Thursday, March 20, 2014

Harper's Palpable, Consistent Contempt



Yesterday, fellow-blogger LeDaro posted a video from last May when Harper invited reporters to a caucus meeting to hear his speech, then refused to answer questions about the Senate scandal engulfing his government. As the reporters shouted out their questions, they were drowned out by the deafening ovation rendered by the Prime Minister's trained seals, aka his caucus.

During the 2011 election, people will recall that reporters following Dear Leader on the campaign trail were limited to asking a total of five questions per day, in total.

A report in this morning's Star reveals that Harper shuffled his cabinet in secret yesterday. Significantly, the shuffle was not announced beforehand. Journalists who did go to Rideau Hall were kept outside.

Chris Waddell, director of the journalism and communication program at Carleton University, had this to say about the secrecy:

“They are public figures and their swearing-in should be a public event,” ... adding that there was no justification for keeping it under wraps.

“As you clamp down more and more on allowing media to attend things, you make things less and less available to the public and you substitute for that public relations materials rather than actual news content.

“A big part of the media’s job in holding people accountability
[sic] is being present at events.”

And that is the biggest problem with the cabal's obsessive and paranoid hiding of the processes of government. In a democracy, the press is entrusted to be our eyes and ears, the conduits of information that ensure that we can have informed discussion and debate and make electoral choices accordingly.

So in essence, the egregious contempt the Harperites shows for the press, when you think about it, is very thinly-disguised and absolute disdain for all of us.

Hardly a revelation, of course; just a timely reminder of what contemptuous and contemptible rogues are now presiding over our collective fates.

4 comments:

  1. Their contempt is rooted in deep paranoia, Lorne. And it's that paranoia which is truly dangerous.

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    1. Hopefully, Owen, the entire bunch will have time to seek psychiatric treatment after the next election.

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  2. Having read an interesting article by Elizabeth May last week on The Rabble, 'Places you won't see Stephen Harper' and then seeing the latest antics regarding the swearing in of Oily Joe I honestly believe that Harper has totally lost the plot and should really seek advice. He seems to live on a different planet to the rest of us, paranoia doesn't come close to his behaviour. The amount of security he surrounds himself with is crazy, he must really
    believe that he is THE world leader to end them all.

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    1. I do believe, Inse, that there is a deep and disturbing pathology at work here.

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