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	<title>Zoonpolitikon &#187; Afghanistan</title>
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	<description>Warning!  Warning!  Left Turn Ahead!</description>
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		<title>Lest We Remember</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/11/lest-we-remember/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/11/lest-we-remember/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Nov 2010 16:51:37 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Canadian Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Political Commentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canada]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[first casualty of war is the truth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iraq]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Police]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poppy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Remembrance Day]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=1232</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Lest we forget.  Every year I have heard those words for as far back as I remember.  Lest we forget.  And yet it seems we never did remember.  Flowery speeches and poems waft through the autumn air each year and yet the killing goes on.  This is the first year of my life that I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><a href="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/poppy.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-1235" title="poppy" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/poppy.jpg" alt="" width="174" height="196" /></a><span title="L" class="cap"><span>L</span></span>est we forget.  Every year I have heard those words for as far back as I remember.  Lest we forget.  And yet it seems we never did remember.  Flowery speeches and poems waft through the autumn air each year and yet the killing goes on.  This is the first year of my life that I have not worn a poppy for Remembrance Day.  Instead my choice was black, the colour of mourning.  Because mourning is what we should be doing.  Instead the services sound more like the hubris of the victors as if we had prevailed in some righteous cause.  What was the cause of World War 1?  I dealt with that war two years ago when I began this blog:  the futility the waste the unnecessary deaths of millions over scraps of land and boasting rights.  World War 2 might have been fought for nobler reasons if we had cared about the Holocaust but we didn&#8217;t.  Canada&#8217;s wartime prime minister Mackenzie King was a fan of Hitler and found nothing to criticize in his treatment of the Jews and others.  When the allied powers might have stopped or at least hindered the killings they refused to act.  Sometimes humanitarian goods can be side effects of war but they are never the goal.  Nor are they ever directly pursued. </p>
<p>Today Remembrance Day has been hijacked by those who would support new unnecessary and counterproductive wars from Iraq to Afghanistan to the amorphous War on Terror.  The poppy is being made the symbol of those who romanticize war as a public good.  I will not join their number.  I will not be a hypocrit.  War is not romantic.  It is not glorious.  It is ugly and wasteful and a cancer upon human society that should be blotted out.  No one should support a war unless they admit the truth behind it.  I suspect that would be very difficult for most people.  How many Canadians would justify the murder of Afghan civilians or even partisan insurgents for the sake of controlling a pipeline route for our southern neighbour?  How many would say those who died to grease the wheels of cross-border trade were heroes?  Parents of the dead and injured must believe the fairy tales to cope with their loss.  But wouldn&#8217;t it be better to confront the truth before and have their children and siblings and parents with them still? </p>
<p>This year I simply mourn.  Not just those whose lives were stolen in wars they were never allowed to fully understand, but those who they killed, who we all have killed.  I mourn the deaths of Afghan civilians and fighters.  I mourn the deaths of the children of Iraq.  I mourn the deaths of Palestinians as they are slowly exterminated in a genocide in which we are compliant.  I mourn the deaths of East Timorese whose killers were in part financed by Canadian taxpayers.  I mourn all those who have died unnecessarily for the greed of others.  And I mourn the poppy.  Murdered at the hand of those who have distorted its simple message and who now make its withered corpse dance to their beat.  If there ever was a death that I would not mourn it would be the deaths of these necromancers of war.  </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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		<title>Just Societies Abhor Secret Proceedings</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/09/just-societies-abhor-secret-proceedings/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/09/just-societies-abhor-secret-proceedings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Sep 2010 00:42:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Canadian Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canada]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joint Task Force 2]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[JTF 2]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[justice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taliban]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=1205</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Apparently an inquiry into the behaviour of Canada&#8217;s elite JTF2 forces has been underway for more than a year now.  Information is sparse but it involves detainees in Afghanistan.  The ugly spectre of torture rears for obvious reasons.  Torture and Canadians anywhere in the same paragraph offends and sickens most Canadians.  And rightfully so.  Torture is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="A" class="cap"><span>A</span></span>pparently an inquiry into the behaviour of Canada&#8217;s elite JTF2 forces has been underway for more than a year now.  Information is sparse but it involves detainees in Afghanistan.  The ugly spectre of torture rears for obvious reasons.  Torture and Canadians anywhere in the same paragraph offends and sickens most Canadians.  And rightfully so.  Torture is a concept that violates our sense of justice which in the end is the moral conscience of our society.  It is who we are and who we present ourselves to be.  If any connection exists between this or any Canadian unit and the abuse of detainees the harshest punishments must be meted out to the those involved.  Whether that involvement is direct or facilitative, whether it is active or passive is irrelevant.   Whether it was an act of individuals on the ground or the complacent silence of a defence minister or the tacit approval of a prime minister justice should be swift and certain.</p>
<p>An inquiry was certainly warranted if allegations were raised.  But in a democratic society that inquiry must be public.  We should not just now be finding out about this problem.  Why would the government not announce the inquiry at the time.  I am confident of the response that will come out once government officials begin their tap dance before the media.  It will all be &#8216;national security&#8217;.  It will all be bullshit.  There is absolutely nothing about an inquiry into the behaviour of our soldiers that will threaten this country or its citizens.  Do we think that the Afghans are unaware if our soldiers have tortured them or facilitated others to do so?  Are we afraid that the Taliban or other groups will torture our people if it becomes apparent we torture prisoners or tolerate others doing so?  Perhaps we think that the result might be terrorist attacks here.  What is it we are so afraid of.  Whenever the great &#8216;national security&#8217; bogey man is evoked from the mists there is no effort to explain what that means.  It is a hollow threat to put us in our place.  We are being treated like children and frightened into not asking embarrassing questions.</p>
<p>The JTF 2 website contains the following statement:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Myth 11 &#8211; JTF 2 conducts activities outside the law.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Answer</strong> &#8211; All JTF 2 activities are conducted within the bounds of Canadian Law. Furthermore, the Government of Canada authorizes the overall missions and tasks undertaken by JTF 2, at all times. The unit is accountable to the Chief of the Defence Staff. The Chief of the Defence Staff is accountable to the Minister of National Defence who, as a Minister of the Crown, is responsible to the Prime Minister of Canada.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>If that statement was made in good faith, and I have no reason to believe that it was not, then JTF 2 should want any investigation of their activities to be transparent.  It is not enough for a public organization to claim ethics it is imperative to be seen to be ethical.  A secret inquiry does not do justice to the service women and men of this unit.  If they have nothing to hide they will survive scrutiny under the light of day and be the better for it.  And it is imperative that we demand public oversight as ultimately you and I are responsible for their every action.  If we sit back and do not due our civic duty in holding our representatives to the highest possible standard then we are as guilty as they of any wrongdoing.</p>
