Barlow’S Canada

Posted on Monday, May 29 at 13:36 by robertjb
As I perused the book I turned to the back cover and there across the top was a quotation referring to Barlow as “Canada’s best known voice of dissent.” Odd, I thought. How can a lady like Maude Barlow who believes so strongly in this country, who has written and spoken so profusely and eloquently about it, be considered a voice of dissent? But then I jarred myself back to reality--this is Canada! By some discombobulated inversion of logic, to believe in this country and have a Canadian vision is to be a radical dissident. Canada is the inside-out country where we shun our patriots and coddle our usurpers. What was also of significant interest was the source of the quote--none other than the venerable CBC. Now if Thomas d’Aquino, CEO of the Canadian Council of Chief Executives, had said this, it would be understandable! He and Ms. Barlow have some difference of opinion on the exact nature of what constitutes a country. Mr. d’Aquino and his merry band of corporate Philistines see this country as a business transaction, something to be sold off as quickly as possible to the lowest and handiest bidder. (Maybe the CBC felt compelled to speak on Mr. d’Aquino’s behalf as he is a very shy and retiring type in the art of acquiescent takeovers and getting hapless politicians to bend to his council’s wishes.) I have to give Maude credit. She issues a cautionary in the Forward: “In some ways this exploration makes bleak reading.” How many authors are going to admit that before you even start the first chapter? Ms. Barlow is more accurately Canada’s best known nationalist, while Mr. d’Aquino is most assuredly our most brazen seditionist. Where Barlow is concerned with the soul of our nation, d’Aquino is the usurper of national dreams, a con artist, and the shameless bagman in pursuit of the corporate welfare state. In very real terms Barlow is the believer and d’Aquino the dissenter. He suffers the American Dream as a vicarious carpetbagger and might be better advised to move south where he can enjoy the full embrace of his dubious convictions. Barlow’s book is an authoritative and well documented indictment of how Canada is being smothered, first of all by the assault of imported US neo-conservative values, secondly by the shameless connivance of the Bush administration to use the tragedy of 9/ll to advance its neo–imperialist agenda and consolidate Pax Americana. Neo-conservatives sing the mantras of deregulation, privatization and the denigration of government. Grover Norquist, a prominent US neo-conservative, wants to get government down to the size “where we can drown it in a bath tub.” In other words, what he is advocating is the corporate welfare of the state--the complete dominance of a deregulated market economy and the servitude of civil society to an authoritarian oligarchy. If Canadians feel compelled to experience the full brunt of a neo-conservative agenda, all they have to do is give Harper’s Conservatives a majority. Every move of this government is calculated to dupe Canada’s electorate into granting this majority. Given a majority he will import the rapidly decaying American Dream to this country. During the 1990’s a small group of neo-conservatives conceived and fine-tuned an agenda that came to be known as the PNAC--Program for the New American Century. It advocated US global domination through serial, pre-emptive and simultaneous warfare as necessary. Not only would “free trade” be used as a device for the penetration and domination of foreign economies; the military would be used as necessary. What was lacking to implement this grand scheme was a pretext, and 9/11 provided that. Not only has 9/11 been used to manipulate and degrade American civil society, but has also been used to intimidate its closest allies into obedient compliance. Canada has been the all-too-willing dupe. Canada’s political and economic elites are drunken partygoers who know no moderation as they belly up to the bar of American hegemony, drinking deeply--and the drinks, it seems, are on the house--our house. Ironically, this comes at a time when wiser men would have serious concerns about becoming too close to the grasping maw of the empire. At a time when American civil society is suffering the same assault of abandonment as Canadians, Fortress North America needs to worry less about the threat of terrorism and more about self-inflicted damage at the hands of its political elites--the three sinister amigos. Barlow’s Canada is an entirely defendable proposition. This country can and must persist even though we exist on the ramparts of the American empire. The problem is that our elites know no moderation, lack imagination and suffer a peculiar deference to American values and self-interest. Barlow is a true believer, a beacon, in a political landscape fraught with cynical and pernicious collusion. She believes in Canada--a largely extinct quality among our indolent and anesthetized political elites as they practice the politics of denial. Among others, her book should be required reading for all Liberal leadership candidates. Maybe with some sense of shame they might be reminded who pays the taxes, and that they are not elected to pander to vested interests, berserk ideologies, or transparent subterfuges. [Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on May 30, 2006]

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Comments

  1. Mon May 29, 2006 11:08 pm
    Running through this entire post is the implicit assumption that Canadian = statist, and that free enterprise is un-Canadian and commerce contrary to our values.

    Barlow is an unapologetic defender of big government, social engineering and heavy-handed state interference in the economy. Why are all Canadians who don't support this agenda labelled "traitors" by nationalists? When did collectivist authoritarianism become the official governing ideology of Canada?

    Are all supporters of free market ideology traitors in your view? Is your Canada really that small a place that while it may have room for all races, cultures and religions it can only tolerate one mode of politial thought?

    Just because an idea is held by Americans does not make it automatically un-Canadian, any more than the New Deal or the Great Society programs were an act of treason against America.

    Don't you find it silly when right-wing Americans call Michael Moore a traitor because of his left-wing beliefs and affinity for the "Canadian way" (or, more accurately, for the personal mythology he's created around what this country is about)? I think it's ridiculous, and I can't stand Michael Moore.

    Perhaps you might want to give your political opponents the benefit of the doubt, instead of rushing to accuse them of offences that once merited hanging.

  2. by RPW
    Mon May 29, 2006 11:19 pm
    I re-watched JFK:<br />
    <a href="http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/jfkmovie.htm">http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/jfkmovie.htm</a><br />
    Then I read this article in Maclean's:<br />
    <a href="http://www.macleans.ca/culture/books/article.jsp?content=20060529_127469_127469">http://www.macleans.ca/culture/books/article.jsp?content=20060529_127469_127469</a><br />
    Followed up by:<br />
    <a href="http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2001/8/14/174213.shtml">http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2001/8/14/174213.shtml</a><br />
    <br />
    So I understand this depression thing........<p>---<br>RickW

  3. by RPW
    Tue May 30, 2006 2:09 am
    <blockquote>Are all supporters of free market ideology traitors in your view?</blockquote>Why do you (as self-proclaimed representative of the freemarket) not address the freemarket proclivity towards soiling your neighbours' backyard, and with impunity? Time and again, you've been asked to justify how cleaning up after yourself is somehow "collectivist". "Externalizing costs" is the hallmark of the freemarket system, and if this externalization results in the death and/or maiming of your neighbour, you simply shrug. <p>Also, the free market you represent cannot exist without military intervention (or at least the threat thereof), yet that military is not maintained by the merchants who make the biggest bucks. Ther is not justification for this</p> So kindly keep your "statist" and collectivist" terminologies safely locked up (they are SO dated - just like Ayn Rand's hairdo), until you can justify the very collectivist notion of a statist military to support your "system".<p>---<br>RickW

  4. by Innes
    Tue May 30, 2006 2:51 am
    There is no ideology more "statist" and elitist than 21st century right wing ideology. In this form of capitalism which goes by many names, one being corportocracy, the state is operated by and for the capitalist. Our lives are controlled by a series of oligopolies: in industries such petroleum, food distribution, mass transportation, retail, etc.

    In capitalist theory terms like individual freedom, free markets, free enterprise are meaningless freedoms for the vast majority of people. They are appealing to two groups: the rich and the gullible.

    Any wise "individualist" realizes that the capitalist system operates to support the "freedom" of the capitalist. If you don't have access to large pools of capital you simply don't have economic freedom or even value.

    In theory, democracy is supposed to work as a counterbalance against this kind of economic dominance. Unfortunately, it is not working because those who hold economic power also control political power and work to close the system. The challenge for the majority is to break that hold in order to secure a more open and democratic system.



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