Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Why the Occupy Movement Has Relevance in Canada

Thee are many who assert that the Occupy Movement has no relevance in Canada because we have a social safety net and other measures that provide a modicum of protection to the most vulnerable. They also argue for the superiority of our banking system, which required no government bailouts because it is more tightly regulated than in the United States and other jurisdictions. However, those espousing this perspective ignore a larger truth about the relationship between the powerful wealthy and government policy:

As long as provincial governments and the federal government continue to lower corporate tax rates despite the fact that current rates are more than competitive with those in the U.S. and despite the fact that we have a growing national debt;

As long as government tells its citizens that some hard choices are going to have to be made (i.e., health care spending, federal transfers to the provinces, etc.) because of that debt and deficit;

As long as the poor are made to pay by living on benefits that keep them well below the poverty line;

As long as government refuses to even consider increasing taxes on the ultra wealthy;

And as long as the working and middle classes are made to subsidize the lifestyle of the power elite while suffering a steady decline in their own standard of living, job and retirement prospects, there will be a need for an Occupy Movement that attempts to speak for those who have lost their voice.

3 comments:

  1. Saying that the US Occupy Movement has no relevance to Canada is akin to saying that, unlike the neighbour's house, the fire in ours hasn't spread to the second floor.

    Occupy, to my mind, is firmly anchored in two prime areas - inequality and climate change. Under 40's and their older sympathizers are rejecting growing inequality in wealth, income and opportunity. And, as Naomi Klein quite accurately opines, these are the generations to whom we've bequeathed the scourges of climate change that are already setting in.

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  2. Canada has a federal social democratic party. A party that might gain power and improve the country.

    So the questions is, are the occupy squatters going to convince anybody to vote NDP?

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  3. It's up to the NDP to convince the Occupiers to vote for them. The 3 main parties are a large part of the problem, so I don't hold out much hope any of them understand the issues.

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