Apr 082012
 

Support your local Smart Meter.

BC Hydro has joined many forward-thinking utility companies around the world in placing Smart Meters at every house and business everywhere.

This is a good thing. Support the transition.

Naysayers point at all the meter readers losing their jobs. So what? Are you a meter reader? So what do you care?

Naysayers point at all the fires caused by Smart Meters. So what? Lightning causes fires, too, and there’s nothing that can be done about that either.

Naysayers point out that your utility bills will go up with Smart Meters. Guess what? Your bills will go up without Smart Meters, too. Get used to it.

Naysayers point out that a Smart Meter emits 14,000 cancer-causing radio frequency bursts every day – a burst every 6 seconds – and that a block of 20 houses emits as much as 10,000 times more radiation than a cell phone. So what? The sun emits even more radiation than that, so are they going to turn off the sun?

Naysayers point out that Smart Meters invade your privacy. If you actually think you have privacy now, the government, your hairdresser, your neighbours, and your boss would all have a laugh over that one!

Support Smart Meters. Because it won’t make any difference if you don’t.

This is General Disorder for Vulture Guard. Carrion, Canada…

Apr 062012
 

Legalize Everything

Actually, decriminalize everything.  Legalization only causes more paperwork and employs more lawyers.  While lawyers are often mistaken as vultures, they are actually a much more predatory breed.  We don’t like lawyers.

Vultures are laid back, mellow, passive.  We’d rather do things that are not illegal, rather than cow-tow to laws.  We don’t want permission to live our lives.  We want to live our lives with no constraints.

In Canada, abortion is decriminalized.  Kill a baby – no sweat; it’s not illegal.

In Canada, anal sex by consenting adults is decriminalized.  Spread HIV, STDs, e-coli, Hep A-B-C…  It’s A-OK with the law.

But in Canada, smoking pot is not legal.  Alcohol makes you higher and cigarettes make you sicker.  Pot should be decriminalized, too.  In fact, all drugs should be decriminalized.

Laws cause stress.  Stress is unhealthy.  If it feels good, we should be able to do it – stress free.

Make laws illegal.

This is General Disorder for Vulture Guard.  Carrion, Canada…

Apr 022012
 

[Bean counters.  They’re the worst!  Yes, things cost money.  The CBC needs our tax dollars to continue to provide vacuous drivel to keep us distracted.  They deserve it!  Would these bean counters rather we all turn off our TVs and take to the streets for our entertainment?  How prehistoric!  Bean counters.  Ugh.]

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Your tax dollars at work waste!

The 100% state-owned, socialism-reliant CBC has spent about…

 

Apr 022012
 

[The Rolling Stones wrote this, but while their black little hearts may have been in the right place, their rendition sounds like it’s by pansie little girls compared to Laibach’s masterful translation…]

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Apr 022012
 

[Whine, whine, whine…  These greedy SOBs think it’s all about money.  When will they wake up and smell the sweet after-aroma of indiscriminate sex?  So what if you get AIDS – everyone dies; you might as well enjoy your life to the hilt until then.  And so what if it costs millions of dollars to have AIDS?  You don’t have to pay – the government pays for it, which means every taxpayer in Canada chips in for your medical bills.  Just do it!]

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November 24, 2011, Ottawa, ON. The Canadian AIDS Society has released a report today that indicates that the economic impact of 3,070 new HIV infections in 2009 has a lifetime cost of $4,031,500,000, approximately 22% higher than previously estimated.

November 24th marks the beginning of Canadian HIV/AIDS Awareness Week and the release of this report – The Economic Cost of HIV/AIDS in Canada, written by JoAnn Kingston-Riechers, PhD, from the Institute of Health Economics and the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology at the University of Alberta – should serve as a sobering reminder of the impact of approximately 3,070 new HIV infections in Canada each year. The report focusses on the costs of treatment and the costs associated with loss of productivity for lost work hours throughout the lifetime of those recently infected individuals (as of 2009).

Read all about it here…