Disciples

Monday 26 December 2011

The War is on : The battle for Canada's soul.


Steven Harper or the problem with Canada.

Today, as the morning shines throughout Canada, as it enlightens the majestic lakes, the great green forest that flourish far and near, in every possible corner in this great white north. From the snowy tops of the rockies to the sandy shores of British Colombia, from British Colombia's thousand islands to Lake Ontario thousand islands, from the great bay of Hudson to the bay of Halifax, as the proud polar bear dashes all through the white ice fields of the polar gap. As people awake today, as almost everyday in this country people awake and are crushed by this nature, this impressive nature that surounds us everywhere we go. People awake and rejoice in this fact, for always has Canada been a leader in the defence of our environment for we take it as part of our and every future Canadian's right. We also rejoice in the fact that we live in a Multicultural society, some might fear diversity we embrace it, just to say so 35% of us were born outside of the federation's boarders. We take pride in this because we believe that diversity isn't a bad thing that it actually something essential to the conception of our entire perception of ourselves and of our Canadian Federation. We take pride in that fact, that we are a caring nation, because we believe that society in general can only be judged by the way it treats the less well-over. Or do we?
Since 2006 (the coming to power of our honourable prime-minister Harper) the Conservative majority has started to chip away the fundamental pillars of the Canadian democratic edifice and of Canadian society in general, a fight has been enhanced for the soul of Canada. Because everything basically does come down to that simple question do we still believe in the values that once made us unique? Do we still cling to the idea that a better world is possible through virtue, solidarity and compassion? Throughout this country's history we have took our stands even when we knew very well that it wasn't in the best of our interests (the decision to not participate in blockade against Cuba, at the time Canada was the only "Nation" in the America's to do so). And today, after the bittersweet symphony that were the 2011 elections and 2011 in general. In 2011 we partially reunited ourselves with that "antique" Canadian soul. Jack Layton brought out the best in us, he really was maybe one of the last great politicians of his generation and in his last words recorded in his letter, he even in front of death set the way for millions of Canadians to build a great and more perfect union and society.
But Jack Layton's death left a vacuum in the middle of the Canadian political spectrum, and it's such a shame that Jack didn't have the time to fully finish he's campaign to take back Canada's soul. And it's probably one of the moments of greater sadness in this young life of mine, for with Jack Layton's death I put everything under questioning again. Are we capable of really continuing Jack's fight?
Because since 2006, the front-lines have become so foggy, so blurry, because the real factor that keeps Harper in power is fear, he was elected by fear, by two kinds of fear, the fear of the external threat, and the fear that is generated between distinct parts of our society because of the incomprehension. The truth is that this government is a government of fear, from fear and for fear. Harper's regime wants to divide Canadian society into divergent "opposing sections". It's the oldest trick in the book devision makes absolute power possible. And since 2006 he's seceded in doing look back at 2006, at  Canadian society back then and take a look, a good one at Canadian society nowadays, and you'll see that he has succeeded in dividing a country, a federation that seemed indivisible. But who do we have to blame but ourselves?
One the most shocking things that came out of the 2011 elections, was "the hurray we won't have to go back to the polls until 2014", where's my Canada? The majority of these same people haven't any notion of the luck that they have to live in country were elections actually exist. Were they aren't cut down like bad grass just because they pronounced an opinion whatever it is. And worst then that was the so-called left and specially the liberal and more specifically Bob Rae that all made it clear that 4 more years of Harper would kill us ,but then took more shots at the NDP and Jack Layton then at the Conservatives and the "Harper regime". The only thing that is worst then a Conservative is a Conservative in disguise, and there are thousands of them in the NDP and in Liberal Party, those people that are just part of the political system to be part of it , those opportunists that just believe in one thing "making money" off the back of their constituents.
Jack Layton 

And then Justin Trudeau speaks out and has to apologize (why?), because just like so many of us he's just fed-up with all this undemocratic stance and rigged political system. A rigged political system in which the Conservatives can design (in drawing the electoral ridings and in adding in some) their "holding" on the grips of power for the next 10 years, and even if they're kicked-out they've got enough power Supreme Court wise to hold the barbarians at the gate. And then more and more "insane" measures are taken by the "Harper regime" the criminal bill that is (excuse my french) a piece of bullshit, probably the biggest piece of bullshit that has even been presented to parliament in it's history. It's sure in a country alike the one we live in, one of the safest in the world we really need prisons popping out of our ears and that the big problem in Canada is kids smoking dope? All this is ridiculous, it's just part of the strategy to maintain us in fear and keep us part and in doing so maintaining power. This strategy of course has some side effects, the probability that it will alienate part of our society, it has already started alienating the Native communities but are we natives? no so of course we don't care. And then one day it will hit us, the wall that we've been running into for so long and we'll fall flat on our faces and ask ourselves how did we get here?
And we'll feel like Adam and Eve kicked out of paradise, and then it will be too late. Our grand Canadian society will be lost, we'll be segregated into this and that box and we won't even recognize it anymore, we'll just think its normal.
So Canada before that happens we better take a stand shouldn't we? Before our Canada becomes the paradise of the grand old Banks and the no tax-paying millionaires, before Canada becomes the home of "the" rising social inequality, a country in which we think universal heath-care is a communist idea, before we have a two-party system and no democracy expect for the oligarchy that from time to time permits elections but the results are already known and everything is controlled. Does this ring any bell?
So I declare war.  I declare war on all of this system of Democracy Only In Name. I declare war on the conservative and the plan for the 'Americanization" of this our Canada. I declare a war on Harper and his hidden racism. I declare war on that hidden racism and by doing so I declare war on the ignorance that breads that hidden racism. I declare war on the broken schools, on the broken families, I declare war on all of this "Harper regime' and on all of its sources, on all of the things that bread fear in Canada. Because fear is the main supporter of this "Harper regime" and more then that I declare war on the phoniness that is the main essence of this political system we live in, only a "real" democratic system, a direct form of democracy that gives back dignity to the median Canadian and puts the power back into the people's hands and out of the spectrum of an elite.
So Canadians it's time to get fed-up, it's time to change this rigged system, to tear down the walls of fear that keep us separated and distinct. It will be a long battle and this is only the beginning, but our great white north is worth it. So get mad Canadians, get very mad...


Canada we stand on guard for thee


Sky

Sunday 25 December 2011

The War on Terror : Reloaded, Deluxe Version.

