Seven years ago I entitled my annual essay for our country’s birthday “State of the Dominion – 2018.” This was during the premiership of Captain Airhead, towards the end of his first term, and I noted that we were in the midst of a third “revolution within the form.” The first had taken place in the early twentieth century in the premiership of William Lyon Mackenzie King and the second from the mid-1960s to 1982 in the premierships of Lester Pearson and Pierre Trudeau. Captain Airhead is finally out of office, although the Liberal Party – the party that each of these men had led – remains in power, under the new leadership of Blofeld. So it is time to revisit the matter of the state of the Dominion.
The first
thing to be observed is that as we emerge from the Airhead premiership Canada
is in a far less worse condition than we could have anticipated going into that
premiership after the 2015 Dominion Election.
This does not mean that we are emerging unscathed, far from it.
On the
social/moral front alone, the progressive agenda has been horribly
advanced. In 2023 a bill banning
“conversion therapy” passed Parliament with unanimous support. While the expression “conversion therapy”
tends to conjure up the image of something similar to the Ludovico Technique
from A Clockwork Orange, the bill
banning it was worded so broadly that it essentially forbids the offering of
counseling to anyone seeking help in conforming their “sexual orientation”
and/or “gender identity” to the reality of their biological sex. Meanwhile, the progressive forces that
demanded this ban have insisted that the opposite sort of conversion therapy be
provided at the taxpayers’ expense to minors without their parents’
consent. The opposite sort of conversion
therapy is hormone therapy and surgery intended to conform biological sex, at
least in appearance, to “gender identity.”
Nor is this
the worst example of the advancement of the progressive social/moral agenda in
the Airhead years. That dishonour goes
to the aggressive promotion of the culture of death by Captain Airhead. There was little he could do in the way of
making abortion more available in Canada since the status quo going into his
premiership was the absence of any legal restrictions due to the failure of
Parliament to pass any after the Morgentaler
ruling in 1988 struck down the previous laws on the matter. He could and did waste tax dollars on
promoting abortion outside of Canada. It
was the euthanasia side of the culture of death, however, that will be
remembered as the darkest part of his legacy.
Captain Airhead became prime minister later in the year that the Supreme
Court struck down the Criminal Code’s prohibition against euthanasia and in the
first year of his premiership a bill that outright legalized it passed
Parliament. In the near-decade since,
further legislation, policy decisions and court rulings have expanded the
assisted suicide program dubbed MAID (Medical Assistance in Dying) and like
abortion, marketed by those in favour of it as a “health care” choice,
extending it far beyond the terminally ill.
In 2021 they got Parliament to pass a bill making it much easier to
obtain approval for MAID and extending it to those whom sane people would say
are most in need of being protected from it, that is, the mentally ill,
although this provision was delayed from coming into effect until the year
after next. In the meantime government
agencies that process requests for financial aid from, most notably, military
veterans, have recommended MAID as an alternative.
So no,
Canada did not emerge from the Airhead era unscathed, and wounds on other
fronts than the social/moral could be provided to further illustrate this. My point, however, is that Captain Airhead
did not do all the damage it looked like he was about to do at the beginning
of his premiership. This was not for
lack of intent or trying on his part. It
is partly due to the fact that he and his entire circle of associates were
grossly incompetent, an affliction not shared by previous revolutionaries such
as his own father or William Lyon Mackenzie King. It is partly due to the fact that the Canada
which the Fathers of Confederation bequeathed to us with her ancient
Imperial/Commonwealth heritage of parliamentary monarchy and Common Law rights
and freedoms, while weakened by these Liberal “revolutions within the form” was
still resilient enough to prevent Captain Airhead from doing his worst. It is partly due to the fact that most
Canadians have simply not succumbed to the brain rot that in its most recent
form has been dubbed “wokeness” to the extent that Captain Airhead and the
progressive commentariat all assumed they had.
The first
of these three factors needs nothing in the way of further commentary.
The second
factor may be disputed by neoconservatives (people who call themselves
conservatives even though they wish to replace our constitution, traditions,
and heritage with those of the United States or something more closely resembling
them) who over the last several years have chosen to express their frustration
with the Airhead Liberals by taking it out on the country with the claim that “Canada
is broken” but these are wrong. The
Fathers of Confederation built a far more resilient country than could be
ultimately broken by the likes of Captain Airhead. I attribute the neoconservative error in
about equal parts to their misguided preference for the American system and to
the sort of infantile thinking that sees every court ruling, election, or other
such public occurrence that does not go one’s way as showing the entire system
to be damaged beyond repair, which sort of thinking is by no means limited to
neoconservatives.