<p>We pump up our chests and announce to the world that we govern ourselves.  Maybe we should drop the sanctimony and get down to the business of governing ourselves.</p>
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		<title>Security Theater at its Worst</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/07/security-theater-at-its-worst/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/07/security-theater-at-its-worst/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jul 2010 01:44:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Political Commentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Society:  Us v. The Man]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Black Bloc]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil Rights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economic crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[first casualty of war is the truth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[G20]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Global Warming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Human Rights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iraq]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[justice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Police]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stephen Harper]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Toronto]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=1185</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Toronto is a major film producing city yet the production values at the G20 summit left much to be desired.  First the placing of the police cruisers to be fired was too static.  The director failed to convey any sense of motivation for their presence;  they stood awkwardly at center stage like a nervous young [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="T" class="cap"><span>T</span></span>oronto is a major film producing city yet the production values at the G20 summit left much to be desired.  First the placing of the police cruisers to be fired was too static.  The director failed to convey any sense of motivation for their presence;  they stood awkwardly at center stage like a nervous young actress arriving too soon on her mark lacking the stage savvy to carry over the moment.  The &#8216;Black Bloc&#8217;, the equivalent of the chorus from a Greek tragedy, rather than forming from the mists of the protest to give voice to the passion of the moment made stilted entrances past police who openly facilitated their approach for all the audience to see.  Bad form indeed!  The audience should never be privy to the stagecraft.  It spoils the magic and make the whole production amateurish.  Costuming also let down the production.  Wardrobe needed to distress the costumes before the curtain went up to give them the air of the battered uniform, a must for the noble warrior, the Don Quixote.  Instead police agent provocateurs amongst the protesters wore new smartly pressed black outfits and police issue combat boots.  All in all the government&#8217;s attempt at Greek tragedy ended up as Roman farce. The government would have been better advised to contract one of the many professional film producers to stage their little show rather than do it themselves.</p>
<p>I know that many out there will think my little choo-choo has finally gone around the bend.  Have I slipped into madness?  To think that the government staged burning police cars and smashing windows is just insane, right?  And that is exactly why governments get away with it.  It is insane.  But let&#8217;s look at the most important evidence:  the motive.</p>
<p>The first measure of the veracity of a conspiracy theory is motive.  This is where most conspiracy theories fall apart.  If their is no compelling reason to conspire to do something why go to all the trouble and risk?  Take the Kennedy assassination for instance.  This conspiracy has been around for 47 years now but the problem with every scenario is the why.  Kennedy was in trouble politically.  Why waste a bullet and drawing all that attention on a president that was about to become another one term wonder.  But in the case of the G20 the motives are strong, compelling and multiple.</p>
<p>First there was the enormous cost of the security operation.  While it certainly is the least important of the motives it is still compelling.  An election is almost certain within the next 5 to 12 months.  Having spent over a billion dollars on security how could the Conservative party face the electorate if nothing very notable had happened?  This is a variation on the old saying <strong><em>&#8216;What if they threw a war and nobody showed up?&#8217;</em></strong> In this case what if they spend all this money and the protesters don&#8217;t cause enough damage.  With Canadians suffering economically the Conservatives could not afford to be seen to be spending money frivolously.  Especially not after <em><strong>FakeLakeGate</strong></em>.  The only way to be sure that the protest would get out of hand and frighten Canadians was for police agents to physically start the process.  After all you can&#8217;t trust a bunch of tree-hugging, hippie, leftist peaceniks to start a decent riot now can you.</p>
<p>This brings us to the second motive:  frightening Canadians.  In the pages of this blog and billions of others around the globe people like me have been warning of the impending security, financial and environmental reckoning.  Even the Pentagon report to the Bush administration stated clearly that this planet will not be able to sustain a population of more than 3 billion people by 2100.  That is less than half of today&#8217;s global population and less than a third of the 9.1 billion projected for 2050.  The Pentagon estimate I should add is the most generous of all I have encountered.  Most others estimate a maximum sustainable population of around one billion and a few even less.  The lowest estimated sustainable population for 2100 that I have come across was approximately 100 million.  Today there are a few hundred thousand climate refugees.  Within a few  short years there will be millions and then billions.  James Lovelock  suggests we built barricades and heighten security if we happen to be  among the fortunate to live in a part of the globe that will still  support human life.  To do this we must end this dalliance with  democracy.  But we may not have to worry about that.  The financial and security reckonings may preempt the ecological.  Spillover from Iraq or Afghanistan or more likely both has the potential to draw in major powers resulting in large fast population reduction with the added turmoil, dislocation, lingering deaths of such a war destabilizing much of what survives.  And the financial meltdown has only begun.  It will play a role in the timing and ferocity of planetary ecological degradation and destabilization of global security.  The unwavering faith of our leaders in the American economic model shows their intellectual inability to conceptualize anything else thanks to a battered and bankrupt education system rather than the strength of the system.  Laissez-faire capitalism is a chimera.  It has failed every time it has been attempted.  But this time it has been pushed farther and the very institutions that society had created over the centuries to protect itself from the worst consequences have been systematically dismantled or undermined by the priesthood of the New Right.</p>
<p>Government officials may deny the inevitability of these events.  They may assist their lackeys in the main stream media to foster confusion.  But at the highest levels they know as well as I do that these events will take place.  Their plan or assumption is that they will be among the survivors and the rest of us be damned.  To do that they must heed Lovelock and end democracy.  To seize power arbitrarily would trigger a backlash.  Too messy and uncertain.  Much more effective to convince Canadians to surrender their rights and freedoms in the name of security.  A quick survey of the letters to the editor in support of the police actions in Toronto should prove beyond a doubt that the tactic is working.  Canadians seem more than willing to surrender everything they say they fought for in the world wars and are supposedly fighting for in Afghanistan.  What irony to send troops half way around the world to fight for a value we do not prize at home.  The G20 events in Toronto had a powerful effect on the unsophisticated and uninformed.  We will see the anti-terrorism laws renewed expanded when they next come up for review and we will see a general and substantial increase in police powers over the next five years.  The G20 protests will be as powerful a symbol in the hands of Canadian elites as 9/11 was to American elites as they stripped the liberty from Land of Liberty.  They needed it and they got it because they did it.  As simple as that.  Any who question rising authoritarianism will be shown pictures of burning police cars as Americans who question are shown the images of 9/11 and in an earlier generation on another continent those who questioned were reminded of the Reichstag fire until the die was cast and they could be silenced more effectively.</p>
