Kneecaps

The primary goal of this site is to provide mature, meaningful discussion about the Vancouver Canucks. However, we all need a break some time so this forum is basically for anything off-topic, off the wall, or to just get something off your chest! This forum is named after poster Creeper, who passed away in July of 2011 and was a long time member of the Canucks message board community.

Moderator: Referees

User avatar
Strangelove
Moderator & MVP
Moderator & MVP
Posts: 15876
Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2004 12:13 pm
Location: Someday

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Strangelove »

Topper wrote:
Strangelove wrote:(according to 2 judges thus far, and of course pending appeal).
Only one judge, Susan Griffin, and she's ruled on the matter twice, oddly without over ruling herself.
Yeahno, I was trying to say Susan Griffin has the wisdom of two judges!

(may be a tad Pauserish but at least I didn't Pratt it) :mrgreen:

(and it wasn't baldfaced like Crooked Christy) :mrgreen:
____
Try to focus on someday.
User avatar
Topper
CC Legend
Posts: 7725
Joined: Wed Sep 15, 2004 8:11 pm
Location: Earth, most days.

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Topper »

Strangelove wrote:
Topper wrote:
Strangelove wrote:(according to 2 judges thus far, and of course pending appeal).
Only one judge, Susan Griffin, and she's ruled on the matter twice, oddly without over ruling herself.
Yeahno, I was trying to say Susan Griffin has the wisdom of two judges!

(may be a tad Pauserish but at least I didn't Pratt it) :mrgreen:

(and it wasn't baldfaced like Crooked Christy) :mrgreen:
It is something that is ignored in the media. Both rulings came from the same judge. The BCTF definitely likes to play up the two court case ruling so that is what we hear........over and over again.

While the BCTF argues it is a collective bargaining issue, the government argues it is an education policy issue. If you look at how Griffin's ruling is implemented across the province it removes any flexibility local school boards have in reacting to changing school populations.

I touched on this in a much earlier post.

I our school district I know of two communities served by 1 room elementary schools. there has been much talk of closing them and busing the kids to larger centre but each time compassion wins over economics and the school is kept open. The main argument is you would be putting K-7 kids on the bus for 3 hrs a day. I don't have any qualms with that.

Now if those 1 room schools need special needs teachers due to class composition rules, the additional cost of staffing would tip the balance, those schools would close. Parent loose, students loose and the BCTF, through their own doing, looses a couple of job positions.

Now if the district has some flexibility, they can offer extra incentives to the teacher for the additional load, keep the school operational and parents and students happy.

The demand for hard and fast class size/composition rules will bite and it will lead to a centralization of education services in larger centres at the loss of the smaller rural schools.
Over the Internet, you can pretend to be anyone or anything.

I'm amazed that so many people choose to be complete twats.
User avatar
Strangelove
Moderator & MVP
Moderator & MVP
Posts: 15876
Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2004 12:13 pm
Location: Someday

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Strangelove »

You make some great points Topper, but Christy created this mess (and now she's backed the BCTF into a corner).

Judge Griffin was very damning in her judgement:

http://northerninsights.blogspot.ca/201 ... beral.html

Now no way would I ever want the NDP back in there, but DAMN do I hate Christy!
____
Try to focus on someday.
User avatar
Topper
CC Legend
Posts: 7725
Joined: Wed Sep 15, 2004 8:11 pm
Location: Earth, most days.

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Topper »

Strangelove wrote:You make some great points Topper, but Christy created this mess (and now she's backed the BCTF into a corner).

Judge Griffin was very damning in her judgement:

http://northerninsights.blogspot.ca/201 ... beral.html

Now no way would I ever want the NDP back in there, but DAMN do I hate Christy!
A rather red link, unfortunate it isn't in Spanish.

As I said, one judges opinion is that it is a work place issue.

Look for small school closures/consolidation and an increase in School Districts switching to a four day week to shave costs. With the only benefit being a shrinking of the ranks of the BCTF

On an aside, I much prefer the MILF over the Hawaiian G&T.
Over the Internet, you can pretend to be anyone or anything.

I'm amazed that so many people choose to be complete twats.
User avatar
Strangelove
Moderator & MVP
Moderator & MVP
Posts: 15876
Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2004 12:13 pm
Location: Someday

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Strangelove »

Topper wrote: A rather red link
My first one. :oops:

Sorry, in a hurry....
Topper wrote: On an aside, I much prefer the MILF over the Hawaiian G&T.
To be honest I despise both of them equally.

