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Canadian Foreign Policy   for both developing and industrialized countries. Economically we are faced with explosive change. Dramatic developments in technology are driving changes in the organization of production, in investment patterns and in financial transfers which defy traditional frames of analysis

March 15th, 1994House debate

André OuelletLiberal

Supply   everything on our part to ensure that Quebec stays as part of this nation. I ask the Minister of Finance today, considering the potential of the Quebec circumstance and considering other circumstances, what provisions he has made for this potentially explosive and expensive issue

March 14th, 1994House debate

Ray SpeakerReform

The Budget   universities, the National Research Council led an incredibly varied program in applied research: new explosives, radar, sonar, chemical weapons, high altitude research. No other country, I firmly believe, given its economic size and population, contributed as much brain power to the war

March 10th, 1994House debate

John BrydenLiberal

Peacekeeping  Mr. Speaker, over the past 10 years I have watched the tragic situation in the occupied territories unfold. The situation in this region is both fragile and explosive. The February 25 massacre of Muslims praying in a Mosque in Hebron makes this tenuous peace initiative even more

March 7th, 1994House debate

Herb DhaliwalLiberal

Defence Policy   of insurance against unacceptable risks. The Canadian forces have been called upon to respond to threats to public order. We all recall the calm and disciplined performance with which the Canadian forces helped to diffuse a potentially explosive situation at Oka a few summers ago

February 17th, 1994House debate

George ProudLiberal

Defence Policy   is an explosion of nations downward and inward to the point where they are really comprising the smallest ethnic and religious groups. In the last four and half years we have been involved in the world and in Canada in more peacekeeping operations than we have in the last 40 years. If we take

February 17th, 1994House debate

Fred MifflinLiberal

Federal-Provincial Fiscal Arrangements And Federal Post-Secondary Education And Health Contributions Act   of the elite, could go to college and the others had to stay home because they could not afford it. What did they do? They became welfare or unemployment insurance recipients. Be that as it may, after World War II, there was a mass communication explosion; our planet was about to become

February 9th, 1994House debate

René CanuelBloc

Pre-Budget Consultations   threat to the welfare of all peoples on this planet is the population explosion. We are rapidly outstripping our ability to provide for ourselves and are straining our resources to their maximum and laying waste to the environment. I would not encourage foreign aid as a lever

February 1st, 1994House debate

Keith MartinReform

Cruise Missile Testing   of natural resources, fisheries, forestry, water shortages, desertification, climate change, ozone layer deterioration, decrease of arable land and reduction of forest covers. It comes from population explosion in some parts of the world at the total rate of 92 million people per year

January 26th, 1994House debate

Charles CacciaLiberal

Cruise Missile Testing  , that any country with the ability to build a simple airplane can construct one of these weapons which will carry a tonne of dynamite or explosives for a distance of at least 300 miles and explode with great accuracy. There is another spin-off benefit from the testing taking place

January 26th, 1994House debate

Jack FrazerReform

Foreign Affairs   thousand tonnes of explosives had been used to totally destroy this church. It was explained to me that there were some 45 elderly people whose average age was 65 had been murdered in that village. They happened to be Croats. One or two were older Serbians who must have tried to protect

January 25th, 1994House debate

Simon de JongNDP

Foreign Affairs   that in this part of the world, the potential for global conflict genuinely exists. The current situation is explosive. And I believe that Canadian troops stationed in Bosnia are preventing the conflict from escalating further. I also believe that, regardless of the situation described to us

January 25th, 1994House debate

Roger PomerleauBloc

Foreign Affairs   we should draw. We should be particularly proud of two things: first, that international action has managed to keep the conflict within limits, a conflict which could have been explosive and spread beyond the borders of the former Yugoslavia. Secondly, and I think that several

January 25th, 1994House debate

Réal MénardBloc

Foreign Affairs   of the population. What we are seeing is an explosion of nations downward, to the point where they are really comprising the smallest ethnic and religious groups. If we add to that the low levels of tolerance that seem to be dominant in the world today, poorer tolerance for religious, social

January 25th, 1994House debate

Fred MifflinLiberal

Foreign Affairs   of helplessness in the face of explosive situations they could do nothing about. I would like, at this point, to try to outline on what basis the decision should be made in Canada to participate in UN missions or not. It is clear that Canada can no longer afford to participate in all

January 25th, 1994House debate

Jean-Marc JacobBloc