Editorials

Jun 052012
 
Quebec students are leading the way

Citizens resist politics of austerity, push back right-wingers' assets grab.

by Ish Theilheimer

with YouTube video rant, produced by Samantha Bayard

While Stephen Harper's omnibus Trojan Horse garbage truck bill is painfully discouraging for progressive Canadians, at the same time, an amazing and encouraging story continues to unfold in Quebec with the student protests over student debt.

Although the majority of recent mass protests have been peaceful, a small faction of crazies has managed to tarnish the reputation of the other hundreds of thousands of protestors. The violent tactics and property crimes of masked "Black-Bloc" types have again attached the adjective "violent" to media descriptions of the demos.

After the revelations of agents provocateurs at the G20 protests in Montebello, QC, and suspicious photos from the G8 two years ago in Toronto, the activities of these people is highly suspect.

Ish Theilheimer's rant on Quebec student protests and the politics of austerity. Please view and share.

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Whether they are police agents or just idiots trying to make trouble, these provocateurs make the brave actions of the hordes of legitimate protestors even more amazing. The violent loonies make it much more dangerous for people to turn out for demos both because of what they do and the way they escalate police violence.

 

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May 222012
 

Mulcair shows focus and consistency in decrying "Dutch Disease."

by Ish Theilheimer

If there's any reason for surprise over NDP leader Tom Mulcair's comments about the tar sands, "Dutch disease," and the polluter pay principle, it is his consistency. As long as anyone can recall, Mulcair has been making precisely the same points and saying almost exactly the same things on this all-important national issue.

His remarkable consistency and reasonable positions won him his party's leadership — with broad support from all regions, including Western Canada, where his rivals keep saying he is hurting himself with these same points and ideas. Indeed, when Straight Goods News interviewed him last September about his leadership campaign, it was nearly impossible to get him off the subject of environmental sustainability and how his views shaped his approach to industrial development of all kinds.

 

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May 142012
 

Omnibus budget legislation lets Harperites roll progress back to 1950s.

by Ish Theilheimer

with YouTube rant

These days in Canada, it seems you're either on the bus or off the bus. That's how the Harper Conservatives see it, at any rate.

The federal budget omnibus bill is a good example. It's a 400-page wishlist lays out changes to some 70 federal laws. It rolls up every Conservative's fondest dreams into one nauseating package — nauseating, that is, unless you're on the bus. This Bill has room for everything the Harperites love, and attacks everything public they hate.

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May 092012
 

Cuts to veterans' services show Conservatives' true colours.

by Ish Theilheimer

Among the most outrageous and surprising truths emerging about the Harper government is how poorly it treats Canada's military personnel and veterans. The Conservatives frequently say "Support our troops," but their government's actions undermine Canadian Forces personnel and veterans to a shocking extent.

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May 082012
 

Cuts to veterans' services show Conservatives' true colours.

 

by Ish Theilheimer

Among the most outrageous and surprising truths emerging about the Harper government is how poorly it treats Canada's military personnel and veterans. The Conservatives frequently say "Support our troops," but their government's actions undermine Canadian Forces personnel and veterans to a shocking extent.

Across Canada, thousands of federal workers, including more than 1,500 PSAC members — about one eighth of the Department of National Defence (DND) work force — are being fired in the wake of the federal budget. "The positions are not back-office public service jobs but are core jobs to support the military in front offices," said Union of National Defence Employees (UNDE) president John MacLennan.

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May 022012
 
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Progressives must seize on organizing opportunity they've been handed.

by Ish Theilheimer

Canada's Prime Minister and Conservative government are known for crass power politics, but including the wholesale dumping of fish habitat protections in with a Budget bill may prove too clever by half.

The government probably hopes it can sneak its changes in with the Budget and that most Canadians won't notice.  And they could be right, if the Opposition and citizen groups don't act on this.

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Apr 302012
 

Election results show a different face of Alberta.

by Penney Kome

From reading Facebook, you'd think that most of Canada heaved a huge sigh of relief when Alberta's election results came in — and then promptly forgot about the province. In fact, a dear friend reports that the local East Coast newspaper carried a headline about the Alberta election but there was no story attached.

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Apr 222012
 
Alberta election up for grabs

Alison Redford's new broom not enough for voters.

by Penney Kome

"It's time for a change," said the woman at the doorstep as she accepted an election brochure. In fact, her neighbour had just said the same thing. After 41 years in power, Alberta's Conservative government has worn out its welcome — ironically, just as the party is returning to its Lougheed-style Red Tory roots, under Premier Alison Redford. The big question is, will Alberta slide backwards and embrace the Danielle Smith's Wildrose Party, with all its Social Credit echoes, or will it find a way to move forward to a more progressive government?

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Apr 032012
 

New book illustrates long-term nature of "current" struggles.

by Ish Theilheimer

Where is Eugene Forsey, when we really need him?

Although known as Canada's foremost constitutional expert, Forsey — who died in 1991 — was far more than that, as his daughter Helen Forsey recalls in her new book. Eugene Forsey: Canada's Maverick Sage (Dundurn, 2012) tells how Eugene Forsey, born in Newfoundland in 1904 to wealthy parents, went on to become one of Canada's leading voices for social justice and the common good.

Stirred by his own conscience and a restless intellect, his radical activities in the 1930s in Montreal — which included co-founding the League for Social Reconstruction and helping found the CCF (forerunner of the NDP) — made him a target. Later, he was fired from work as a McGill University professor, but then hired as first research director of the Canadian Congress of Labour, forerunner of today's Canadian Labour Congress. Later still, Pierre Trudeau — whose vision for national unity he vigourously supported — made him a Senator.

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Mar 262012
 
Mulcair delivers new politics to NDP

Many signs of cultural change on display in leadership vote.

by Ish Theilheimer

TORONTO, Straight Goods News, March 25, 2012 — At about 9:20 on Saturday night after four exhausting ballots, members of the NDP chose a new kind of politics in Tom Mulcair. The new leader answered in kind, with a low-key acceptance and a next-day love-in with former leadership rivals.

Mulcair's overwhelming support — he led on every ballot, and won with 56 percent of the vote despite the Party establishment's attempt to stop him — showed how keenly the membership embraced this new kind of leader.

To understand how different Mulcair is from conventional NDP leaders requires an understanding of the Party's culture. That culture, traditionally, has combined picket line grit, obsession with parliamentary procedure, retail electioneering, and moral sanctimony for the many causes that comprise this coalition called a political party. It was a culture of moral victories and a narrow base. Jack Layton made real progress toward changing it.

Tom Mulcair, however, aimed to change that culture for good. He appears to have done so.

His low-key acceptance speech is a great example of his new politics. Although many reporters panned it as low-key and uninspiring, it actually accomplished exactly what he needed it to do.

In a party concerned about his personal style being too aggressive, Mulcair showed himself to be a compassionate person who loves his family and young people. Keen observers might have noted, as well, that the man was close to tears at least twice as ballots results were revealed, and that he and his family were constantly together.

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