated in 1920.
Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump joined French President Emmanuel Macron and Russian President Vladimir Putin at an Armistice Day ceremony in Paris, along with more than 60 other world leaders.
The Prince of Wales led the rest of the nation in honouring the country's war dead on Remembrance Sunday, taking the role historically held by his mother Queen Elizabeth for the second year in a row.
The Queen appeared comfortable in the companionship of Kate and Camilla, with Prince Philip absent from the occasion. The Duke of Edinburgh has rarely missed the commemorative event.
Big Ben, which has been silent since renovations to the Elizabeth Tower began in August last year, struck at 11 o'clock to mark the hour the Armistice was signed.
Prime Minister Theresa May and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn joined Prince Charles in laying wreaths as Prince Andrew, Prince Edward, Prince Harry and Prince William looked on in full military uniform.
Crowds started lining the Mall in central London early on Sunday morning ahead of a 'people's march' this afternoon.
Wearing poppies and carrying wreaths, hundreds gathered from 9am to mark 100 years since the guns fell silent.
Big screens were erected so those waiting can view the Cenotaph service.
The march will proceed around St James's Park before turning into Whitehall, where 10,000 people are expected to stream past the Cenotaph.
Flashmob on The Hill
The 75 Youth Forum participants at The United Church of Canada's 41st General Council in Ottawa on Parliament Hill yesterday. gc41.ca Music: Testify to Love by Isaminely Couvertier covered under CCLI Licence 11088633.
everyone coming down the slide at Earl Haig Park
Lakeview Place - 2770 Aquitaine Avenue, Mississauga, ON
Welcome to Lakeview Place!
Luxury lake front community boasting condo-quality living in a beautiful community setting, exceptionally maintained building with unparalleled tenant services.
Amenities include party room and game room, picnic tables and backyard, state of the art fitness centre, and underground parking.
Bright and spacious suites with gorgeous surrounding with breath taking lake views, parks and bike trails. A GO train station is 2 blocks away and a bus stop at the door.
IDLE NO MORE - LLOYDMINSTER DEC 21, 2012
JMSS OCDSB AUP SH Summative v9 2017
This is a recent draft of What is the OCDSB AUP by John McCrae Gr11 student Sarah H. (January 2017)
Please review and add comments if any of the information appears inaccurate or out of date.
A final version will be rendered on Jan 20 2017