Today Christmas day, the Christmas spirit fills up your rooms, smiles wonder from face to face without interruption or distinction and laughter follows throughout our western society and a bit all over the world we rejoice. Even if Christmas is some what divergent from the it's original source, the essential spirit of Christmas which to cherish and give praise to what we have the most important in our lives, is still widely alive and this essentially Christian spirit which has procured our Western Society in my mind some of the most fundamental values we have, those of love and of the need to shed the barriers of fear.
Pope during his annual Christmas speech said that the real meaning of Christmas had to be reinvigorated and I think (and I differ with him and the institution that he leads in many ways and on a wide set of points). The "modern" Capitalistic values as opposed to the 'classical" Capitalistic values, that run our world today have tried to chip away the fundamental essence of the spirit of Christmas, and yet that spirit hasn't completely been eroded yet, but is our Christian spirit being?
I remember alike millions of kids of my age back in the good old days, I wanted Christmas to last forever, I didn't understand why the happiness and "positive" energy that ran through our veins on Christmas couldn't keep running through our veins year long. And still in many ways I acknowledge it I'm a kid deep down inside, but aren't we all? It's not about being childish or not, it's about the feeling we sense during the Christmas period, this period of rejoice and this period were deep-down inside the fact that we are with our love-ones pushes us to be better and to be nicer in this insensible world of ours.
As as we are all in the prime of our delight let us reflect on our modern world. Let's look at things this way in an Ocean of terror and anguish filled with suffering and despair Christmas and this end of year feeling is in Island surround by the horrid the storm that has been flooding way by way our everyday lives. That flooding started on 9/11.
We still live our lives according to the aftermath of 9/11, that is without doubt. If you look around this society of ours, everything is still stalled, stuck in time, lost in translation. 11/9 wasn't just the physical destruction, the two towers, the almost 3.000 deaths, the other thousands of family members or friends that were affected directly and the 300 million that were affected both indirectly and directly. Of course this physical and mental destruction was horrible it's no good to go back again and again on those awful images that all reside in our "collective mind" but to really heal any pain or wound we must continue heading forward and not giving into terror.
And yet the day after the attacks, the U.S.A. and the Bush "regime" of the time decided to lunch this so called War on Terror. At the time blinded by fear maybe more than the notion of revenge or of hate even if those did certainly exist, the majority of the American people stood silent, and so did the majority of people through-out the western world. 9/11 wasn't just the physical destruction, in was the nirvana of fear, in was the specific moment at which fear took over the direction our human societies.
From the start of the war against/on "terror" (bullshit), terror hijacked our rationality and so we traded our freedoms to be safe, we traded our ethics and morality for security at least we thought that we would get security, but how could we? When you fear, when fear controls you and dictates your life then you are a slave of fear, and no slave is safe because he has no free-will without free-will you can't be free and when freedom is under threat anywhere its threatened everywhere.
But do not fear anymore my friends a new dawn is upon us nowadays,  people are awakening through our world. As we finished out our last preparations for Christmas, hundreds of thousands of Russians braved the cold and defied a power in a country that until now was subjugated by fear. During this year people like you and me lifted the banner of change and carried to new heights. Some might say it's just a phase, I say it's just the beginning. The War on Terror the real one, the rightful one starts now, it's not a war against some "unknown", "invisible" enemy it's against ourselves, it's the fight to slay the fear that lives inside us, only then we might live free and only then will the "true" values of Christmas may be known.

Merry Christmas to y'all and may we build peace on earth.

Sky

Friday 23 December 2011

Your International Moment of Zen

This is why Jon Stewart is genius, keep giving the establishment hell.

The New Age.

This is a video, I stumbled on to not so long ago. It's approach to the events of 2011 and to the whole apocalyptic scenario of 2012 is very interesting. In my case it was actually mind blowing, I never really thought of things along "these" lines... Enjoy and 'enlarge' your vantage point.



Sky

The Long March of Freedom.




               The sun light shattered the amounting confinement of darkness. The shades of darkness that inhabited the morning on the great Washington "domesticated" swamp lands, died, gave into the sun rays. As the bustling city started it's routinely awakening... thousands of million of awakened marched.
The day was the 28th. The Battle Cry of Freedom mixed lyrically with the verses and harmony of We Shall Overcome. The air was filled with some new kind of feeling for thousands of marginalized and forgotten, it was the feeling of some sort of novice sense of self-empowerment. But something was more important then that new born awareness. People couldn't put their fingers quite rightfully on what that condescending feeling was. I guess that we could call it dignity.
Frank was black and back then in the deep south, that was the basis of his whole life story. Before he was even born down in the "Heart of Dixie" he's life was already defined. He couldn't personally give his life it's own sense, it's own definition, his definition. But that is fundamental human right, the right to hope and to build dreams and to actually believe that their is a possibility of realization of those "dreams". Back in those days, and now is no different even in "dream terms" inequality was frequently recurrent. All we're brought-up on the idea that "As long as I breath, I hope", all we're part of this American Dream. This notion of American Dream back in Frank's youth was the fabric of the nation, without it the Statue of Liberty just wouldn't seem that shinny anymore to those boats packed with millions of swarming immigrants coming from all over the world. And on that same day as the mist lifted little by little from the New York City soil, Ricardo had just made his way past customs, you could see the light in his eyes as he made it past the central gate of La Guardia. That dream was alive in their minds, because more important then the feeling of self-empowerment that ran like a rush through their veins that day, was the sense that they we're finally dignified.
And then that dignity, was striped from them. The hopeful sixties turn into an abortion. The abortion of hope. Ricardo had trouble finding work, even if he had a major in English Literature and a very good pen, the only work he found was washing dishes at the back of an old Puerto Rican restaurant. And finally after the frustration and all of the anger, the mere consequence of the realization that this dream was turning into a nightmare, Ricardo enlisted, promised by the government that if he fought for his new found "home" he would come back as a hero and be treated like a "real" American. Even if Ricardo was intelligent and college educated and he hated the smirk on those G.I Joes faces, the dream was still in his mind.
Mike after the march, fought even harder for his cause, he believed more then ever that he was going reinvigorate the dream. So he started participating in the campaigning of voter enlistment in the south. He traveled all around, with sky-high expectations he believed, he really did. And then things just turned wrong.
Ricardo got back from Vietnam, it was hell no need to explain that part. He never really got his American dream. During the great Harlem drug wave, he died a stranger in a strange country, he died of an overdose,  he was an alien. But even in those dying moments the dream was still there...
Frank changed, one day a bullet killed hope. And so he took a security job at the Watergate, and one on one night shift, Frank found intruders and called the police. He unveiled a scandal and deposed a president, in the end he died in poverty and would never be recognized in his life for the great deed he did for lady democracy on that night shift. Frank Wills died on the 27th of September 2000, he died of a brain tumour, like so many of his fellow Americans he was uncovered, Frank Wills died penniless... But I guess the dream was still alive...
And how about if the "Dream" never existed.
Ricardo and Frank's stories are far from being isolated incidents along this pursuit of happiness.
But really to understand this American Dream, the originating myth of the American Republic and the "construction material" of this American enterprise, we must try to understand what this notion of pursuit of happiness is, we have to put it back into context. For me, but then again this is only my opinion, I have the firm believe that one of the notions that the founding father held close to their hearts was the notion of dignity. In the end, all of our existence comes down to the simple notion of dignity. Many people use complicated words and expressions, write papers and essays filled with philosophical and metaphysical issues to try to explain what is a forgotten notion in our modern democratic societies. For me the pursuit of happiness, change up the words, turn it around, mix it up a bit, it all adds up and comes down to dignity because without dignity humanity isn't a possibility and we've been dehumanized for too long.
It's time to forget modernity for a time. It's time to bring things back to their source, dig up the roots and find the knots, recalculate everything and find the errors that have induced "us" into choosing the wrong path. The time has come to back things up and go back to that point in time where we were at that "fork in the road". It's time to rethink things.