But then I don't suffer politicians gladly to begin with...
____
Try to focus on someday.
User avatar
ukcanuck
MVP
MVP
Posts: 1236
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 3:04 am

Re: Kneecaps

Post by ukcanuck »

First up, thank you for a genuine response. I will endeavour to return the favour.
Topper wrote:For a start UK
ukcanuck wrote:I believe that taxes are due on profits.
ukcanuck wrote:The point was already made that mining is speculative.
ukcanuck wrote:They know the total worth of the ore in that mine and they can calculate world prices
Topper wrote: How so, as you say, mining is speculative, as as you also note in the quote below, prices fluctuate. I would also add that labour, energy and taxation costs also fluctuate. You only need to look at mines that were profitable several years ago at $500/oz Au but are uneconomic now at $1200/oz Au.
ukcanuck wrote:Obviously, the price one gets on market day fluctuates but the inherent value remains. So whether you sell it today, tomorrow, next week or next year it's never actually a loss.
Unless of course you count a profit you didn't make today as a loss...
If the price fluctuates, how does the inherent value remain? Would it not fluctuate also? What happens when that value drops below mining, exploration and permitting costs.


Okay so when you say fluctuates.. And honestly I don't know the answer to this but do you mean the price of gold actually drops significantly?

Because I remember in 1979 during the Iran revolution the price of gold shot up from 35 dollars an ounce and people were selling their jewelry in a mad scramble.

I also remember that one of the reasons bandied about as to why the price of gold spiked so precipitously was that the US government (read interest groups here, nudge nudge ) was buying up gold in order to drive up the price to destabilize OPEC which beggars a question about a free markets but that's another story...

Anyway, from 35 dollars an ounce in 1979, to 1200 dollars in 2014...
That's a pretty healthy increase not a necessarily a fluctuation.

Of course the costs have changed and that's your point ...

Topper wrote: Oh that's right, it cost money to explore and permit a mine. Do not forget the success rate of an exploration project becoming a mine? Upwards of $1- $2 billion for a porphyry copper mine these days. No revenue is received from that project during exploration and permitting. Remember you did say it is a speculative business.[/quote ]

Fair point, but can not all of the above be explained by inflation and the decrease in the spending power of the dollar?

The price of everything ( except wages, hello BCTF ) has easily doubled and tripled

What was a great wage at 50,000 a year is uneconomic know

And isn't the speculative nature of any business exactly the responsibility of the investor?
You play you pay?
Topper wrote:
ukcanuck wrote:I believe that when a company secures the mineral rights whether by lease or title or claim they have obtained an inherent value that is a tradable commodity.
and therefore have the right to claim exploration costs against that value. If it is an active mine then they can also claim their operational costs against their profits.

You have lost the track of you speculative belief here. The company or individual prospector is assuming all the risk, not the public.
I don't think I have lost the plot.
Of course all costs must be weighed against profits but I think that the potential, in a mine exactly because every ounce in the ground belongs to all of us and the public needs to see a return as well.

In this case manifestly as taxes or royalties if you prefer, but presently there is an unaccounted for profit by the very fact the deposit exists



Yeah I'm hearing you scream in disgust at this point...
Topper wrote:
ukcanuck wrote:Except we aren't talking about the tax a mining company should pay for what it physically produces. We are talking about why should a mine get to defer tax on the profit they make off of what amounts to the people's savings account.
How are they deferring profit on something that has yet to be extracted at unknown costs and an unknown sale price? You have acknowledged the speculative nature of the business and have acknowledged prices fluctuate, also you have acknowledged that taxes should be paid on profits.
I'm finding it hard to believe that tech would devote such resources as you describe with the heavy lift helicopter
Without knowing what's in the ground and without hard science to back up their estimates.

That's a sellable commodity in of itself and tech must surely being drawing investment and shareholder profits must improve without taking an ounce out of the ground.

And that's what I'm talking about.

