I recall an interview with prime minister Trudeau at the 6-month mark of his ascent to power. He told the interviewer that his overarching responsibility was to be an agent of trade. Trade to grow the economy. Trade to generate prosperity.
Trudeau's Harperesque pursuit of CETA and TPP demonstrates that he means business. This goes straight back to those mandate letters he issued to his freshly minted cabinet ministers as they were sworn in. Even Catherine McKenna's marching orders stipulate that her priorities are to be the economy and the environment. There's no doubt that she meant it when she said she was "as much an economic minister as an environmental minister."
Trade it is then. But, if you're going to make trade your priority, your dominant responsibility, then surely you have to accept full responsibility for the fallout from that pursuit. That's on you, Slick.
One element of that fallout is the rise of Canada's homegrown "precariat." It's a term used to describe the future this free-trading government has bequeathed to our youth. In case you're wondering, that's a future fraught with insecurity and economic peril.
Earlier this week, Trudeau finance minister, Bill Morneau, delivered the bad news telling Canadians that they would just have to get used to "job churn" - a future of intermittent employment and a constant scramble for the next job, that essential paycheque to meet the rent and heat the apartment.
Morneau defined his government's focus will be to train and retrain and retrain regularly laid off Canadians as they're tossed "from job to job to job."
What Morneau avoided was any mention of why he's consigned Canada's most vulnerable to a nomadic working life, always wondering when the current job will end and where they'll find the next temporary spot, how long it will take to find and how they'll avoid falling through the floorboards when that inevitable dislocation happens again and again and again.
Morneau won't mention how his own government and its predecessors laid the foundation for this upheaval and uncertainty through its obsessive pursuit of neoliberalism and global free trade, the constant downward spiral. He won't explain why, when even the World Bank and International Monetary Fund can no longer remain silent on the social and economic damage inflicted by globalism, his government remains a faithful adherent to this toxic ideology.
I'm sorry Morneau and you too, Trudeau, but, when you tell Canadians to forego their hopes and resign themselves to a future in the precariat, what you're really telling them is that you won't change course and liberal democracy be damned.
It wasn't always this way. Here are a few observations from two real American Idols - Lincoln and T. Roosevelt.
Let's begin with Abraham Lincoln who declared:
“I hold that while man exists it is his duty to improve not only his own condition, but to assist in ameliorating mankind.”
“Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration.”
If it is, indeed, man's duty "to improve not only his own condition, but to assist in ameliorating mankind," how is he to do that when his government consigns him to the precariat and tells him to "get used to it"?
If Labour is "the superior of capital" how is it that your government chooses to stack the deck so that capital prevails at the direct cost and damage to labour and our society?
Now let's turn to Teddy Roosevelt who observed:
Now, I know these passages carry a certain homespun-ness that can seem awkward but I dare you to tell me - whether you're a Conservative, New Democrat, Liberal or Green - would you really prefer a government that doesn't embrace every one of these principles? What would you give to have a government that did, a genuinely progressive party?
Climate change is, or should be, a non-partisan issue. It's the ultimate scientific question spanning the gamut of Earth sciences - geology, climatology, atmospherics and meteorology, hydrology and oceanography, physics, agronomy, epidemiology, on and on and on. Those disciplines are all separate voices. They have their own scientific focus, their own scientific history, and they each test the "hypothesis" against the best research, analysis and knowledge of their own discipline. Discipline, by discipline, by discipline - without exception - they have all tested the theory of climate change against their own strictures and found in that ever more corroboration.
Progressivism, like climate change, can and should be a non-partisan issue. You shouldn't have to be a Conservative or Liberal or, even, New Democrat to reach out and grab these precepts and notions. Even Edmund Burke wrote of matters progressive.
And so how do our Latter Day Liberals and Conservatives justify so abandoning the Canadian people and, especially, our younger generations? Who elected them to give the future the finger?
This, of course, brings us back to Morneau's finger to young and future Canadians to just "suck it up." If you were one of those kids, you might look at us and the governments we imposed on them as truly predatory acts.