"The price of democracy is eternal vigilance" Thomas Jefferson. I think that this quote has that power to be "unageable", we let some pursue their happiness and we renounced to ours. We have been trick to believe that this current situation is natural, that huge inequality is something natural.
The thing is that we laid back and thought that the problems that surrounded us weren't ours, that the injustice didn't affect us, until it did, until we felt it and then was it already too late?
I'm an eternal optimist but I guess that shows, it shines through-out my pores and I believe that maybe this was just part of the great design of humankind, and that drop by drop that balance is turning upside down.
And that we have the opportunity to reimpose dignity as a "currency", put dignity in the limelight again. Because for me a system that strips anyone of his dignity is a system that is undignified and so-being illegitimate. Freedom, Liberty, Equality, Brotherhood, Fraternity all those are good but what are they without dignity nothing, because dignity is essence of humanity, people without dignity turn to animalistic attitudes, people without dignity are very dangerous because their essence is lost, their rationality is gone. The problem of our modernity is that dignity has become marginalized. We don't want dignity we have traded our dignity for material goods and consummation without really knowing it. Since the sixties probably and that abortive tentative, we have been pushed further and further into the infernal decadent spiral of ignorance, we have slept for too long, we renounced, desisted and deserted.
But then this year has proven those that believed that a awakening would never occur wrong, millions of those "subjugated" spirits rose-up to the challenge, millions of people that should never had done so did. And so the dream still lives on, even it might badly bite us, even if the pursuit of a paramount might kill us , we can't stop believing, dreaming, organizing. Because in doing so we are re-indignifing ourselves, because dignity essentially comes down to the simple notion that we have faith in the present and in the future and our hopes and confidence are respected.
Martin Luther King Jr had after the first march on Washington in 1963, the idea to march a second march to the heart of American power, but this march differed substantially from the first one. The first was part of the movement of Civil Rights more specifically the Afro-American Civil Rights Movement but this time around he thought that the march had to be greater, it had to be a march for dignity. He wanted to bring to together the millions and millions of down and out communities and peoples, those people without an actual voice. But Martin Luther King Jr's life was too short he died before we could accomplish the full extent of his will, and so the idea was forgotten.
I believe that the general conscience is opening itself up to the fact that things can be different and things are profoundly wrong and that elections aren't the antidote. So if the OWS movement really wants to thrive, it has to take up this idea and build on it. And so through-out the years the soul of freedom and of the freedom fighters keeps marching on. And as long as we march, we revolt, we contest and participate, as long as we act and we engage the power, the dream lives on and democracy will survive and thrive.
Sky

Saturday 19 November 2011

The Movement


Peurta del Sol, Madrid, Spain, April 2011 during the "Spanish Revolution"
           
               As now night falls upon Zuccotti park in New York City, as the lights of the grand boulevards illuminate the skyline, as planes, like flashing stars dash through the Manhattan sky, one man looks down. That man a normal man probably in his 50's, a typical, banal man, of which we do not much looks down. And as the plane starts its decent into the New York City airspace, he senses somehow, somewhere, something in this city, this huge megalopolis of millions and millions of inhabitants, the cosmopolitan "neo-babylonia" has changed. And who could deny him that though? Who could tell him that his perception was wrong?
Mr X flying lonesomely on that Boeing 747 overflying the labyrinth of lights that is NYC, sensed something that we've known for a bit over 2 months, something that the whole world has felt deep down in its "general" gut, the "general" gut feeling that Zuccotti park, alike Peurta del Sol in Madrid, or Tahir Square in Cairo is one of those front-lines, in the tricky war to redefine what democracy and justice is in the 21st century.
For years now, we've heard about fault-lines, fault-lines that were drawn throughout this world, drawn in the tears, the pain and the blood of millions of working families, throughout the world. Detroit and New Orleans the American fault-lines of this universal crisis created by some, but paid by the many. The burning streets of Athens, the open veins of Latin American, and carbonized cars of Seine Saint-Denis are also the fault-lines of this massive counterrevolution.
Occupy Anchorage, Alaska, U.S.A. 2011

A counterrevolution, for revolution in its primary sense, and it's rightful meaning is rotation of things until they realign into their rightful order, basically the way things should be.
And this is were history, and "The Movement" enters the scenery. Maybe it's a very plain, simple line of thought but after an analysis of modern history, two key movements seem to push forward.
Let's stroll back through history lane, to find the source of this amazing movement of "civil rights/ democratization". Probably some would say that this movement of perpetual change progression (revolution), that like a drop of water in an almost full cup, that drop by drop tries overflow, started a while back way before my "starting" date, but in this case I underline 5 particular popular movements in modern history that founded the basis for our actual society: The Reformation (Peasants Wars), The Liberal Revolutions (The American and French Revolutions), The Marxist Revolutions and finally later on in the 20th century, the Fights for National Liberation in the 3rd world, and the Civil Rights Movement were drops that tried to push the balance of universal justice more and more to it's righteous position.
At the same time for each step forward, their was the possibility if an error was committed to take three steps backwards. For inter-tangled in the common massive and impressive human "general" psychology, are two sides, one side progressive that embraces revolution and the other side regressive or conservative that in the face of revolution enhances counterrevolution. Of course in detail this is far form being true, their are zones of grey that are more important, then the clearly defined zones of white or black. Even so, general trends do exist and do help us understand the "general" maybe even very general direction of our human enterprise.
Moscow, Russia December 2011

As I've said earlier we now live in a world that is cut-up and devised through lines. Fault-lines and front-lines. We live in a world of gates and gate keepers, of those that have and those that have not or nothing. And the history of the world has always been this way, for some it will always be this way, it's as some say part of human nature. But I beg to differ, I think that from time to time the general subjugated conscience of those "have-nots" does get to a boiling point, and at that specific moment when those that the established power has underestimate, revolt and push for change, it's at that specific moment that the "movement" is born.
Back in the 1960's a similar movement was born. At the end of the 1960's the movement that eventually broke-up into very divergent "sub-movements" (from the Black-Panther Party for Self-Defence and the Weather Underground Organization to the non-violent Hippie movement) it started far away from the urban centres of Chicago or New York, it started in the deep south (in Alabama). Alike the "general" civil disobedience movement in the 1960's this movement of revolt was born in the most improbable and in a what can be considered the periphery. It started in Tunisia about a year ago and spread throughout the world at an amazing speed rate. The links between all of this movement, tend to draw a general trend, of this bigger then life "movement". For example Reformation ignited Europe like a wild fire, creating more 100 years of Political instability, and the Reformation was started by the most odd of acts and surely Martin Luther himself predicted little, if not anything of how the pinning-up of his statement would change forever the world as he knew it. Little did the leaders of the Boston Tea Party know that their acts would inspire a new revolutionary era.
Occupy Portland, November 2011

But from my point of view it seems as if this movement that was supposed to continue in a sort of Hegelian manner it's "progress" stalled along the way.
For I believe that we are at a very critical turning point in the history of humanity. The values that were born in the aftermath of the Reformation (a specific set of values, not the entirety of the values that came out of the religious and theological upheaval that was the Reformation), the same values as the thesis of Max Weber has proven we're the basis of modern Capitalism and of our modern Liberal democracies are exhausted.
Curitba, Brazil 2011

I think that we are at a time alike the realignment of the world, after the birth of "modern" religions such as the birth of Christianity.In history there have been major shifts that have redefined how us "inhabitants" vision our place in our common environment. I believe that one of the major shifts in our world was the "building-up" of modern Capitalism as we know it. I also have for firm believe that the installation of this Capitalistic system created the long and brutal 20th century (in this logic WWI and WWII were in some sort reactions to this construction of Capitalism). And I believe that what we are witnessing today, what we are participating in today is anew realignment of the world.
Looking back to the 1960's, the general civil disobedience movement, was the basis for a real realignment in the way we apprehend our world, in the way we interact inside our own environment and also how we conceive the world that surrounds us. It was overall a revolt, but beyond that it was redefinition of our common sense, by common sense I mean the social fabric that brings us together and out of which we can create bonds, in the end common sense is the foundation of the world-systeme we live in.
The Christian revolution of values or the monotheistic revolution fundamentally changed the social fabric/ "common sense" of the ancient world and built the basis of the modern world. But little by little this monotheistic foundation of our "modernity" was chipped away by the new realignment that had for philosophical source the enlightenment. The enlightenment built the basis for the liberal philosophy. The first big revolution that started to "pull the rug" underneath the feet of the monotheistic (in the occident) was the Reformation it built the theological bedrock for protest, and at the time to contest the authority of the church of Rome was to contest the major legitimate power of the time. After the liberal revolutions that started in England in 1688 and the liberal revolutions that fallowed in 1774 and 1789 set the battlefield for the 19th century, between the slipping power of religion and the new liberal influence.
During the 20th century the political theory known to us as Liberalism clearly implanted itself, through what we could call the institutionalization of democracy, something that seems at times paradoxical. By affirming such a thing I affirm the fact that democracy is fundamentally very little "institutionalized" and our current "crisis of democracy" has for direct origin this fundamental paradox that lies in the construction of representative "liberal" democracy (our modern form of democracy).
Damascus, Syria "The Arab Spring" April 2011

