Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Tuesday, January 01, 2013

When Canada turns 150: A frightening future or a new day led by Bieber and Trudeau?

What might Canada look like in 2017, the year of our sesquicentennial celebration?

It is, of course, impossible to predict events a week from now, let alone five years out. But for fun and the sake of argument, let’s try. What follows is a brief national portrait, dated July 1, 2017. Utopia? Dystopia? Or the usual hodge-podge, leavened with fanciful nonsense? You decide.

Politics

In late June of 2017, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is just getting his feet wet. He has developed wrinkles, a few grey hairs, and a hint of a paunch – which he intends to work off, he tells reporters, by doing half an hour of yoga every morning. Trudeau leads a minority Liberal government of 157 MPs, having eight months earlier narrowly defeated minority Conservative Prime Minister Jason Kenney, now reduced to 128 seats.

The New Democrats, led by Megan Leslie, hold 45 House of Commons seats, most of them in Quebec and the Maritimes. Elizabeth May’s Greens, building on their five-seat B.C. breakthrough in Election 2015, hold eight seats in the 338-seat House of Commons.

But the talk this summer in Ottawa is not of eight Green seats, but 20: Delivering on a promise made in 2015 and again in the recent election, the Trudeau government has embarked on a full-blown reboot of the electoral system, which appears likely to result in a proportional setup based on the Australian model. That could see the Greens dramatically increasing their seat count at the next vote.

Meanwhile, as the price of their co-operation in the reform effort, May, Leslie and Kenney are negotiating through intermediaries for cabinet seats. Kenney has demanded Finance, Foreign Affairs and Industry. Leslie wants Health and Justice. May, of course, is determined to be Environment Minister. If they’re not satisfied they may bring the government down, causing the whole reform process to collapse – and marring the sesquicentennial. But Trudeau can’t give these key portfolios away, without sparking a revolt within his own ranks. Nor does he want to.

Complicating matters is a nationwide protest movement, initially led by aboriginal groups unhappy about the exclusionary tone and content of the 150th anniversary celebrations. “15,000, not 150!” goes the slogan. The protest quickly spreads, morphing into a multi-ethnic, multi-generational expression of dismay at the continuing specter of high taxes, declining government services and bleak job prospects for anyone without a marketable trade. A celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Vimy Ridge, on April 9, 2017, is marked by mainly peaceful protests on Parliament Hill and across Canada.

The prime minister attempts to engage protest leaders in one-on-one dialogue but the initiative quickly founders. Radicals among them accuse Trudeau of being a toady to globalist, corporate interests. He does not flip them the bird, but is sorely tempted to on more than one occasion.

None of this is made easier by the fact that former prime minister Stephen Harper, from his perch as head of the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, continues to blast the Trudeau government and all its works with a stream of incisive and wickedly funny articles in the national media. A darkly ironic sense of humour, it turns out, was Harper’s true hidden agenda.

Nor is Tom Mulcair, the New Democratic premier of Quebec, any help: He dislikes Trudeau with an intensity bordering on mania, and in fact has his portrait pasted on a dartboard in his home office. Mulcair continues to wield considerable influence with his allies in the House and is fomenting for the government’s downfall. More than once, Trudeau is heard to sigh wearily to his Minister of Everything, Toronto MP Gerald Butts, or long-suffering chief of staff Katie Telford: “Why did we do all this, again?”

Business

The Canadian and global economies remain mired in a decade-long slump – not a depression, per se, but anemic growth of just over one per cent. That’s because the massive global de-leveraging process that began in earnest in 2013 is still only half-complete. The United States, Europe, India and even China are struggling with slowdowns of their own and the effect is cumulative. A huge ramp-up in U.S. unconventional fossil fuel production has blunted, somewhat, demand for Canadian bitumen – despite the construction of new pipelines to the Gulf Coast and a massive new rail transport network to Alaska. Enbridge’s Gateway Pipeline project was shelved in late 2013.

China is now deeply engaged in the Middle East, both as a consumer of oil and politically, and focusing its resource-extraction efforts there and in Africa. The resultant softening in Canadian commodity prices has caused the Canadian dollar to slip back below 80 cents U.S.

Canadian creative industries, however – including engineering, technology innovation, media and the arts – are thriving. Newspapers in particular, after a decade of darkness that lasted 20 years, are once again posting healthy annual profits, thanks partly to the cascade of Internet pay walls that went up beginning in 2013. Drudge Report founder Matt Drudge, in announcing the dissolution of his now-bankrupt news aggregator site, angrily declares that “democracy on the Internet is over.”