I can only defend some of what we've done by claiming "we didn't know." We really didn't know the scope or the nature or the self-destructive qualities of neoliberalism. But we've had our eyes opened now, at least other than those who chose to turn their heads, and we don't have any excuse to keep tolerating the Morneau's and the Trudeau's and Harper's of this world who see no obligation to ensure the Canada bequeathed to our young and future generations won't be a much degraded remnant of the country we have exploited for our ease and comfort.
It's not unfair to say that Morneau's dystopian vision is, in a word, revolting. That's "revolting" as in justifying resistance, civil disobedience, perhaps even upheaval. If this government isn't leaving our young people and generations to come the best possible future it can provide, if it isn't even attempting to fix this crisis of our own making, why should any young person accept it? Why should they find any legitimacy in such a government?
If I stumbled across an act of civil disobedience underway today, I would be very tempted just to look the other way. This form of governance is not legitimate to me either.
It's not unfair to say that Morneau's dystopian vision is, in a word, revolting. That's "revolting" as in justifying resistance, civil disobedience, perhaps even upheaval. If this government isn't leaving our young people and generations to come the best possible future it can provide, if it isn't even attempting to fix this crisis of our own making, why should any young person accept it? Why should they find any legitimacy in such a government?
If I stumbled across an act of civil disobedience underway today, I would be very tempted just to look the other way. This form of governance is not legitimate to me either.
6 comments:
Your post, and the actions of our 'new' government, Mound, help demonstrate the absence of real leadership in our country. Except for those whose involvement in the political, economic and social discourses of our times is peripheral or non-existent, people are beginning to see the true nature of the people who prevailed in the last election. It is not a pretty picture, and young Justin can look forward to more demonstrations of discontent like the one he experienced the other day at the hands of young people.
I have never heard a more abject submission to the neoliberal imperative than Morneau's assertion that young people will just have to get used to precarious work. That statement alone shows his unfitness for public office.
Yes, Morneau has shown himself unfit for office, Lorne, but he's hardly an outlier in the Trudeau cabinet. What Morneau was noting was the arrival of just one inevitable impact of the neoliberal displacement of liberal democracy. We saw this unfold so openly in the States and yet we did nothing to forestall its certain arrival in our country.
The young need to fight back and that means fighting their and our government. If it comes to it I would probably side with the young in this.
Morneau and Trudeau might not get it, but you can be sure that Derek Burney and Norton Rose do. If you can endure it, drag yourself through this offering from a couple days ago:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/rob-commentary/on-trade-the-eu-needs-to-step-up-and-canada-needs-to-move-on/article32493005/
Meanwhile, in a segment on CBC P&P the dispute settlement issue is discussed in such a way as to suggest that it deals with disputes between signatories, while Justin's chief dollar-a year market-libertarian mouthful, Dominic Barton, is fawningly referred to by Mexico Mandy as Canada's "economic czar" as he gets a full half-hour with her nodding presence ("The fact that unions exist ... ton of roadblocks") on Bloomberg North:
http://bloombergtv.ca/shows/bloomberg-north/bloomberg-north-episode/?epid=401&sgid=1
And since Mulroney has decreed that the TPP is dead, I think the entire assembly can agree that it's time to make some minor adjustments in our "wave approach"; take a closer, but not too close, look at the "Australian model"; and get ready to tie a tighter knot with China.
Next stop: India.
Hi, John. Thanks for the links. Makes me think we're heading for a hard landing.
I could have delivered Morneau's message in less than 10 words:
"Suck it up, this is the way it is!"
What this guy is suggesting is totally unrealistic. What are the costs to keep retraining the unemployed for just another short term job? And realistically what kind of a job would that be? This is not a jobs plan. Most people will very quickly give up and who could blame them.
More trade with EU means more stuff transported long distances on ships, trucks and airplanes, which means more GHG emissions. I thought the plan was to curtail GHG emissions.
I think the worst part about CETA is the ISDS provisions. According to the Globe and Mail, ISDS is now not part of the CETA, for the time being anyway. This is good.
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