And we are at this point in time, in this space and dimension, and things oddly seem to be shifting. Things in general (the common history of mankind) and things in particular (each and everyone's singular experience) tend to at some times function in the same manner. It's when you least expect it, in places less probable and of improbable people that fundamental change outbursts. And that is probably what is so great about life in general, it's improbable side to it. Looking back on 2011 who, would of expected all of these occurrences, we try to plan things its part of human nature, we tend to find confront in planing the future and building on that... of course no one can build on the improbable, but we must rejoice of this improbability and this unknown and unmapped face of our lives and our common future in this human society.
Cairo, Egypt 2011
                           
As now the evening lights give into the dark nightfall skies, as the smoke lifts in Tahrir square in Cairo as the army now burns down to the ground the marks of any physical resistance. As the cold night swifts into Zuccotti square through the grand corridors of New York City's avenues and once again the occupiers face the dreadful night. As another Athenian family turns off the lights in the once cradle of democracy, now riddled with debt. As so many in this time of discontent and full of incertitude. Let us remember and recollect, that the movement still on goes, and still thrives and that this is just the beginning and what a start it is. The road ahead is long and steep, narrow and screechy, but we now know that the road out of here does exist. And everything depends on our capability to "occupy" our hopes and dreams, our expectation and beliefs, all depends on our efforts to reinstate our moral paramount over our fears and grievances, our restraint and disbeliefs.  That's the big personal and general fight of humanity, revolution or counterrevolution, for change is possible, but are we ready to "occupy" that change? I personally think that we are.
Sky.
Tahrir Square on Fire, December 2011.

Thursday 8 September 2011

The Death of Canada ( as we know it)?




Fading Canada?
As the summer fades away, all of the world gets back to reality, wakes up not anymore to the sunshine and heat of that past season, but rather to the cold and monotony of Autumn. And at this pivotal moment in the year, we always meet wide at another anew crossroad, the one that marks the 10th anniversary of the 9/11.
Ten years ago as some would say our collective innocence was shattered, and in such a gruesome and despicable manner. Words can not relate or explain the real meaning of the 9/11. And before I get into the death of this post, i would like to take a moment to recollect and revive those horrid images and that awful day and make my compassion known to all of the families and all of the victims of 9/11.
Now many of you, may ask yourselves were is this going, how can this post be entitled The Death of Canada and start off in such an odd manner? Well the connection is pretty simple, as we all know in the wake of 9/11 measures were implemented throughout the western hemisphere, measures to make sure that 9/11 would stand an exception in the history of mankind. Measures to fortify our boarders, our cities, and specially fortify our sense of security. At the time it did seem like the "right" thing to do, we needed to feel safe again, and at the time the world was confronted with the unknown wrath of a very obscure organization.
In the wake of 9/11 Canada alike all nations implemented new security measures, put them into law. And they were very controversial at the time and still all. In wake of 9/11 almost everything was accepted out of fear and of animosity. And so the laws rolled out. The liberal government followed the flow.
But through this past decade, question marks did show up here and there throughout our rhetoric, probably the most important was related to the thesis that stood out after the attacks as truth. The thesis that we needed to wage a war on terror, that Islam and "Islamicism" did breed terrorism and radicalism it was just a fact. And ten years down the road, as we look back do we feel safer? Did anything really change?
Probably the question that most frequently arises is the one that we are so scared ourselves to answer did we "win" this fictive war on terror?
For our cherished PM Mr. Harper the answers is somewhere between we "are getting there" and "lets redouble our efforts". Yes our cherished PM supposedly the leader of the Canadian government and of all Canadian citizens, put a new red-hot bulls-eye on the Muslim Canadian community, and so we can say that ten years later another myth of our innocence : Canadian tolerance was shattered. Now Mr. Harper for too long has lived in a parallel universe, in his own world, alike so many other elected officials, Mr. Harper lives in the world of political points and of elections, the world of power. And after almost 6 years of PM Harper we known what he would do to maintain his power, anything. Now I could go on and on about Harper's will to turn Canada into the 51st State, but this argument I am trying to elaborate is way deeper to be merely focused on Mr. Harper, he gets way too much attention anyways in my opinion.
No whats important in this post is to understand that the main pillar of our Canadian society, that being tolerance is being chipped-away by this Conservative ideology.
Going through the article on the Vancover Sun I stumbled on to some very interesting remarks, one went a bit like this "Only Harper tells the truth in Canada". Whats ironic is that to justify this quote the author said that all the other countries in the world were following the same suit. What happened to my Canada? The country that defended human rights tooth and nail, and fought for what it believe was right not what would go down well with the international community. To illustrate this through back in 2004 it was Canadian observers that rang the alarm bell when the European Union form fear of the Russian reaction turn its back on the democratic aspirations of the Ukrainian people and thus validated the Orange Revolution.
Maybe the real question ten years after 9/11 is... what has happened to our Canada?

Canada we stand on guard for thee.

Sky        

             

