Superfluous Matter
HST (Harmonized Sales Tax) Foofarah

Ever since Dalton McGuinty became premier of Ontario I've been mostly indifferent to him and the work of his party. Most things he did seemed OK but nothing was good enough or bad enough to make me care much one way or the other. However with the HST I am definitely taking notice.

Something that bothers me about democracy in Canada is that it does not seem well suited to long term projects. A majority government only has four years to accomplish anything with certainty. They may not win the next election and the new government may abandon the project completely. By definition, a long term project is unlikely to show any benefits right away. Thus, any government that introduces unpopular changes which may have substantial long term benefits risks being booted out of office before those benefits are realized. The general voting public does not seem to understand "long term" very well.

By bringing in the HST, Dalton McGuinty has earned my respect. It will almost certainly cost him and possibly the Liberal party the next election, but he is doing it anyway because he believes it will bring long term benefits to the province of Ontario.

In addition to supporting Premier McGuinty for making an unpopular decision, I also support the implementation of the this new tax package itself. It's not perfect, but it seems like they put a lot of thought into it and have done a lot to deal with increased costs for consumers.

Not that any of the articles or comments about the issue recognize that fact.

Yes, when the HST comes in we'll have to pay a higher tax rate on many common goods and services. But what most people and news articles fail to mention is that the HST is part of a broader package of tax changes that attempt to make the HST revenue neutral for the government and keep the tax burden on any individual at the same level. Personal income taxes are being lowered for everyone. Sales and property tax credits are being increased. And until 2011 there will be additional transitional benefits. Ignoring those transitional benefits, the other changes will more than offset the increased taxes paid through the HST for most families earning less than $70,000 per year. For those earning between $70,000 and $100,000 the extra cost will be less than $200 per year which is pretty negligible.

These numbers come from a very interesting study that I read from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, an independent research group. The assumptions made in determining the numbers are extremely conservative, ignoring the transitional benefits as well as the exemptions on things like diapers and coffee. I encourage anyone who is interested in reading a balanced study of the issue to check it out: Not a Tax Grab After All

I find it particularly amusing that many of the people I see complaining about the HST change are actually arguing against a net decrease in taxation for themselves. And for those who will have a net increase, the increase is so small that they probably could have recouped it by being productive in the time they spent complaining. I also find it amusing that the HST is being labeled as a "tax grab" when, combined with the cost of the tax cuts, the government will only be taking in about $100 million extra a year. Almost nothing compared to the provincial deficit which is in the billions of dollars.

I haven't even mentioned anything about the potential benefits of the HST. It will save businesses tons of time in administrative duties. There will no longer be "cascading taxes" where PST is applied at every step in the production chain. Both of these will save business a lot of money. Even if none of those savings are passed on, they make Ontario a much more attractive place for business to invest in, potentially creating many new jobs. Finally, the new system will be simpler and cheaper for the government to administer. And once again, even if none of these benefits pan out, the other tax changes make is so that HST will have almost no impact on the annual budget of the average Canadian family.

So what's the big deal? Why is there so much hate on for this change? It's not like this is even a new and untested idea. Internationally, PST style taxation is considered not just obsolete but laughable. Over 130 countries and most of the Atlantic provinces have moved to HST style taxation (also know as "value added tax").

74% of people in Ontario oppose the tax changes. I'm extremely grateful that they did not open up the issue to public debate like the opposition parties wanted. Most of the public that are against the changes actually stand to benefit from them which suggests that they either don't understand or are just ignorant of the details of the full package. We don't need public screaming matches like the "town hall" debates over health care in the US. Those were so bad they continue to make me wonder how the US became the global super power it is.

I don't understand all the opposition, but I'm very impressed by Dalton McGuinty's resilience in the face of it. I wish him the strength to see it through without compromise and I wish him the best in his next job after the 74% of Ontarians vote him out of office in 2011.

Christmas is Coming

I think I've recovered enough from my marathon Italy blogging to start trying to do regular blog updates again. Stuff has been going well lately, it's been nice to relax a bit since the wedding and not have to think about it anymore. I'm even almost ready for Christmas!

I've been thinking a lot about priorities lately. There's tons of stuff I love to do with my time like climbing, photography, reading, cooking, going to restaurants, exploring Toronto, traveling the world and lots of other stuff too. And that list doesn't even include all the computer-related (personal and professional) activities I do. I also have vague goals for the future like kids, home ownership, LOTS more world travel and total personal fulfillment. You know, easy stuff.

I already have trouble making time for all the things I want to do. It makes me sad that I don't get out to take photos regularly and if I don't climb at least twice a week I don't improve. Everything takes up lots of time and I fill my time so much that I don't have any left to think about future stuff.

So, I've decided to sit down over Christmas and take stock of everything I did last year; what was good and what was bad. I'll make a list of all the things that matter to me and try to prioritize them and see if I can work out a way to fit them all in to a regular week. If this is even a little bit successful I'll try to do it every year and hopefully I'll be able to make constant progress in the areas of my life that matter to me.

And of course, one of the things I'd like to improve is the frequency of my blogging. But I always say that.

Here's a picture of Chris and John's Christmas tree taken at the Christmas party they hosted last weekend:

Chris and John's Christmas tree
Chris and John's Christmas tree
Italy!

