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Politics : Canadian Political Free-for-All -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SofaSpud who wrote (2744)6/7/2003 9:48:03 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Respond to of 37858
 
This story was told by a nurse...and she swears this really
happened on her ward.

A man suspected of SARS is lying in bed with a mask over his mouth.

A young auxiliary nurse appeared to sponge his face and hands.
"Nurse," he mumbled from behind the mask, "Are my testicles black?"

Embarrassed the young nurse replied: "I don't know Mr. *****, I'm only here to wash your face and hands."

He struggled again to ask: "Are my testicles black?"

Again the nurse replied: "I can't tell. I'm only here to wash your face and hands."

The Head Nurse was passing and saw the man getting a little
distraught so she marched over to inquire what was wrong.

"Nurse," he mumbled, "Are my testicles black?"

Being a nurse of long-standing, the Head Nurse was undaunted. She whipped back the bedclothes, pulled down his pajama trousers, moved his penis out of the way, had a right good look, pulled up the pajamas, replaced the
bedclothes and announced: "Nothing wrong with your testicles."
At this the man pulled off his mask and asked again: "I
SAID...

Are my TESTS RESULTS BACK!!!???"



To: SofaSpud who wrote (2744)6/8/2003 10:54:22 PM
From: Lino...  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 37858
 
Perhaps a couple govt checks would help ease all this pain and suffering:

Homophobia leading to deaths, says group

Silas Polkinghorne
Saskatchewan News Network; CanWest News Service

Wednesday, June 04, 2003


SASKATOON -- Gay and Lesbian Health Services (GLHS) of Saskatoon says 15 people in Canada die prematurely every day as a result of homophobia.

The organization also says support services for gays and lesbians need more funding to combat the problem.

A recent study commissioned by GLHS reviewed existing research on the human impacts of myths, stereotypes, and negative attitudes about homosexual people.

GLHS says the experience of living in a climate of hate and intolerance causes people to adopt coping mechanisms that impact on their health.

"Homophobia is killing us and those responsible for the health of all Canadians don't seem to give a damn," said GLHS Executive Director Gens Hellquist at a news conference Tuesday.

He said research has shown higher rates of suicide, alcoholism, illicit drug use, smoking, depression, murder, unemployment, and HIV AIDS in the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered population.

The review says that 5,500 Canadians die each year as a result of homophobia, but Hellquist said if could include the gay and lesbian community as a whole, the numbers would be higher.

Other research says the average life expectancy of a gay male in Canada is 55 years, 20 years less than the average and comparable to third world life expectancies.

Erin Scriven, GLHS board co-chair, said organizations representing other groups, such as aboriginals, women, and the disabled, receive significantly more funding that GLHS, which is the only support service of its kind in the province.

Dr. Ross Findlater, chief medical health officer for the province, said addiction, disease, and mental health are serious health issues among the gay, lesbian, and bisexual population.

But to assume that all health problems among that population are caused by homophobia is a "pretty big leap of faith," he said in an interview Tuesday.

"There's a role in the social environment in perhaps pushing them towards (unhealthy behaviours) but there's also personal responsibility," he said.

"There are also a lot of their own behaviours that cause infections and lead to addictions," Findlater said.

Bob Challis was afraid to reveal his homosexuality until he was in his 40s. He said Tuesday when he was "outed" at his workplace, co-workers made baseless allegations that he had sexually abused mentally challenged clients.

"I know the turmoil that homophobia causes in people's lives and what that can do to you," said Challis, the fund development officer for GLHS. "It's something that has to change."

Challis said homophobia was a factor in triggering his bouts with depression and bipolar disorder.


canada.com



To: SofaSpud who wrote (2744)6/10/2003 2:43:26 PM
From: SofaSpud  Respond to of 37858
 
The noble feat of Nike

Johan Norberg

The Spectator

Tuesday, June 10, 2003


Nike. It means victory. It also means a type of expensive gym shoe. In the minds of the anti-globalization movement, it stands for both at once. Nike stands for the victory of a Western footwear company over the poor and dispossessed. Spongy, smelly, hungered after by kids across the world, Nike is the symbol of the unacceptable triumph of global capital.

A Nike is a shoe that simultaneously kicks people out of jobs in the West, and tramples on the poor in the Third World. Sold for 100 times more than the wages of the peons who make them, Nike shoes are hate-objects more potent, in the eyes of the protesters at last week's G8 riots, than McDonald's hamburgers. If you want to be trendy these days, you don't wear Nikes; you boycott them.