Saturday 25 June 2011

A requiem for CAPITALISM

Capitalism, a model that started as an experimentation to fund foreign expeditions under the Dutch East Indies Company. A model that was sketchy and awkward, now has become the model of predilection through the world. It conquered the last bastions of so called "Communism" and through the impulsion of right-wing neo-liberal ideology in this 2nd decade of the 2nd millionaire it implements itself not only as a concept of trade or a "façon" of commerce but more so as a "way of life". It interlinks itself with so called notions of freedom and of liberty, even of "social evolution".
It is very important nowadays to try to understand the origins of this ideological capitalism, to understand how did capitalism root itself so deeply in our common culture, in our common perception of our world and of its surroundings.
Today capitalism is in many ways link as a synonym to the notions of liberty, of freedom, it nourishes itself off the myths of the "self made man" and the tales of "rags to riches". But was capitalism always seen in such a manner? Was capitalism always the banner carrier of liberty, and all of these notions born of the enlightenment?
No is the answer and we don't have to recollect to far in the past to understand that capitalism wasn't always intermingled with this notions. The fact is that the rise of capitalism, "industrial capitalism" during the 19ht century in the heart of Europe (England, the German States, France and the lower countries) were in fact earthquakes metaphorically speaking creating anew social tensions, creating greater wealth without any doubt, but creating such disparities in this new creation of wealth, that it created two new social classes. One empowered by their investment and the other empowered by their hands (manual work), it goes without saying that in the power struggle of class relations one was stronger then the other. And so was born the bourgeoisie and the working class. The only difference between the relationship between the nobility and the non-royal subjects (the third estate) was that the bourgeoisie was had thicker rows then the nobility and that the working class were subjected to a sort of unprecedented impoverishment. It was was a new kind of impoverishment in the sense that the new working class was completely subject to the new ruling classes. It may seem a simple explanation but one the greatest differences between the so called peasants of the feudal age and the "labourers" of the industrial age was the absence of land to cultivate, in fact they were masters of nothing. The peasants at the time were in subjects of their feudal lord, but the had land and could feed off the land in tranquility by paying off the lords taxes. On the other hand the new working class were brought from the countryside into the cities lived to raggedy, shabby shantytowns on the outskirts. They couldn't produce their food, and so couldn't produce a living, their independence became a complete dependence to the newly born capitalistic system. And the backlash against the newly born system would be called first socialism, and later on communism. So the question is now to be asked: so if capitalism wasn't at the start linked to freedom and liberty quite on the contrary, then why and how did it link itself to such causes? And was this link justifiable?
Well to understand the creation of this link between capitalism and such values such as freedom and liberty, human rights and social evolution, we have to understand the ideological fight that fallowed the second world war. At the end of the second world war a great tension between two different economic models was born. The first called communism was born as a backlash against the capitalistic society, its masterminds Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels believed in a society of pure equality "form each according to his abilities to each according to his needs". Engels and Marx regarded the capitalistic society as the means of domination of the upper-classes that behold the means of production and so subdued the working class into a semi-slave state. The working class needed to unite and conquer equality with their bare hands. The problem that would play out later on was that the need of a "revolutionary elite" in the first steps of the revolution, in fact in practice always turned out to be the empowerment of a new elite, the communist party. So the two differing ideologies would struggle for world dominance throughout the later-half of the 20th century. Above all the "Cold War" was an ideological war, it was a war to conquer the "hearts and minds" of the world, it was a war of ideas, a war of propaganda. And it was during the Cold War that capitalism through the pens of it's "mad men" would link itself with the greater cause of liberty and freedom, values that were most often assimilated to democracy (democracy in its radical sense the rule of the people, the power that emanates from the people). But capitalism and democracy have never been the same, and very small are the similarities between the two models one political and the other economic. It's as if today capitalism has become the extension of democracy and visa versa.
But crisis such as the 2008 market crash, a bitter reminder of 1928, in a sense a bitter reminder of the real values of capitalism. Unlike democracy, capitalism is not a system in which each and everyone has a say, quite on the contrary, capitalism is system that alike communism creates an elite that controls piratically everything, and when you look at it today as you go through your bills trying to make some sense out of it all a small tiny minority doesn't need to through their bills, hey they got 100million dollar bonuses. And yet something seems out of touch here, because just 3 years ago these same guys had brought the world economy to it's knees and prayed for forgiveness and asked for bailouts. And it was, but three years down the line unemployment is still rising, no regulation has affected the life of that small minority, and the gap between those at the top of this capitalistic system and those at the bottom gets wider and wider by the day.
Now I'm not against capitalism completely as a system, I'm against radical and insane capitalism that has imposed yet another "Gilded Age" on us. What we have learned with the revolutions that have turned and spiralled the world forever changing it is that system are not eternal, that the road to real sustainable democracy is a long one but that unlike Francis Fukuyama said history is far form being over. So capitalism as we know has its days numbered a new sort of economic model with be born form its ashes (for the better or  for the worst) because a system that puts entire nations up against the wall, creates millions of disaffected citizens, and destroys our planet and our democratic regimes has no where to go but to the grave.
One last thing : CAPITALISTIC VALUES ARE NOT DEMOCRATIC/ DEMOCRACY IS NOT CAPITALISM/ CAPITALISM CAN BE CHANGED.   

Sky                                           

Wednesday 25 May 2011

An Open Letter to Israel and Palestine

Dear Israelis, Dear Palestinians.

Since 1947, the date of the creation of the state of Israel and the start of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, much has been said, many conferences and "peace deals" have been set up or put into writing, but as this generation looks back through the past it recollected with certitude that not much has changed.
As of today we are mingled in a very noxious situation, always been a rock and a hard place, and so there isn't much room form mutual understanding or cooperation. As of today it seems that in such a dear, important moment, an opportune moment unlike any other that can not go to waste. Winds and breezes of change whistle throughout the the corridors of power of the Middle East, forever changing the "geopolitics" of the region, forever changing the people's conception of power and of democracy, reinstating hope and the belief that common hands can change "destiny".
And yet shades of grey are tainting the bright whiteness of newly found freedom. One biggest grey spot on the awesome frame. That being the quagmire of the Isreali/Palestinian conflict.
These last day have proven to the world and the international community that even if the "times are a changing" in the Middle East in some aspects, on some topics the "road-blocks" are so imposing that little or in this  case nothing is changing. Mr. Netanyahu visit to Washington was a failure in every sens of the term, first of diplomatically he did not (did he even try is the question) to warm up the bilateral relations between his administration and Mr. Obama's, but he didn't really need to make an effort because of the importance of the Israeli lobby. Second of all he proved to be once again part of an almost extinct "race" of political leaders, the commonly called old guard, that still believes that nothing is shifting in the Middle East, that was brought up with the idea that the Arabs and Arab nations we're "unfit" for democracy, and he proved that Israel was certainly unfit for peace.
Netanyahu said during his speech before Congress, that he remembered the time when he and Jon Biden we're the "new boys in town", well as this generation recollects on his past and the present, one thing is evident, the Israeli "disengagement" in the common welfare of their neighbours is one of the roots of evil. And during this "Arab spring" it is just astonishing how many evil roots have been uprooted.
The message I want to try with  my mere words to my Israeli and Palestinian friends, to those moderates who believe that over terror, blood, fear and tears, compassion and cooperation is stronger. Is that the message that started as a writing on the wall, became a whisper and then form a flame grew an uncontrollable blaze, and that it's time to ignite the flair of revolt in Israel and in Palestine.
First of all one must recognize that the aspirations of the Palestinian people for statehood, to build a legitimate and internationally recognized "home" are as important as those as the (Post second world war) Jewish claim for Israel. We must recognize that the context of the building/independence of the state of Israel legitimate and that the crimes of WWII will never be buried in the dust of time, but that this context, this past experience does not give the Israelis the right to act in the way they do with the Palestinians people. It must be known that without of the recognition of the righteous cause of the state of Israel by the Palestinian political body and by all of the Palestinian actors no peace can be found. As much it is a right for the Palestinians to live in peace within their home land, so too is it the right for Israeli families to live without fear within their households and neighbourhoods. Terrorist organizations should cease to exist and each actor should renounce violence. And most important of all in my view the "colonization" of the West Bank should come to an end immediately.
But the greatest problem is that these are just words, words can surely create actions and engender change but for change to really occur men must give life to the writings. The future of the Middle East as we have seen isn't in the hands of dictators, or international organizations, it isn't in hands of Washington or of Tel Aviv or of Ramallah, and certainly not in the hands of extremists that hijacked the two actors of the conflict for too long.
It's in the hands of the peoples of Israel and of Palestine, as it is in the hands of the Egyptians, the Tunisians, the Syrians, the Yemenis and of the Spanish.
Sky                                     

Tuesday 24 May 2011

Your Moment of Politcal Zen... brought to you by Red&Sky

How Jon Stewart owns Bill O'Reilly on his own show enjoy...

