Thursday, August 30, 2007

La Clarté Libérale

En retraite de deux jours à St John’s, les Libéraux ont passé du temps à paufiner leur stratégie pour l’automne en compagnie de leur sondeur Michael Marzolini. Dans une allocution prononcée pour le caucus, celui-ci a declaré que le Parti courait d’excellentes chances de remporter la prochaine élection à condition qu’il puisse mettre sur la table des politiques claires et novatrices. Et bien que M. Marzolini ait peut-être choisi de diffuser un message trompeur en compagnie des médias, je crois que vous serez d’accords avec moi pour affirmer qu’il sonne vrai.

Depuis l’élection de Stéphane Dion comme chef de parti, les Libéraux ont éprouvé une peine visisble à se demarquer des autres partis de l’opposition. En début d’année, ceci n’était peut-être dû qu’à l’inexpérience de leur chef, mais il faudrait maintenant se demander si le problème ne serait pas plutôt au niveau du message.

Les Libéraux nous montrent tous les jours qu’ils savent critiquer; qu’ils ne sont pas d’accords avec les positions du Gouvernement Conservateur. Mais que proposent-ils, eux? Quelle est leur vision?

Le problème des Libéraux, c’est qu’ils ont trop critiqué, et trop peu proposé. Pendant la course à la direction, les candidats ont souvent participé à des debats où ils avaient l’occasion d’échanger des idées; Stéphane Dion a gagné la campagne sur sa grande idée : le système aux trois pilliers. Les Canadiens ont visiblement appreciés car les Libéraux ont mené dans les sondages pendant la course.

D’après les plus récents sondages, la plupart des Canadiens n’aiment pas Harper. Ils n’aiment pas sa vision, et n’aiment pas son style de leadership. Stéphane Dion à proposé aux membres du Parti Libéral une solution alternative claire et simple : qu’il la propose aux Canadiens.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

The Hollowing Out

With a 6 percent unemployment rate and the highest GDP growth in the G7, it would be difficult to make the Canadian economy look any stronger. And while it remains unclear to whom the credit is due, a CTV/Globemedia poll released today showed that, as expected, Stephen Harper’s Conservatives are cashing in!

This is definitely bad news for Dion and the Liberals, as sound economic management has traditionally been perceived as their biggest strength. With that asset now lost to Harper, one of Dion’s main focuses for the coming year will be to snatch it back by demonstrating to Canadians that the strong economy is not due to Mr. Harper’s good management, but to a combination of Alberta Oil Sands growth and ten years of Liberal rule.

All I can say is that he faces a steep climb. Let’s face it, it’s difficult to convince Canadians that the economy is being badly handled when the unemployment rate is at a 33 year low, but the one area that may hold the solution to his problem is the “hollowing out” of head offices.

In the past two years of Conservative rule, we’ve seen an unprecedented number of Canadian firms get taken over by foreign giants. First it was Inco, then Falconbridge, then the 350 year old HBC, then Fairmont Hotels, then Alcan, and yesterday, the country’s last steel producer: Stelco. Though Canadians might not be known for their strong sense of patriotism, it’s only natural to feel a certain anxiety when so many head offices start moving abroad. This was further demonstrated by yesterday’s same CTV poll, which also showed a large majority of Canadians concerned by the recent trend.

Sound economic management has been central to the Liberal brand ever since the Chrétien/Martin team slayed the deficit. Dion ran his leadership campaign on “the three pillar approach”: a sound economy, a just society, and sustainability. According to the poll, he’s sold himself to Canadians on the last two issues; time to regain the first.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Stuff

The Globe just published a fantastic editorial that you should all read. People often say that you should think twice before altering your lifestyle to meet the recommendations of the latest studies, I guess this is why!

There also another Globe article which is really worth reading called Adolescence is Obsolete. Written by Tralee Pierce, a well known Globe Life journalists, it reviews the work of Dr. Robert Epstein, former editor of Psychology Today, who argued in a recent book that the concept of adolescence serves little purpose other than creating “Frankensteins of our own making”. Most of Dr. Epstein’s suggestions are pure and total nonsense (giving teens the right to vote if they can pass a test…), but he really does succeed in bringing home the point that today’s teens have fallen victim to a nasty stereotype which prevents them from being handed responsibility.

