A perfectionist who is very concerned about self-image, often driven to succeed and seen as successful. Must prove their own attractiveness by the number of people they can conquer sexually. People […]
Information doesn’t always add up to knowledge
It is said in business that, over time, relationships must please both buyers and sellers. In negotiations, we examine the other side to understand their objectives and we seek ways to merge […]
Finally, Campbell comes clean about HST
Global TV Wednesday reported on “a long string of PR nightmares Gordon Campbell’s Liberals faced over the first year of this current term.” Certainly it is a struggle for a politician to […]
I am shocked, shocked to find that lawyers give money to politicians
One of the first articles posted at In-Sights was a praise piece about Norman Spector. You cannot read it now. It is gone, retroactively redacted by the truth fairy. A few moments […]
Integrity – easier kept than recovered
Following the inquest into the death of Raymond Silverfox, Yukon RCMP Superintendent Peter Clark demonstrated an improved standard of responsibility for managing individuals under his command. “. . . I acknowledge that the […]
News not fit to print – not part of the Vancouver Sun agenda
Alexandra Morton and friends took their walk for wild salmon to Victoria yesterday, gathering on the steps of the Legislature. According to CKNW’s morning news, hundreds of protesters gathered. Victoria’s Times Colonist […]
Filthier and richer
A friend said, “Hey, did you notice that Britain had an election, and everybody lost.” Governments don’t usually fall because of a single mistake or policy error. They fall when ordinary people, […]
". . . as natural as the ocean water"
When regulators at the Minerals Management Service had concerns about the safety equipment for offshore oil rigs, the agency did not impose stronger regulations and instead allowed industry to police itself, according […]
Lessons for those who say, "Drill baby drill!"
WASHINGTON — As offshore oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and elsewhere boomed, a 2003 report warned that the industry wasn’t taking time to find and fix the problems that commonly […]
Liberals master self-destruction
One thing that BC Liberals have mastered in this 39th Parliament is self-destruction. Oh, it’s been brewing for a time but, like an aging airliner, this government is about to be grounded […]
Affluenza outbreak appears imminent
The Midas Curse: Nine out of 10 affluent families will lose their wealth in three generations. “The offspring of riches: Pride, vanity, ostentation, arrogance, tyranny.” Mark Twain With Shaw acquiring Global TV […]
Building public consensus behind closed doors
May I suggest reading Paul Willcocks’ April 29 Times Colonist column: Moving past the politics of blind division. Paul says too many British Columbians choose not to talk about public policy; they […]
"They get more, we get less"
For those who do not subscribe to Alexandra Morton’s newsletters, I repeat her latest news. She is on a walk to Victoria from northern Vancouver Island, walking to save the wild salmon. […]
Today’s wtf moment
CBC Vancouver News reports that Torstar, owner of Toronto’s largest paper, is in the running to take over financially and intellectually bankrupt Canwest Newspapers. To determine if this might be an unsatisfactory […]
Cry for British Columbia
First published October 18 2009, this issue rises back to the top because the proposed Victoria marina has cleared another roadblock. Abraham Lincoln said: Democracy is the government of the people, by […]
More regulation and smarter regulation
New York writer Joe Conason is one of the sharpest political commentators around and one of the most accessible. He writes at Truthdig.com, an online news magazine for progressive voices: . . […]
Two hits and a miss
A two day visit to Victoria this week allowed me to gather information that will prove useful to future writing in Northern Insights. I met people who were informative and furthered my […]
Reader contribution
Curtis & Leroy saw an ad in the Quesnel Advertiser Newspaper in Quesnel, BC and bought a mule for $100. The farmer agreed to deliver the mule the next day. The next […]
Best way to rob a bank is to own one, an anti-regulation story
PBS program Bill Moyers Journal has been available by broadcast, podcast and online transcript. Moyers is proudly a long time bane to public injustice and America’s military industrial complex. Also, of course, […]
Russian rebellion
As British Columbian’s learned during the Olympics, important people must never waste time standing in lines or sitting in slow moving traffic. That is for people of lesser purpose. Muscovites know this […]


The US influence extends it's foreign policy to unwitting allies with the UK and Canada being prime examples. With this…