Neo-Liberalism and the demise of Democracy. (Part One)


1978,1979 and 1980. These years will forever be recorded as a turning point in world history, even more profoundly in human societies and in our perception of democracy. These three dates are linked without any doubt with the "defacto" leading, world dominant ideology, that we call Neoliberalism. In 1978 around 1 year and a half after the death of the grand leader Mao Zedong, a new elite of reformers took power in Beijing. At their head a man called Deng Xiaoping, a man that had always been at odds with the economic ideal of Maoism. His repugnance of the ideal of an industrial superpower that for basis an agrarian society originated with his deception of the "Great Leap Forward" for him this great leap was more so a great leap backwards. And so after the death of ideological father of the Chinese revolution, the revolution would be betrayed by one of it's own. Deng Xiaoping started the great economic reforms that would lead to the installation of a "capitalistic statism", in practice it meant the opening of certain sectors of the economy to private capital, and private enterprise in the so-called Special Economic Zones (SEZs) this was the first step towards the global economic power that China beholds today. But Xiaoping economic reforms did not change much in political or social terms, the fact is that the Xiaoping reforms were the birth of the Neoliberal tendency in China and the real implementation of Neoliberal policies in one country or was it?
In 1979, the United States under Jimmy Carter was on the brink of oblivion, at least that's the perception that the American public had of the denouement of the then being current world affairs. First of all Communism seemed on the rise throughout the world specially in Africa with the newly independent states of Angola and Mozambique. The Soviet army was on the offensive in Afghanistan and the debacle of Vietnam wasn't so far away form American minds. In economic terms the stagnation crisis had undermined the capitalistic model and so in a rush to save American two men would appear. First of that had for objective to save the economy, his name was Paul Volcker he become the boss of the Fed in 1979 with a mandate to curb the power of the almighty American trade unions and to make the inflationary and stagnation crisis history. In 1980 Reagan would join his side after being elected president of the United States of America on a platform of "American Renaissance". In Europe the "Iron Lady" Margaret Thatcher was elected on basically the same agenda. And so the birth of the "new brave world" occurred, little did they know back then that this Neoliberal revolution would forever change the face of the globe. The question that must be asked at some point is the fallowing, certainly the Neoliberal doctrine did help the United States gain hegemony and overthrow the decadent Soviet Union but at what cost? How could a doctrine that was said to be "umbilically" linked with freedom and liberty instate so many dictatorships? Today as the liberalization of the world continues little by little and more and more so, so does the demise of Democracy.

The Chilean prophecy. 
Salvador Allende

The ideological birth of Neoliberalism can be traced back in time to the 1930's and even before, but the object of study here is not Neoliberalism as an idea, instead Neoliberalism as a political actor, and the Neoliberal political actor first took stage on the 11th of September 1973 in the Southern American country of Chili. Neoliberalism first became a political arm during the period form Salvador Allende's election in 1970 to the 11th of September of 1973 the date of the Pinochet coup that would be the start of long bloody, horrid, black page of global history. Salvador Allende a figure very much forgotten in these days and times, was the ancestor of the actual left-winged leaders of Latin America. Salvador Allende implemented what he called the Chilean path to socialism lifting a very important percentage of Chileans out of extreme poverty, through social reforms, nationalizations and public works, his administration reduced unemployment and inequality in the country and prepped-up Chili's heath care and public education, But his most controversial policy was the decision to size land form the rich landowning families that were until Allende's ascension the holders of all the economic and so for political power of the nation. After this decision a multiplication of strikes and the mounting fear of  American in losing their hegemony in the region (the birth of another Cuba) would final terminate Allende's regime through a CIA mounted coup that would bring a military junta to power under the effigy of Augusto Pinochet. 
Augusto Pinochet
 With the arrival of the Junta the Chicago-boys and the American hegemony had the opportunity under this puppet regime to modify the socio-economic structure of Chili to it's guise. As Naomi Klein explains in her masterpiece The Shock Doctrine, through the shock of military oppression Pinochet's junta would liberalize completely the entire Chilean society.  So through the economic policy implanted in Chili by the economic reform plan called the brick. Chili's economic growth would soar, the only problem was that this "economic miracle" (expression used by Milton Friedman) happened in one of the worst dictatorships in world and even probably in world history. The question that immediately comes to one's mind is, how could an ideology that professed that great liberalization economic would automatically engender greater political freedom accept it's practice under a dictatorship?  And how about if Neoliberalism was not indistinguishable form democratic freedoms but instead to the commonly "vehiculated" idea, how about if Neoliberalism need as a basis for it's expanse a dictatorial/corporatist state?

Operation Condor and the accession of Neoliberalism in Latin America.

As in Chili's case Neoliberalism just could make itself a space in the political spectrum, parties that employed their platform of rapid economic liberalization were very unpopular among the peoples of the Latin American states, so Neoliberalism had to overpass the democratic institutions to really take root, and that's where Operation Condor comes into action.
Operation Condor, was the sort of war on terror of the time. It was an operation that had for objective to join all the intelligence services ( more secret policies) of the Latin American dictatorships. The Operation Condor was probably one the most brutal political repression campaigns in modern history. It spanned throughout an entire continent. Under it's banner it encompassed various anti-subversive "tactics" (all of them out of the fascist playbook) such as the "Dirty War" in Argentina, the political repression in Brazil and the death camps under Pinochet in Chili. But then again there is shocking correlation to make between these forms of political repression and the implementation by these authoritarian governments of Neoliberal policies. Under the banner of "containing communism" the United States aided extremist right-wing military groups to gain power and to maintain it through techniques of repression exported through the canals of the School of the Americas, and what was asked in exchange economic liberalization, so that Latin America would be transformed into "economic satellites" of the great American industrial machine. But as was seen in Chili before and throughout Latin America after the Neoliberal economic policies were not accepted by the population, because Neoliberalism wasn't "democratic". Neoliberalism could not withstand "democratization" the first necessary element to instill Neoliberal policies is "dictatorial playgrounds". On that basis the Neoliberal economic policy killed democracy in Latin America for almost two decades, but after the Latin American "triumph" the dark mantle of Neoliberalism would spread through the world and transform itself to adapt in hostile climates.

Gaz, Oil and the "liberalization" of Iran and the Arab world.           
British Petroleum or Anglo-Persian Oil Company
The tale starts back in 1951, a predominant nationalist with socialist penchants is appointed prime minister in Iran. Dr. Mosaddegh then undertakes the important reform of nationalizing the very profitable Iranian petrol industry, that at the time being was in the hands of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (the Iranian BP affiliate of the time), in other words an important pillar of the British economy. For Mosaddegh the plan was very plain and simple, with the revenue generated by the new nationalized petroleum industry he would soar his fellow countrymen out of the grips of poverty. But for the British the lose of such an important economic asset was mere folly and for the C.I.A. and the American government of the newly elected Eisenhower Dr, Mosaddegh socialist principals were flirting with communism in a way that made the United States uneasy. The only option now was a tactic that would become very well know in the future "Regime Change". So the tale of Dr. Mosaddegh and of his "nationalistic" adventure comes to an abrupt end in 1953. With unconditional tactic/strategic aide of the American and British secret services the conservative wing of the army mounted a coup and put on the thrown a new Shah.             
Another turning point in the "liberalization" of the middle east was the ascension of Anwar Sadat to the title of Rais in 1970. After Gamal Nasser's death in 1970, Anwar Sadat a high ranking military general as was Nasser took control of Egypt. First he was view as merely a puppet of the "Nasserist" elite, but through the "Corrective Revolution" Sadat eliminated the entire "Nasserist" vision form the circles of power. He then pursued the economic policy of "liberalization" something that was completely contradictory with Nasser's vision of "Egypt's self-determination".
And then came the period of the 1990's and the arrival of military junta's to power in all of the middle east implementing Neoliberal agenda's, as in Algeria that completely "liberalized" it's gaz and oil industry, the same in Tunisia, the "Tunisian Miracle" under the rule of Ben Ali, and in Libya with reconstruction of diplomatic relationships with country. Throughout the Arab world form Saudi Arabia to the United Arab Emirates, from Bahrain to Yemen, the United States through the C.I.A. and the so-called war against "the evil empire" that represented communism financed authoritarian regimes/ petro-kings and in return the only thing they asked for was the implementation of Neoliberal policies and the "liberalization" of their economies so that American enterprises could operate in total freedom. But what did this lead to? What did this mean for democracy? 
Without any doubt the direct consequences of the Neoliberal policies instilled by the various "puppet" regimes of the United States was grand popular discontentment, in lead to "Bread-Riots" in Egypt, a civil war in Yemen between "Socialist" and autocratic fractions, but the major shift it lead to without any doubt was the Islamic Revolution of 1979. It was a new kind of revolution, a one that did not lean to the west or to the east but stood on it's feet (at least at the beginning, afterwards it turned into one of the most repressive regimes in the world) and fought violently against the Neoliberal policies that were implemented by the Shah and his regime. It was more anti-capitalistic, then anti-occidental or anti-American, and detested the "western" main mise on the Iranian economy, it was the first anti-Neoliberal revolution. And it "breeded" a new sort of protestation Islamic radical terrorism. So we have seen how in the "3rd world" Neoliberalism destabilized and destroyed the democratic process, how it cut the grassroots of democratic aspirations, doing so under the theory that greater economic liberty would defacto engender greater political liberty a more democratic form of governance. But could Neoliberalism infiltrate western democracies and turn them into "facade democracies"? into D.O.I.N.'s (Democracies Only In Name)? Create the same oligarchic regimes that existed in the third world but dressed with the robes of democracy?

