We finally got our look at the Ottawa shooter video yesterday, minus some 18 seconds that the RCMP deemed too sensitive with relation to their investigation. Through the less than a minute, we learnt a few things – he was lucid, he gave motives about our missions in Afghanistan and Iraq, and he wanted to attack soldiers in Canada so as to show that we weren’t safe, and that we should get out of countries trying to re-establish religious laws. Okay. As a very smart person on my Twitter feed said, “terrorist boilerplate.” The fact that the autopsy showed none of the usual intoxicants in his system also shows that he wasn’t doing this out of some drug-addled episode, and there seemed to be little indication that he was having a mental health episode either. It really does dismantle some of the hedging about his motivations and does cement it as a terrorism incident – or at the very least, a terrorism-inspired incident. That said, when you pull it apart a little, the fact that what he did say was such boilerplate that you pretty much could go down a checklist as he said them speaks to the whole improvised nature of what went down, and even if he was under the influence of someone else, none of this had the hallmarks of being a well orchestrated or financed incident. More to the point, the RCMP commissioner noted in his comments during the scrums that he really didn’t want this released until after they concluded their investigation, but that he was pretty much forced into it by PCO, which leads to questions about the government trying to orchestrate its timing so as to build the narrative about why C-51 is so necessary and needs to be rammed through the process. Remind everyone that terrorism at home is a clear and present threat, and hope that people will go along with whatever the government offer as a solution, even if it’s not the best one.
Good reads:
- The inside story of how the Victims of Communism memorial came to be is very worthwhile reading.
- The Privacy Commissioner has a lot of alarming things to say about C-51, but also has some suggestions for how to fix the worst of it.
- RCMP Commissioner Paulson noted the unprecedented shift in resources toward anti-terror investigations at the expense of organised crime, which isn’t sustainable.
- Susan Delacourt writes about the idealism on display in that Manning Centre online poll.
Odds and ends:
A former Detective Sergeant of House of Commons Security explains why things should not be turned over to RCMP control.
The parody Rhinoceros Party is looking to make a comeback, and they want Rob Ford as a candidate.
Was just in the middle of interviewing Cape Breton MP Rodger Cuzner when he witnesses a shoplifting. He hung up to go help chase the guy.
— Paul McLeod (@pdmcleod) March 6, 2015
UPDATE: The shoplifter got onto a bus but then Cuzner and the security guard flagged down the bus. There was a brief skirmish…
— Paul McLeod (@pdmcleod) March 6, 2015
…the thief briefly got away again but after another chase he had to stop to have a smoke and the police caught him. God I love Cape Breton
— Paul McLeod (@pdmcleod) March 6, 2015
The guy was trying to steal two duvets. You'd think he'd go for something lighter and less conspicuous.
— Paul McLeod (@pdmcleod) March 6, 2015
Remember the Reichstag Fire:
Does this count as Godwin’s Law?