<p>The final motive is chaos.  In chaos it is a human tendency to cling to the known rather than fly to things we know not of as Shakespeare might say.  New economic ideas, new ecological initiatives and new diplomatic peace initiatives all take a leap of faith.  It always seems risky to move in a new direction.  And it is risky but better risk swimming for shore than cling to a sinking lifeboat.  Is it a surprise to anyone that those who benefit most from the status quo should want to disparage alternatives.  By painting the protesters as the lunatic fringe, the current elites can assure the support of the timid which is most Canadians who face the challenges of day to day living.  As Otto von Bismarck said  so eloquently <em><strong>&#8216;A man who relies upon the state for his pension is not likely to rebel against that state.&#8217;</strong></em> By the time most Canadians realize that their comfort is no longer exists it will be too late.  In this way the political and economic elites of this country smear their opponents and solidify their support.  It is a bold stroke.</p>
<p>So there you have it.  The motives for the government to commit insanity.  I suspect that many remain unconvinced.  They will say that this is too Machiavellian.  After all these are good people, good Canadians.  We just don&#8217;t do these kind of things or have these kinds of motivations.  To those I say this.  To deny that the above is plausible is to deny:</p>
<ul>
<li>that there were no Residential Schools;</li>
<li>that there have been concentration camps in Canada (1914-18, 1930-36, 1940-46); </li>
<li>that Canadian POW camps at the end of World War Two allowed Nazi officers to hold courts martial and execute German prisoners under our protection with guns and bullets supplied by the camp administration;</li>
<li>that over a million Canadians were spied on and blacklisted by the RCMP during the Cold War.  The information gathered shared with the United States.  Many had their lives and / or careers destroyed.   Several committed suicide or died prematurely from stress.  Their crimes included subscription to the wrong journals, activity in their trade union, support for the United Nations, support for peace, etc.;</li>
<li>that there was no Maher Arar;</li>
<li>there is no Omar Khadr.</li>
</ul>
<p>The list could go on but I think you get the picture.  So before you judge me mad you must first explain why our government should be trusted given the track record.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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		<title>V. E. Day:  Celebrate or Mourn?</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/05/v-e-day-celebrate-or-mourn/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/05/v-e-day-celebrate-or-mourn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 May 2010 18:43:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=1160</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Yesterday marked the 65th anniversary of the surrender of Germany in World War Two marking Victory in Europe or V. E. Day.  Nazism had been defeated, the horrors of the Holocaust uncovered and a new day was dawning on the planet.  The dream of the United Nations was forming; to be established October 24, 1945.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="Y" class="cap"><span>Y</span></span>esterday marked the 65th anniversary of the surrender of Germany in World War Two marking Victory in Europe or V. E. Day.  Nazism had been defeated, the horrors of the Holocaust uncovered and a new day was dawning on the planet.  The dream of the United Nations was forming; to be established October 24, 1945.  We had learned our lesson as we were forced to bear witness to the darkest depths of human depravity.  Our ability to murder on mass shook us from the dream of civilization.  Our collective soul cried out &#8216;Never Again!&#8217;</p>
<p>But in 2010, as the German Chancellor Angela Merkel sat on the dais next to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, representing the opposing powers of the conflict that had more in common than differences, where are we?  What has happened to the dream, that moment of pure joy and hope?</p>
<p>As its predecessor, World War Two was not the war to end all wars.  Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, the list is long and bloody.  Our ability to kill has improved with each new conflict.  Diplomacy is ridiculed as the the fires of nationalism brightly light the banners of the legions.  The eagle of Rome and Germany now demands the people of the world bow down to the eagle of  America.  That the symbol of power since early history has been a scavenger should speak to us.  But somehow it doesn&#8217;t.  Fear, distrust and ignorance drive us into our imagined communities, not seeing the realities that connect us behind the myths that divide.  And so the story continues written in the blood of millions.</p>
<p>Political lies continued to swim in human blood.  In Hungary and Iraq honest people were encouraged to rise up against tyranny only to be abandoned when they did so in good faith believing that they would be supported.  The Hungarians listened to Radio Free Europe spew its propaganda East.  Not realizing that this was only a tactic to undermine Soviet stability they rose up and awaited the aid implicitly promised.  They stood firm as the Soviet tanks rolled over the Hungarian frontier and into the streets of Budapest.  Still gazing West in desperation as they were slaughtered, the survivors later lost in the void of the Gulag.  The Shi&#8217;as of southern Iraq encouraged by Bush senior to rebel were again abandoned as were the Kurds of northern Iraq.  How much different is this to the guarantees given to the Czechs and others prior to the war.  Horribly the Tutsi and Hutu at different times learned that &#8216;Never Again!&#8217; was hollow rhetoric as did the people of Srebrenica in their turn.</p>
<p>Domestic persecution so abhorred in the Third Reich still visits us as well.  From the Cold War where America and the Soviet Union tried to outdo each other with show trials and mock patriotism to the Patriot Act and Canada&#8217;s anti-terrorism laws and Arizona&#8217;s yellow sombrero law (see previous post <em>The Yellow Sombrero</em>) we have repeated the ideas and concepts of Hitler and Himmler.  People persecuted, hounded for what they believed or what they were not what they had done.  Over one million Canadians were blacklisted as communists/socialists.  Rarely were any Soviet spies.  That was not the point.  It was the idea that was feared, not the people.  The idea needed to be destroyed lest it upset life of the power elite.  Today it is Muslims.  The &#8216;experts&#8217; talk about Islamic culture and say it is violent, that it praises terror, that it is regressive.  What they don&#8217;t say is, like Nazi depictions of Jewish culture, it doesn&#8217;t exist.  It is a fabrication.  There is no &#8216;Islamic Culture.&#8217;  There are several Arab, Persian, Turkic and Malay cultures.  Most North Americans see &#8216;Islamic Culture&#8217; and think Arab Culture but it in itself is not a monolith and Malay is the largest Muslim ethnic group.  If the threat is real why would it be represented by a mythical creation?  It seems only that some threat must exist.  But why?  What is it that the powers that be don&#8217;t want us to see.  Today we can look back at the Third Reich and see what Hitler and Goebbels didn&#8217;t want the world to know.  Will historians 65 years from now be revealing abominable secrets buried behind American imperialism?  Research the provisions and justifications of the Enabling Laws introduced by German Chancellor Hitler in 1934 to see a reflection of the Patriot Act and its ilk.  Racial profiling of Mexicans and Muslims is no different than that used by Nazi administrations.  Look at the propaganda below showing the same basic caricature used in two contexts but really about the same people, Semites.</p>
<p><a href="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/dolchstoss.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1168" title="dolchstoss" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/dolchstoss-300x246.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="297" /></a><a href="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/20090220-oil-pump-the-west-in-arab-hands.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-1166" title="20090220-oil-pump-the-west-in-arab-hands" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/20090220-oil-pump-the-west-in-arab-hands-256x300.jpg" alt="" width="256" height="300" /></a></p>
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<p>Mussolini said that fascism could more accurately be called corporatism.  Is that not the culture we have today in Canada and the United States?  Is not the corporation and the financial sector the new Rome?   Is it not the sum total of existence, that which gives meaning to our lives?  We are told constantly that there is not enough money, enough wealth to maintain the welfare state that was to raise all boats; to create a floor not a ceiling to use William Beveridge&#8217;s phrase.  Apparently the neo-conservative Right has taken him at his word and want to cut the floor out from under the powerless in order to extend their ceiling to the heavens.  Corporations steal our money to fund their failures.  And still George Will this morning on This Week (ABC) claims that the crisis in Greece is the masses thinking they are entitled when their is no money left to fund such entitlements.  What better example of self-entitlement than the bail out of General Motors or Lehman Sachs and the rest.  They told us they were too big to fail.  They told us we needed to give them more of our money for our own sakes.  Those who would now eject us from our own homes, destroy our retirements and deny our children of the same education and career opportunities as their children feel so entitled as to believe that such behaviour is an act of gratitude.  Don&#8217;t tell me there is not money to fund entitlements.  You mean there is no money to fund those who don&#8217;t belong to your class Mr. Will.</p>
