A little something for those Canadians who pine for the re-opening of the border to Amerika.
Rarely have I seen such a sterling expression of commitment and leadership:
Reflections, Observations, and Analyses Pertaining to the Canadian Political Scene
A little something for those Canadians who pine for the re-opening of the border to Amerika.
Rarely have I seen such a sterling expression of commitment and leadership:
I like to regularly post letters-to-the-editor that hit targets concisely and precisely. The following meet those criteria.
On the subject of the Pandora Papers, her is what one writer thinks:
Re Opening the Pandora Papers and what they reveal, Oct. 4
As your research on the Pandora Papers shows, Canada has been and continues to be a tax haven for laundered money on both the provincial and federal level with its lax laws. Provinces don’t require residency or even basic identification to register a company, and the end result is millions of illicit money is placed in real estate.
It is not surprising that, on the federal level, billions are placed into offshore accounts.
Much of these activities can take place because of the legal loopholes that allow criminals, millionaires, and corporations to stash billions in offshore accounts around the world.
Since the publishing of the Panama Papers in 2016, not a single charge has been laid.
It would be totally naive for anyone to think that those identified by the Pandora Papers will face consequences.
Canada and the rest of the world needs to close loopholes that allow billions to be stashed in offshore accounts, leaving hard-working Canadians and citizens of other countries shouldering the bulk of the tax burden.
These loopholes allow the rich to continue becoming richer while the rest pay the price.
Sheila Gaal, Toronto
A flurry of letters attest to the public reaction of disgust over the insane opposition to vaccines and certificates:
Is there no end to anti-vaccination characters complaining about tyranny and coercion of people to get vaccinated?
One argument turns on being forced to get vaccinated or losing their job; if I lose my job, who is going to put food on my family table?
The question they should be asking is: if I don’t get vaccinated and contract the virus and spend weeks or months in hospital or even die, who is going to put food on my family table?
The part that anti-vaccination folk are missing is that, with freedom, come certain obligations. The society you are part of is asking you to step up and join your fellow citizens in an effort to quash the pandemic that has cost thousands of lives in Canada and millions worldwide.
Don’t complain that restrictions, such as the requirement to show a vaccination certificate, make you a second class citizen if you are not vaccinated!
If your definition of freedom is “I do what I please and to hell with everyone else,” then you are a second class citizen all of your own making.
Francis Zita, Scarborough
Venues that follow vax rules deserve support
Re Ontario must enforce its Covid rules, Oct. 2
Eighty-three per cent of the population has stepped up and been doublevaxxed. It’s time for the majority of us to enjoy our freedom.
And it’s time for the 17 per cent to endure the restrictions that their ignorance has caused.
Stop pandering to the minority! We’ve been a divided community since the vaccine became available.
A vaccine certificate didn’t suddenly become the cause for division in our society.
It’s too bad our premier doesn’t recognize this; so many deaths and hospitalizations could have been prevented.
I am proud to support venues that follow the rules, and will certainly avoid those that flout them. I am certain I am not alone.
Linda Saxe, Toronto
Following COVID-19 rules good for business
No one wants to see businesses like gyms and restaurants suffer any more unnecessarily, but the requirement for proof of vaccination for entry is a necessity, and any owner who openly declares that the rules do not apply at their establishment needs to pay the price
And this disregard to the rules demands a big price be paid.
The unvaccinated are many, but still a minority, so, if the owner feels motivated to cater to the minority of his clients, the majority of them who are the vaccinated will likely stay home.
How is that good for business, never mind the obligation we all have as part of society to protect each other with every tool available against the scourge of COVID-19?
Margaret Perrault, North Bay, Ont.
Kids routinely vaxxed, so why raise objections?
Go to school? Get your shots!, Sept. 26
The problem with this selfish, misinformed bunch is that they are too young to remember all the previous health challenges their ancestors had to live through, and defeat.
Smallpox, diphtheria, polio, not to mention measles, rubella, mumps, all of which are controlled by … vaccines.