Technology

By 2017, technology is well on its way to transforming everything, again. Mining and oil-and-gas explorers are going deeper than they’ve ever gone before, in places they’ve never gone before, using increasingly sophisticated robots and drones. In 2016, the U.S. and Israeli militaries field a new prototype infantry combat robot, guided by satellite, quickly nicknamed “the Terminator” by the media. But the most startling technological innovations come in health care. For the first time, realistic-looking, functional and affordable prosthetics can be controlled by a user’s thoughts. In early 2017, a chess robot designed and built entirely by another computer defeats a chess robot built by a human engineer.

That same year, Apple launches a free-standing medical division, with a line of apps and devices that allow users to self-monitor and self-diagnose many ailments and conditions. The company also markets a system, the first commercial application of its kind, that allows users to interact with their laptop or phone using mental commands. Locator chips become commonplace in pets and controversy erupts over plans for their widespread implantation in children. More controversy erupts after a Mumbai-based firm offers complete home health diagostics for Canadians, including 24/7 electronic and pacemaker monitoring, outside Medicare, payable via Paypal. In Kuala Lumpur, a young woman achieves international notoriety by giving birth to two “twin” clones – one of herself, one of her husband.

Across the country, provincial governments respond to exploding health-care costs by dramatically increasing the numbers of mid-salaried nurse practitioners and health-care technologists, and sharply reducing the numbers of high-salaried medical doctors, relative to the number of patients. There’s still no cure for cancer – but incidence of the disease begins to drop sharply, due to much greater public attention to exercise, environmental factors, vitamins and nutrition. In late 2016, using stem-cell technology, researchers at the University of Waterloo find a cure for Alzheimer’s Disease. They will later win the Nobel for medicine.

The Arts

Speaking of which: In 2017, Canadian short story writer Alice Munro at long last wins the Nobel Prize for literature. Novelist Miriam Toews wins the Booker for a darkly sardonic story narrated from the point of view of a Japanese-designed housekeeping robot. The hits just keep on coming as a Sarah Polley film based on Michael Ondaatje’s 1987 masterpiece, In the Skin of a Lion, wins Oscar nominations for best adapted screenplay, best cinematography, best director and best picture. The film is shut out in all categories except cinematography, however, causing fans to cry foul.

A Phd candidate in mathematics at McGill develops a piece of software that creates real-time symphonic music based on the infrared signatures of the audience.As applause grows, the music becomes more energetic and complex; this feeds greater applause, and so on. The show is performed across Canada to rave reviews.

Late in 2016, actor Daniel Craig is at last nearing the end of his uber-successful run as Ian Fleming’s superspy. As the film goes into production, rumours emerge of a plot surprise to eclipse all previous Bond films. Anonymous sources are quoted as saying the film has a “transgendered” theme, raising speculation to a fever pitch. Finally, the big reveal: In mid-narrative Bond’s brain is transplanted into the body of a woman, played by Scarlett Johansson. Henceforth, Johansson will play Bond – Jane Bond. Fans around the world are outraged but turn out to see the movie anyway, in record numbers. Social critic Camille Paglia pens an essay in Salon.com in which she asserts that Bond’s gender switch marks the end of “the ascendancy of man.”

In March 2017, Justin Bieber, just turned 23, undertakes a world tour “unplugged,” accompanying himself on an old acoustic guitar, sporting long hair and a scraggly beard. The show is wildly successful, including in Canada, where Bieber reprises his 2012 performance at the Grey Cup. This time, no one boos.

Sports

A wildly popular plan to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the NHL with a series of outdoor hockey games among the original six teams is shelved due to a dispute over money and television rights. After protracted negotiations the games are cancelled.

In regular season sports action, the Toronto Maple Leafs lose. The Toronto Argonauts lose. The Toronto Blue Jays lose. And the Toronto Raptors lose. But all four GTA pro sports teams post record profits as fans turn out in ever-greater numbers, paying ever-higher prices. Late in 2017, Stephen Harper finally produces his hockey book: 1,297 pages long, the volume is quickly recognized by sports historians as a masterpiece. “Harper does for hockey what Conrad Black did for Roosevelt,” declares one reviewer.

In Chiang Mai, Thailand, a new cycling race emerges, billing itself as “no holds-barred”: Competitors are free to use any drug or substance they wish to enhance their performance. The competition is denounced by athletic officials worldwide but public interest is such that TSN decides to broadcast it anyway. After a brief attempt at a boycott fails, advertisers leap aboard. The race, which snakes through the opium-producing mountains of the Golden Triangle, is the most watched cycling event in history.

Nevertheless, public disgust at the excesses of elite sport leads to a rethink of athletics funding here in Canada. In a program personally championed by Prime Minister Trudeau, partipACTION makes a comeback. Across Canada, sluggards and couch potatoes turn off their phones and tablets, and flog their bodies into action – running, walking and cycling, often by torchlight or by moonlight, to celebrate the country’s 150th birthday.

Original Article
Source: canada.com
Author: Michael Den Tandt

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