<p>But corporations have always held the people in disdain.  They always believed in a natural leader class.  That is why so many of them supported Hitler and nazi ideology, before and during the war.  Ford enriched itself on slave labour in Nazi occupied Europe.  IBM vaulted to the lead in tabulation later computation by designing the system that sent six million Jews to the gas chamber.  President Roosevelt had to relieve Joseph Kennedy, father of the future president, from his post as ambassador to the Great Britain because of his praise of Hitler and Nazism and his repeated effort to undermine British resolve in the face of what he considered a superior German system. Do we believe that suddenly they changed their philosophy when the war was over?  Are we that naive?  Or just so afraid that if we say such things somehow we will be next on the train to the camps.</p>
<p>German education under the Nazis convinced young Germans that they were superior by blood to the other races of the world.  They twisted ancient northern European myths to create an image of the Teutonic race as the defenders of civilization against the barbarian hordes.  Anything that might bring that image into question was dropped from the curriculum.  Self appointed &#8216;experts&#8217; shored up the image with quasi-science and bad academics.  Education seen as the conduit to maintain the social order whether or not that order is right.  Sound familiar?  Does to me.  I see it every day in the classroom and I am both sad and afraid.  I know where it <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>will </strong></span>lead, not might lead.  Young Americans today are brainwashed into believing that the American way is not jut the best way but the only legitimate way.  Other cultures, other peoples, other values are ridiculed or vilified.  The lie of democracy used to shade the evil intent:  <strong>Power</strong>.</p>
<p>So what have we learned in sixty-five years?  What has happened to the possibilities of 1945?  Today they are just the puppets of power.  Power corrupts.  But mostly it perpetuates.  Those who have it seek to keep it.  Those who don&#8217;t lament their suffering as the Athenian generals counseled the Melians in Thucydides account of  the Peloponnesian War,<em><strong>&#8220;for you know as well as we do that right  &#8230; is in question only between equals in power, while the strong do  what they can and the weak suffer what they must.&#8221;</strong></em> or they live Zapata&#8217;s words:  <em><strong>&#8220;It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.&#8221;</strong></em></p>
<p>Today I mourn not because nazism and fascism were destroyed but because they survived.  I mourn because the ideals of Adolph Hitler are the ideals of the Obama administration and American Imperialism.  They are cloaked in the facade of democracy and humanist rhetoric but they are the same.  I mourn because my country, like so many others, complacently accepts this outrage lacking the courage to die on our feet if needs must.  We play the Jester to America&#8217;s Lear.  Around the world today the celebrations are not of the end of something but of its perpetuation in secrecy.  Hitler&#8217;s mistake was to open a window and let the world see.  That could not be countenanced if the power elites elsewhere were to continue without public outrage.  Secrecy reigns once more and all is well in Washington as on Wall Street.  So celebrate, but excuse me if I weep.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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		<title>Media: Guilty of Complicity or Cowardice</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/04/media-guilty-of-complicity-or-cowardice/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2010/04/media-guilty-of-complicity-or-cowardice/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Apr 2010 18:28:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=1068</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Families of nine Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan were shown on the news yesterday visiting Kandahar and the memorial to the Canadians who have fallen in that conflict.  It was a touching moment.  Emotions played on the faces of the family members as they stood before the stone etchings of their son or daughter.  The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><a href="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/storring-canadian-memorial-220.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-1081" title="storring-canadian-memorial-220" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/storring-canadian-memorial-220.jpg" alt="" width="220" height="170" /></a></p>
<p><span title="F" class="cap"><span>F</span></span>amilies of nine Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan were shown on the news yesterday visiting Kandahar and the memorial to the Canadians who have fallen in that conflict.  It was a touching moment.  Emotions played on the faces of the family members as they stood before the stone etchings of their son or daughter.  The media followed by interviews with a couple of the pilgrims who unanimously support the mission and support extending it if necessary.</p>
<p>What did the media expect them to say?  What else can they believe but that the mission is important and necessary in order to justify the sacrifice and the grief they have suffered?  The sudden loss of a loved one in a conflict half way around the world must stand for something or their grief would destroy them completely.  All families of fallen soldiers must believe the sacrifice had noble purpose or go mad.</p>
<p>This pilgrimage was a personal journey and should have remained so.  What purpose was served by the media presence?  To the families no purpose whatsoever.  But for the media and for the government the purpose is clear and as petty and self-serving as the reasons that drew us into this conflict in the first place.  Each group, media and government, are attempting to assuage their own guilt by maintaining the myth.  But we don&#8217;t need our government giving us myth we need the truth and we need the media to question that truth incessantly.  That is the role of the media.  I can almost forgive the government for lying to us.  In a poll in the United States a couple of years ago the American public admitted they preferred their government to lie to them.  A lie is often easier to deal with than the truth.  Besides governments are by nature secretive little entities.  So it is the media that bears the greatest guilt because it is their job to wake up the public to the truth before it is too late.</p>
<p>The evidence has been there from the beginning concerning our real purpose for deploying to Afghanistan.  Our neighbour, our closest ally and our friend the United States asked us to go so they could free up assets to deploy to their upcoming Iraq invasion.  We said yes because they are our neighbour, friend and ally and because we were in negotiations with them over a  number of cross border issues at the time.  The two most important were softwood lumber and border access following 9/11.  The United States has its own reasons for being there.  Chief among those are access to Kazakh oil and gas without having to ship through Russian territory.  There is also evidence of resources in some of the other Central Asian states as well.  Nothing about this mission has been about human rights or democracy or any of the other catch-phrases that allow us to sleep at night while murdering people half a world away.</p>
<p>But removing the Burka, routing out terrorists, building a modern society (aka. American society) and creating democracy raises pride to console the tears and makes the whole thing a little more bearable.  This war was never about that.  The Soviet backed government of Afghanistan that we worked so hard to topple, which led us to create the Taliban and Al Qaeda was a secular government that had outlawed the burka and encouraged women to engage fully as equals in society.  It was an American tactic to encourage Islamic fundamentalism among the mujaheddin as a way to gain popular support among village elders and traditionalists.  Following the collapse of the Soviet Union the United States and its western allies supported various groups in power in Kabul including the Taliban.  The Taliban were in close negotiations for a pipeline with the U.S. government and private firms such as Haliburton whose envoy to the Taliban was Dick Cheney.</p>
<p>Realpolitik is messy but it, not the spirit of humanity, motivates state actions.  No war has ever been fought for humanitarian reasons and none ever will be under our current international system.  Without a compelling selfish interest no state will risk its assets.  But without a higher moral purpose no democracy will sanction a foreign war.  Hence the lie.  We are manipulated to support something we really don&#8217;t understand.  We make it about nationalism just like the Nazis, the ultimate nationalists.  We, like them, take pride in the delusion that we are creating a better world; we, like them, believe we know the mind of god and it is consumerism.</p>
