Sunday, February 8, 2015

What, Me Worry?


H/t The Toronto Star

According to Star readers, there is plenty that could go wrong. Here is but a sampling of their concerns:
In his anti-terrorism speech, Stephen Harper said: “Over the last few years a great evil has been descending upon our world ... Canadians are targeted by these terrorists for no other reason than that we are Canadians. They want to harm us because they hate our society and the values it represents because they hate pluralism, they hate tolerance, and they hate freedom....the freedom we enjoy.”

Might I offer an interpretation of his remarks quoted above:

“Over the last few years a great evil has been descending upon Canada. So while purporting to protect Canadians, my government is targeting them simply because most of my fellow citizens are sheeple. More to the point, we can do what we like. We seek to strike fear into hearts in the hopes of winning the coming election. We hate opinions that stand in opposition to our own, we hate having to tolerate any opposition at all, and we are committed to diminishing further the remaining personal freedoms Canadians enjoy.”

Unfair? Too harsh? I invite anyone who believes so to examine the documented undermining of our democracy and its institutions wrought by Mr Harper over the past decade.

“The people can always be brought to the bidding of their leaders. All you have to do is tell them that they are in danger of being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger.” (Hermann Goering)

Jan Michael Sherman, Halfmoon Bay, B.C.
Once the state usurps the authority to punish citizens prospectively for crimes that they allegedly “may” commit in future but have never actually committed or conspired to commit, this without due legal process: without formal charges being laid, without a hearing or a trial, much less before obtaining a conviction from a presumably still independent judiciary, we abandon all pretense of living as free citizens under a democratic system of government. It is the hallmark of every authoritarian regime at either end of the political spectrum to want to persecute, punish or “disappear” its political opponents extrajudicially: alleged “terrorists” today, “Banditen” as the Nazis called all those who opposed them or “Enemies of the State” under Stalin. Even a child knows how ridiculous and recklessly dangerous Harper’s proposed new powers, worthy of a Vladimir Putin, really are:

“Sentence first - verdict afterwards”, said the Queen to Alice. “Stuff and nonsense!” said Alice loudly. “The idea of having the sentence first!” “Hold your tongue!” said the Queen. “I won’t!” said Alice. “Off with her head!” the Queen shouted at the top of her voice. Nobody moved. “Who cares for you?’ said Alice, (she had grown to her full size by this time.) “You’re nothing but a pack of cards!”

If only. It seems that no one in Ottawa has learned anything from the Maher Arar debacle and is hell-bent on creating the perfect political climate for such travesties of natural justice to be repeated. Bill C-51 may protect the state from its citizenry (which our current government apparently lives in fear of) but fails to protect the presumptively innocent from malicious and unaccountable persecution by the state. It is a law antithetical to democracy and a betrayal of our most cherished human values.

Edward Ozog, Brantford
All of this puts me in mind of a 2002 movie called Minority Report. Anyone seen it?


8 comments:

  1. Many people still believe that Alice in Wonderland -- like Gulliver's Travels -- is a book for children, Lorne.

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    1. So-called children's books have a long tradition of being among the most 'subversive' literature, don't they, Owen?

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  2. Minority Report is based on a Philip K. Dick short story published in 1956. That seems to be where the concept of 'precrime' and 'precogs' entered his work and was later carried through in his later novels.

    I started an old fashioned 'pen and paper' conversation with Mr. Dick discussing his idea of 'synchronicity music' contained in his last novel VALIS (Vast Active Living Intelligence System). His agent was kind enough to send me a letter informing me of Mr. Dick's death (1982).

    At the time, I would never have believed that Canadian society would morph into some kind of Philip K. Dick dystopia. Yet here we stand.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Minority_Report

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    1. Thanks for the information, Anon. It is amazing, isn't it, how the once unthinkable has become the very real? "What fools these mortals be," as Shakespeare once wrote.

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  3. Ah, yes - Minority Report. After all, what could possibly go wrong?

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    1. I was still teaching when the film came out, UU4077, and I remember discussing it with some of my students. Perhaps prophetically and ominously, none seemed bothered by the idea of convicting people before they commit crimes, if it ensures a safer society.

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  4. "Thanks for the information, Anon"

    No prob Lorne.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGXNr5fDWkk

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    1. I love Van Morrison. Thanks, Anon. An apt selection, as usual.

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