Of all
Captain Airhead’s bad acts, the worst was when he invoked the Emergencies Act
in 2022 to crush the Freedom Convoy Protest.
Unlike the types of protests he routinely supported, the Freedom Convey
did not involve the destruction or defacement of property, public or private,
violence, or riotous behaviour in general but was a true peaceful
demonstration. The trucker-protestors
converged on Ottawa, parked in the neighbourhood around the government
buildings, and basically threw a long, loud, party in the streets. The protest was entirely justified. It was in response to the Liberal government’s
having introduced new restrictions by removing the exemption to vaccine mandates
for cross-border truckers at the time when restrictions were generally being
rolled back, showing the government’s determination to milk the absurd bat flu
paranoia for as long as they could at the expense of the rights, freedoms, and livelihoods
of Canadians. There was no call for
bringing out the biggest weapon the government had at its disposal against the
protestors, the brutality with which the government broke up the protest was
the sort of thing one would expect from the Chinese or North Korean regimes,
and the ongoing legal persecution of the protest organizers is disgusting, to
say the least. Nevertheless, it could
have been a lot worse, and all the evidence indicates that Airhead and his
cronies intended to go much further. They
were forced to rescind the Emergencies Act, however, because the Senate was
about to vote against confirming their having invoked it, which would have made
their position much more difficult going into the mandatory inquiry that
followed. As for the inquiry itself,
while Justice Rouleau’s finding that the government had met the threshold
required for invoking the Act was absurd, Captain Airhead failed in his efforts
to turn the inquiry into a trial of the protesters’ actions rather than his
own, and when the Federal Court ruled on the same question a year later, they
found against the government.
That is
what the system working looks like. It
could have and should have worked better.
Ultimately, however, it worked.
That
Canadians do not share Captain Airhead’s “woke” views to the extent he always
assumed is a large part of the reason why he is no longer prime minister and
why the Liberal Party under Blofeld has taken several steps back from aggressive
promotion of the “woke” agenda.. Whether
this will be permanent or is only temporary while the forces of progressive
insanity regroup remains to be seen, but for now at least, the Liberal
government is focusing on matters that appeal to a wider base among Canadians
than the far left fringe. That something
like this would happen sooner or later was inevitable because an ideological
agenda based on maximizing every type of diversity except diversity of thought is
unsustainable. Towards the end of the
Airhead premiership, the left’s efforts to maximize diversity in the realm of
sex and gender were undermined by its simultaneous efforts to maximize
diversity in the realm of culture and race.
That this would happen was entirely predictable because the only way to
maximize diversity of culture and race in a Western society is by increasing
the number of people whose culture has not been so transformed by Modern
liberalism as to make it supportive of maximizing sex/gender diversity. Eventually the foreseeable clash occurred and
a sizeable portion of Canadians realized that Captain Airhead was pushing
diversity too far in both of these areas.
For the
immediately foreseeable future, it is likely that immigration levels will
remain higher than they ought to be but will cease to resemble overt efforts to
make Jean Raspail’s The Camp of the
Saints into a reality. Promotion of
the alphabet soup agenda will probably continue but it will be much lower key
than under Captain Airhead. That this is
the case is evident in the fact that the abuse of the sign of God’s covenant
with Noah was a lot less conspicuous last month than in the “month formerly
known as June” in previous years. The
same will be more or less true in other areas where Captain Airhead pushed his
agenda far beyond what the general public was willing to support him in.
In
conclusion, while Canada should be in a much better condition than she actually
is, she is far better off after a decade of Captain Airhead than could possibly
have been anticipated.
Happy
Dominion Day!
God Save
the King!
Happy Dominion Day! God save the King!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteHappy Dominion Day!
God save the King!
The Laurentians decided to self-correct. Happy Dominion Day, Gerry! God Save the King!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteThe self-correction was long overdue. Here's hoping and praying it lasts.
Happy Dominion Day!
God save the King!
Nice to have been reminded that the Senate can be at times a chamber of sober second thought, or at least in its capacity to do so, can thwart the arbitrary will of the government. The Senate, in the case of the imposition of the Emergency Act, fulfilled its function.
ReplyDeleteHappy Dominion Day, Gerry.
God save the King!
Thank you Thomas!
DeleteHappy Dominion Day!
God save the King!
Oops, my earlier comment turned out anonymous.
ReplyDeleteIt was shrouded by accident in a cloak of anonymity.
DeleteI hope you had a good Dominion Day Will.
Thanks Gerry, I did. Hope you did, too.
Delete