Currents

CURRENT AFFAIRS, POLITICS AND LIFE IN VANCOUVER, CANADA

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Canada for sale


"Of note is that Canada's largest companies by value, and largest employers, tend to be foreign owned in a way that is more typical of a developing country than a G-8 member."
–Wikipedia entry, Foreign ownership in Canada

A Toronto Star business section article takes issue with foreign ownership of Canadian industry. This is an old subject that is unlikely to ever go away, barring a Fidel Castro-style nationalization of our industries.

Canada is a vast storehouse of resources with not enough people or capital to exploit it. Tied to the issue of foreign investment and ownership is the supposed deindustrialization of Canada. Whether that is a real threat to our sovereignty remains to be seen.

But the current situation is no surprise: as one commentator in the article says, "As Canadian companies mature to the point where they are world class, they are getting world-class attention, and, typically, the most appropriate suitor will be a foreign buyer."

Basically, we're getting attention from the world because we're seen as a safe, profitable place to invest. That's not necessarily a bad thing.

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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Say "non" to separatist jackasses


Canada needs to outlaw the Parti Quebecois.

Yes, that would be bad for political freedom in Quebec and Canada. But the status quo is an even worse infringement on political freedom in that province.

Instead of arguing over health care, housing or the environment - issues that matter to Canadians from coast to coast - Quebecers are invariably forced in provincial elections to vote on the issue of whether they want to stay in the country. It's going to happen again on March 26.

It's not that Quebecers don't get to discuss the issues, but that all of them are ultimately subordinated to national unity/breakup when election time comes around. As such, one never really knows whether their elected officials got reelected (or booted) over financial management or social priorities, or if it was because of their efforts to keep the province in the federation (or vise versa). This is bad for democracy.

Canadian unity politicians who haven't done anything to change this situation know this, and they must also know that it's a huge gamble to keep doing nothing. The Liberals may very well with this election, or the next one... but what about the one after, or the one after that? Quebec sovereignty has been an issue for over three centuries, and a serious threat to Canada for over three decades. It's not going to go away.

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Friday, February 09, 2007

Quebec separatism is racism


A Quebec journalist's overnight jump into the arms of the Parti Quebecois is feeding speculation about journalistic integrity and media bias.

Whether former Radio-Canada reporter Bernard Drainville was objective in his coverage of Quebec society, or slanted towards separatists, doesn't really matter in the big picture, though. The main question is why Quebec separatists are allowed to even have political representation in the form of the Bloc and Parti Quebecois.

If home-grown neo-nazis ever magically morphed into a successful mainstream political party representing a white, Anglo-Saxon homeland in rural BC and Alberta, most Canadians outside of that area would rightly condemn it. The international community would have a fit.

Of course, such a scenario is only possible in fiction - and badly written fiction, at that. But in Quebec, a political movement that is essentially run on the same principle of volkish nationalism is seen as politically legitemate. Quebec separatist politicians not only get the respect of their constituents - their paychecks are funded by Canadian taxpayers.

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