Finally, I’d like to point you to the websites of the four main national parties: Conservative, Liberal, NDP and Green. I’d just like you to take a look at the front pages. On the Liberal, NDP and Green party websites, you’ll see positive front pages detailing the party’s successes, and bottom bars of constructive criticism of the government. The pictures of the leader also appear, but they are small and on the sidebars. On the CPC page, the first thing you see is a big picture of the great Stephen Harper. Beside that, there is a scrollbar with the latest Not a Leader negative ads, and right under, three columns of text each called: MORE CONSPIRACY THEORIES FROM THE RED-GREEN COALITION, Stéphane Dion: Conspiracy Theorist, and Where Does Stéphane Dion Actually Stand on Afghanistan?

Doesn’t that say something about the values of each party!

Friday, August 24, 2007

Provocateurs

Thank god for YouTube.

Earlier this week, a video of the Montebello Summit protests was posted on YouTube, where it was noticed that a trio of particularly violent rock-throwing protesters who seemed to be egging on violence were wearing Sureté du Québec boots. The police force originally denied all involvement in the incident, but has now been forced by YouTube evidence into admitting the existence of “undercover agents but not provocateurs”. The only thing left to explain is why those “agents” were throwing rocks.

The Ministry of Public Safety, led by Minister Stockwell Day, has also chosen to downplay the incident, and has repeatedly refused calls for a public inquiry. Day is also claiming that "The thing that was interesting in this particular incident, three people in question were spotted by protesters because were not engaging in violence,". I guess that neither he nor his department have much of a choice, but they’ve both demonstrated that they haven’t quite gotten that new media thing.

They can deny involvement, they can manipulate facts, but regardless of what they do, the truth is only one click away.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Separate School Funding

Ontario PC leader John Tory has recently promised to extend public funding to Jewish, Muslim and Christian schools that agree to follow the provincial curriculum, calling it a matter of fairness. His announcement followed an Ontario Green Party pledge to end public funding of Roman Catholic Schools.

The Liberal Party of Premier Dalton McGuinty remains firmly in favour of a status-quo, and the Premier was quoted earlier today as stating that “he didn’t think that Ontarians believed that improvement or progress was defined as inviting children of different faiths to leave the publicly funded system and go to their own schools,” and “That's the system that we have inherited,”.

It certainly looks as if the funding of separate schools in Ontario is emerged once again as a hot-button issue, and the stakes this time are as high as they ever were: a PC victory would most probably mark the beginning of a new era in the Ontario education system, while a second Liberal triumph would confirm the status-quo as the preferred option and keep the issue buried for another twenty years.

The separation of church and state has long been a requirement for a country to achieve true legitimacy and righteousness. In 1966, the right to a secular state was enshrined in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Canada adhered, and in 1982, we Canadians made it a fundamental part of their identity by including it section 2 of our newly repatriated constitution.

The present funding system in place in Ontario clearly violates this principal, and was ruled discriminatory by both the Supreme Court and the United-Nations. Yet Ontarians chose to do nothing, our leaders preferring the status-quo to a political minefield which would necessarily pass through an amendment of the BNA Act and a battle with the powerful Catholic Lobby.

But now, two new party leaders are proposing a change. The first one, towards full funding for all religious schools, and the second, towards a final end to state funded separate schools. Both changes would bring back full secularity for the Ontario government, so the choice left to voters is namely the choice of secularities.

The European vision of a secular state is of one which repudiates all demonstrations of religious faith and actively seeks to restrict them to the confines of private life. This explains legislation such as the infamous French law 2004-228 that banned “the carrying of symbols or garb which are religious in nature or appearance in public primary and secondary schools.”

At the opposite end of the spectrum, we have John Tory’s vision: a state that seeks to satisfy all religious groups by segregating them into separate systems specifically tailored to fit their religious values and beliefs. This vision is an inefficient as it is divisive, and quickly becomes, as Ontario Green Party leader Frank de Jong put it: “a can of worms”.

A successful secular state is neither of the above. It does not seek to take religion out of the public eye, but neither does it aim to satisfy everyone by funding independent religious communities. Rather, it simply accepts the beauty of all religious beliefs that don’t go against fundamental rights of citizens, and avoids using them as a basis for discrimination.

The current funding pattern goes against a UN convention and the Charter; it is simply wrong. The PC vision will create conflict, division, and will see students placed in artificial religious communities resembling in nothing the real world for which school is supposed to be preparing them. Only the Green Party proposal corresponds to the definition of a thriving and successful secular state, as it promotes sharing, understanding, tolerance and non-discrimination.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Xénophobie?

