In an online article entitled This is what democracy looks like: Occupying Wall Street and Bay Street, Gerald Caplan and Amanda Gryzyb discuss why the occupation movement is a healthy expression of the people, and address some of the inequities that will surely help focus its Canadian incarnation beginning on October 15: vast social inequities, climate change, rising unemployment, precarious jobs, the lack of upward social mobility and the egregious corporate influence over government.
More specifically in Canada, some dismaying facts about life here are as follows:
The youth unemployment rate is 17.2 per cent. An increasing number of Canadians – young and old – are precariously employed or underemployed, without benefits and without job security.
The poverty rate in Canada is over 10 per cent, and one in seven children live in poverty.
Our homeless shelters are over capacity and our food banks face constant shortages.
Tuitions at Canadian universities are rising, and graduating students are debilitated by student loan debt.
A nation of such wealth simply should not have such glaring social inequities.
Let's hope for a good turnout on Saturday.