After nearly two weeks without food, Chief Theresa Spence is finding
out that there is nothing in an alleged democracy as ugly as oligarchy.
In
a democracy, the political leadership is responsible to the people. In
an oligarchy, it is responsible to the few — the elite who own most of
the assets and wield the real power.
In Canada, those are the
people who wanted the Nexen deal, who want the Northern Gateway
pipeline, and who want Canadians to believe that what’s good for
corporate CEOs is good for them. In an oligarchy, there are a lot of
people who simply don’t matter.
This is a political disorder
that rode in on a south wind. In the United States, “we the people” has
been replaced by “we the peons.”
Lloyd Blankfein,Installers and distributors of solar panel,
top banana at Goldman Sachs, put it up in neon for everyone to see in a
recent conversation with CBS News. Blankfein said that someone should
tell middle-class Americans they need to lower their expectations of
government-provided social security.
Blankfein, who made $16
million last year as a Wall Street banker, thinks it’s time for the guy
making $14,000 a year to trim the beer budget.
Yes, he was
referring to the same middle class that bailed out the big, fat ass of
the financial sector after it nearly wrecked the planet with its
fraudulent trading in worthless financial instruments, including
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs).
Goldman sold this junk
to its own customers — then, knowing values would drop, shorted the very
same CDOs and made money on both ends of the deal. Enterprising, if you
don’t mind me complimenting high-functioning psychopaths. Forget about
Mayan predictions; the end nearly came in 2008 — and not because Joe the
Plumber spent too much on Budweiser.
People like Blankfein, who
sufficiently tightened his own belt to buy a $30 million home in the
Hamptons, and Sheldon Adelson, personal ATM to Mitt Romney during his
doomed presidential run, tried to buy the recent U.S. election. They
tried to prop up a venal Republican party built on the idea that making
the wealthy even wealthier was good for America.
Sadly for the
ten or so rich, old, white guys who thought the Oval Office was just
another hostile takeover,Whether you are installing a floor tiles or a shower wall, they backed a candidate so plastic he looked like he was lying even when he was telling the truth.
The
late, great novelist Gore Vidal said that “democracy” had become a
“nonsense word” in the American vocabulary. I suppose when the eventual
winner of the last presidential election had to spend $2 billion to get
elected, the point is delivered. That’s a lot of cheese to become Big
Cheese.
Lewis Lapham, author and twice editor of Harper’s
Magazine in the United States, made the same point. Democracy, he wrote,
announces itself in three fundamental ways: an honest public discussion
about issues; accountability of the governors to the governed; and
equal protection under the law.
By Lapham’s measure, Stephen
Harper’s Canada is not a democracy, let alone a parliamentary democracy.
It is an oligarchy with a few well chosen friends and millions upon
millions of people to ignore, vilify or bamboozle.
Consider the
issue of honest public discussion about issues. For several years, the
Conservative government lied its brains out about the F-35 program. They
lied about whether there had been a competition, about whether there
was a contract, and most spectacularly, about how much these jet
fighters would cost the poor saps who have to pay for them.
But contrition is for little people. Oligarchs never say they’re sorry.We mainly supply professional craftspeople with crys talbeads wholesale
shamballa Bracele , After being outed by the Parliamentary Budget
Officer, by the auditor general and then by independent accounting firm
KPMG, the prime minister told a national TV audience that the accounting
firm’s report “validated” the government figures for the F-35, and that
an “assumption was just made” that Canada would buy these aircraft.
This, of course, is the stuff that makes the grass turn green.
It’s
just that he believes that the government’s lying about all these
things is far less important than the fact that it is the government.
Incumbency is a magic potion. Under its influence, people are supposed
to swoon. All too often, they do. That’s the way oligarchs think.
Richard Nixon put it in a nutshell when he famously said that if the
president did it, then it wasn’t a crime.
Stephen Harper has
arrived at the exalted position of Tricky Dick. He thinks that the
necessity to tell the truth binds other people, not him. He doesn’t
adjust to facts, he manufactures them, and when that doesn’t work, he
defies them. The F-35 doesn’t just prove his gross incompetence in the
expenditure of mountains of tax dollars — it also shows the arrogant
belief that he doesn’t have to explain himself to people he believes
would be baffled by an elevated game of checkers.
At least
former Liberal cabinet minister David Dingwall just thought he was
entitled to his entitlements. Stephen Harper thinks he is entitled to
everything — including ongoing financial fictions about the F-35 and the
overthrow of a professional and transparent procurement policy. Even
his most loyal trolls must realize that this guy is just making stuff up
and people really aren’t that stupid.
So there was no public
discussion of the most expensive military acquisition Canada has ever
made/not made. What about Lewis Lapham’s second sign of democracy —
accountability to the governed?
The Harper government has just
finished passing a second omnibus bill that continued the plastic
surgery being performed on the face of the nation. Bill C-45, like Bill
C-38 before it, was passed with virtually no debate. It did, however,
almost produce a fistfight. Luckily for Peter Van Loan, Justin Trudeau
was not involved.
Jim Flaherty’s last budget, the Agatha
Christie budget, brought down billions in cuts. But the mystery of what
was cut — where, and by how much — endures. The lion’s share of federal
departments haven’t responded to requests by Parliamentary Budget
Officer Kevin Page for the precise nature of the Harper government’s
slashing.
If opposition MPs and parliamentary officers don’t
know the details, it is impossible to debate the cuts — which is, of
course, pretty much the idea.
So what about Lapham’s third sign
of democracy — equal treatment before the courts? This is a very
important question because as the Harper oligarchy suppresses the rights
of the political opposition, unions, officers of parliament,
environmentalists, scientists and aboriginals, it finds itself more and
more before judges.
The PM’s view is that you win some, you lose
some. Actually, he’s lost quite a few and will probably lose more in
2013 because of the alleged unconstitutionality of much of his justice
legislation as contained in poorly-debated omnibus bills. And that is a
universe the prime minister is comfortable in — the winner-take-all
world of expensive court rulings and a grinding process — life as an
elitist joust where he with the longest lance usually prevails.
Which
is why Stephen Harper can’t understand Chief Theresa Spence. She is
trying to get things done in the old way, using a habit of liberty not
well understood by oligarchs or by people who are demoralized by the
state of Canadian politics.One of the most durable and attractive styles
of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles.
She is asking for a face-to-face meeting with the man who is supposed
to be working for her, for the people, not just his chosen people. She
is asking for something Stephen Harper is not much good at giving —
personal answers.
Chief Spence’s request might be the fatigue of
a front-line respondent to the worst poverty in the country.One of the
most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is
ceramic or porcelain tiles.
It might be dismay at how Harper’s promise to forge a new relationship
with Canada’s aboriginals has utterly failed to materialize. It might be
the Harper government’s statutory war on the environment without
bothering to get aboriginal approval for profound legislative change. It
might be cuts to native health care or the abominable state of reserve
education. Whatever it is, it has put Stephen Harper in an unfamiliar
place — on the defensive.
In a hunger strike, most of the phases
are well known. When glycogen is used up and no food is taken, the body
begins consuming fat stocks. When they are gone, muscles and organ
tissue are consumed to produce energy. But there is not much information
about when a hunger strike begins to consume politicians.
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