Sky                      

Thursday 5 May 2011

Your Moment of Politcal Zen... brought to you by Red&Sky

The Reformist Revolution: the redesigning of the Canadian political landscape that lead to Harper's Majority

How did Haper get here?
Monday morning the whole of Canada awoke to the news of the new Harper majority with 167 seats in parliament out of 308 total seats it appeared to be really a strong conservative mandate that would be instated in Ottawa. It's been a long trend since 2006 and the first Harper government, since then Canada, Canadian values have metamorphosed into something unrecognizable, unthinkable for Canadians merely 5 years back. But what really does this Harper majority mean for Canada? What does this election of 167 MPs teach us about the changing nature of Canadian politics?


The logo of the Reform Party of Canada
First of all without any doubt a "polarization" of politics is coming into effect in the Canadian political landscape, what Canadians have to remember is that the Conservative Party of Canada under the leadership of the Right Hon. Harper changed radically. The Conservative Party of Canada today isn't at all the Progressive Conservatives that existed before. That "race" of politicians and that political conception of Canada seems to be extinct at least inside the new Conservative Party of Canada. Throughout the political history of Canada the Tories as we call them where the party of fellows like John Diefenbaker and John A. Macdonald, they had very different perception of what Canada's place should be. Today it's seems like we are assisting to an "Americanization" of Canadian politics through the policies implemented by the consecutive Harper administrations, through the loosening-up of gun registry and soon enough the move by the evangelistic wing of the new Harper majority to push for more regulation of abortion and so on. Since the ascension of Harper to PM and even before since his election as leader of the new Conservative Party the old Canadian "social-democratic" ideals, the heritage of Tommy Douglas and Pierre Elliot Trudeau have been seen as the "enemy'. In fact Harper has a hit-list and as we have seen throughout his previous mandates he will not stop until the Canadian social state is on it's knees. But how did things get so tangled-up how did Canada the idyllic north started becoming little by little the 51st State?


Preston Manning the influential leader of the Reform Party
To understand really this metamorphose of Canadian politics we have to go some what back in time, to the 1990's Canada was hit but a very severe economic crisis, Mulroney at the head of the Progressive Conservatives lead a series of economic reforms that would help put Canada back on track. During this period of economic stagnation, voices on the right would rise up to ask for reform. The link between the crisis of the 1990's and the birth of a new bread of right-leaning groups in Canada is doubtless. The Reform Party of Canada was without any doubt the spearhead of this right-wing "renaissance". Under the leadership of  Preston Manning they would destroy literally the Progressive Conservatives, robbing them of the Prairie and their western Canadian basis. In the 1993 election the Progressive Conservatives would drop to an unknown bottomless bottom. What was the appeal of the Reform Party? It was a populist movement that had for source of it's political capital the discontent of the ordinary folk against rising taxation. But the main factor driving this "Reform" movement to Ottawa was based on a western prairie movement (that then after extended to British Colombia) calling for a stronger representation of the west in Canadian politics. It called for lesser rights for the gay, lesbian and transexual communities, to give the first nations lesser importance, and to rebuke the idea of Quebec's autonomy. It was an evangelistic, populist, enraged movement against federal power (expect in the case of Quebec of course).  With it's electoral victories in 1993 and 1997  the "Reform" party forever divided Canadian politics. The Reform Party created the fault lines on which now the Conservative Party has gained a majority. Now the next question resides in the death of the Reform Party, the birth of the Canadian Alliance and all that mashed-up into gumbo gave us the new "Conservative Canada".
Canadian federal election of 1997 (In Green the Provinces that voted Reform)


Even with the impressive electoral performances in 1993 and 1997 that was the death sentence of the Progressive Conservatives, the Reform Party just couldn't get elected into governing. Yes back then Canada still was a "Liberal Nation" and the Canadians during that time input their trust in Chretien's Liberal Party with three majority governments (from the 1993 federal election through the 1997 election and finally with the 2000 election). So the option was rather simple it was the merger of the various political groups of the right in one strong Conservative Party. But before that happened the Canadian Alliance emerged replacing the Reform Party and tried harder and harder to "break the ice" in the eastern provinces of Ontario and of Quebec, without success. Like today with the NDP and the Liberal splintering up the vote and impeding the Canadian left a real chance to govern, back in the day it was the same old ball game the Progressive Conservatives won seats in Ontario and Quebec and the Canadian Alliance would take seats in the prairie provinces. And so was born the Unite the Right movement and through it's impulsion finally the two united to create the actual Conservative Party of Canada. This being the union wasn't an easy thing the Progressive Conservative electors were radically opposed to the idea of the merge, they preferred to vote Liberal then to vote for a Canadian Alliance candidate, and so when the union was finally formulated it seemed that it wouldn't last. And that's when the "Reformists" (a very iconoclastic bunch, made-up of tax haters/neo-liberals, social conservatives and western patriots) hijacked the conservative movement.
One of the consequences of the "Reformist Revolution" the 1995 Quebec referendum


I guess that if John Diefenbaker or MacDonald (maybe we should ask Mulroney) were they still alive, they would probably not recognize their party. Today the Conservative Party is not even the shadow of it's former self. We always look south of the border and  to the American political disarray to comfort ourselves. The problem is that we are heading down the same trend in little time, Ms. Sarah Palin could very well find a new home in Canada. The rapid ascension of Stephen Harper was only possible due to the grassroots movement that was already existent. The "Reformist Revolution" was the centrepiece of his political career, the front page story of the last two decades. The vision of Canada, of what Canada should be, the "Reformists" changed forever the Canadian political landscape, and that "change" has started to change Canadian society. The "Reformist" vision of a Conservative Canada in America's image has little by little has lingered into Canadian society, poverty is up on the rise, ever more perturbing is the rise of poverty among immigrant communities, they become more and more ghettoized shoved into a corner. The "Reformist Revolution" brought neo-liberalism and social conservatism into the mainstream of Canadian politics, the particular consequence of the appearance of these new ideologies in the Canadian political landscape was: the reduction of social programs, the liberalization of the Canadian market (that means through the efforts of Globalization a bigger share of the Canadian economy to American companies), the dismantlement of heath care and the reduction of funding for federal education. But one other flaw of the "Reformist Revolution" was the birth of a sort of Culture War inside Canadian politics, between the Canadian west that was the "stronghold" of this new born movement and Ontario and Quebec, specially Quebec. The Culture War would push Quebec into the hands of the sovereignist Bloc Quebec and put Quebec on the edge of the oblivion of independence during the referendum of 1995. The Conservative movement has played on this fault line of provincial division to assure their reign. The question that stands out is will the party of Diefenbaker (once champion of a Canadian conservatism), his ideological stance re-find it's place in Canadian politics?

