Monday, February 14, 2011

Canada - Land Of The Future? French Not Required

Canadian Mountie


Welcome to all of our ABT readers,


Are you like many of Canada's neighbors to the South (residents of the USA)


Here are just some of the questions that we have heard from South of the Canadian border.


1. Does the phrase  "Canadian Mounties always get their man" mean they are gay? 


2. Do Canadians live in igloos because there is snow there all year around?


3. Are there Polar Bears in Canada?


4. Why do Canadians have to kill baby seals?


5. Are all Canadians like Red Green?


6. Does everyone in Canada speak French?


7. If I were to go to Canada could I ever come back home?


8. Do all Canadians drink beer?


9. Was the movie "Brother Bear" filmed in Canada?


10. Is Newfoundland and Nova Scotia part of Canada?


11. Do you have ice cream in Canada because it is so cold there?


Have you asked these or other similar questions about Canada? Why not take a few minutes and read the following article that was published in the Washington Times January 4th issue.



Article in the “” Washington Times””  January 4th - Go North, young man, go North Canada is quietly surpassing the U.S.. As the land of opportunityBy James A. Bacon

The Washington Times
6:29 p.m., Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Illustration: Canada and freedom
Unless the Winter Olympics are on television or someone is clubbing baby seals, Americans don't pay much attention to what's happening in Canada. It's as if we live in a house with a set of quiet, orderly neighbors on one side and a bachelor pad with drunken parties, girls in the hot tub and occasional gunshot eruptions on the other. To whom would you pay more attention?
I dare say Americans could correctly name the president of Mexico (Filipe Calderon) over the prime minister ofCanada (Stephen Harper) by a margin of 5-to-1. That's too bad. While we have every reason to fear the disorder spilling over from our increasingly lawless neighbor to the south, our well-mannered Canadian neighbors have pulled their act together. We could learn a lot from them.
Look what's not happening in Canada. There is no real estate crisis. There is no banking crisis. There is no unemployment crisis.. There is no sovereign debt crisis. Recent reports suggest that consumers are loading up too much debt, but Canada shares that problem with nearly every other country in the industrialized world.
Among the Group of Seven nations, which also include the United States, France, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom and Italy, Canada's economic activity has come the closest to returning to the pre-recession peak. The country has recovered three-quarters of all jobs it lost. The International Monetary Fund estimates that Canada will be the only country among the G-7 to have achieved a balanced budget by 2015.
Now, instead of expanding Canada's welfare state, the conservative government led by Mr. Harper is intent upon building the nation's global competitiveness. Our friends in the Great White North cut their corporate tax rate to 16.5 percent on Jan. 1 and will see it drop to 15 percent next year. That compares to the current U.S. Corporate tax rate of 35 percent. That will give Canada the lowest corporate tax rate among the G-7 nations and an eye-popping advantage for businesses wondering whether to locate on the U.S. Or Canadian side of the border.
The last time Canadians really caught Americans' eyes was when prime ministers such as Jean Chretien and Paul Martin, both leaders of the Liberal Party, were proving uncooperative in the realm of foreign policy. American media played up disagreements over the invasion of Iraq and Canadian participation in the American National Missile Defense Program, which made President George W. Bush look bad and confirmed the narrative that his cowboy foreign policy had alienated old friends around the world. By contrast, when Canadian soldiers under the conservative government became active combatants in Afghan-istan, the American media showed little interest.
But that's nothing new. Except to note how well or how poorly Canada's national health care system was working, Americans have paid little heed to news coming out of Ottawa. The titanic effort of both Canada's liberal and conservative parties in the 1990s and 2000s to rein in government spending largely escaped our notice. Nor did it ever occur to anyone to wonder why, with our economies so closely entwined, U.S.Housing prices were busting through the roof while Canadian houses remained so sensible.
It turns out that Ottawa's housing policies and banking regulations tempered the boom in real estate prices. No tax deductions for mortgage interest payments. And get this: Buyers actually had to make down payments on their houses. Because there was no real estate bust, there was no banking crisis. (Indeed, healthy Canadian banks are snapping upU.S. Financial assets.) Despite the lack of public policies geared toward stimulating homeownership, Canadian homeownership was 68..4 percent in 2008. That would be a higher number than in the United States, which was 67.4 percent in 2009.
Lesson to Americans: If you want affordable housing, stop promoting policies to make it more "affordable."
Meanwhile, Canada has many of the same assets that Americans like to brag about, such as an immigrant tradition that invites foreigners to live and work in the country. On a per-capita basis, the rate of legal immigration to Canada is comparable to that to the U.S. Settling in world-class, creative cities like Toronto and Vancouver, foreigners add immeasurably to the nation's wealth-creating capacity
Talented Canadians have long regarded the United States as the land of opportunity. It may not be long before Americans see our northern neighbor as the land of the future.
James A. Bacon is author of the book "Boomergeddon" (Oaklea Press, 2010) and publisher of the blog by the same name.    

Can A Budget A Future Make?



Welcome to all of our ABT readers,

Are you familiar with Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs? We all have needs some are more basic than others  and that is what this pyramid is all about. With a survey of our needs as a household we can tell where we need to spend our household income. "Our Budget"

Today is the day the President of the United States Of America  presents his long awaited and much discussed "Budget" to "Win The Future".

There appears to be some major cutting as well as a five year freeze in proposed spending around the issues of community support programs and discretionary spending.

The focus IS rather on education, innovation, specific infistructure and associated support. This focus appears to be laser like in it's approach to getting the country in a firm position to compete with the world going forward.

Watch this seventeen minute video and judge for yourself. Is this what it is going to take to make the cut?



Thanks for watching.

What do you think? Is this the best approach to bring prosperity back to America? Is the "Race To The Top" program a good program or does it just continue to support a broken education system that still educates children for twentieth century jobs that no longer exist? Is there a plan in place to support the education of mature students in order to find jobs to support families in the new economic environment? Is it enough?

How important is the development of infrastructure like high speed Internet and rail as well as other transport systems.

Is this the way to "Win The Future" and give the people "A Brighter Tomorrow"

One last question. Will the world changing events such as Egypt have an effect on your future?  How?

Thanks for taking the time to read this post and watch the video! Please feel free to post your thoughts as a comment below.

We will post again soon,