Le chef de l’opposition officielle du Québec, Mario Dumont, a soulevé cette semaine toute une polémique dans la Belle-Province en affirmant que le Québec avait atteint son seuil maximal d’absobtion d’immigrants. Dans une entrevue avec Patrick Lagacé de La Presse, il a en effet soutenu que « [le Quebec] est pas mal sur [sa] capacité d'accueil » et que « À court terme, peut-être que tu règles des problèmes de marché du travail. T'auras des entreprises où toute la main-d'oeuvre va parler une autre langue, va vivre autrement dans un ghetto. ». Ses propos ont immédiatement été condamnés par le Premier-Ministre Jean Charest ainsi que par la chef du PQ Pauline Marois, qui ont tous deux affirmé que la province devait au contraire augmenter son seuil actuel de 45 000 par annee à 60 000, mais malgré la position des deux autres partis principaux, il semble indéniable que la vision de M. Dumont gagne rapidement de nouveaux appuis et pourrait vraisemblablement prendre le dessus dans un futur pas si lointain.

Cette plus récente sortie du chef de l’ADQ n’est en fait qu’un nouvel épisode du débat sur « les accomodements raisonables » qui se tient au Québec depuis l’affaire d’Hérouxville et qui semble indiquer de profonds chamboulements dans la société de la province. Il faudrait en effet quasiment remonter au référendum de 95 pour revoir un tel niveau d’effervescence intellectuelle et de passion. Rares sont les hommes politiques et chroniqueurs à ne pas s’être prononcés sur la question, et les titres d’éditoriaux des grands quotidiens semblent contenir le mot « immigration » une fois sur deux.

Malheureusement, comme je l’ai indiqué plus haut c’est la vision de M. Dumont, fermée et xénophobe, qui a le vent dans les voiles, ce qui soulève de nombreuses questions sur l’état de la société Québécoise actuelle.

Plusieurs chroniqueurs, dont André Pratte de La Presse, affirment que la montée du sentiment anti-immigrant n’est en fait qu’un symptome d’une phobie croissante chez les Québécois de souche de tout ce qui n’est pas Francophone et athée. De même, Le Devoir a publié aujourd’hui une lettre d’un certain Jimmy St-Gelais de Saint-Jérôme titrée : Reflexe de conquis, où celui-ci soutient que cette montée xénophobe est une « riposte réactionnaire » de la part de la nation Québécoise Francophone contre la baisse démographique qu’elle est en train de connaître.

Ce sont là des propos troublants, et je me permets d’espérer qu’ils s’avèreront être sans bon fondement, cependant, après avoir réécouté l’entrevue de M. Dumont avec Patrick Lagagé, je redoute le pire.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Buy Peace

Tony Blair is a man on a mission. Last June, he assumed a new position as Middle East Peace Envoy of the Quartet (or the United States, European Union, United Nations and Russia), and he now needs to start finding solutions to finally put an end to this interminable state of turmoil.

I think he has a plan. If not, why on earth would he have forgone a comfortable retirement to the after-dinner circuit with his good friend Bill Clinton by assuming a mandate that has been sinking Western leaders for over half a century. Yes, Tony Blair has a plan; and if his plan is the one I have in mind, and the one that experts have had in mind quite for quite some time, well who knows, it may just work.

Imagine being a young Palestinian Muslim man living in small village near Ariel Sharon’s concrete wall. A few years back, a battalion of Israeli tanks stormed into your village and took the soul of one of your friends who had come to protest against the destruction of a Mosque in Jerusalem by Israeli Armed Forces. Then, just last year, a bomb, no doubt Israeli, landed near your village’s granary and destroyed many months worth of food, forcing the whole community to ration itself nearly to death until the next harvest.

As could be expected, you hate Israelis, so one day, when a group of fighters from a Radical Muslim group come to your village with food and water to preach the destruction of Israel, you decide to take up arms and join them in their holy struggle against the Western Invaders.

The next week, you and your new comrades spot a lone patrol of Israeli soldiers standing guard near the wall. You shoot, and you hear a long, tearing scream as one of them falls to the ground. You feel guilty about having spilt blood, but you remind yourself that these white armed men are nothing more than cold-blooded invaders who killed a friend of yours a few years back. So you stay the course. But while you are away fighting against foreign invaders, your family is still at home in your little village and suffering terribly from a drought. At the same time, you hear that a group of western doctors and diplomats from a “peace agency” recently arrived in your village and are offered to grant all the inhabitants a constant supply of water and grains if you and the other young fighters of the village return home.

At the same time, the leader of your guerrilla group receives a notice from that same Western “peace agency” that he is being offered a credit flow of thirty thousand US dollars a month in exchange for the dismantling of his group. The flow will remain open for as long as he stays out of terrorist-related activities, and can be used partly to fund the construction of a new Mosque in East-Jerusalem.