You said yourself that mines take options on each other so there is a buying and selling of risk

Much like big banks selling debt to each other that caused the last global collapse.
Topper wrote: Should governments be required to refund tax revenues on forward paid taxes of the in situ value when operational costs increase or commodity prices decrease?
I don't know, maybe that would be reasonable, people get tax rebates

Topper wrote:
As for the teachers, since their binding arbitration vote was an overwhelming success, I hear they will vote next week on holding negotiations on Mars, but only conditional on the government dropping E.
Haha that's a good one :)

I'm pretty much spitballing about this mine thing. It's clear something has changed in this province
Another great premier WAC Bennett wouldn't accept that we aren't wealthy enough to build a bridge without tolls

Pretty soon you won't be able to cross the fraser without paying one

We can't limit class sizes and provide resources for all of our kids

We can't raise taxes on the middle class, blobber will explode

We can't touch multinationals so it's got to be business here that can't leave.

The idea that big business gets a free ride because they provide jobs and wealth isn't working out too well


On my way back here I stopped in at Canadian tire to pick up a couple of hockey sticks I could find none made in Canada and they averaged over a hundred dollars each

They are all graphite and Kevlar now so somewhere in Malaysia is a high tech hockey stick factory making sticks that we should be making

When I got home I looked closer at the labels of all my gear... Nothing made in Canada
User avatar
ukcanuck
MVP
MVP
Posts: 1236
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 3:04 am

Re: Kneecaps

Post by ukcanuck »

Topper wrote:
Strangelove wrote:
Topper wrote:
Strangelove wrote:(according to 2 judges thus far, and of course pending appeal).
Only one judge, Susan Griffin, and she's ruled on the matter twice, oddly without over ruling herself.
Yeahno, I was trying to say Susan Griffin has the wisdom of two judges!

(may be a tad Pauserish but at least I didn't Pratt it) :mrgreen:

(and it wasn't baldfaced like Crooked Christy) :mrgreen:
It is something that is ignored in the media. Both rulings came from the same judge. The BCTF definitely likes to play up the two court case ruling so that is what we hear........over and over again.

While the BCTF argues it is a collective bargaining issue, the government argues it is an education policy issue. If you look at how Griffin's ruling is implemented across the province it removes any flexibility local school boards have in reacting to changing school populations.

I touched on this in a much earlier post.

I our school district I know of two communities served by 1 room elementary schools. there has been much talk of closing them and busing the kids to larger centre but each time compassion wins over economics and the school is kept open. The main argument is you would be putting K-7 kids on the bus for 3 hrs a day. I don't have any qualms with that.

Now if those 1 room schools need special needs teachers due to class composition rules, the additional cost of staffing would tip the balance, those schools would close. Parent loose, students loose and the BCTF, through their own doing, looses a couple of job positions.

Now if the district has some flexibility, they can offer extra incentives to the teacher for the additional load, keep the school operational and parents and students happy.

The demand for hard and fast class size/composition rules will bite and it will lead to a centralization of education services in larger centres at the loss of the smaller rural schools.
Your missing the argument that teachers know better how to compose class sizes and composition that a bean counter in Victoria

Teachers what to be consulted and each district has a local BCTF so it wouldn't be difficult to be flexible at all.
You should have qualms with kids on a bus three hours a day, lack of sleep affects their test results. To be at school for 8 they will have be up at 5:30 and won't get home till 5 pm in many parts of the province kids would never see daylight except through a classroom window.
User avatar
Meds
MVP
MVP
Posts: 3929
Joined: Mon Jul 11, 2011 8:50 pm

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Meds »

ukcanuck wrote: Your arguments are old school bait and switch.
Derisive personal comments linked to Cold War propaganda.

Communism does not describe the political ground upon which unionist and social minded people stand.

Dave Barrett is no more a communist than Jimmy Pattison is a nazi.

Yet this is the first page in the right handed play book, divert attention to the irrelevant and hope everyone missed the obvious.

(Sadly it seems to work on Mëds)
It's not so much a tactic that works on me.....it's that I don't subscribe to a LW view and a totally socialistic or communist system (not say your a commie).

I just subscribe to a pragmatic view, you know, do what works. Running a country or province into the ground by instituting laws, taxes, etc., that will drive away the big businesses that offer employment and higher incomes is just retarded. It's even more retarded to then talk about increasing spending and forgetting about any kind of budget so long as everyone gets what they want.....and then the money runs out and we are fucked.

