The Guardian's 'True North' correspondent, Martin Lukacs, nails it:
The threat of barbarism is grave, insidious and far-reaching. Those responsible are a small group nurturing a foreign-inspired ideology on Canadian soil. They pore over rigid doctrines in cloistered rooms. They scheme to impose their values, attractive only to a minority, on the majority of Canadian people. They have carefully veiled their true selves but their agenda is unmistakable: to erase the country’s achievements in security and fairness.
This threat comes not from a handful of niqab-wearing Muslim women. It has always come from Canada’s Conservative party. Their imported neoconservative ideology, baked into homegrown resentment toward the federal state, has never been palatable to a country with progressive ambitions. They have risen to power through other means: money and economic clout; a deep network of right-wing media and think tanks that have shaped policy options; and an unreformed electoral system that has allowed a party with only a quarter of the electorate’s support to rule unhindered.
Lukacs points to Harper's real constituency:
On 19 October, Canadians will have their chance to combat a home-grown threat – a threat posed not by veiled women, but by the dismembering of their country. When a regime so utterly ransacks its own lands and people, can we stop describing it as the governing of a nation? It is more akin to a barbarian invasion.
5 comments:
Getting rid of Harper and his minions is only the first step. We also have to get rid of like minded barbarians in provincial governments. We have to expose neo-liberal, market economics for the fraud it is and its proponents for the thieves they are. There is a much bigger threat - global warming - and we have to get the neo-liberals, like Harper, out of the way in order to address pressing problems.
A superb assessment of where we have been in the last ten years, Mound.
Anyong said...in other words, Harper would like the rest of the country to think, act and speak like Alberta.
That's a great point Toby and nowhere is that more clear than BC. Although with what happened in 2013 with the NDP, we still don't have a great government in waiting. Horgan to me seems to be biding his time, comes out with something good from time to time, but still nothing about what his vision for BC is. It's got me worried of having more of the same incompetence and corruption that lurks behind Ms Clark.
Is this article out of an Australian paper, magazine etc?
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