<p>The media knows this.  Instead it pretends as if it is too stupid to be able to assemble diverse evidence into a meaningful package and present a comprehensive report to the public.  That is news and the job of the news organization.  So we don&#8217;t have to research raw government documents and expert data on our own; or interview public figures and experts to tease out meaning; the  news media is to bring all this information together, plot its interactions and present us with understandable meaning .  Instead our newsrooms more resemble the Reichsministrie of Propoganda than the movie <em>All the President&#8217;s Men</em>.  Much of what is reported is lifted directly from press releases and the rest is assured not to ruffle the feathers of advertisers or their close buddies in government.</p>
<p>It is not just the loss that we experience in the Afghan debacle but  where such complicity could lead that is of most concern. We are already experiencing a powerful move toward authoritarianism in our domestic society.  The anti-terrorism laws are only the prominent tip of the iceberg.  Whether police in Ontario charge people with a law that doesn&#8217;t exist in the statutes, shoot an innocent man (Dudley George) and then perjure themselves rather than take responsibility or the RCMP taser Robert Dziekanski in British Columbia and again lie in court or  resource companies invade and pollute your land in Alberta without allowing you recourse to protect it, the breakdown in trust between the agents of authority and the citizen continues apace.  Yet the media keeps its silence filling our minds with pleasant snippets and diversions rather than attacking the issues that will impact us most profoundly, if often without our notice until it is too late.  We ourselves must shoulder some of the blame for this.   Where are the crowds outside the major publishers and broadcasters demanding their right to know.</p>
<p>Individual reporters take shelter in their jobs.  They can only report what their editors, publishers and news directors allow.  It is there job.  That was the defence the Nazis used at Nuremburg as well.  We were just following orders.  We had our families to think of.  If not us someone else would have done it.  All true as far as it goes.  But it still boils down to one of two things.  Either they don&#8217;t stand up because they agree with maintaining the lie in which case they are complicit.  Or they fear the consequences of standing up and speaking their mind in which case they are cowards.  Those who are complicit I have no words of comfort for you.  May you soon be together in hell with your mentor Josef Goebbels.  To those who shrink from fear I have greater understanding.  But while you might be able to lie to the country you can&#8217;t lie to yourself.  You know the truth and you know your neighbours rely on you to make decisions.  Sometimes decisions concerning the life and death of those closest to them.</p>
<p>Each journalist must make their self assessment  and decide whether they are collaborators complicit in undermining the ethic of our society or cowards who to save their own skin let their neighbours suffer.  But shame on both for victimizing the families again to use them as a prop in your deceit.</p>
<p> </p>
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		<title>Reality Wars</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/11/reality-wars/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/11/reality-wars/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 12:20:24 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=979</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[An old saw says that the first casualty of war is the truth but reality might be a close second.  It is not just that our governments lie to us it is how they tell us the truth.  Outright lies are often easy to uncover, sending official sources into a frenzy of just straight out [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="A" class="cap"><span>A</span></span>n old saw says that the first casualty of war is the truth but reality might be a close second.  It is not just that our governments lie to us it is how they tell us the truth.  Outright lies are often easy to uncover, sending official sources into a frenzy of just straight out denial.  After all an outright lie is a difficult thing to defend in the face of the truth so the simple denial is the sole strategy available unless you can literally kill the messenger which has been known to happen.</p>
<div id="attachment_986" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 410px"><img class="size-full wp-image-986" title="iranIED" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/iranIED.jpg" alt="This particular IED image carries a 2 fold message in the reality wars.  " width="400" height="524" /><p class="wp-caption-text">This particular IED image carries a 2 fold message in the reality wars.  </p></div>
<p>Take for instance the glitzy NewSpeak for a bomb.  That little word does not convey the correct message.  Every word, every reference must expose a stark difference between us and our foes in a time of war.  We use bombs and we are the good guys so the public must have a different term for a bomb when it is used by the bad guys, i. e. the enemy.  Solution:  Improvised Explosive Device or IED.  Just rolls off the tongue doesn&#8217;t it.  Now you know that anything improvised is not official and is just not the tool to use.  The word improvise carries a subliminal message of inferiority.  A legitimate military organization doesn&#8217;t improvise materials.  Only some slipshod mom and pop terrorist cell would do that.  I guess if these people want to be taken seriously they need to raise some money and go out and buy an SBED (Store Bought Explosive Device).  That&#8217;s what we use and that&#8217;s the ticket to legitimacy.</p>
<p>If these criminals and scumbags, to use the military vernacular, would use legitimate weapons manufactured to precise specification to blow up our troops then we would be able to respect them.  They too would become soldiers and cease being criminals and scumbags.  Maybe we would then celebrate their deaths less and gain a perspective on our own casualties.  As it stands now the subhuman Taliban is gleefully dispatched to Allah and each of our casualties is a fallen hero.</p>
<p>Language is used to persuade, to guide the listener subtly or sometimes not so subtly to the speakers position.  It is the pigment on the canvas of understanding, the colour of reality.  If anything should be painted in the words of reality it is war.  How else will we ever break this sad cycle of carnage.  Even bomb is too kind a word.  And Improvised Explosive Device is so sanitized as to be laughable.  How about we call it what it is, a life and limb shredding horror, whether we buy it from a manufacturer listed on the NYSE or cook it up in the basement.</p>
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		<title>Medical Capitalism: The Deadliest Virus</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/06/medical-capitalism-the-deadliest-virus/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Jun 2009 17:44:35 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=793</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Barak Obama&#8217;s health care plan, as it has thus unfolded, should be a clear and final answer to all those who believed this young man would somehow change politics and create a more inclusive, just and caring society.  The pinheads who screamed that socialism would reign and undermine the American way (greed, cynical self-interest, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="mceTemp">
<div class="mceTemp"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-849" title="j0366608" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/j0366608.wmf" alt="j0366608" />Barak Obama&#8217;s health care plan, as it has thus unfolded, should be a clear and final answer to all those who believed this young man would somehow change politics and create a more inclusive, just and caring society.  The pinheads who screamed that socialism would reign and undermine the American way (greed, cynical self-interest, and lack of community) can at last rest comfortably in the certainty that President Obama is different in complexion only from his predecessors.  It is clear that his campaign document, <em>Blueprint for Change</em>, would have been more aptly named, <em>Blueprint for the Appearance of Change</em>. </div>
</div>
<p class="first-child "><span title="O" class="cap"><span>O</span></span>bama still has to announce many of the details of the plan but he has rejected categorically any form of single-payer public system.  His reason:  it would be too expensive given the current state of the economy.  What a crock.  Canadian labour costs have been and remain lower than American in great part because we have a single-payer public health care system  Current closing and downsizing of Canadian automotive plants is due to political considerations not economics.  American political debate would sound like a cacophony of scorched cats if GM were to close American plants and leave all the Canadian plants open.  It would make the company far more competitive if that were the only criteria for restructuring.  So Obama&#8217;s proclamation that cost factors prevent him from creating a health care system that would truly address the current crisis in medicine is just a lie.  A stronger argument can be made that the opposite is true.  The United States cannot afford not to create a single-payer health care system given the current state of the global economy if it wishes to remain competitive. </p>
