Barry Goldwater, Our Chief Inspiration Officer

Barry Goldwater, Our Chief Inspiration Officer
Moderation In The Pursuit Of Justice Is No Virtue; Extremism In The Defense Of Liberty Is No Vice

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

STUDENT PROGRESSIVE ACTION NETWORK RADICALS OOZE COMMUNISM

UPDATE -- NEW UBC AMS ELECTION ARTICLE --
STUDENT PROGRESSIVE ACTION NETWORK RADICALS OOZE COMMUNISM

The fundamental message of this article is simple, so for the time-pressed among us (read: engineers) and those who just plain don’t like to read (read: engineers), I’ll tell you everything you need to know right now: In the oft forgotten Student Leadership Fund Society election (the one you didn’t know was happening), don’t vote for the Student Progressive Action Network (SPAN) because they are radicals (fo’ reals communists) who don’t have your best interests at heart. Instead, vote for their (only) rival, the Students for Responsible Leadership (SRL), an intelligent, experienced, and well… responsible group of individuals – the type of people you’d want to watch your kitten. And do your homework.

Now that the letterman jackets have returned to their, uh, graph paper (right?), I’ll be a little more effusive. I’m taken to thank the rank communists, anarchists, dumpster-divers and malcontents of the Student Progressive Action Network for doing us all a great service: they have concentrated themselves in one election. Granted, we owe this more to their pragmatic sensibilities than their benevolence, but with these people, I’ll take a good deed any way I can get it.

By practical sensibilities, I refer to the group’s own knowledge that not one of their ragtag buffoons could possibly win any other AMS election - but not for lack of trying. The same tepid radical cesspool from which emerged the leviathan SPAN, produced a lackluster (if ambitiously oriented) unofficial slate last year. Predictably, the slate lost, and lost hard. Rory Breasail, their flagship candidate (so designated both because of his perceived strength and because of his ultra-radical views) was not only beaten but shamed. After a pitiful debate performance, he came in dead last in the polls, despite his persistent, almost militant, protestations that he spoke for students.

What is more, the individual radicals that comprise SPAN have emerged in the ONE race that allows slates. Low profile and new (yet-unlisted) radicals, once identifiable only by their penurious wardrobe, are now officially linked to their better-known ideological allies. Armed with this knowledge, UBC students can be confident their vote is not going to a radical ideologue. And while progressive isn’t most apt word for a group of Stalinist thugs, it is at least a familiar euphemism.

I am reluctant to go into too much detail on the appalling history* of individual SPAN candidates because it is at once too easy and too difficult. (* Appalling is a strong word, and I use it here because it is truly apt. The appalling history to which I refer includes an incident in which two prominent SPAN candidates attempted to verbally and physically intimidate me in the Student Union Building. Rest assured, they were most unsuccessful.)

Too easy, because these are self-identified radicals. My blog, ‘Caught Red Handed’ earned its reputation by exposing latent threats to good governance, from frightening fundamentalists and unscrupulous electioneers. “Exposing” these proud-to-be radicals is rather like being a DEA agent at a heroin convention, or… a midnight screening of ‘The Dark Side of Oz’.

Too difficult, because detailing the sordid history and twisted beliefs of SPAN members is at best a lugubrious necessity, and at worst, a counterproductive exercise that gratifies the very people it decries, by recounting for a wider audience than they could organically attain, their illiberal ideology and their ignoble pursuits of those ends. Just as the vandal relishes front-page news of his handiwork, so too will the radicals sanctimoniously indulge in the infamy garnered from popular and specific criticism.

Fortunately, no such in depth analysis or expositive journalism is necessary in this case. This is one election where both parties vying for your vote are being honest. If you want to find out what they stand for, consult them directly. I write this article only to make you aware of the grave danger posed by the extreme radicals running in this otherwise only marginally important race.

There is no Student Legal Fund Society debate, which is a shame because the SPAN radicals would have been so soundly defeated. One wonders whether the organizing committee couldn’t find a thick enough antimacassar to satisfy the would-be hosts concerns - valid though Kubrickian - regarding communist contamination. It runs in their fluids, after all.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

THE WAR ON FUN

THE WAR ON FUN.
FIGHT IT!
BECAUSE THE AMS SURE ISN'T.

The VP finance, who we just re-elected, decided to cancel toonie tuesdays. It's a shame, because that and the balanced budget were the only two good things he did... wait... make that the only thing... wait... make that the only fomrer thing.

That's right. With an unbalanced budget and no more toonie tuesdays, he's officially done... nothing, in his year in office. And now, he has a mandate to do it all again.

