Posted on 02/02/2006 11:06:41 AM PST by fanfan
On Saturday the 21st, reports of gunfire drew police to an apartment containing a dying cabdriver named Ashok Malhotra. Witnesses saw two men, Jose Antonio Barajas and Ishtiaq Hussain, flee the scene. This homicide was Richmond, Californias first of the year and a new chief of police had just been sworn in, so the hunt was on.
It ended last Tuesday 900 miles from the scene of the crime, at the Peace Arch border crossing near Blaine, Washington, with the perps just a yard shy of home free. Barajas and Hussain had pulled into a rest stop along I-5 when a police officer matched them with the APB and tried to collar them. They gave him the slip, sped toward the Canadian border at over 100 mph, and plowed into several American police cars before a strategically aimed van brought them up short. They then tried to hoof it, but cops shot Hussain in the leg and tackled Barajas.
Heres the kicker: When the Americans turned around to ask their Canadian counterparts, How do you like that, eh? they could hear the crickets chirping. More that 40 Canadian customs officers had abandoned their posts to avoid the conflict. Which made good sense, given that the Americans (cops and crooks both) were the only ones who had guns.
The story made slight impress south of the 49th parallel, but for many Canadians it captured everything that is wrong with their governments approach to public order. The border officials werent cowards, just sane men. A spokesman for their union asked: What were they supposed to do? Throw their flashlights at the invaders?
In fact, their retreat didnt stray too far from the script. Because Canadian border guards do not carry guns, they are not supposed to engage a motorist suspected of having one. Its standard procedure to allow him into the country and then call in the RCMP and hope for the best.
It gets better: If Barajas and Hussain had made it through, its likely that they would never have returned to Richmond to stand trial. Canadian courts have proven extremely reluctant to extradite prisoners who face the possibility of the death penalty, and the tragic execution of St. Tookie doubtless demonstrated that the state of California is barbaric enough to kill convicted murderers. Canada used to get our draft dodgers. Now it gets our murder suspects to add to its growing problem of urban violence.
As luck would have it, the day before the border run, Canadians went to the polls in a federal election and tossed out the Liberal government in favor (sorry, favour) of a new Conservative one. Prime Minister-elect Stephen Harpers Conservative Party ran on a platform that included anti-corruption measures, tax relief, and a less lame approach to law and order. One plank was a proposal to finally arm border officers, whose union has been asking for side arms for years. The Liberals, in power for the last 13 years, had stubbornly refused. The Peace Arch incident was a slam dunk argument to follow through on that pledge. As a Globe and Mail headline put it, Tories stick to their guns.
Aboot time, you might say, but that sensibly hard-headed approach has been missing in Canada for the period of Liberal rule, and some feared it was gone forever. David Miller, the left-wing mayor of Toronto, blamed recent shootings there by Jamaican gang members on Americas easy gun regime and a too-porous border. And Parliament has passed a slate of largely useless gun control measures, including a national long-gun registry to try to cut down on all those drive-by hunting-rifle shootings.
Harpers party fell well short of a parliamentary majority, so they will be looking for issues to fashion coalitions around and which will better position Conservative candidates for the next go-round. Law and order issues will be awfully tempting. Some of the great demon figures in Canadian politics are the nations lenient judges, who seem to find new rights for criminals under every clause and semicolon of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, including the right to vote while in jail.
Unlike in the U.S., a national anti-crime effort could make real difference in the Great White North. Canada has a uniform criminal code that can be amended by an act of Parliament. And the RCMP is a cross between state troopers, the FBI, and Barney Fife. Many communities contract with the national government to provide all their local law enforcement needs, so changes in RCMP priorities would matter a whole lot more than D.A.R.E. (Hello, broken windows!)
As Harper contemplates the next election, the simple fact is that Liberals and the further left NDP have carved out strongholds in three of the nations larger urban areas: greater Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto. He must whittle down support for the opposition parties there if he has any hope of holding on to power.
Fortunately for Harper two of those three locales are beset by serious gang violence, and polls indicate that the locals are mad as hell about it. They might even consider voting Conservative if the new government proves serious about punishing violent lawbreakers. Making MPs vote on, say, tougher sentencing laws and jail construction would hand Harpers party either legislative victories or wonderfully effective attack ads.
And arming border officials might give new meaning to the last line of the countrys national anthem. You know, the part where hockey fans sing, We stand on guard for thee.
I think Harper will provide some good, positive change for Canada.
Now you know what you can do with the liberals there.
Ogopogo is hungry! LOL!
In 1978 I was visiting my aunt in Vancouver and we went out to the Okanagan Valley to pick blueberries. It was great.
Where in the States are you from?
i hadn't thought of that! lol good idea! i was wanting to use some of the street thugs here as bait, thought it would be fun to troll with them. lol
i am from Washington state, just across the border actually, the Tonasket/Oroville area. little farming towns. :) no wonder i am conservative huh? lol
LOL!
It's not so bad.
We managed to get 4 more Conservative seats here.
It could be worse, I could still live in Toronto. ;-)
Agreed.
Or Vancouver!
I'm originally from Indiana but I live in Maryland :o/
i lived on the South Shore of Montreal Quebec for about 4 years. i thought i would die. you know that bible verse, If thine eyes offened thee, pluck them out."??? whew, i would need a lot of them. LOL
And I thought Baltimore was bad!
lol well not only did i hate the VERY liberal life style there, i also missed the mountains. :( really glad to be back here, and glad to have meet someone from Kelowna that isn't a Bush bashing American hater. i feel faint actually...
Or Montreal!
I know her from the Dementional Doorway thread, she's great!
Do they all have to be so,so, liberal?
i am going to have to make a point to meet her when i get a chance!!! :)
I think the city dwellers get used to having everything done for them, so are naturals for nanny-state thinking.
A few years back Toronto called the army in because of a big snow storm......wimps!
Should be easy since you both live in Kelowna :o)
Now THAT sounds like Baltimore!
Her?
I always guess wrong.
So we're a bunch of chicks, huh? LOL!
YeP!
With all the talk lately about "the flow of guns" one item hasn't been heard about--the suspicion that criminals were using the handgun registry to target victims for burglary. Was in the news a couple months ago, maybe it still is, though I haven't read anything, nor have I read whether or not an investigation was ever launched.
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