All school children get their measles, mumps and rubella vaccination and diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), and tetanus vaccination.
These anti-vaccination people all had these when they were children.
Yet they insist on listening to the those who spread unscientific misinformation and blame the various governments with infringing their rights.
The only right, when it comes to pandemics, is the right to do the right thing to protect themselves, their kids, their parents and their neighbours.
Roll up your sleeves and help defeat this disease!
George McCaig, Kitchener
Ontario needs system for reviewing exemptions
Re NDP leader calls out PC vaccine exemptions, Oct. 5
The recent furor over medical exemptions given to two government MPPs reminded me that, according to the news, medical exemptions in PEI must be approved by that province’s chief medical officer. Granted, there is a huge difference in scale between PEI and Ontario, but it illustrates the need to have those exemptions vetted by someone other than one’s own family doctor.
This is a matter of public health, and should be reviewed accordingly, with questionable exemptions reported to the Ministry of Health as well as to the College of Physicians and Surgeons.
The knowledge that such decisions of family doctors would be reviewed would ensure exemptions would only be granted for specific and relevant medical conditions.
Doug Lewis, Clarington
As I tried to suggest in my post the other day, rich people really are different from us, and people like Justin Trudeau, part of that rarified group, have no desire to really disrupt their status quo.
While it might seem reductionist, in my view that fact goes a long way toward explaining the inability of the Canada Revenue Agency to recoup taxes that have been sheltered in off-shore havens. If you believe that the CRA acts without political interference, you need only remember how Harper sicced them on non-profits that were active on environmental issues, often embarrassing the prime minister in the process. The same thing is happening under the Liberal administration; it is just taking a different form.
And people are noticing the CRA's apparent impotence:
Five years, 200 audits, zero charges, Oct. 5
Aside from hearing how the wealthy continue to evade paying taxes in this country, what is even more infuriating is reading about how the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) does very little to recoup this money or charge these people for this kind of criminal activity … all the while charging hundreds, even thousands of dollars in penalties and fees to small businesses or average citizens for filing our taxes late or not making our payments on time.
Heidi Bigl, Toronto
Heidi Bigl is not the only one. Writes Terry Glavin:
As for Canada’s diligence in capturing tax revenue — it’s not much to boast about. It was only after the ICIJ’s Panama Papers bombshell in 2016 that the CRA dropped a court fight intended to prevent the Parliamentary Budget Officer from releasing estimates on how much the treasury was being effectively bilked out of revenue by individuals and corporations resorting to secret offshore accounts. That was just one minor impact the Panama Papers had on government policies worldwide, but Canada remains a laggard in corporate transparency.
And the same laxity seems to apply to money-laundering:
For years, Transparency International Canada has been campaigning against what it calls “snow-washing,” a kind of money-laundering that allows foreign investors to hide dubiously sourced capital in Canadian assets, notably real estate. It was only earlier this year that the federal government promised to introduce a searchable “beneficial ownership” registry in the House of Commons.
The adverse impacts of snow-washing in real estate is most noticeable in British Columbia, where a provincial expert panel reckoned in 2018 that in that year alone, money-launderers had sunk $5.3 billion into real estate investments, mostly in Metro Vancouver. It’s a racket that’s been going on for years, causing dramatic distortions in the city’s house prices, and it has spurred B.C. to introduce a beneficial ownership registry of its own.
The promise of a federal registry to identify the real owners of corporations investing in Canada was made in the Liberal budget that was introduced in the House of Commons last April. The registry is supposed to come into effect within five years. But a federal election has since come and gone. So will Ottawa finally act to clean up Canada’s reputation and start collecting taxes on the super-rich with the same rigour the CRA applies to the rest of us?
We’ll see.
The view from Olympus can be dizzying, and it is a great height to fall from. Hubris and nemesis, anyone?
If you saw yesterday's post, you might want to go back to it for some updates. The tale is not quite as straightforward as originally reported, but, I think, still quite indicative of the fraught society known as America.
