Canadian Election 2025 ➙ Vote Against PP

In historically Conservative Calgary Centre, I’ll be voting LIBERAL.

Voting against the Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre.

Elections are often a choice between who’s least bad, and PP would be terrible in defending Canada against attacks by Trump. PP has no academic nor business credibility. He’s not well known outside MAGA USA who support him. His policies have been Trump-lite for years.

I’m quite sure he’d be a lightweight in international matters. Trump and his appointees would try to walk all over him.

So far, PP has refused to get top-secret clearance so officials with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) could share intelligence on foreign interference with him.


I’ll be voting for Mark Carney. Various roles at Goldman Sachs. Governor of the Bank of Canada. Governor of the Bank of England.  United Nations (UN) special envoy for climate action and finance. Well known and respected as an economist.

He could have run for the Conservative Party leadership, legitimately. In 2012, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper asked Carney—who was then governor of the Bank of Canada—if he would join the Conservative government as minister of finance

He completed the 2015 London Marathon in 3 hours, 31 minutes.

Carney and his wife Diana Fox

Carney’s wife EVEN has better credentials than PP for Prime Minister. 😀 Fox has a degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics and a master’s degree in agricultural economics from the University of Oxford and an MA in international relations from the University of Pennsylvania.

Actually, my current Conservative MP in Calgary Centre, Greg McLean, is very good. I won’t be disappointed if he is reelected. A loyal opposition is an important part of our Westminster-style parliamentary democracy.

I wrote to tell him I had to vote against PP. No reply. 😀

Vancouver Island, where my Mom lives, will elect either NDP or Conservative representatives in 2025.

I’d vote to reelect Gord Johns of the NDP. Seems to me he’s been doing a terrific job.

next door neighbour’s yard sign

Never Lie by Freida McFadden

A good psychological thriller.

The writing of Never Lie, I found, simplistic. Similar to McFadden’s other books.

But the plot and (somewhat predictable) twists kept me going.

It tells the story of a married couple, Tricia and Ethan, who are stranded in a house in upstate New York because of a snowstorm. 

The house belonged to renowned psychiatrist Dr. Adrienne Hale, who went missing three years prior.

When Tricia discovers a room of secret tape recordings in Adrienne’s house and starts listening to them, the truth about Adrienne’s murder is revealed, as are secrets about Tricia’s and Ethan’s own murderous pasts. …

Never Lie is told via two alternating points of view, shifting back and forth between the voices of Patricia Lawton, first introduced only as “Tricia,” and Dr. Adrienne Hale. Tricia’s voice narrates the present, while Adrienne’s voice narrates the past. …

SuperSummary

Dark Winds – season 1

I finally got to the super popular TV series Dark Winds.

It’s excellent. Very intense. Somewhat complicated.

The first season is primarily based on the books Listening Woman (1978) and elements of People of Darkness (1980).

Set in 1971 on a remote outpost of the Navajo Nation near Monument Valley, Dark Winds follows Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn of the Tribal Police as he is besieged by a series of seemingly unrelated crimes.

The closer he digs to the truth, the more he exposes the wounds of his past.

He is joined on this journey by his new deputy, Jim Chee. Chee, too, has old scores to settle from his youth on the reservation.

Together, the two men battle the forces of evil, each other and their own personal demons on the path to salvation.

This show is on AMC and AMC+ — two services I’ve never used.

Somehow it was showing via our Cable TV service under “On Demand”. Some of that On Demand contents is FREE … at times.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Here One Moment by Liane Moriarty

Funny. Smart.

Very philosophical. Life. Love. Destiny vs free will.

A very different kind of book.

Here One Moment (2024)

The plane is jam-packed. Every seat is taken. So of course the flight is delayed!

Flight attendant Allegra Patel likes her job—she’s generally happy with her life, even if she can’t figure out why she hooks up with a man she barely speaks to—but today is her twenty-eighth birthday. She can think of plenty of things she’d rather be doing than placating a bunch of grumpy passengers.
 
There’s the well-dressed man in seat 4C who is compulsively checking his watch, desperate not to miss his eleven-year-old daughter’s musical. Further back, a mother of two is frantically trying to keep her toddler entertained and her infant son quiet. How did she ever think being a stay-at-home mom would be easier than being a lawyer? Ethan is lost in thought; he’s flying back from his first funeral. A young couple has just gotten married; she’s still wearing her wedding dress. An emergency room nurse is looking forward to traveling the world once she retires in a few years, it’s going to be so much fun! If they ever get off the tarmac. . . .
 
Suddenly a woman none of them know stands up. She makes predictions about how and when everyone on board will die. … 

How would you live your life if you thought you knew how it would end? Would you love who you love or try to love someone else? Would you stay married? Would you stop drinking? Would you call up your ex-best friend you haven’t spoken to in years? Would you quit your job?

For me it was less a plot than a series of slices of life. The characters unrelated — other than their reactions to what happened on the plane.

At times I found the book long.

Still — it’s unique. And it will make you consider your own life.

Are YOU living each day as if you already know the year of your death?

related – Guardian – Here One Moment by Liane Moriarty review – interesting premise, disappointing result

Cross Down by Patterson & Dubois

Cross Down: An Alex Cross and John Sampson Thriller (2023) was appealing in that — for the first time — John Sampson is the lead character. Alex Cross shot and hospitalized early in the book.

Unfortunately, the plot is even more absurd than usual. I was tempted to quit.

As the book opens, President Lucas Kent is meeting with General Wayne Grissom, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at the White House. …

Violent attacks have been peppering the nation, and Kent and Grissom don’t know if foreign or domestic terrorists are to blame — or a combination of both. Their fear is that there will be bigger and deadlier ones, culminating in an unprecedented attack on the nation’s capital. …

Sampson goes on a clandestine mission in which no cavalry will be called upon to bail him out should it all go sideways. …

BookReporter Review

The Decagon House Murders by Yukito Ayatsuji

Perhaps something was lost in translation — but I really couldn’t get in to this variation on the Agatha Christie plot.

I only made it about half way through the book.

The Decagon House Murders (十角館の殺人, Jukkakukan no Satsujin) is a 1987 Japanese mystery novel, the debut work of author Yukito Ayatsuji.

Borrowing its basic plot structure from Agatha Christie‘s And Then There Were None (Christie’s book is directly referenced by some of the characters at several points), it tells the story of a group of seven university students who travel to a deserted island that was the scene of a grisly mass murder six months earlier, where events soon turn ominous. 

Gathering Prey by John Sandford

This is considered one of the best of the Prey series. Number twenty-five.

Gathering Prey (2015) is a crime novel written by Pulitzer Prize winning writer John Sandford. …

Letty Davenport a young college girl receives a call from Skye a traveler she met briefly in San Francisco.

Remembering that Letty’s adoptive father is a detective she requests help in finding her companion Henry, who has just gone missing.

Soon Skye is missing as well and Detective Lucas Davenport decides to investigate further. He soon finds himself pursuing a drug dealer named Pilate in a chance that crosses state lines and exposes him to variety of sub cultures and their gatherings.

My MacBook Air M4 Laptop in 2025

When Apple launched the M4 Air, they offered a crazy high trade-in bonus to jumpstart sales.

I got CAD $780 for my 2021 MacBook Pro. Used that towards the CAD $1400 NEW M4 Air.

I need 16GB unified memory for VIDEO editing. That’s the minimum available on the M4.

Got the minimum 256GB SSD storage as I put my BIG files on external SSD drives.

I don’t use the standard Apple charging brick. Instead I use a UGREEN Nexode 100W USB C Charger.

For the missing ports, I always carry the UGREEN USB C Hub.

Reviews are all good.

That said — if you don’t edit VIDEO on your laptop, I’d recommend buying the least expensive M1 MacBook Air you can find refurbished. Don’t pay more than CAD $300.

Click PLAY or watch unboxing and set-up of the new M4 Air on YouTube.

The Fixer by Joseph Finder

Though I couldn’t get into this author’s Nick Heller series, I’ve been reading some of his stand alone books.

The Fixer is another with an interesting plot.

It evolves out of corruption during Boston’s  Big Dig — the most expensive highway project in the United States, plagued by cost overruns, delays, leaks, design flaws, accusations of poor execution and use of substandard materials, criminal charges and arrests.

When former investigative reporter Rick Hoffman loses his job, fiancée, and apartment, his only option is to move back into–and renovate–the home of his miserable youth, now empty and in decay since the stroke that put his father in a nursing home.

As Rick starts to pull apart the old house, he makes an electrifying discovery—millions of dollars hidden in the walls.

It’s enough money to completely transform Rick’s life—and everything he thought he knew about his father.

Yet the more of his father’s hidden past that Rick brings to light, the more dangerous his present becomes. Soon, he finds himself on the run from deadly enemies desperate to keep the past buried, and only solving the mystery of his father—a man who has been unable to communicate, comprehend, or care for himself for almost 20 years—will save Rick…if he can survive long enough to do it.

This book is too long. Too slow. And nobody would make the obvious mistakes Rick Hoffman does … BUT I still recommend it.

You end up cheering for the poor guy. 😀