<p>Surrounded by the executives of the major American health insurance corporations, Obama painted himself as a man of integrity and said he would fix health care regardless of the state of the economy.  As I have said here before, Barack Obama is a master of image.  He spoke of a consensus between the White House and the insurance companies to do what was necessary to see that all Americans would have access to affordable health coverage generously provided by that bastion of social conscience, the health insurance industry.  The question arises what if someone still cannot afford the premiums set by these socially conscious corporations?  First you will have to prove you can&#8217;t afford it and if the government decides you could by oh I don&#8217;t know living in your car instead of paying rent or whatever, then the talk is that a fine should be imposed.  Only in the United States would anyone think that insurance at gunpoint would be an appropriate solution to assure all citizens have health insurance.  Obviously this policy is not in the interests of uninsured Americans so why even think of it.  Wait a minute.  It was conceived in conjunction with the major insurance companies.  You don&#8217;t think that the president and these leaders of American finance would scratch each other&#8217;s back and come up with a solution that benefits themselves do you?  Gee, the insurance industry gets to extort millions in profits from a new source, those who can&#8217;t afford medical insurance, and the government led by Barak &#8216;the enforcer&#8217; Obama sees that they cough up the dough or else.  And Barack&#8217;s pay-off, I suspect a tidy little kickback to his re-election campaign.  Might as well just call him President Barack &#8216;Milhous&#8217; Obama and the corporate executives B. B. Rebozo clones.  It is interesting on this note to</p>
<div id="attachment_850" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 210px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-850" title="CB024010" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/j0406795-200x300.jpg" alt="Save the cost of health care premiums and rent at the same time.  Suicide:  the most cost effective option under the Obama Plan." width="200" height="300" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Save the cost of health care premiums and rent at the same time. Suicide: the most cost effective option under the Obama Plan.</p></div>
<p>mention that a criticism of Obama&#8217;s current nominee to the Supreme Court, Sonia Sotomayer, is her previous assertion that all campaign contributions are in reality bribes.  She was simply stating the obvious.  A person supports a candidate because she expects him to look after her interests and in a self-serving society like the United States that means the individual&#8217;s selfish interests not her communal interest.  A bell should have gone off back in the campaign when Obama rejected public campaign financing.  Guess we know why now.  (Actually the bell did go off but the American public was so caught up in the election of the first Black president and the fulfillment of Martin Luther King&#8217;s dream they refused to listen to those voices.  I guess that they just forgot that King&#8217;s dream was a society where a man would be judged by the content of his character rather than the colour of his skin.)</p>
<div class="mceTemp"> Of course those who they decide really cannot afford the premiums will have some form of subsidy or government system to fall back on.  But that is the system that currently exists and has left 40 million Americans out in the cold without health insurance.  Medicaid, the current fall back for those under 65 who cannot afford private coverage and Medicare for those over 65 work on a means test basis.  The problem with means testing appears when dealing with those who fall on the cut-off line.  Let me give you a personal example.  My wife&#8217;s father had a small company pension ($63.00 per month).  Here in Ontario there is a provincial program called Old Age Supplement which is to supplement the Old Age Security pension universally received from our federal government.  The idea was that it would top up the federal pension to the level set as a living income.  Because my father-in-law had that little company pension he fell just over the line to qualify for the supplement.  Result:  he received about $20 a month less in total than if he had not received the company pension.  Means tested programs always fail and so will Obama&#8217;s current health care plan.  Oh, he will declare success as will his minions but bottom line millions of Americans will still die needlessly for lack of medical care.  The absurdity continues if you remember that the cut-off point must be approved by a group of people who cannot manage their household budget while earning multi-million dollar salaries.  This is why they NEED lump sum infusions at least once a year in the form of bonuses.  Oh yeah, these are the go to guys when it comes to budgeting necessities. </div>
<div id="attachment_851" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 247px"><img class="size-full wp-image-851" title="single-grave-2" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/single-grave-2.jpg" alt="I chose to pay the rent.  Now I have a permanent home." width="237" height="218" /><p class="wp-caption-text">I chose to pay the rent. Now I have a permanent home.</p></div>
<p>Health care is a human right.  Money was quickly found to fight an illegal war of aggression in Iraq.  Obama while downsizing that war is ratcheting up another unwinnable war in Afghanistan and in the process propping up a government rife with war criminals.  (While Obama continually tries to compare himself to Kennedy and Roosevelt, his behaviour increasingly resembles Nixon.  Nixon while taking credit for troop reductions in Vietnam failed to inform the public that they were just secretly being deployed to Cambodia which led finally to the rise of Pol Pot and the systematic murder of millions.  Now that&#8217;s the American way in action.)  There is no question of cost for these ill-conceived adventures.   They are being fought in the name of security while they have only succeeded in making Americans less secure and making the entire world more dangerous, and more in danger.  A secure state is one that minimizes the possibility that any of its citizens will die needlessly or preventably.  Health care then is a security issue.  Not just programs to deal with potential pandemics but prompt, quality medical assistance to every citizens who needs it when they need it.  Paying the rent or saving your life should not be a choice for a citizen of any civilized country.  Today in the United States it is.  Therefore the United States in NOT a civilized country.  It is a barbaric despotism where the wealthy and powerful spend their time cheating the weak and vulnerable.  And the &#8216;President of Change and Hope,&#8217; Barack Obama has revealed his true self as the &#8216;President of No Change and No Hope.&#8217;</p>
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		<title>Right&#8217;s Wrong Answer</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/04/rights-wrong-answer/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2009 05:21:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=642</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well, it is time we peasants gathered together with our torches and pitchforks and marched up that hill to storm the castle.  Dr. Frankenstein is making monsters again.  Actually it is our education system and the monsters are our children.  A study of university professors in Ontario (Canada) reported students were immature, lazy and unprepared.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child " style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify"><span title="W" class="cap"><span>W</span></span>ell, it is time we peasants gathered together with our torches and pitchforks and marched up that hill to storm the castle.  Dr. Frankenstein is making monsters again.  Actually it is our education system and the monsters are our children. </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">A study of university professors in Ontario (Canada) reported students were immature, lazy and unprepared.  They also lacked the research skills that might yet save them from going blithely forth to their, and our, doom.  The so-called most informed generation had little knowledge and what they did possess was superficial at best and outright myth at worst.  For example, Canadian troops, in one form or another, have been fighting in Afghanistan since 2002.  Yet when I ask students at beginning of semester where Afghanistan is only 1 or 2  can answer correctly.  None of them have a clear understanding of how we got there and what we are trying to accomplish.  But if I ask whether they support their troops the majority answer in the affirmative.  How can you support your troops if you don&#8217;t know where they are or why they are there? </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">Something not reported was that many of them are functionally illiterate.  