Air Canada flight attendant to passengers in Row 4 of a flight to Sydney Tuesday afternoon: "You are in the emergency exit row, so I have to show you how to open the emergency door." [Gestures to door handle.] "Pull it down. It opens in. Throw it out." [Pause.] "Any questions?" Airline safety instructions are so often wordy and prissy. How refreshing to encounter a  no-nonsense pro who understands the value of brisk, imperative prose, and isn't afraid to use it....

I am posting from the tarmac at Montréal-Trudeau  Airport, part way through the strangely priced Air Canada flight I wrote about here. Contrarian reader Joe MacKay offers a plausible if partial explanation for Air Canada's charging more for a Halifax-Sydney ticket than the Toronto-Sydney ticket I'm flying on, even though the Halifax-Sydney leg is the same flight on the same plane I'll be taking. I think this was a side effect of a Porter sale. Porter ran 50% off flights from the Island briefly a week or so ago. Air Canada responded (as they do) with a predatory sale on all bookings...

My postings here and on Facebook, voicing mixed feelings about Dave Wilson’s situation, provoked a ton of feedback. Publishing most of it will make for unusually long post, but it also shows public sentiment to be less lopsided than media coverage indicates. In cases like this, I believe reporters seek out and highlight the most dramatic responses, usually the vengeance-seekers, and this distorts our impression of the public mood. Plenty of people agree with me that Wilson has already suffered mightily. But not this neighbor:
As soon as he was caught, he went into hiding, now he's fessing up. A thief is a thief. I'm not kicking him when he's down. I just want him to pay for his crimes. I had a brother who went to the county for bootlegging when he had no work. He knew the job was dangerous when he took it. He got what he deserved and mama taught him better. Dave will get his pension and this will blow over. Just don't trust him with your signature. He is one of many who are the reason people don't have any faith in governments and other large institutions, like the catholic church!
A Dartmouth resident:
Revoking [his pension] makes no morse sense than any other random, vindictive retribution the mob might conjure. I don't care what [the neighbor quoted above] says, I think you're you're right to feel some pity for an addict. Gambling ruins lives. And the more we destroy the guy, the more we show other gambling addicts to keep their mouth shut and hope you win enough to hide your problem.
A reader:
Beautifully said.
Another reader:
I agree with your sentiments and arguments on this. Two successful and high profile MLAs publicly crumbling, with a gambling addiction the most likely poison, should have us questioning the social costs of that government-promoted world.
A Sydney businessman:
Well said, well done.
A former journalist who has moved on:
I don’t think you’re alone in that view on Dave Wilson. I always liked Dave, right back to the time I worked in the CJCB news room.
From a woman who has occupied high-profile federal and provincial posts in NS:
Thanks, Parker. You have expressed my view in far better, more complete terms than I could.
From a trade union official:
You softy, you.
From a reader
I have to agree with the sentiments expressed here. I also believe the Speaker of the House, Gordie Gosse, should appear in court and make a submission on sentencing. I firmly believe that Gordie should stress the damage caused to the reputations of all politicians and of all stripes. The idea of "tarring them all with the same brush" is not fair to the honest and conscientious politicians, whatever party they belong to. That is why I believe it is important to make a submission on behalf of all MLSs.
From Rick Howe:
Would you be available for a chat on my radio show re your thoughts on David? [And in response to my asking how he felt about it] I’m waffling. I, too, feel bad about David, he’s a friend, but I think a short jail sentence might be necessary to appease public outrage and send a message to other politicians.
A journalist who has moved on:
On the pension issue, point taken. There's no provision in the Criminal Code for appropriating offenders' pensions. But the rest -- the "fine man who's suffered enough" argument. Really? Ordinary scam-artists don't suffer when the law catches up with them? [And on further reflection] I agree about the disgusting bloodlust. Where does it come from? Is it from 3+ almost unbroken decades of short-sighted governance? Maybe Contrarian readers would like to catalogue the poor decisions for which we're still paying the consequences: Buchanan's decision to spend the offshore wealth before it made landfall; the neglect that's causing Halifax rot from the centre outwards; the indifference behind the decision outsource the immigration file; Sysco; the decision to kneecap John Savage before he could stand for re-election, etc. Or maybe people just sense that there is a ruling class in NS and it doesn't care about the suckers who pay the bills. Maybe it's the Bluenose equivalent of finally coming over the walls, lovingly sharpened sickles in hand and a gleam in the eye.
A reader:
Well said. Damn gambling got him and Zinck and goodness knows how many others have been victims of those damn machines. Just disgusting that all three parties refuse to say they will shut down the machines in bars and and anywhere else.
A Sydney woman:
His misdeeds - petty and poorly-executed, moves me to pity for it's ineptitude and pathos rather than righteous indignation. He "reads" to me, though, and again- unfortunately- as an older white man in a suit, seemingly above a little graft, or worse, entitled. Probably he believed in it a bit too much as well. Entitlement. The real question might be - *ahem* - are you identifying with it a bit too much yourself? We hate to see the white male do such a shabby job of a little sad cheat.
After the jump, some responses from Facebook:

A lo-tech texter has been leaving messages in the Lawrence Street area of in West End Halifax.  From simple labels...

Country rock artist Steve Earle (center, in spotlight) played Dalhousie University's Rebecca Cohn Auditorium last night with his current band, The Dukes (and Duchesses), featuring Allison Moorer. She is Earle's sixth wife out of a total of seven marriages. The evening's highlight was Moorer's unusual rendition of the great Sam Cooke civil rights anthem, A Change is Gonna Come. The ensemble plays tonight at Membertou Trade and Convention Centre, Sydney....

Summer 2011 is going out like a lamb, but that's not how it came in. Mike Swain of Fall River, NS, caught this lightning strike from his back yard in June, during an electrical storm that wrecked havoc with power lines and communications equipment throughout much of New England and the Maritime Provinces. (Click photo for larger image.)...

Salon sex columnist Tracy Clark-Flory clucks disapprovingly at what she deems excessive media coverage of that award-winning New Mexico state trooper busted on security cam having sex on duty and in uniform with a woman splayed across the hood of her Honda. Contrarian takes a different view. You cannot spend as much time in newsrooms as we have without developing a grudging admiration for the comic extremes of tabloid chutzpah. We particularly admire the Hispanic-oriented, Chicago-based website Hispanically Speaking News for shining a spotlight on the small but curious dog that wandered in for a closer look at the steamy curbside quickie,...

Here's a bit of contrarian sporting news that escaped my attention when it happened April 18:  The 20 fastest finishers in the men's 2011 Boston Marathon had one thing in common: All raced in wheelchairs. Our friend Warren Reed highlights this remarkable (but largely unremarked upon) fact in an article for the Journal of Medical Ethics decrying the use of outdated terms about disabilities in scholarly writing by medical researchers. It's a point Reed has gently chided Contrarian about in the past. In an informal search of half a dozen medical journals, Reed found 8,680 articles in which the word "wheelchair" was...

Our friend Teresa, a radiation tech at the Cape Breton Regional Hospital, volunteers at the SPCA. Lately she has posted photos of impounded dogs in the nuclear medicine department. On Monday, this caused a hospital visitor to remark that he really should get over to the SPCA and look for a new dog. His beloved labrador had died several months ago. "I have pictures on my iPhone of all the dogs up for adoption, if you'd like to scroll through them," Teresa offered. The man did just that, until he came upon this photo:   "That's Cheesie!" the man said. "That's my friend's dog!" He...

A roll call of Cape Breton musical greats gathered at the Dubinsky Family farm in Englishtown Sunday to celebrate the 70th (!) birthday of songwriter Leon Dubinsky (Rise Again; Josephine, She's Got Her Diamond; Workin' at the Woolco). Pictured here are Angelo Spinazzola, Ronnie "Drive'er McIvor" MacEachern, Fred Lavery, Scott MacMillan, Evie Dubinsky Carnat, and Leon. Singer Max MacDonald and keyboardist Ralph Dillon, original members of Buddy and the Boys, were also on hand. The party, which also drew generous representation from Cape Breton's dwindling Jewish community, included tributes to Leon and Evie's father, ship chandler Newman Dubinsky, whose legendary summer...