This excellent but alarming Hill Times article by Murray Dobbin ties in with several posts we have seen lately conncerning free trade, the undermining of democracy and free speech, Canada's shifting image and role militarily, and the use of fear to control citizens.
Dobbin explains how the harper government in particular has been effectivley moving our country toward a security state - Its most familiar elements are privatization, deregulation, so called "free trade," tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations and massive cuts to social spending.
But in order for our budding security state to protect itself - as conditions worsen, as wages and living standards fall, as personal insecurity increases, and as the social safety net frays, (all which result from a security state) the threat of a radical response becomes real.
Any one not clouded by absolute love for the Master Strategist knows what that means: protesters are re-branded by the ruling government as criminals, more prisons are built to house them, access to information is reduced to near nothing, freedom of speech and the press is severely curtailed by whatever means available - imprisonment, false charges, threats, smear campaigns.
The national security state is intended to protect the gains made through free market policies, and at the same time, gradually redefine what government means to the citizenry. We have in Harper a prime minister who virtually never refers to medicare, education, social protection, the environment, poverty reduction or indeed any of the issues that the vast majority of Canadians say they care about.
How does he get away with this when polls consistently show most of us are at odds with the priorities of the current government?
Massive campaings meant to distract us.
Fear campaigns: fear of criminals, fear of socialists, fear of terrorists, fear of environmentalist who threaten good, old fashioned entrepreneurship, fear of whatever other country they can paint as a threat. This allows the government not only to keep us distracted, but to boost military spending, to give greater powers to the military, policing forces, security forces. It allows the government to invade our privacy and curtail our freedoms, all in the name of security, a security that in reality is nowhere near as threatened as they lead us to believe.
Divide the population: citizens will fight more between each other than with the government; division provides more fodder for distractive campaigns; division allows the government justification for cutting programs; division encourages fear; division allows the government to portay certain groups they seek to undermine as unsavoury, as threats to democracy.
Dumb down and simplify messages: repeatedly portraying issues as good or evil allows the government to toss issues into one camp or another and to offer simplistic, false solutions. It also alters the way citizens perceive issues or disseminate information , if done long enough. Show us only black and white long enough, we begin to lose the ability to even look for shades of grey.
Cut social spending: not only is the population less educated, then, it is so focused on simple survival that it has little time to devote to figuring out how to fight their own government, how to get information, or even to simply attend protests. It has little interest in much more than meeting basic needs for them and their families, and when there is a little time and energy at the end of the day, they turn to non-productive activities so that they don't have to think about how rough things are.
Eventually, though, the pressure becomes to much and there is rebellion. Bloody rebellion because it isn't well planned, and by then the security state is well entrenched to subdue its very citizens through force.
Dobbing lists several recent examples of how our civil rights are being altered: G20 arrests and violations of rights, the Montebello fiasco with undercover cops trying to create trouble so they can justify a crack-down, the harassment of anti-Olympic protesters...
Each time these outrages go unchallenged by federal opposition politicians, the national security state clicks one notch further forward and normal gets a bit worse. When tough on crime bills sail through almost without comment even when crime is declining, and when we are spending billions and billions on defence when we have no enemies, there is something terribly wrong with the body politic. The country is changing before our eyes, and federal opposition parties are letting it happen.
And so are we, when we see the opposition fail at controlling a vicious, undemocratic minority government that has been systematically leading us toward a security state. We are letting it happen when we continue to support these parties, offering little more than e-mails voicing our discontent. We need to make those parties realize they will lose our vote, our financial support, and our public voices.
We will never convince harper to protect our rights and freedoms, so wee need to put pressure on opposition parties to do what they were elected to do. Represent us and oppose what the harper government does that undermines our collective welfare.
We need to be as critical of the parties we tend to support as we are of harper & co because they are failing us, and we need to get it through our heads that we can't compromise on fundamental issues related to rights and freedom. When we refuse to accept the trading off of our right for temporary political gain and quit supporting the opposition parties when they do these things, they may start listening to us and act accordingly.