Obviously the value of some things is intangible, but it's still what we have to work with, and for some reason the left wing side of the equation lives in a fantasy world where the rules that apply just don't apply.

Ironically, in this particular thread and the conversation regarding the teachers, I'm on the side of the teachers for the most part. They deserve a fair wage, and, more than that, they deserve to have the government honor what the courts awarded them.
Somewhere in NW BC trying (yet again) to trade a(nother) Swede…..
User avatar
ukcanuck
MVP
MVP
Posts: 1236
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 3:04 am

Re: Kneecaps

Post by ukcanuck »

Mëds wrote:
ukcanuck wrote: Your arguments are old school bait and switch.
Derisive personal comments linked to Cold War propaganda.

Communism does not describe the political ground upon which unionist and social minded people stand.

Dave Barrett is no more a communist than Jimmy Pattison is a nazi.

Yet this is the first page in the right handed play book, divert attention to the irrelevant and hope everyone missed the obvious.

(Sadly it seems to work on Mëds)
It's not so much a tactic that works on me.....it's that I don't subscribe to a LW view and a totally socialistic or communist system (not say your a commie).

I just subscribe to a pragmatic view, you know, do what works. Running a country or province into the ground by instituting laws, taxes, etc., that will drive away the big businesses that offer employment and higher incomes is just retarded. It's even more retarded to then talk about increasing spending and forgetting about any kind of budget so long as everyone gets what they want.....and then the money runs out and we are fucked.

Obviously the value of some things is intangible, but it's still what we have to work with, and for some reason the left wing side of the equation lives in a fantasy world where the rules that apply just don't apply.

Ironically, in this particular thread and the conversation regarding the teachers, I'm on the side of the teachers for the most part. They deserve a fair wage, and, more than that, they deserve to have the government honor what the courts awarded them.
Consider the Scandinavian countries, Europe and the UK all more lefty than BC and all doing well enough, the Mediterranean countries not so much. But freaking Norway has an absolute free post secondary system. Imagine no student loan debts...
Switzerland is looking at bringing in a minimum guaranteed income for everyone.
The UK is in the same swing canada is with Harpo but they still tax the shit out of everybody in a lefty way.

The idea that big business can't be taxed lest they take their money elsewhere has to reexamined because it's not the only way all other jurisdictions handle things.


However going back to the education budget the Libs have cut taxes and lowered the budget in education for years.
They had money for the Olympics and they had it for the roof on bc place

They seem to be able to find money for projects that are important to them

But they don't send their kids to public schools do they ?
User avatar
Topper
CC Legend
Posts: 7725
Joined: Wed Sep 15, 2004 8:11 pm
Location: Earth, most days.

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Topper »

ukcanuck wrote:Your missing the argument that teachers know better how to compose class sizes and composition that a bean counter in Victoria
Education policy is the responsibility of the Provincial Government and has been that way since the British North America Act.

The tail does not wag the dog.
ukcanuck wrote:and each district has a local BCTF
Some district have two BCTF offices. Just ask Iker, he ran one of the double represented BCTF locals pocketing his executive salary (teachers union dues) for being redundant.
Over the Internet, you can pretend to be anyone or anything.

I'm amazed that so many people choose to be complete twats.
User avatar
ukcanuck
MVP
MVP
Posts: 1236
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 3:04 am

Re: Kneecaps

Post by ukcanuck »

Topper wrote:
ukcanuck wrote:Your missing the argument that teachers know better how to compose class sizes and composition that a bean counter in Victoria
Education policy is the responsibility of the Provincial Government and has been that way since the British North America Act.

The tail does not wag the dog.
ukcanuck wrote:and each district has a local BCTF
Some district have two BCTF offices. Just ask Iker, he ran one of the double represented BCTF locals pocketing his executive salary (teachers union dues) for being redundant.
That's why class composition and class size need to be negotiated because teachers know which children need testing and which need additional support

Teachers have education degrees and know how to deliver courses.

Government should facilitate the education system not control it in order to cut costs

Teachers are a part of the education system not an enemy of the state.


Class size goes to working conditions and quality of service for students. Unlimited class sizes makes the possibility of 35 kids and that's a physical impossible number and still mark every piece of work and plan differentiated lessons. I would need to spend another 25-30 hours a week just keeping up.

Composition should be a three way decision between the teacher, administration and a doctor, not allowing testing by the ministry because of budget concerns is not an acceptable answer in many cases.