A functional illiterate can read and write but with severe limitations.  They could perhaps read a menu (without the pictures found in fast food joints the purpose of which is a recognition of the extent of illiteracy); they could read the headlines of a newspaper but would struggle with the content.  If they get news at all it is from television and even then they are lucky to fully comprehend the story as their vocabularies are woefully inadequate. </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">Are teachers to blame?  They are certainly the easiest target.  They stand on the front lines in the classroom day after day.  Surely they are aware that what passes for education today is a hollow shell.   The problem is that people outside the education system can&#8217;t see the forest of bureaucrats hacking away gleefully on the ability of the trees to teach.  Teachers have marginally more say as to what goes on in the education system than the school janitor.  Decisions are made by bean counters and other bureaucratic nitwits shuffling papers in some climate controlled paradise.  They wouldn&#8217;t know what end of a white board marker to use let alone how to fire up the data video projector.  They love flow charts but anything with real people involved like a classroom, forget it.  Those bipedal chatterboxes in the hallways are clients or products to them not kids with a life that demands preparation.  The business mentality that has invaded our schools has created good cogs but poor humans. </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">This is not the first study to raise an alarm that something horrible is happening in our society.  It will likely not be the last.  What I have yet to come to grips with is why we allow this to continue.  Maybe the reaction by students in one of my classes to the survey sheds some light.  They laughed.  They had been insulted and they thought it was funny.  They had been called immature and they accepted it. </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">In a separate study this generation of high school graduates was found to be closer to their grandparents than their parents in attitudes and outlook.  Fresh-faced youths interviewed for the news report merrily expressed their optimism for the future.  The current recession/depression concerned them not at all; nor did the two foreign wars that are going badly for western powers.  They seemed oblivious in their certainty that life would unfold as it should.  But is this optimism or naiveté?  When I was their age I too was optimistic.  I believed that we could create a better, more just, and more humane society.  I believed the future could bring an end to unnecessary suffering and ease the pain of the rest.  And of course I believed that I would find love and adventure.  Optimism in youth should be a given.  I still strive for that better society.  Change is slow but it is measurable.</p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">However, I knew the dangers presented by an illegal and unjust war in Southeast Asia.  I realized the fragility of life under the umbrella of nuclear weapons.  I watched the machinations of government destroy people&#8217;s lives without conscience and knew only herculean efforts would bring about meaningful change.  I was optimistic not that things were great but that things could change; that most people were basically good and if we banded together there was little we could not accomplish.  The key was being in as well as of my world.  My father always complained that I was an idealist but it was an idealism grounded in reality.  I am not saying that young people today should rent their clothes and wail at the fates all the time.  I don&#8217;t now and I didn&#8217;t then.  Rest and recreation, which I admit was sometimes chemically induced when I was their age, has always been important to me.  I am definitely a Type B personality.  But denying the obvious is not escapism it is just dumb.</p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">This generation thinks everything is basically wonderful and Bill Gates will fix everything else.  That truly is a telling reminder of the 1950s.  In the Leave It To Beaver era housewives wore pearls to vacuum and were ditsy redheads whose antics would attract disapproving but loving smiles from their husbands.  The 1950s was the clean cut illusion of what life in North America was supposed to be.  Ike was in the White House and he would fix any problems that might arise.  There was a sense that the world had been settled with the defeat of Naziism.  There was a comfort and certainty about society.  But it bore little resemblance to the reality.  Many teens of the era, particularly those of interest to &#8216;popular&#8217; researchers, knew nothing of the world outside their immaculate suburbs.  Blacks were smiling Rochesters singing and dancing, happy in their simple life.  Mom was always home to make a hot meal and gush over the latest kitchen marvel.  These young people had not yet learned of the horrors of life in the ghettos of the North or shantytowns of the deep South.  They had no idea that after they kissed mom goodbye in the morning she would turn to a bottle or pill to get through her day, both gleefully prescribed by a male dominated medical profession who thought the little filly was just suffering from a bout of female hysterics.  While conscientious studies chronicled the dark side of society, there was an entire industry within social science to prop up the illusion and a flickering television to inject the social sedative. </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">How did we end up with a generation that knows little and worships the fatuous?  Shouldn&#8217;t we have seen this coming and done something about it?  For the past 30 or so years successive political leaders in Canada and the United States have been trying to fix the education system.  But wait a minute.  When did it break?  There is the key to the problem.  An Ontario education minister in the 1990s said everything we need to know about the problems we see with our youth today.  He brought his senior bureaucrats into a meeting and told them to create a crisis in education because he was going to fix it.  I will not hold it against this particular man that he himself did not finish high school.  After all neither did I.  I completed only grade 9 while he went on through grade 11.  The difference between us is I never stopped learning.  He did.  I quit high school for social reasons; he quit because he believed education was unnecessary.  Like many on the Right, he believed the sole purpose of education was to inculcate vocational skills to suit the current job market.  But there is more.  I don&#8217;t subscribe to conspiracy theories but I do believe there can occur a confluence of interests.  As the franchise had been expanded in the 1960s and 1970s to include the previously disenfranchised groups, women and minorities but also the lower classes, life became more complicated for those who wielded the instruments of power in western society.  Democracy is a messy, chaotic, inefficient, and if you are a corporate capitalist inconvenient, method of governing a country.  More people in the mix just slows the process down further.  Knowledge is power and knowledge was increasing in groups who had been cheated by the status quo. </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">You can&#8217;t just stop teaching in schools altogether so you need to make it appear as if everyone is getting an education</p>
<div class="mceTemp" style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">
<dl id="attachment_707" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 216px;">
<dt class="wp-caption-dt"><img class="size-medium wp-image-707" title="ann-coulter" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/ann-coulter-206x300.jpg" alt="Oh yeah ...... Look at the intelligence on her " width="206" height="300" /></dt>
<dd class="wp-caption-dd">Oh yeah &#8230;&#8230; Look at the intelligence on her </dd>
</dl>
</div>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">when they are not.  The solution arrived at was a return to the 3 Rs, Readin&#8217;, Ritin&#8217; and &#8216;Rithmetic.  I have always loved this little phrase about education because it is the mantra of morons.  At least people who can&#8217;t spell because only one of the words really begins with the letter R.  (For those educated in our current system the three words are actually Reading, Writing and Arithmetic.)  The fact that it usually comes from people on the political Right gives me added joy.  But what do you expect from a political movement that considers Ann Coulter a seminal thinker?  The 3 Rs is Right-wing code for let&#8217;s gut the content of education.  History, civics, geography, anything that expanded the human in our young people was brushed aside as a waste.  Critical thinking was replaced by rote learning.  No wonder students get bored at school.  How many times can you recite the times table or set formulas?  Add to this little mix forcing teachers to become boosters for the little cretins and voilà a generation that can be lied to and manipulated to support any atrocity, any blunder and George W. Bush for two terms.  Stupidity should be a choice not a given. </p>
<p style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify">Well the Right got what they wanted, a crisis.  And what might you ask about the children of the people who did this to education.  Don&#8217;t worry.  They are in private schools that still provide education.  Nice how everything works out for the best for those in charge.</p>