…especially a man like restauranteur Jody Pendleton, who so loves his freedom that he exercised it by firing all of the staff from his four eateries who have been vaccinated against Covid-19.
UPDATE:
Well, the story now gets a tad murky. According to Jody, this was all a joke, an attempt at satire. But is that all there is to this tale?
One thing emerging from this imbroglio is certain: in the corrupted currents of American society, all things are possible.
Justin Trudeau has rightly earned severe criticism for his holiday in Tofino on National Truth and Reconciliation Day. However, in my view there is another very important story here as well, one that imparts a lesson we would all do well to bear in mind, especially in light of the new revelations made in the Pandora Papers.
My contention is a simple one. When you have friends in high places, when you associate and identify with them, you are likely to handle them with especially soft kid gloves and certainly be wary of offending them by tax measures that may capture a scintilla of their wealth.
What does any of this have to do with our prime minister? Justin Trudeau is of the financial elite, and those he considers friends breathe the same rarified air as he does. One remembers his ill-fated holiday on the private island of close family friend, the Agha Khan. Then there was his impassioned defence of his good friend and major fundraiser Edgar Bronfman over his unsavoury involvement in an offshore scheme. As well, although perhaps a minor example, consider where he stayed during his B.C. sojourn, an abode called Surfer's Paradise, which is currently on the market with an asking price of $18,750,000. While I do not know what rental he paid for the house, it would likely be beyond the budget of most.
Does the fact that Trudeau can afford such an indulgence impugn his leadership? Of course not. But it is yet another reminder that the truly wealthy are different from the rest of us, and that the filter of wealth is often an impediment to being in touch with the rest of us or seeing us on the same level of humanity as they are. In other words, empathy is compromised, one of the subjects Chelsea Fagan addresses in her video, 6 Secrets I Learned Working For Rich People, which I recommend you view as time permits.
Accompanying the video are some very useful links to articles she cites in the video:Articles on rich people and empathy can be accessed here, here, and here.
An article on rich people and philanthropy can be accessed here.
Now, it would clearly be an offence to the ideal of critical thinking to suggest that any of this directly indicts the sensibilities of Mr. Trudeau. But, as they say, actions (or in this case inactions) speak louder than words, something I shall return to in a moment.
I am thinking anew of the financial elites in light of the release of The Pandora Papers, a kind of successor to the Panama and Paradise Papers, all of which reveal the off-shore dodges the rich use to avoid paying their fair share of taxes. Those using these tax avoidance measures range from world leaders to prominent Canadians, and it is estimated that there is more than $14 trillion squirrelled away by the entitled.
Now, I am not suggesting for a moment that Mr. Trudeau or any of his family makes use of such havens. However, as I expressed in a series of posts in 2017, I am concerned that his identification and affiliation with the truly wealthy has prevented any meaningful reforms that would close the loopholes that allow for such selfish behaviour. Particularly damning is the fact that since the 2016 release of the Panama Papers, which showed the magnitude of off-shore tax-avoidance havens, not one Canadian has been charged, and it appears no money has been recovered. This stands in sharp contrast to his campaign avowals in 2015 to close such loopholes. And in the 2021 campaign, he made similar promises which, even if some were to be enacted, would result in mere tinkering around the edges and would do nothing to advance lofty goals such as pharmacare and $10 a day childcare.
Mr. Trudeau is very well-known for talking a good game. His rhetoric even soars at times. But it is absolutely essential that Canadians demand more than words if we are ever to become the country that history shows us we are capable of becoming.
To borrow from Ben Jonson's accolade about Shakespeare, George Carlin was "not of an age, but for all time." A man not afraid to shake the tree of complacency, he saw things that so many of us either don't see or are afraid to acknowledge.
Yesterday, he was trending on Twitter. Here are but a few of his cogent and acerbic observations.
And perhaps most pointedly relevant for the times we are currently living in: