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olpfan1

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Everything posted by olpfan1

  1. Smoking anywhere outside should be illegal. Smoking around children should be child abuse. Those are my thoughts on it.
  2. Every opposition MP read the tweets, if they tell you otherwise they are lying, but this really is not a story Nothing illegal was done here, this is just nasty, hypocritical, Vic, trying to get back back at Adam Carroll for confirming everyone's beliefs that Toews is a super piece of sh!t whom I would give the finger too right now If I saw him
  3. here's another article http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2112372/Study-finds-50-cent-Americans-wont-return-lost-smartphones--rifle-personal-information.html?ito=feeds-newsxml
  4. I would have preferred it be an even split, 3 Canadian cities & 3 American cities..and maybe even some European cities and Australia, just to get a bigger scope of who is more honest http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/story/2012/03/09/ottawa-lost-cellphone-study.html A new North American study found Ottawa was the most honest city when it came to returning lost cellphones. U.S.-based security software firm Symantec Corp. organized and funded the study where it placed 10 lost smartphones in five different cities. Ottawa was the only Canadian city, while Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington, D.C. and New York City were the others. Ottawa-based security consultant Scott Wright was contracted out to place the cellphones in all cities and track the statistics. He dropped them in office elevators, food courts, transit stops and even phone booths. Wright said the company put 12 different apps on the phones, including four business, four personal and four "neutral" apps. The goal was to show the importance of protecting personal information on cellphones with a password. "We really just wanted to see what people would do with them. We weren't trying to collect personal information of any type, just to see what type of data they were accessing," Wright told the CBC's Ottawa Morning. Ottawa residents returned 70 per cent of phones In Ottawa, seven of the 10 phones were returned to Wright. The other three, he said, can't be tracked by the company and likely will never be found. The worst city was New York, where only three phones were returned. Wright said the study found more than 80 per cent of people across the five cities "snooped" for corporate or personal information. More than 90 per cent accessed some kind of information. "Even if somebody offers to return your lost cellphone, it doesn't mean they haven't looked at much of your corporate and personal sensitive information," Wright said. He added passwords should be as long as possible because some people use creative techniques to decode the security password. "It's actually possible somebody might be able to tilt [the phone] on an angle and look at the reflection off it to see what were the most commonly pressed areas of the keyboard. They could actually try to guess your pin from that." Wright said the best plan for smartphone users is to use a sticker with a reward and contact number in case the phone is lost. You can also program a message in the phone if it is lost, he said.
  5. Really? all along they said they were giving everything they had to EC and now we learn that they had to be subpoenaed? I hope this is not true
  6. E.T Aliens don't exist.. What it probably is are humans living on other planets in different solar systems as well as ours why would we be the only human civilization?! the universe is never ending
  7. Children don't get aborted
  8. There is no such thing as a "traditional family" there hasnt been for decades so can we please stop talking about it
  9. I think by now all signs point to pierre poutine being Andrew Prescott http://www.ottawacitizen.com/touch/life/story.html?id=6274256 OTTAWA — On the day “Pierre Poutine” activated the burner cellphone used to launch his robocall blitz on voters in Guelph, a young Conservative campaign worker sent out a message on Twitter warning of “voter suppression calls” aimed at his party. Andrew Prescott, deputy campaign manager to Guelph Conservative candidate Marty Burke, tweeted on April 30, “Anti-#CPC voter suppression phone calls currently underway in Guelph, suspecting #LPC #elxn41” — referencing the Twitter shorthand for the Liberal Party of Canada and the 41st general election. Prescott, a self-described cellphone expert, followed up a few minutes later with another tweet claiming that these phone calls were “using spoofed Caller-ID of Burke campaign. I ‘wonder’ who it could be ...” Later, Prescott tweeted about these alleged calls again, saying “#LPC internal polling must be BAD, considering the dirty voter suppression calls underway in Guelph ...” He also sent a public Twitter message to CBC blogger Kady O’Malley, speculating the Liberals’ internal polling “must be REALLY BAD, voter suppression calls in Guelph AND Halton ... anywhere else?” But it was not until two days later, on election day, that reports of fraudulent Elections Canada calls began to flood in, prompting the agency to send out a press release warning electors to ignore the fake calls. More than 100 voters misled by the fake robocalls showed up at the Quebec Street Mall polling station, where some of them ripped up their voter IDs in anger. The Citizen could find no media reports from Guelph referring to spoofed phone calls or voter suppression calls aimed at Burke supporters before election day. Elections Canada has traced calls from a disposable Virgin Mobile cellphone registered to the name Pierre Poutine, to RackNine, the Edmonton based voice-broadcasting company that was used, unbeknownst to its owner, to send out the fake Elections Canada calls at the centre of the robocalls scandal. Prescott is the only Burke campaign worker known to have held an account at RackNine. He has denied any involvement in those calls, saying he used the service only for legitimate reasons, to promote Burke campaign events and, on election day, to warn Burke supporters about fraudulent calls. Asked about the tweets on Thursday, Prescott sent an email saying he did not want to comment. Pressed, he emailed back, “you’ve already tried and sentenced me in your own mind, so I’m through talking to you. But for the record, you’re wrong. Goodbye.”
  10. I feel sorry for you, The Wire is the best tv show ever, joy ride & phonebooth are two great suspenseful movies
  11. It get's sadder, but that is for another time
  12. does this mean that THEY KNOW WHO HE/SHE IS? Mr. Meier said he had his “Eureka” moment at 3 a.m. one morning, and by 5 a.m. had written a 22 page report for Elections Canada. “He [Pierre Jones] screwed up. Just for a fraction of a second but it was enough for me to find him,” he said.
  13. has anyone thought that maybe this was a test run? the article mentions Pierre Jones gave what appears to be a false address in Joliette and made payments using PayPal that were purchased with a pre-paid Visa gift card. He then set about making a number of phone campaigns apparently designed to mislead voters, although only one was sent out.
  14. but how often does a scandal with an alias Pierre Poutine from separatist street come up? they lost their opportunity to make fun of us anyways, when Pierre Poutine is caught I want to buy him / her a beer for having a sense of humour
  15. still, Pierre Poutine..is hilarious, I can't believe that wasn't all over CNN, they must not get Canadian sense of humour
  16. I doubt it'll be the real perp, the bad guy always gets away by using a decoy, like in Phonebooth & Joy Ride
  17. evidence like we just saw? why do you think breitbart held onto this for so long? do you think he was gonna hold on to it until a week before the election? there's nothing there!
  18. haha this is getting entertaining again http://www.montrealgazette.com/touch/life/story.html?id=6272584 OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Vic Toews is accusing a campaign worker for an NDP leadership candidate of being sent to dig up dirt on his divorce proceedings. Those proceedings were then released in 140 character bites on Twitter under the handle, VikiLeaks. On Thursday, Toews took to Twitter allege a campaign organizer for Paul Dewar was sent to get the divorce papers at the behest of Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger. Toews said his source for the information was NDP MP Pat Martin, who allegedly admitted that the NDP wanted the information in the court documents. Toews won a court order Wednesday giving him access to court records to see who had accessed the publicly available divorce files. "It seems (Dewar) MB organizer Thomas Linner was sent to collect dirt on my divorce records," Toews wrote. "(Martin) told me MB Premier wanted verification of my divorce." Dewar's camp confirmed their Manitoba organizer, Thomas Linner, did go to the courthouse but only after the VikiLeaks account went live. "After (Foreign Affairs Minister) John Baird accused the NDP of exposing personal information, Thomas Linner was asked by the NDP to check the public records so that they knew what they were being accused of," said Dewar spokesman Joe Cressy. Martin, an outspoken member of the opposition, quickly took to Twitter to refute the allegations. "That's not true. I told Vic the fed NDP wanted to check the veracity of (VikiLeaks) after Baird accused us. Mb NDP verified files," Martin wrote. "The Mb NDP staffer went to look at Vic's divorce file on Feb 17, well after (VikiLeaks) started and only after Baird blamed the NDP." "I made this Clear to Vic Toews yesterday. He is deliberately misrepresenting the facts for some reason unknown to us." What isn't clear from the thread of quick messages is how that connects with the Liberal staffer who admitted he was behind the VikiLeaks account. A message to Toews was not returned by Thursday evening. The Tories delayed making a decision Tuesday on whether to haul Adam Carroll before a parliamentary committee, wanting to question him about his use of parliamentary resources to tweet unflattering details of Toews' divorce proceedings. Carroll was working in the party's research bureau when he set up the Vikileaks30 account. Carroll created the Twitter account after Toews suggested in the Commons that opposing Bill C-30 — the so-called online surveillance bill — was akin to siding with child pornographers. The Liberals said Carroll apologized for his role in the VikiLeaks account and resigned from his job. Speaker of the House of Commons Andrew Scheer ruled the VikiLeaks Twitter account was an "unacceptable use of House IT resources," but considered the matter closed after interim Liberal leader Bob Rae made a public apology to Toews. Toews, however, was not ready to let the matter go, saying that the NDP were now trying to delay the Commons ethics committee from looking into the VikiLeaks affair. "We know the Libs used public resources for dirty tricks. What are the NDP also hiding?" Toews tweeted. [email protected]
  19. That doesn't mean he lied, it just means he has no proof
  20. An attack on Iran could take place within a matter of months, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a series of television interviews on Thursday. A matter of months is different than a month or so
  21. Yeah I know, they probably think we have states
  22. I'm lying here? he even admitted to it http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2010/12/01/flanagan-wikileaks-assange.html This is what he said "I think Assange should be assassinated, actually," Flanagan said with a laugh, and when asked to expand upon his answer, added that he "wouldn't be unhappy" if Assange "disappeared." This is him backpedaling "It was a thoughtless, glib remark about a serious subject," Flanagan said Wednesday on the CBC's Power & Politics with Evan Solomon. "I never seriously intended to advocate or propose the assassination of Mr. Assange. But I do think that what he's doing is very malicious and harmful to diplomacy and endangering people's lives, and I think it should be stopped."
  23. I have no faith that E.C & the RCMP would find anything even if there was stuff to be found We need a public inquiry to get to the bottom of what happened
  24. Your headline is very misleading, he says in a matter of months, not month Do you work for The Globe & Mail, by any chance?
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