The Canadian Red Ensign

The Canadian Red Ensign
Showing posts with label Evelyn Waugh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evelyn Waugh. Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2025

A Surprisingly Good Start

Since last month’s Dominion election, Blofeld, who has succeeded Captain Airhead as both leader of the Liberal Party and prime minister of Canada, has made it very difficult for me to maintain my intense dislike of him.  Difficult, but not impossible.  He is, after all, the worst kind of banker, someone with a track record of supporting the same sort of goofy environmental and social causes as his predecessor, and worst of all, a Grit.  However, his reversal of the Liberal Party’s previous practice of urinating all over Canada’s Loyalist roots and heritage is much to be appreciated.  The decision to arrange for His Majesty, King Charles III to deliver the throne speech opening the forty-fifth Parliament in person was a wonderful move which I wholeheartedly applaud.

 

Of course I am not holding my breath in anticipation of Blofeld’s re-criminalizing or even placing restrictions on abortion, abolishing MAID, re-orienting government policy towards a firm defense of parental rights against deranged educators who think their calling is to teach children to be ashamed of Canada and her history, hate white people, and choose their own gender or a firm defense of law-abiding Canadians and their property against violent criminals, abandoning the failed harms reduction approach to drug abuse in favour of a sane prevention based approach, jettisoning the vile government policy that has been in place under both Liberal and Conservative governments since the first Trudeau premiership of tolerating or at time encouraging hatred towards specific groups – males, heterosexuals, people who identify as their actual sex, whites, Christians, and above all the combination of these – while protecting other groups – basically everyone else - from even having their feelings hurt by words they find offensive, or anything else of this sort.   

 

To be fair, had the Conservatives won, I would not have expected them to do many of these things either.  Evelyn Waugh said once that he was giving up voting because he had been voting Conservative for years and they failed to turn the clock back even a second.  The Canadian version of the party has not been any different, at least in my lifetime.  They have long ago forgotten what they are supposed to be for.  Earlier this week, when former leader Andrew Scheer was named interim leader of His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition until the party’s actual leader can return to the House via by-election, he said “The Conservative Party is the party of free trade.”  That would have come as news to Sir John A. Macdonald, the Right Honourable John G. Diefenbaker, and basically every Conservative prime minister prior to Brian Mulroney.

 

This Tuesday Blofeld met with Krasnov the Orange, who after fulfilling the prophecy of the wounded head of the beast last year became president of the United States for the second time.  Krasnov is the second Communist agent to have infiltrated the White House by means of the Republican party.  The first was Dwight Eisenhower, who in World War II sabotaged the Western forces so that Stalin’s could reach Berlin first, forcibly repatriated thousands of people who had fled Soviet tyranny and, most likely, had George Patton murdered to prevent exposure of his crimes.  Krasnov defended his obvious calls to make Canada the fifty-first state by talking about how it looked to him as a real estate developer which, of course, was what he was doing back before he became a television star.  Blofeld’s response, pointing out that “there are some places that are never for sale” and that Canada “is not for sale.  It won’t be for sale ever” was most appropriate.  Krasnov told him “never say never” and he replied that Canadians would not be changing their minds.

 

Was Krasnov’s “never say never” remark a James Bond reference?  It is one word short of the title of the 1983 Irvin Kershner directed remake of Thunderball. The Blofeld our new prime minister resembles, however, is Christoph Waltz who portrayed the character in Spectre (2015) and No Time To Die (2021), the only actor to portray him twice.  The Blofeld in Never Say Never Again was Max von Syndow, the Swedish actor who crossed over to the American film industry after making a name for himself in the films of Ingmar Bergman, by portraying our Lord in The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) in which two other then-future Blofelds appear - Donald Pleasence from You Only Live Twice (1967) portraying the devil and Telly Savalas from On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969) portraying Pontius Pilate.  Apparently Krasnov can’t keep his Blofelds straight.

 

Is Krasnov’s latest proposal, a 100% tariff on non-American films, a by-product of his ignorance of the basics of James Bond filmography?  That would make as much sense as his stated reasons for any of the other things he has done since regaining the White House.  In this case, I welcome his proposal.  If he goes through with it, other countries will be prompted to respond with retaliatory tariffs on American-made films.  Limiting the influence of Hollywood can only be a good thing.

 

Back to Blofeld, so far he has been doing much better as prime minister than I expected, although with as low expectations as I had that isn’t saying much.  Still, with His Majesty coming, for the first time in ages I am looking forward to an opening rather than a dissolution of Parliament.


God Save the King!