This is just how it needs to be to work
User avatar
Topper
CC Legend
Posts: 7725
Joined: Wed Sep 15, 2004 8:11 pm
Location: Earth, most days.

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Topper »

ukcanuck wrote:Unlimited class sizes makes the possibility of 35 kids and that's a physical impossible number and still mark every piece of work and plan differentiated lessons. I would need to spend another 25-30 hours a week just keeping up.
35 students was quite common in the classes I went to elementary school in.
ukcanuck wrote:Composition should be a three way decision between the teacher, administration and a doctor, not allowing testing by the ministry because of budget concerns is not an acceptable answer in many cases.

This is just how it needs to be to work
Your version of educational utopia needs a do$e of reality.

Teachers went to school to learn to teach, educational policy is the domain of the elected government. Just as taxation and budgeting is.
Over the Internet, you can pretend to be anyone or anything.

I'm amazed that so many people choose to be complete twats.
User avatar
ukcanuck
MVP
MVP
Posts: 1236
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 3:04 am

Re: Kneecaps

Post by ukcanuck »

:wink:
Topper wrote:
ukcanuck wrote:Unlimited class sizes makes the possibility of 35 kids and that's a physical impossible number and still mark every piece of work and plan differentiated lessons. I would need to spend another 25-30 hours a week just keeping up.
35 students was quite common in the classes I went to elementary school in.
ukcanuck wrote:Composition should be a three way decision between the teacher, administration and a doctor, not allowing testing by the ministry because of budget concerns is not an acceptable answer in many cases.

This is just how it needs to be to work
Your version of educational utopia needs a do$e of reality.

Teachers went to school to learn to teach, educational policy is the domain of the elected government. Just as taxation and budgeting is.
Tax and budgets are numbers education is about people.

You should be aware that anecdotal evidence is not always valuable.

Sure 35 kids in a elementary classroom when I went to school was not uncommon in the 1970s
But 2014 and it's a different world.

35 kids in high school college prep courses and provincial exam courses are way out of line.

Private schools know the optimum is 22. That's what the public system should shoot for.


As for coin yeah it's more expensive but that's the reality, it's about priorities



Sure, the governments concern is to keep costs down but it's teachers concern to provide the expertise ...

It's called balance which is what class size used to be

Now it's all the way to the government side and there are kids and parents getting screwed over.
And that is fact not my version of utopia.

Pretty sure if it was your kid who couldn't get the timetables or kept putting letters backwards and was being marginalized in classrooms and on the playground and withdrawing into himself no matter what you were doing at home would colour your idea of dollars and sense
User avatar
SKYO
MVP
MVP
Posts: 3403
Joined: Sat Jul 09, 2011 10:34 pm

Re: Kneecaps

Post by SKYO »

September 22nd we can finally send our kids back to school to get their education...order shall be restored.

8-)

Image
Can the Canucks just win a Cup within the next 5 years.
User avatar
Blob Mckenzie
MVP
MVP
Posts: 9135
Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 12:34 pm
Location: Oakalla

Re: Kneecaps

Post by Blob Mckenzie »

ukcanuck wrote:

We can't raise taxes on the middle class, blobber will explode
Blob is fine if taxes are raised. Blob is not fine when the taxes are raised but the overall situation does not improve. Blob has a problem when hospital janitors are raking in $35 an hour and welfare slugs get 1000 a month because they are too fucking lazy and useless to go get a job. Blob has a problem with gobs of money going to ESL and teachers who want class sizes of 20 kids just like the private schools have. Go teach at a fucking private school if this is such a big deal to you. I'm sure the public system will survive your loss.

I have had one raise in the last five years uk yet you don't hear me constantly bitching about it. I do ok but my income is supplemented by my company performing well and my overtime, not because I have my fucking hand out asking for more all the time.

Maybe the resources that the govt receives could be better allocated than just dinging the taxpayer more every time the nurses/teachers/cupe etc jump up and down and scream for more. I forgot that's the NDP way. Just hit the taxpayer with the bill. There is a reason the NFG has formed govt only three fucking times in this province. I will give you a hint . It's not because we are all idiots for voting for Socreds and Liberals. Maybe it is the commies who are out to lunch here.
“I don’t care what you and some other poster were talking about”
Post Reply