Craig Hubley lives in Toronto Canada. He is a founder of P146 -- a group
which advocates regional secession from the Canadian national government; as
well as from Toronto, Ontario, and the UN. He is a fan of the movie "Fight
Club". He has a degree in mathematics, from the University of Toronto, Waterloo
(1987). He enjoys writing reviews for Amazon.com. He is associated with
the Free University of Toronto, the Unicus Corporation, the Green Party, and
Craig Hubley & Associates. He is a fan of Winona LaDuke.
It is easy enough, if you so desire, to search the internet and obtain his
phone, fax, email, associates, friends, resume, education, personal
correspondence, home address, and place of employment.
Notable Quotes by Mr. Hubley
- But I have made up my mind whose
side I fight on, and I would cut fifty human baby throats to save one
gorilla. In the 1960s there were "race traitors". I am a "species
traitor". Take that as you will, but perhaps you see some reason now why I am
not going to be participating in any great depth in any advice beyond the
economy, which all Anthropoid nations participate in, whether willing to, or
not...
- The only real standard for money
used by human beings for human concerns should be free time... I can
buy a comfortable hour of being left alone by everyone to consume any
non-material comfort that I want, for one US$. How's that? The
government operates "don't bug me" isolation tanks for one dollar an
hour to guarantee that price, and all of them have a cot and toilet and
lots of Internet bandwidth... with programs set up to route people
together who belong together.
- In Canada our most educated observers
have concluded that the PRovinces are pernicious instruments for exploiting
natural capital as resources. Jane Jacobs, the noted urbanologist, advocates
the city-state solution. We should be talking about how the NAFTA region, and
then the OAS region, can develop workable investment and currency liquidity
standards so that there is no "Rent-seeking" nor "race to the bottom" in
either bloc.