Unite the Right campaign poster


The preexisting divisions between the basis of the now defunct Progressive Conservative Party, still hide under the sink of the actual Conservative Party, it's just a question of remembering those Red Tories that the political stance that Diefenbaker certainly deferred form the nowadays Canadian left, but that in the end the objective of a true north strong and free is not going to happen through the continuation of Harper's  rule. The "Diefenbaker ideology" is of course not a left-leaning ideology, but it has for base social-justice, the belief in meritocracy (opposed to capitalist oligarchy, the American model, that Harper tries to implement with so much zeal) and equal opportunities. This perception of Canada is completely opposed to the "Reformist" perception of the ideal Canadian society. In the end the Red Tories of Ontario and Quebec can find a home in the "grand" left of the political spectrum. A formation that would confederate the liberals, and the centre-left, the socialists and social-democrats on the left and to the centre the Red Tories. It's time to learn from the history of the "Reformist Revolution". Without any doubt the "Reformist Revolution" was the motor of the political surge that swept Canada and that today lead Harper to Ottawa at head of one of the greatest Conservative majorities in history. To save our Canada, the non-neoliberal nation, the home of Greenpeace, a nation of equal opportunities and a meritocracy based on equity and moral principals and not uncontrolled, wild capitalism, we have to fight the "Reformist Revolution" with a "Righteous Revolution" to reinstate the Canadian ideal.

Canada we stand on guard for thee.

Sky

Wednesday 4 May 2011

Osama Bin Laden's Death or the unanswered questions

It was during the night of Sunday to Monday, it happened like a blast, when all hope was lost. The news would spin around the world like a forest fire in the drought months of the summer, it's spark and flare would reignite a feeling of unity and invincibility unseen in the home of Jefferson for years. And yet as Americans gathered throughout the streets of New York and Washington, in Times Square or on the lawns facing the White House, America would slip just a little more into denial.

Osama Bin Laden, was the most wanted terrorist, maybe even man in history. Without any doubt the images of 9/11 still hunt the United States today as a nation, it's heritage lead the United States into two "wrecking" wars that would forever undermine America's place at the table of nations. Two wars that would ruin the economy and send the deficit into soaringly high waters. Worst of all it would through the Bush presidency really emphasized the "culture war" predicted by Patrick Buchanan some years before. The truth is that as always in state of shock  (a state in which America was plunged into after 9/11 and to a certain extent sank into nowadays after the dead of Osama Bin Laden), the right, the most pertinent questions are not asked.

Osama Bin Laden was without any doubt the leader of Al-Qaeda. He was the rich heir of one of Saudi Arabia's most influential families which goes without saying had more then very close ties with the Bush family was one of the founders of an armed group of Islamic radicals. Thing many have forgotten is that during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan during the 1980's Osama Bin Laden was supported in more then one way by the United States. And even during the civil war that would fill the vacuum left by the retreat of the Soviet forces after 1989 the United States continued to keep strong links with Osama's mujaheddin, bizarrely favoured by the United States instead of the Lion of Panjshir that a much more "open" view for the implementation of a democratic form of Islamic rule in Afghanistan. Thought the military aide allocated by the United States to help Al-Qaeda fight the "red" menace it also assured a future safe heaven for terrorism in Afghanistan.

With or without the intention of doing so, through the foreign policy implemented during the Reagan and Bush senior years the grassroots movement for global terror was created. That's the first undeniable fact Osama Bin Laden was America's own creation. America made him in 1979, by the year of 2001 he was able to mastermind the attacks of 9/11 and last Sunday year 2011 the creator took the creation's life.

Another unanswered question is the US/Saudi Arabia relationship, is this relationship really beneficial for the world? For the peoples of both countries? Well then again it seems that it isn't at all. First of all the great majority of the terrorists that attacked American soil on 9/11 were Saudis. Then again we are getting into the dark side of politics, the ugly side. The fact is that the relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia is much more then a common economic partnership or common enterprise. As of today American is the biggest investor in Saudi Arabia and today Saudi Arabia controls 2% of the American GDP a huge share for a country of Saudi Arabia's importance. So what? Some would say, I would give you that if it was between two modern democratic regimes but it isn't Saudi Arabia is a fundamentalist Islamic regime built on a conservative interpretation of Islamic laws much like the vision that Osama Bin Laden had for Afghanistan. So American is hand and feet tied to a backwards Islamic regime? Yes and I say more what did the American or Saudi Arabian people gain in this relationship, terror.  Maybe Osama Bin Laden was just one of many consequences of this special relationship?

Another question that still surrounds us and now since the death of Osama Bin Laden involves us, is the real meaning of this war on terror, the links between the war on terror and the markets, the "capitalization" our political society, the concentration of power in the hands of some. Osama Bin Laden sleeps forever, but the legacy of his actions still prove the demise of our democracies and of our modern political systems. Two unanswered questions that emphasize this demise, the fact that this war on terror seems more like a mini series soap opera the main actors being the Bush and Bin Laden families and as sidekicks the Husseins, and the fact that this so called war on terror had for banner freedom and liberty over fear when in the end it was all about Halliburton and Carlyle Group.
Let me explain myself. First of all the Bin Laden and Bush families have been partners forever, the Bush family actually served as a satellite for the Bin Laden's investments in the United States. The Bin Ladens had so many interests in the United States that they partly resided in side America's borders. So to paint the portrait of Osama Bin Laden as fundamentalist, an Islamic radical with a sort of "dog/wolf" hate for the United States is not true. Let it be said that Osama Bin Laden actually stay in America on several occasions, what we know for sure is that he did in 1979 and went to Chicago and Los Angeles. How is it that right after the 9/11 attacks none, not even one of the 13 Bin Laden family members that were in the United States were questioned?  This is just proof that today politics is the affair of some and it's minuscule details (most of the times in democracy details are the most important) are unknown to the masses.
Second question here: was the War on Terror really a war of ideals? Throughout the length of this war ideals of freedom, liberty, fundamental democratic ideals were used to preform really undemocratic actions. The restriction of personal liberty in the United States through the Patriot Act, the censorship of the first amendment for reasons of "national security" but even more terrifying the opportunism of some through the war of Iraq and Afghanistan to enrich themselves. Dick Cheney before becoming the "worst" vice president in America's history was part of the renown "big oil" and armament giant Halliburton a company that experienced an increase of 284 in profits throughout the wars in Iraq and in Afghanistan conflict of interests? No sir not at all. Shafiq Bin Laden (Osama's brother), Bush senior and junior and Donald Rumsfeld were all part of  Carlyle Group another group that made titanic profits during the wars through armaments too.

So "okeh", Osama Bin Laden is now gone, but the questions still stay unanswered and well I guess they will always stay so, because to my big disarray people find it more patriotic to go out and wave flags and chant USA USA USA!!! the problem is they don't even know what it stands for anymore.

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