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What happened to Canada?
March 12, 2009, 11:41 pm
Filed under: disinfo reporting | Tags: , , , ,

What happened to Canada?
Norman Finkelstein questions our nation’s acceptance of Israeli policies
by Jason Chesworth
March 03, 2009
Originally published at Scene and Heard.ca

finkelstein

The Government of Israel flatly rejects the establishment of a Palestinian Arab state west of the Jordan river. The Palestinians can run their lives freely in the framework of self-rule, but not as an independent and sovereign state. Thus, for example, in matters of foreign affairs, security, immigration and ecology, their activity shall be limited in accordance with imperatives of Israel’s existence, security and national needs.
– Likud Party Platform “Peace & Security”

Towards the end of his 60-plus minute address on Israel’s invasion of Gaza, at U of T on January 15th, former Harvard professor Dr. Norman Finkelstein, made a simple comment that received a surprisingly supportive round of applause from the largely Canadian audience.

“I don’t know what has happened to Canada”, Dr. Finklestein stated plainly. “I was here 25 years ago and met a Palestinian man who had refugee status and was living in Montreal. I asked him how he found it, living in Canada, and he said, ‘to live as a refugee is always difficult, but if I had to live anywhere in the world, Canada would be my first choice. In Canada, you can experience the country the same way as Canadians do.’”

In the 25 years that have since passed, Norman Finkelstein simply can’t account for why our outlook on international affairs and foreign policies have shifted away from keeping the peace and moved towards engagement.

Surely, the supportive applause was largely due to the fact the audience was filled with Palestinians, activists and students, but to those of us sitting on the sidelines without an ethnic, religious or familial tie to the conflict; the applause appeared to come out of an appreciation for Dr. Finkelstein’s courage to continue a discussion that is nearly impossible to have in an era that is steeped in hope for change and progress.

Finkelstein, the son of Holocaust survivors, has long been demonized for his criticism of Israel’s aggressive policies towards the Palestinian people, regardless of the political representation of Palestine (PLO, Fatah, Hamas). A frequent lecturer, contributor to various news outlets, Dr. Finkelstein regularly chronicles the asymmetric, disproportionate and increasingly illegal warfare tactics employed by the Israeli Defense Forces against the Palestinian civilian population.

But what of Dr. Finkelstein’s question: “What has happened to Canada”? The irony of an American asking a Canadian audience this question notwithstanding, it seems a particularly important question to be asking at this time in our history if we are even flirting with the idea of asking the next and more pressing question: “What will happen to Canada?”

To take an educated guess, Canadians by and large, see themselves as peacekeeping, human rights defenders who err on the side of moderation and have a basic Foreign Policy to foster democratic principles throughout the world. In short, we’re good, peace-loving people. Except for the fact that the majority of us appear to have a deep “hate-on” for a Prime Minister who can’t seem to lose for winning; Canadians seem to view themselves as a “do-good” type of folk occasionally hamstrung by self-serving elected officials – not as de facto supporters of illegal wars or the use of illegal weapons.

Finkelstein was sure to point out that it wasn’t only Stephen Harper and the PMO’s way of thinking that he didn’t understand; but also that of our intellectual elite and general acquiescence to the notion that this conflict falls under the banner of “self-defense” for one party and not for the other. It was difficult to leave the lecture hall without considering the kind of pro forma support a citizenry gives its tenuous leadership in the form of silence.

Old adages used to subjugate discussion or debate, such as, “this war has been going on for a thousand years” are difficult to make sense of, knowing that the war being fought on the other side of the world was (as we left the lecture hall), happening in real time with real weapons, costing lives that were very much in the present day.

It was impossible not to consider that, the battles being fought throughout Gaza had illegal weapons (white phosphorous, Dense Inert Materials Explosives), being rained down upon a civilian population who had already been weakened financially, emotionally and left without adequate food and potable water by more than 18-months of strict sanctions already put in place by Israel. Food, water, electricity and money had already been in scarce supply within Gaza’s borders well before Israel unilaterally decided to end the six-month ceasefire.

