Craziest news story in your country?


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Well.....I'm watching the news in MN and the temp is below zero( like it's been all winter long) it's almost March 1st and the weatherman says "cold air is coming".......? OMG I don't know how much longer I can take it.

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Not much going on here, since Rob Ford has been trying to keep low key.

The exact opposite actually. Within the past 2 weeks he:

Hit his bollocks running into a fire hydrant.

Condemned both his competitors in the municipal elections.

Said the Toronto police chief was against him and being a very very mean man!

Went to a mayor's conference in Ottawa after (for years) calling it a "lefty caucus". Then was condemned by other mayor's there.

[lefty caucus.. hehehehe]

And my personal favourite:

When asked why he gave pay raises and bonuses to his staff and friends (when promising to cut spending), he responded with:

"did I give my personal staff pay raises and bonuses? Of course I did!"

and just left it there with no further insight.

In fact, he made front page news today in most Toronto papers.

Sent from my BlackBerry Q10 using Tapatalk for Android.

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The exact opposite actually. Within the past 2 weeks he:

Hit his bollocks running into a fire hydrant.

Condemned both his competitors in the municipal elections.

Said the Toronto police chief was against him and being a very very mean man!

Went to a mayor's conference in Ottawa after (for years) calling it a "lefty caucus". Then was condemned by other mayor's there.

[lefty caucus.. hehehehe]

And my personal favourite:

When asked why he gave pay raises and bonuses to his staff and friends (when promising to cut spending), he responded with:

"did I give my personal staff pay raises and bonuses? Of course I did!"

and just left it there with no further insight.

In fact, he made front page news today in most Toronto papers.

Sent from my BlackBerry Q10 using Tapatalk for Android.

Ahhh we have one of these too, we call them Boris Johnson. Ours is a favourite for the next, if not future, prime minister though :S

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aye, i know Johnson...

his little escapades with Cameron are hard to keep off the radar! :)

Last I heard he got stuck zip lining down a building, gave up so delivered his speech dangling mid air lol. His international gaffs are hilarious though, most on youtube, jokes/speeches by him always make him laugh and the hosts/guests not quite sure just how offended they should be :D

He's like a walking British stereotype, madder than a box of frogs!

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Family Bliss Ends Up in Costly Smoke

A man in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia is burning away his money and his family’s happiness due to his addiction to imported Cuban cigars, Harian Metro reported.

“I have been suffering for three years. We had to pawn all our jewellery to meet his taste for the expensive imported cigars. on which he spends RM700 to RM2,000(200USD-625USD) a box,” said the man’s aggrieved wife, who wants to only be known as Sara, 30.

“Normally, it takes a long time to finish a cigar. In my husband’s case, he smokes like a chimney.”

She said he started on his unusual habit from socialising with certain office friends and she initially thought it was just a passing fad.

Things got worse about a year ago when he started sourcing for the cigars via the Internet and no longer giving her money for their household needs, she said.

Sara added that she now has to sell food and take catering orders to make ends meet for the family.

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A head scratcher out of Quebec

Quebec shop owner ordered to use French on Facebook

650_bili.jpg&size=650x366&quality=85

Eva Cooper, owner of Delilah's, is photographed outside her Glebe location in Ottawa on Thursday February 27, 2014. The Quebec government is asking her to shut down her mostly english Facebook page as she also has a store location in Chelsea, QC. Darren Brown/Ottawa Sun

Denis Armstrong, QMI Agency

Feb 27, 2014

, Last Updated: 8:26 PM ET

OTTAWA ─ Eva Cooper says she has enough Canadians in her corner to fight Quebec's language laws.

Cooper, who owns Delilah's (in the Parc), a women's boutique in Chelsea, 10 km north of Ottawa in Quebec, received a letter from the OQLF ─ office Quebecois de la langue francaise. ─ on Feb. 18 indicating they had received a complaint that Delilah's Facebook page was in English. The letter, which was written in French, said the 45-year-old shopkeeper was violating section 52 of Quebec's language charter, which makes French the official language of the province.

The letter asked Cooper to indicate what corrective measures she would take, and gave her a deadline of March 10 to respond. If she doesn't reply by then, she risks legal action and a fine.

Cooper's response was to ask the language watchdog to resend the letter to her, this time in English.

Quebec's language charter states it's okay to post personal messages on social media in English. However, if the message is has a commercial intent, it must be available in French as well as English. Cooper, who is fully bilingual, uses Delilahs (in the Parc) Facebook page to market the fashions she sells in the store. She employs 12 bilingual employees and all signage is displayed in both French and English. She operates a second Delilah's store in the Glebe.

Cooper's defence is she has a right to express herself in whatever language she wants to on social media. That, she argues, is the very nature of social media.