Then, also at the same time, the ten most influential mullahs of the area also receive a note from this “peace agency”, this one asking them to accept an invitation to Jerusalem to participate in the new rounds of negotiations for the creation of a Palestinian state. All their costs would of course be covered, and each would be granted a beautiful new mansion and a seat in the Palestinian Upper Chamber as a token of Western appreciation of their relentless work to bring peace.

I’m not an economist, nor a political scientist, so I probably haven’t quite figured out how much needs to be paid to the various actors to provide strong incentives, but I do know this: Blair needs to buy the ceasefire, buy an agreement to hold democratic elections, buy out the local chieftains, and satisfy the religious leaders. And if he can convince his friends in Brussels and Washington to grant him the cash, there’s a good change he’ll get peace… and maybe also the Nobel.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Remaniement du cabinet

Il y a vraiment matière à s’esclaffer en regardant la nouvelle composition du cabinet Harper. Le premier ministre a visiblement choisi de rester conservateur en maintenant bien ancrée dans les moeurs de son gouvernement la vieille tradition d’incompétence ministérielle.

Le grand fardeau du cabinet, le Général Gordon O’Connor, a été deplacé de laDéfense... au Trésor Public, où sa formation militaire lui sera sans doute d’une grande utilité. Et pour le remplacer, Harper a choisi de nommer son vieil ami Peter MacKay, l’ancien chef du PCC qui fut probablement l’un des pires Ministres des Affaires Etrangères des dix dernières années. Ensuite il y a Maxime Bernier, l’ex-conseiller de Bernard Landry qui représentera maintenant le Canada sur la scène internationale en remplaçant MacKay, et qui a pour seul mérite d’être un élève obéissant et bien habillé, toujours prêt à exécuter les moindres désirs du maître Harper.

Du côté des femmes (je dit bien ça parce qu’il n’y en a que 6 dans tout le cabinet), la calgarienne Diane Ablonczy, l’un des seuls visages prometteurs du caucus conservateur est promue au poste de... Secretaire d’Etat responsable des petites entreprises et du tourisme, et les ministres Bev Oda et Josée Verner, qui se sont laissées submerger par les terrifiants dossiers de la Culture et du Développement International, échangent de portfolios, histoire de garder les idées claires.

Le plus drôle dans tout cela, c’est que tout ces efforts ne serviront à strictement rien. La maison de sondage Ipsos Reid a étudié les intentions de vote trois mois avant et trois mois après tous les grands remaniements du cabinet fédéral depuis 1988. Sa conclusion: dans presque tous les cas, les intentions de vote déclarées de la population sont restées les mêmes. Et avec un Harper qui conserve de toute façon un contrôle total sur les gestes et paroles de ses ministres, la tendance n’est pas prête de se renverser.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Brrr....

On apprend aujourd’hui que le nouveau commissaire de la GRC, William Elliot, a fait partie de l’équipe de bureaucrates chargée de censurer le rapport du juge O’Connor sur le rôle du gouvernement dans la déportation de Maher Arar. Encore plus grave, il semblerait que plusieurs ministres conservateurs aient aussi été impliqués dans le processus de censure, mais le gouvernement Harper refuse de les nommer ou de specifier le rôle qu’ils y auraient joué.

Il est terrifiant de voir jusqu’à quel point notre gouvernement est libre de manipuler en secret nos institutions nationales pour son propre intérêt. Sauf en temps de guerre, personne ne devrait avoir le droit de cacher des rapports juridiques à la population, mais notre propre gouvernement semble être passé maître dans cet art.

Tout ceci est encore plus déplorable quand on pense que le rapport O’Connor devait précisément se pencher sur la question d’abus de la part du gouvernement et de branches de la fonction publique.

En fait, la situation se résume assez simplement : On découvre que le citoyen Maher Arar a été déporté en Syrie sans avoir été reconnu coupable d'aucun crime - le gouvernement ordonne une enquête - le gouvernement en censure les résultats avec l’aide d’un bureaucrate qu’il nomme ensuite à la tête de la GRC.

En Russie, d’accord; aux Etats-Unis, peut-être; mais au Canada? Brrrr….

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Michael Ignatieff recently wrote an article for the New-York Times Magazine in which he admitted to having been wrong to support the US-lead invasion of Iraq.

I was personally very pleased to read his article and felt his admission was a sign of true leadership and maturity that deserved to recognised, but as could have been expected, the country’s main newspapers lived up to their cynical reputation and decided to use Ignatieff’s apology as a medium for voicing more cheap criticism against him.

Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente devotes a whole column to showing that Ignatieff only made his apology for political gain. She calls the column “The Torture of Being Iggy” and writes sarcastically “This discovery has been a chastening, yet enlightening, experience. It has made him humbler, yet wiser, and even more qualified to be a leader. What a great prime minister he'd be!” and “it's designed to get the millstone of Iraq off his neck for good.”