Congrats, VP Tayyar. Now you can go on vacation for the year, and not leave us any worse off. That's some damn clever posturing. I appreciate cleverness. In fact, I'd drink to it, but... you know... I can't afford to... anymore...

CAUGHT RED HANDED, SPECIAL FEATURE
Join in solidarity with our comrads (but not the commi kind, ew) in California, as they do their part in war on fun. This is a conflict with many fronts.

http://www.stopthewaronfun.org/

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Caught Red Handed Honored For Defending America


Caught Red Handed Honored For Defending America

Gordon Katic Becomes 'Campus Left' Columnist for Ubyssey

Gordon Katic Becomes Campus Left Columnist for Ubyssey



Congrats, Gord. I knew the Ubyssey was missing SOOOMETHING. I just wasn't sure what. The left! Of course! How could I have forgot? So many right of center columnists, and so few to get out the message of UBC's small, fledgling leftist population.

NAAAWT.

Maybe you could just rename it the People's Times and use red ink.

Silver lining:
Maybe more leftist coverage in campus' most read publication will be able to mobilize normal students to go to an SJC meeting... at which point, they'll realize how completely insane the SJC is and join me in campaigning for its swift, wholesale liquidation.

THIS JUST IN

THIS JUST IN

CAUGHT RED HANDED found to contain more words than an engineering student will write in his/her (who are we kidding... his) entire lifetime. Engineers reacted to this news by making weird noises, pounding some beers, putting on letterman jackets, and dangling something big from something tall.

Three Ideas That Would Improve UBC Immediately

Three Ideas That Would Improve UBC Immediately



Take heed oh newly elected leaders, here are three simple  ideas that could be put into place immediately and would just as quickly have an enormously positive effect on the student body.

1. Do Stuff YOU Can Do, While You Lobby Other People To Do Other Stuff

I know you AMS types have an obsession with tuition fees and land use planning and rapid transit and other things that will never really effect any students at UBC right now (except perhaps for the SJC which tends to cultivate forty somethings who stick around for quite some time). I know that long term grand scale stuff is important to you. Fine. Do it. Lobby. Build the skytrain yourselves, if you want. Just make sure that's not all you're doing. You could immeasurably improve the student experience by making campus cooler with events and school-wide programming. Integrate the fraternities and sororities more into mainstream campus life, the way you find on many American campuses. The key to getting students engaged isn't some open forum on something boring is a dark little room in the SUB on a Tuesday night. Think big. Thin exciting. Think partay. While you wait for other, less reliable institutions to come through for you, do the things you can do independently to realize immediate success. 

2. [Re]Watch all the great college movies ever made. THAT is what college should be like. Make it happen.

So this is pretty straight forward. Just be sure to repeat it regularly. Oh and public screenings, though not a substitute for private AMS ones, would be good too. In case you need some suggestions, the following are required watching: Animal House; Back to School; the Paper Chase; Revenge of the Nerds. 

3. When you plan events, plan them for everybody. 

The AMS shouldn't plan events for the AMS. The AMS should plan events for the students at large. It's not enough to have an event wherein a representative from each faculty does something cool on behalf of the thousands of students they represent. Make things happen that actually involve the majority of students. I know it's tough, but if you could do it once or twice a semester, it would dramatically change the character of the campus. 

Thank You, Mr. President

Thank You, Mr. President



The controversy over the message of thanks directed at our president Bijan was staggering. The complexity of the issues surrounding the creation of ithank.ca belies the simplicity of its message. The discussions that followed the website, which included some of the most involved discussions ever held anywhere on subject of mint patties, ignored the heart of the website's purpose. Even as arrogant early-twenty-somethings bemoaned the impressionable nature of 18 year old first years with a level of arrogance and superiority that would be have been off-putting had it come from an aged monarch, they failed to address the real issue.

The real issue of course, the one that Bijan's enemies delicately tried to avoid, is that Bijan is worthy of our sincere thanks.

If Bijan is older than most students pursuing a double degree in business and law, it's because he's devoted so much of himself to this university and its student society. We may forget his service, but I don't suspect we, or students that follow, will soon forget the results of his tenure.

The meaningful progress on the new SUB, perhaps the most ambitious project embarked upon by ours our any student union since the building of our last SUB, will surely be jewel in his crown of merit. Improving university/AMS relations to a level that would have been unimaginable twelve months earlier will be up there too. By creating meaninful dialogue with the school, Bijan has set up his successor for success.

And did all this without any UN assistance. Remarkable, eh Blake?

So thank you Mr. President, not just for your work in office this past year, but for your decade of service to this institution.

By the way, you're one HELL OF A DANCER.