So I was interested to hear someone not only praising Nike sweatshops, but also claiming that Nike is an example of a good and responsible business. That someone was the ruling Communist party of Vietnam.

Today Nike has almost four times more workers in Vietnam than in the United States. I travelled to Ho Chi Minh to examine the effects of multinational corporations on poor countries. Nike being the most notorious multinational villain, and Vietnam being a dictatorship with a documented lack of free speech, the operation is supposed to be a classic of conscience-free capitalist oppression.

In truth the work does look tough, and the conditions grim, if we compare Vietnamese factories with what we have back in the West. But that's not the comparison these workers make. They compare the work at Nike with the way they lived before, or the way their parents or neighbours still work. And the facts are revealing. The average pay at a Nike factory close to Ho Chi Minh is US$54 a month, almost three times the minimum wage for a state-owned enterprise.

Ten years ago, when Nike was established in Vietnam, the workers had to walk to the factories, often for many miles. After three years on Nike wages, they could afford bicycles. Another three years later, they could afford scooters, so they all take the scooters to work (and if you go there, beware; they haven't really decided on which side of the road to drive). Today, the first workers can afford to buy a car.

But when I talk to a young Vietnamese woman, Tsi-Chi, at the factory, it is not the wages she is most happy about. Sure, she makes five times more than she did, she earns more than her husband, and she can now afford to build an extension to her house. But the most important thing, she says, is that she doesn't have to work outdoors on a farm any more. For me, a Swede with only three months of summer, this sounds bizarre. Surely working conditions under the blue sky must be superior to those in a sweatshop? Farming means 10 to 14 hours a day in the burning sun or the intensive rain, in rice fields with water up to your ankles and insects in your face. Even a Swede would prefer working nine to five in a clean, air-conditioned factory.

Furthermore, the Nike job comes with a regular wage, with free or subsidized meals, free medical services and training and education. The most persistent demand Nike hears from the workers is for an expansion of the factories so that their relatives can be offered a job as well.

These facts make Nike sound more like Santa Claus than Scrooge. But corporations such as Nike don't bring these benefits and wages because they are generous. It is not altruism that is at work here; it is globalization. With their investments in poor countries, multinationals bring new machinery, better technology, new management skills and production ideas, a larger market and the education of their workers. That is exactly what raises productivity. And if you increase productivity -- the amount a worker can produce -- you can also increase his wage.

Nike is not the accidental good guy. On average, multinationals in the least developed countries pay twice as much as domestic companies in the same line of business. If you get to work for an American multinational in a low-income country, you get eight times the average income. If this is exploitation, then the problem in our world is that the poor countries aren't sufficiently exploited.

The effect on local business is profound: "Before I visit some foreign factory, especially like Nike, we have a question. Why do the foreign factories here work well and produce much more?" That was what Mr. Kiet, the owner of a local shoe factory who visited Nike to learn how he could be just as successful at attracting workers, told me: "And I recognize that productivity does not only come from machinery but also from satisfaction of the worker. So for the future factory we should concentrate on our working conditions."

If I was an anti-globalist, I would stop complaining about Nike's bad wages. If there is a problem, it is that the wages are too high, so that they are almost luring doctors and teachers away from their important jobs.

But -- happily -- I don't think even that is a realistic threat. With growing productivity it will also be possible to invest in education and health care for Vietnam. Since 1990, when the Vietnamese communists began to liberalize the economy, exports of coffee, rice, clothes and footwear have surged, the economy has doubled, and poverty has been halved. Nike and Coca-Cola triumphed where American bombs failed. They have made Vietnam capitalist.

I asked the young Nike worker Tsi-Chi what her hopes were for her son's future. A generation ago, she would have had to put him to work on the farm from an early age. But Tsi-Chi told me she wants to give him a good education, so that he can become a doctor. That's one of the most impressive developments since Vietnam's economy was opened up. In 10 years 2.2-million children have gone from child labour to education. It would be extremely interesting to hear an anti-globalist explain to Tsi-Chi why it is important for Westerners to boycott Nike, so that she loses her job, and has to go back into farming, and has to send her son to work.

The Left used to listen to the Vietnamese communists when they brought only misery and starvation to their population. Shouldn't they listen to the Vietnamese now, when they have found a way to improve people's lives? The party officials have been convinced by Nike that ruthless multinational capitalists are better than the state at providing workers with high wages and a good and healthy workplace. How long will it take for our own anti-capitalists to learn that lesson?

Johan Norberg is the author of In Defence of Global Capitalism.

nationalpost.com