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		<title>The Few; The Proud; The Baggage</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/04/the-few-the-proud-the-baggage/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/04/the-few-the-proud-the-baggage/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2009 22:15:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Canadian Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Political Commentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social Commentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canadian casualties]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CFB Trenton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Governor-General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hero]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Karine Blais]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Minister of Defense]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=646</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After renaming a highway and a full court press by high command and the government to label each and every fallen Canadian soldier in Afghanistan a hero, in the end the Canadian military has shown they are just another parcel to be delivered.  If it is more convenient or economic to jostle them to and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="A" class="cap"><span>A</span></span>fter renaming a highway and a full court press by high command and the government to label each and every fallen Canadian soldier in Afghanistan a hero, in the end the Canadian military has shown they are just another parcel to be delivered.  If it is more convenient or economic to jostle them to and fro for three hours to unload baggage and another 117 soldiers, so be it.  The body of Karine Blais was returned to Canada Thursday but was forced to make a stopover in Ottawa before being delivered to her final destination, CFB Trenton, Ontario (for my American readers, Trenton is Canada&#8217;s Dover).  Many are outraged at this turn of events.  Those of us who have had friends and relatives in the Canadian military just smile.  Getting a flight home was always a problem and the fear of getting bumped by some officer or his dog anywhere along the line a constant fear.  At least she wasn&#8217;t put on a baggage cart with other luggage to switch planes as one report suggests happened in Rochester, New York with a returning American coffin.   Of course they are not heroes in the United States.  America has far too many casualties to do the whole hero thing for every one. </p>
<p>But only the Canadian army could screw up public relations to this level.  First there is the waste of taxpayer dollars to convince us that Afghanistan is a great and noble cause.  I guess this incident means that plan is history.   It gets worse.  This was a female soldier which adds to the public relations fiasco.   But wait there is more, she was French serving with the Royal 22nd (Van Doos).    I can&#8217;t wait to see reaction in the French sovereigntist press.  Who is in charge of propaganda at National Defence Headquarters, Gilligan?  In its imperious ineptitude, they have managed to offend just about every group one can think of.  I am surprised they didn&#8217;t wait until it was a Black French woman with autism to pull this boner.  I mean let&#8217;s piss everyone off at once and get it over with. </p>
<p>Don&#8217;t forget taxpayers.  The part of this story that has raised no comment as yet that I can find is that the governor-general and minister of defense met the coffin at CFB Trenton.  Hold on.  Think about this.  The coffin was on the ground for three hours in Ottawa.  Ottawa is where the governor-general lives and the minister of defense works (and lives while he is working, if he works, I don&#8217;t know).  So, let me get this straight.  The minister and governor-general and the coffin all travelled at taxpayers expense to Trenton for what exactly, a photo-op?  Did they all travel together?  You can drive from Ottawa to Trenton in less than 3 hours maybe one of them could have made room in the back seat.  Why do they even have to be there?  Maybe the prime minister should be there too.  Hell bring the whole freaking parliament.  They love nothing better than a free trip.  Here&#8217;s a thought.  Take the coffin home, to the family.  Shouldn&#8217;t they be the priority not protocol?  Do we need an official &#8220;Death Camp&#8221;?</p>
<p>Military observers (cheerleaders) commented to news outlets that it was a minor controversy being blown out of proportion.  I tend to agree.  It was an insensitive decision but in overall terms the coverage in the mainstream press is probably causing more grief to the family than the incident itself.  Military observers are worried though about their little traditions and customs being broken such as failure to lower the flags while the plane was on the ground in Ottawa.  If it was me in the coffin they could shove the flag where the sun don&#8217;t shine for all I would care.  Actually when I die the flags over municipal buildings in my town will be lowered to half mast because I once served on city council.   Honestly, if they forget I couldn&#8217;t care less.  I would imagine the whole dead thing will be bothering me more at that moment. </p>
<p><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-654" title="593px-maskeagamemnon" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/593px-maskeagamemnon-296x300.jpg" alt="593px-maskeagamemnon" width="296" height="300" />Where I differ from the hotties with the olive drab pompoms is, if you make out that she was a hero, you can&#8217;t say this is a minor controversy.  Heroes are a special category of people or sandwiches if you come from New York.  Therefore this would be by definition a serious controversy.  But she wasn&#8217;t a hero.  She was a young woman with her whole life before her who died under a foreign sky for geopolitical reasons she never fully understood.  This is a tragedy; not the fall of Agamemnon.  Calling her a hero implies her death was necessary; it served a greater good.  That may assuage the consciences of the political masters who threw her life on the dust heap of history.  But it will never fill the empty chair at family gatherings or give her parents grandchildren.  Maybe if Canadians would come to grips with that we might have fewer tragedies and the Canadian military would have fewer opportunities to trip over its own braid.</p>
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		<title>A Mountie may always get his man but never takes the blame for killing him</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/03/a-mountie-may-always-get-his-man-but-never-takes-the-blame-for-killing-him/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/03/a-mountie-may-always-get-his-man-but-never-takes-the-blame-for-killing-him/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2009 01:24:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Canadian Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Society:  Us v. The Man]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Canada]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dziekanski]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dziekanski Inquiry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Police]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=522</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The RCMP are at it again.  This time the Commissioner, while visiting Kandahar, told Canadians not to jump to any negative conclusions about the force because of recent scandals such as the Dziekanski case.  &#8216;Walk a mile in my shoes&#8217; he said comes to mind.  Modern policing is very challenging, things are not always black [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="T" class="cap"><span>T</span></span>he RCMP are at it again.  This time the Commissioner, while visiting Kandahar, told Canadians not to jump to any negative conclusions about the force because of recent scandals such as the Dziekanski case.  <em>&#8216;Walk a mile in my shoes&#8217;</em> he said comes to mind.  Modern policing is very challenging, things are not always black and white and a situation can turn nasty quickly.  All of that is true but it does not change the fact that a man died needlessly.  Testimony at the enquiry continues to raise questions about the training and conduct of the officers involved. </p>
<p>The inquiry shows no indication that a life or death crisis existed at the time Mr. Dziekanski was killed.  I am not jumping to conclusions.  But I do admit a prejudice against people and organizations that exert maximum effort to deny and obfuscate their mistakes instead of owning up to them.  Something went wrong at Vancouver airport that tragic day and we could have gotten to the bottom of it long ago and implemented corrective measure had the RCMP not dug in their heels, protected officers whose testimony varied, and generally tried to push off the blame on the victim. </p>
<p>If you want public respect, don&#8217;t insult our intelligence with the we know better than you defence and own up to your conduct. </p>
<p>As a side note of an even scarier nature, the Commissioner was in Kandahar because the RCMP will be training Afghan police.  All I can say is the Afghan better keep their staplers holstered.</p>
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