Just Right

Just Right is a weekly shortwave radio show. Hosts, Bob Metz and Robert Vaughan analyze issues from a viewpoint of individual rights, freedom, and capitalism.

056 – Eco-fascism 2

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May 292008
 

Eco-fascism

The TOTALitarian Picture of Fascism/Socialism
American Fascism – A Brief History
So Who’s Scared? Environmentalist Fear Tactics
Fear of Chemicals – John Stossel
David Suzuki – No Matter How Bad…
Al Gore – “That’s Not Funny”
Ecotheology: Religion, Yes; Science, No
Global Warming Believers vs Skeptics

052 – Guests: Jim Chapman, Jeff Schlemmer – Left, Right & Center: A reunion

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May 012008
 

Left, Right and Center Logo

Left, Right & Center – A re-definition
Left, Right & Center – Bans
Left, Right & Center – Environmentalism
Left, Right & Center – Political correctness and discrimination

051 – Guests: David Aldred, Mary Lou Ambrogio, Arthur Majoor

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Apr 242008
 

London City Hall

The Forest City Institute:
Civic Governance In The City Of London, Ontario

PLEASE NOTE: Due to a technical difficulty with the broadcast server approximately 2 minutes of the program was not archived.

044 – Sherlock Holmes: Elementary, Symbolic, Representative…

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Mar 062008
 


Polls expose a curious public confusion between fact and fiction. Many in Britain insist Sherlock Holmes walked the streets of London as flesh and blood, while dismissing Winston Churchill as mere legend. Such blurring of reality and myth reveals how powerfully stories shape perception long after events fade.

We see the same dynamic play out in contemporary policy debates. Canadians celebrate an MRI scan that costs only a parking fee after seven months of waiting, as if this represents some triumph rather than a rationed system’s quiet cruelty. The satisfaction with mediocrity masks the invisible costs borne by others denied timely care.

Political figures receive similar mythic treatment. John Tory garners praise as the ideal conservative leader despite a record of equivocation and electoral failure. Talk of principles clashes with actions that mirror liberal instincts, leaving voters with no clear choice.

Meanwhile, advocates for human rights commissions invoke ‘hatred kills’ to justify speech restrictions, citing tragic cases while omitting inconvenient details like the ideological motives behind certain crimes. The impulse to control expression under the guise of protection echoes ancient myths used to maintain power.

Ideas endure far longer than the individuals or events that spawn them, whether drawn from ancient legends or modern political narratives. Distinguishing the symbolic from the factual remains essential in every age. Only in this way do we discover what is Just Right.

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