No backbone = no vote, no donation, no support.
No backbone = stark criticism
Monday Afternoon Links
9 hours ago

5 comments:
Our entire system is failling us. We must remember the purpose for the creation of our current system. The Westminster System was initially build by nobles with the intention of putting checks on the power of the Monarchy. The house of Commons was created by powerful, and very rich, members of society who did not fall into the traditional nobility. This system of democracy we so admire and say is disappearing is infact doing the opposite. OUR system was created by the elite for the elite and the different levels were created because different people rose to prominence at different times.
This is an issue because the vaunted democracy we claim to protect never really existed. It was a misdirection pushed on us by the noble or noble wannabe's to keep the people placent. It also helped that nobles had more ideals in those days and some even saw it as their duty to protect the week and less fortunate. What we have today is not the destruction of the democracy we so covet. Rather we have stupid and lesser men (from all political avenues) contemptuously ignoring the maintenance of the old misdirection. Instead the people today are getting the real picture that has been hidden from us for so long. The problem is the picture we are getting is the one after the cancer has spread and matastasized(don't know the proper spelling, please forgive me). We are seeing the sickness at it's worse.
It is not just the Harper government I have a growing contempt for, but all political hopefuls from the major parties. It is in fact those major parties I want to see destroyed. That would be a true first step to the democratization of our nation. If we are lucky we will figure this out before heads have to roll. Lucky for us, even if our population gets dumbed down, we know from history that they can be enlightened once again.
I tend to agree with Informed Despite Education and 9J with you. Harper is pretty bad. However, are you not painting a gloomier picture than it really is?
With a better Liberal leader things can change. Unfortunately I don't see in the current Liberal caucus such a leader. It has to be an outsider.
Thanks, Informed. I never looked at it that way, but I see our system was what allowed this to happen.
I agree that the parties need to burn so that we can rebuild something better.
As far as the picture being gloomy, yes, I think it is that bad, probably worse. With a better Liberal leader, one prepared to clean not only the House but the party's as well, we could perhaps get Harper out but it would take an exceptional leader with a lot of courage, charisma, and integrity to unite the party behind him or her and prevent further rifts as some inevitably give in to self interest.
That'll only happen if people who tend to support the Libs quit putting up with the crap they are dishing out, though. I've voted Lib more often than anything else, but I can't support them as they are. They need to be shown few people will before they actually start listening to us and taking us seriously.
I hope they beat harper next election, because without doubt, he's the worst pm ever, the most damaging. But that's not going to make me accept without criticizing the bad in the lesser bad.
This is an extremely important topic. The divide between rich and poor, powerful and powerless is growing. That will lead to massive suffering. Those in power aren't likely to change this, only enough to get elected. So we need to push hard.
There are a few very decent MPs in opposition. Just thought I should add that.
Sorry for the crap writing, my head is killing me at the moment!
The Liberals have been complicit in allowing the concentration of power to the PMO. Paul Martin was implicated in the organised crime investigation in BC. They are part of the globalist agenda. Free Trade and all that crap.
Dobbins also mentioned in his article how the pressure of the Soviet block kept rampant capitalism in check. As a sop to workers who could easily turn rebellious as they did in most of Europe prior to WWII, all the mechanisms of our social safety nets were put in place and maintained.
Without that pressure, a steroid infused free trade, global capitalism took hold like stage 3 cancer. The former soviet countries became staging grounds for testing out PPPs, rampant privatization primarily through unfettered foreign investment, etc. In the past decade, they have increasingly introduced the same concept to western economies.
During that same period, the whole political spectrum moved dramatically to the right. The NDP and UK Labour Party barely resemble the parties they were 20 years ago. The Liberals and US Democrats resemble their respective Conservative counterparts in the 1980s-90s.
Finding political leaders who can put people before corporate interests will definitely be more challenging than ever.
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