I finally finished writing up the journal for our honeymoon in Italy! It's over 12,000 words and has 239 photos so you can maybe understand why it took so long. Also, I couldn't even start until I got my NAS set up so that I had enough hard drive space to deal with the almost 2000 new photos I acquired as a result of the wedding and the trip.

Anyway, check it out by clicking the link above or by going to the Trips section of my site.

Spam Update

I'm still getting small amounts of comment spam. It's always on one of two posts for some reason (no idea why). I've taken action though! If you check out the comments page you'll notice that I've added a reCATCHPA widget to the form. Now to make a comment you need to successfully solve a CATCHPA first. The neat thing about reCATCHPA is that you actually do two: the first is a real CATCHPA and the other is some scanned text from a book that wasn't recognized by OCR. So you're actually helping digitize books by making comments on my site. Go you!

In other news, I'm slowly making progress on my Italy trip journal. If you check out the photos page you can take a look at four of my photos from Rome that I really like.

Lots of Stuff

I've finally started on typing up the journal from our trip to Italy!! I'm not going to publish it until it's done but I thought people would like to know that it is at least started. There seemed to be no end of things preventing me from working on it, but I think most of those are gone now.

My new NAS (network attached storage) is working out pretty well. All of my photos and stuff are on it and I hope to one day re-rip all my music and get that on there too. It comes with a built in BitTorrent client which has worked pretty well so far (although just today it crashed for some reason). If I ever get a fancy new TV and a PS3 the NAS will make a really awesome media server.

Just before starting to write this post I was doing a bit of minor maintenance on this site and I noticed an irregularity in the number of comments I have on some older blog posts. It turns out I've received a little bit of comment spam! Crazy. Comment spam is pretty common on blogs that use standard blogging software because it is easy to target a lot of blogs with an automated script. But for my blog someone would have had to find it and then look at it in order to make a bot able to spam me with comments. Kinda strange and totally not worth the effort. I'm going to make a small modification to the comment stuff and see if I get any more. If I do I'll have to close down the comments feature until I think of some way to deter the spammers. I do collect minimal data (IP address) from commenters and it looks like the spam originates from Russia (with love?).

Yesterday was the first central region Tour de Bloc bouldering competition of the 2009-2010 season, held at Climber's Rock in Burlington. Myself and a bunch of the people I regularly climb with competed in the recreational division in the morning. It was lots of fun and I managed to come in sixth out of maybe thirty competitors. After we finished climbing in the morning, the real competitors climbed in the afternoon. We spent the time going to see the new Christmas Carol movie in 3D (it was ok) and then returned in the evening to watch the finals. As usual, the finals were amazing. I think the women's set of final problems was too hard as none of the competitors managed to complete more than one or two of the four. The men's problems were set at a better level.

Today we took it pretty easy as I am sore basically everywhere and can't move too much. Kim did make apple crisp though and it was yummy.

Other things that have happened recently include: a 24 hour trip to London to open and pick up all of our wedding presents; my birthday supper at Trimurti with Matt, Chris and John; Jeremy's birthday party at Second City and Fionn MacCools (where I ALMOST lost my man bag AND camera!!); and (hopefully) the partial resurrection of wing night, starting this Tuesday.

One Last Visit With P+T

The day before leaving Italy we found out that Patrick and Toni had not yet left Canada and that we would be able to go see them the day after we returned. So this past Sunday, despite being tired and jetlaggy, Kim and I caught a GO Train (later than we wanted, due to missing the first one) to Oakville to have dinner with Patrick, Toni and Matt at Ryan and Liz's house. Liz made us an awesome supper and we had a nice relaxing time talking about our trip and enjoying the Limoncello I brought back from Cinque Terre.

We also got to look at the photos Patrick and Toni took at our wedding and they turned out great. I'll be posting some soon, but first I need to resolve the fact that I am totally out of hard drive space. Today I ordered the Netgear ReadyNAS Duo, a network-attached storage device which I will be filling with a pair of one terabyte hard drives in RAID 1. I got an amazing deal from NCIX in BC...it was half price!! All of the NAS devices they sell are on huge sale at the moment. It's pretty crazy.

Back from Italy

We're back from Italy! It was awesome!! I'll be writing up a proper trip journal over the next few weeks with photos and such.

I made a point of ignoring the Internet while I was gone, and so there are over 1000 unread items in my Google Reader, tons of email and facebook messages and I'm sure hundreds of unread emails on my work email account. Damn you Internet!

In Italy!

I am now happily married and equally happily in Italy! Things are awesome!

One More Day

Twenty-four hours from now I'll be married and about to start an awesome party with a whole bunch of awesome family and friends. I'm pretty sure everything is ready to go and I'm really looking forward to seeing everyone tomorrow!

Patrick and Toni

Patrick and Toni are back in Canada!! They arrived Thursday afternoon and are staying with us at our apartment until after Jeff and Simone's wedding on Sunday. It's been really fun having them around and they'll been in Toronto until at least our wedding so we'll get lots of chances to hang out. Tonight we went to Chris and John's place to have lasagna and a birthday cake for Toni. We also played Carcassonne and watched a couple episodes of the original Wonder Woman television show. Very excellent evening.

Older | Newer