"I didn't know there was an official language to Facebook," Cooper said. "Whatever happened to freedom of speech on social media? I thought social media was about freedom of speech and expression."

In lawyer Michael Geist's opinion, Cooper's caught in a murky legal issue.

"Quebec's courts have been applying language laws for 10 years and they've determined that websites are commercial publications," said Geist. "Under Quebec law, commercial websites have to use French, but the law isn't black-and-white when it comes to social media sites like Facebook because it's a personal site that functions like a commercial publication."

Cooper suspects she has been caught in the crossfire of pre-election Sovereigntist politics.

"Are we going to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars monitoring social media?" she asked. "We have more important issues to worry about like getting potable water in Chelsea."

Cooper’s story has attracted a lot of attention on social and mainstream media. In the 24 hours since news broke, Delilah's (in the Parc) Facebook page has picked up more than 2,000 likes while Cooper has received hundreds of personal e-mails of support from both English and French readers.

"I've had so much support from the rest of Canada, I'm going to go the distance and challenge their case," said Cooper.

"This is an important issue. It's opened a dialogue on freedom of expression."

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Great thread!!

Hmmm...Schapelle Corby, convicted drug smuggler in Bali (Aussie tourist at the time) was busted and sent to their prison, served 10 years in (Lucky she didn't get the death penalty), released on probation and sold her story to a show called 'Sunday night" for a few million.

Typical about this country to be a criminal and make money from the proceeds of crime. Nice one dry.png

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A head scratcher out of Quebec

Quebec shop owner ordered to use French on Facebook

650_bili.jpg&size=650x366&quality=85

Eva Cooper, owner of Delilah's, is photographed outside her Glebe location in Ottawa on Thursday February 27, 2014. The Quebec government is asking her to shut down her mostly english Facebook page as she also has a store location in Chelsea, QC. Darren Brown/Ottawa Sun

Denis Armstrong, QMI Agency

Feb 27, 2014

, Last Updated: 8:26 PM ET

OTTAWA ─ Eva Cooper says she has enough Canadians in her corner to fight Quebec's language laws.

Cooper, who owns Delilah's (in the Parc), a women's boutique in Chelsea, 10 km north of Ottawa in Quebec, received a letter from the OQLF ─ office Quebecois de la langue francaise. ─ on Feb. 18 indicating they had received a complaint that Delilah's Facebook page was in English. The letter, which was written in French, said the 45-year-old shopkeeper was violating section 52 of Quebec's language charter, which makes French the official language of the province.

The letter asked Cooper to indicate what corrective measures she would take, and gave her a deadline of March 10 to respond. If she doesn't reply by then, she risks legal action and a fine.

Cooper's response was to ask the language watchdog to resend the letter to her, this time in English.

Quebec's language charter states it's okay to post personal messages on social media in English. However, if the message is has a commercial intent, it must be available in French as well as English. Cooper, who is fully bilingual, uses Delilahs (in the Parc) Facebook page to market the fashions she sells in the store. She employs 12 bilingual employees and all signage is displayed in both French and English. She operates a second Delilah's store in the Glebe.

Cooper's defence is she has a right to express herself in whatever language she wants to on social media. That, she argues, is the very nature of social media.

"I didn't know there was an official language to Facebook," Cooper said. "Whatever happened to freedom of speech on social media? I thought social media was about freedom of speech and exp<b></b>ression."

In lawyer Michael Geist's opinion, Cooper's caught in a murky legal issue.

"Quebec's courts have been applying language laws for 10 years and they've determined that websites are commercial publications," said Geist. "Under Quebec law, commercial websites have to use French, but the law isn't black-and-white when it comes to social media sites like Facebook because it's a personal site that functions like a commercial publication."

Cooper suspects she has been caught in the crossfire of pre-election Sovereigntist politics.

"Are we going to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars monitoring social media?" she asked. "We have more important issues to worry about like getting potable water in Chelsea."

Cooper’s story has attracted a lot of attention on social and mainstream media. In the 24 hours since news broke, Delilah's (in the Parc) Facebook page has picked up more than 2,000 likes while Cooper has received hundreds of personal e-mails of support from both English and French readers.

"I've had so much support from the rest of Canada, I'm going to go the distance and challenge their case," said Cooper.

"This is an important issue. It's opened a dialogue on freedom of exp<b></b>ression."

I've always wondered what the French view on Quebec is.

Smallclub / guy?

Just a place that uses French or an unofficial part of France etc?

Do Quebec residents consider themselves Canadian, Quebeccian (?) or French?

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Not sure how the French think but the Quebecois definitely do not identify themselves as being French. I think for the other 2 they are divided.

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