And what will happen to Canada? Will we continue to support countries that aggressively expand their interests at the expense of an already decimated population?



The strategy of losing… (and other clusterf***s)

Thank God *that’s* over…

Although I’m always up for the opportunity to have a “changing of the guard”, I’m relieved that the Canadian election is over. I prefer to pay attention to politics between elections. Seems like more things actually happen during this period. Just as some can’t understand my penchant for reading about politicians and policy on a daily basis, I can’t understand how people can get whipped into such a lather in such a short period of time – and yet, can’t sustain their interest in the issues outside of an election campaign.

And really… how many “issues” are actually debated throughout the course of the campaign?

How many of us could actually *explain* Dion’s Green Shift? (I’m not judging, I couldn’t do it…and if it weren’t for trying to stay focused… I’d make an argument right now that Dion himself can’t explain it)

How many pissed off artists could have actually named an Heritage Ministry program that was going to be affected by the $45-million cut to “The Arts” (which were announced a *year ago*) before they updated their Facebook statuses to quip their distaste for Harper’s “gala” comment. How many of these self-same artists could identify which of the programs to be on the chopping block were of Conservative origin, or carry-overs from previous Liberal administration attempts to hack away at their industry? I mean, if we’re going to get *strategic* with our voting (which, correct me if I’m wrong, implies a certain amount of thought going into the process of determining a “strategic” vote) – if we’re going to get *strategic*…

Shouldn’t there be a plan?

Call me “Crazy”, but… I’m reminded of the quote, “The best laid schemes of mice and men/ Go oft awry”.  So… what if there are *no* plans being laid? What if we’re just pulling strategies out of our a**? I think we can safely assume that, if the “best laid” plans often end up in a clusterf***, you can be s*** sure that *no plans* will end up in the Mother of all clusterf***s.

The Mother of All Clusterf***s?!

YES! The Mother of All Clusterf***s. That being… another Harper Administration.

That being… *exactly* the opposite of A B C. Anything *But* Conservative?! Sorry… how about… Always Be Conservative. Anything But Change. Always Believe CNN. (I digress…)

There may be an argument in support of strategic voting, but it’s wrong. At the very least… it’s not “right”. It doesn’t work, as evidenced by the outcome of this most recent Canadian election. At this point, a thousand “if only such-and-such had occurred” arguments will not trump the “Harper *is* Prime Minister” theory. All apologies… (truly… he’s fast-tracking us to the North American Union folks…)

So Where Does This Leave Us?

I sincerely hope that all of the piss-and-vinegar that each Canadian citizen seemed to be willing to put on display in the form of a Facebook status, lawn sign, bumper sticker or TV show choice, doesn’t completely subside with the next four years of “the Devil you know” putting everyone to sleep with visions of Sugarplums and Jack Layton Dancing With The Stars in their heads.

This is my New Year’s Eve.

Elections are my X-mas season and I don’t dig X-mas. But it *is* a time of renewal and *that* I can dig.

My New Year’s resolutions are to:

  1. Remember that my union (ACTRA) supports Harper’s Bill C-61 (Canadian Copyright Act). At least… they support it enough to get it passed, and *then* argue for the changes that they want made… (trust me… more to come on *that* strategy…)
  2. Keep watching the economy slide towards a unified currency with the United States and Mexico as we all pretend that “no-one could have predicted this economic downturn”.
  3. Be thankful that I’m getting a little “long in the tooth” for draft age as we escalate our global conflicts and send more innocent and impressionable well-meaning youth off to fight bullshit wars for policies we’re not even able to effectively vote against.
  4. Not accept President Biden’s reasons for war against Iran/Afghanistan/Pakistan/Venezuela.
  5. Learn to play the saxophone.

I know for a fact that I’m gonna bail on at least *one* of those resolutions before the next election.

I’ll say it again…

We’re doomed. But at least we’ll have YouTube… and really… that’s not all *that* bad!