She then reopens the old debate about the depth of Ignatieff’s commitment to Canada by pointing out that he published the article in an American magazine and writes: “Personally, I think it's smart PR, on account of the Lorne Greene effect. That is, you get 10 times more attention for anything you do in the U.S. than anything you do in Canada.”

In the Francophone press, it’s the same song. In an letter published today by LeDevoir titled Pourquoi? (Why?), the writer, Mr. Denis Christian Morin says “being a parliamentarian would have opened his eyes? Today, he says he has to take account of reality.”

Ignatieff’s apology may have been formulated solely for political gain, and he may still be an American at heart, but my parents have always taught me the importance of moving on after arguments. “Once everyone has apologized” they tell me, “there’s no justification for reopening the argument.”

Ignatieff has admitted to having made what everyone now knows was a mistake in judgement. He may have done so for the wrong reasons, but in the end, it really doesn’t matter. By using his apology as a further reason for attacking him, the country’s newspapers are making it even riskier for our politicians to admit their mistakes. That’s not the message they ought to be sending.

Monday, August 6, 2007

Fissure et plafond bas

Le Globe and Mail décelé une fissure dans la Loi fédérale sur la responsabilité.

L’article 41 plafonne les contributions de particuliers à des partis politiques à 1100 $ mais il existe un moyen de faire une contribution illégale sans que le Directeur des élections soit en mesure de la déceler. Comme les partis politiques ne sont pas obligés de déclarer des dons de moins de 200 $, le Globe a calculé qu’un individu peu scrupuleux pouvait donner plus de 60 000 $ à son parti en versant 199 $ à chaque bureau de circonscription.

Une telle manoeuvre violerait l’esprit de la loi et serait sans doûte trop risquée pour qu’un parti en use sur une grande échelle. Cependant, nous devons aussi accepter que notre limite actuelle sur les contribtions si ridiculement basse mettera certaines personnes en quête de procédés pour la contourner.

Les gens politiquement engagés doivent avoir le droit de verser des dons à leurs partis. Le plafond actuel est déraisonnable et doit être soulevé.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

CN Safety

Two CN freight trains collided today in Northern BC after one of them derailed onto the opposite set of tracks. There were no injuries to the crew members, but fuel is leaking into the Fraser River and a diesel engine and a lumber car are in flames.

This is the fifth major derailment to have struck the CN in the last two years and raises alarming questions about the safety standards of the service and tracks. An average of two and a half major derailments per year does indeed seem to be an awfully dangerous number, especially when one takes into account the environmental damage caused by these accidents and the fact that the CN tracks are also leased by ViaRail. It was after all, only two years ago that a derailed CN train spilled 41 000 litres of caustic soda into the Cheakamus River, wiping out its entire fish population.

It is imperative that we establish once and for all the frequency of accidents which we are willing to tolerate and have our safety officials act in consequence. At the moment, the situation seems totally ridiculous, and if it is not remedied, it will only be a matter of years before a Via Rail train carrying hundreds of passengers plunges straight into a gorge.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Diviser et conquérir

Nous avons appris cette semaine l’acquittement de l’ancien Vice-Président et Géologue en Chef de Bre-X, John Felderhof, par un jury de la Cour Supérieure de l’Ontario. M. Felderhof, seul accusé dans l’affaire Bre-X -le plus grand scandale minier de l’histoire du monde- était accusé de délit d’initié (4 chefs d’accusation), et d’avoir diffusé des communiqués de presse contenant des informations mensongères (4 chefs d’accusation).

Son acquittement met définitivement fin aux espérances des actionnaires trompés de voir les coupables punis et laisse planer un doute quant à la capacité des autorités Canadiennes à punir les fraudes boursières. Le Ministre des Finances, Jim Flaherty a qualifié la situation de « honteuse » et a affirmé que « nous devons protéger les actionnaires contre des violations de lois boursières et nous devons faire ceci ici au Canada et ne pas dépendre de pays étrangers pour le faire ».

La situation actuelle est en effet assez risible. En ce moment, les autorités financières sont divisées par province en treize juridictions indépendantes se servant de forces policières différentes pour mener leurs enquêtes. Il n’existe aucune autorité nationale pouvant opérer de façon indépendante et coordonnée dans plusieurs provinces.

Il est nécessaire de remédier la situation au plus vite si le Canada ne veut pas acquérir une réputation de « paradis judiciaire » et s’attirer toutes les crapules financières de la planète.