The Venerable Edward Michael George posts a long quotation from Soren Kierkegaard on the need to work for one’s bread. You can read it here.
The short form was elucidated by Bob Dylan:
Well, God said to Abraham “Kill me a son”
Abe said “Man, you must be putting me on”
God said “No”
Abe said “Wha?t”
God said “You do what you want to, Abe but
The next time you see me coming, you’d better run”
Abe said “Where do you want this killing done?”
God said “Out on that Highway 61″
Mr. George and I have rather different conceptions of God. It appears he is inclined towards importing the Old Testament’s vengeful Lord into the New Testament’s new dispensation. “‘labour and be heavy laden’” quotes Mr. George.
My own sense is that Mr. George fails to understand the meaning of the great day we are about to celebrate. If Easter has one great meaning it is the radical and overwhelming redemption of our sins embodied in the Resurrection. The Old Testament, not withstanding St. Paul’s best efforts, was firmly closed and a new world begun.
Jesus brings a burden of an entirely different sort than that imposed upon Abraham. One which it is possible to lift with joy rather than carry in fear.
Written by jay on March 20th, 2007 with 10 comments.
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Money for Quebec…check
Refunding SOW…check
Green Social Engineering…check
Another couple of hundred for the kids…check
Bump the capital gains exemption (but only for small business, not investors)….check
Over at SDA the Conservative Street is seething.
Andrew has come to the horrible realization that:
Today’s budget (see: official site) is an embarrassment for those who consider themselves fiscal conservatives (especially those who poured countless hours into helping bring this government to power in order to change how business is done in Ottawa). Aside from a few small measures - including a continued commitment to pay down the national debt and some baby steps towards preventative health care, the budget is an undisciplined mish-mash of high-flying spending and ridiculous wealth redistribution. bound by gravity
The Tiger notes the Budget’s capacity to make virtually everyone look ridiculous:
On the other hand, we, the grassroots supporters of the CPC, look ridiculous for having supported the government with an idea that there would be any sort of fiscal restraint on their part. the tiger in exile
Greg Staples joins the chorus and points out that this Tory government is the highest spending in Canadian history.
And so on…
Harper has morphed into Mulroney; the question is where’s Preston so to have at least one voice in Parliament suggesting that the best thing to do with taxpayers’ money is pay down the debt and cut taxes. Such people may very well exist in the backbenches of the Tory Party but they have been firmly sat on in the run up to the election which, apparently, is not going to happen.
When the BQ is prepared to support you it is a fair bet that you have managed to make the Quebec bribe just big enough:
Within minutes of the release of the budget — which offers Quebec at least $2.3-billion more a year — the separatist Bloc Québécois announced it will back the fiscal plan, giving the Tories enough votes to pass it in the House of Commons. globe and mail
With Dion sinking steadily in the polls there is no particular reason for Harper to pull the trigger quite yet. Assuming that Charest wins in Quebec Harper will be free to concentrate his cynicism on the “much sought after Ontario voter”. For all I know Flaherty will hand deliver a crisp $100.00 to every voter in every marginal riding in the province.
CPC true believers are a tad disappointed by the unbridled pandering of this budget. What of fiscal rectitude, tax reduction, spending cuts? What they are missing is that Harper was elected to get elected with a majority next time out. He is on track. They should hold their real disappointment for when Harper wins his majority and absolutely nothing changes.
Written by jay on March 20th, 2007 with 4 comments.
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