Friday, June 25, 2021

Abstract Flags

 

One of the bad habits of the age in which we live is the habit of turning abstract terms into flags, running them up the pole, and demanding that everybody salute them or be denounced as a traitor. 

 

This habit can be found on both sides of the political spectrum.   This is, for example, what neoconservatives do with the term “liberty” and its synonym “freedom”.   Up until about a century ago it was self-identified liberals who did this these terms but that is the nature of neoconservatism.   Irving Kristol defined a neoconservative as a “liberal who has been mugged by reality”.  Neoconservatism is yesterday’s liberalism.   Think back two decades to the events of 9/11 and the “War on Terror” that ensued.   The American President at the time, George W. Bush, his Cabinet, and his supporters all maintained that 9/11 had been an attack on American “liberty” by people who hated Americans for their “freedom” and that their “War on Terror” would be fought on behalf of said freedom.   They ran freedom up the flagpole, demanded that everyone salute, and denounced everyone that was not 100% behind everything they were doing as a traitor to liberty.

 

By turning “freedom” and “liberty” into flags, and proclaiming their allegiance to them, however, they avoided accountability for how their actions were affecting the actual freedoms and liberties of American citizens.   In order to fight the “War on Terror” on behalf of the abstract flag of “freedom”, they permanently and exponentially expanded the powers of their government and created a national surveillance state.   It is a strange sort of “freedom” and one that does not much resemble the traditional understanding of the word that can be defended in this way.  

 

This, of course, is the problem with this habit of making flags out of abstract terms.   Allegiance to the term as a flag is required of people, but it is all that is required, not any sort of consistent, intelligent, understanding of the term.

 

Progressives are just as prone to this bad habit as conservatives.   Indeed, they are much worse.    In the previous example it was noted that the abstraction the neoconservatives were saluting as a flag had originally been run up the pole by liberals, who are progressives and this is true of most of the abstractions that today’s conservatives salute.   Progressives are the ones who make the abstract terms into flags, then, when they have decided that the flag they were saluting yesterday is no longer “modern” (1), they abandon it to the conservatives and make a new one.   “Democracy” is an abstract flag that progressives created and neoconservatives adopted even though the progressives have not abandoned it.   Both sides frequently accuse the other of betraying “democracy”.   This is one reason, among many, why I try to avoid saluting this particular flag, and insist that I believe in the concrete institution of parliament under the reign of a royal monarch, that has proven itself through the test of time, rather than abstract ideal of democracy.

 

At the present moment the primary abstract flag that progressives are saluting and demanding that the rest of us show our allegiance to is that of “diversity”.   This, of course, raises the question of what kind of diversity is in question.   The term is used in a myriad of diverse contexts, from speaking of someone whose outfits are radically different from day to day as having a diverse wardrobe to a farmer who plants diverse crops as opposed to only wheat or only barley to my own use of the word at the beginning of this sentence.   The diversity that progressives demand our allegiance to today is a very specific kind of diversity.   It means diversity of the population in terms of categories of group identity.   Race and cultural ethnicity are the most obvious such categories.   Sex ought to be the least controversial such category, in that no human population could last longer than a generation that is entirely of one sex, and all societies except for mythical ones like the Amazons, have been sexually diverse in the traditional sense.   Progressives have turned it into the most controversial category, however, by demanding that everyone show their allegiance to diversity of “sexual orientation” and “gender identity”.

 

In practice, the progressive insistence that we all salute the flag of diversity translates into a requirement that we accept the propositions a) that diversity of this kind is an unmixed blessing to a society and b) the more diversity of this kind a society has the better off it will be.   Here again, we find the habit of making flags out of abstract ideas shutting down intelligent thought concerning those ideas.   Both propositions are obviously false.   Consider the first proposition.  The much more nuanced statement that there are positives and negatives to both cultural and racial heterogeneity (diversity) and homogeneity, that each conveys distinct advantages and disadvantages upon a society, and that the advantages and disadvantages of each must be weighed against those of the other can be defended intelligently.   So can the assertion that after such weighing, the advantages of diversity outweigh its disadvantages and the advantages of homogeneity, although the opposite assertion can also be intelligently defended.    The proposition that diversity of this kind is an unmixed blessing cannot be intelligently defended.  Even if it could, however, and further, we were to concede it to be the case, the second proposition, that the more diversity the better, would by no means follow from the first.   Plenty of things that are good in themselves turn bad when taken to excess.   Indeed, in classical Aristotelean ethics, vices (bad habits) are formed by indulging natural appetites that are good in themselves to excess, and in classical Christian theology heresies (serious doctrinal errors concerning tenets of the Gospel kerygma as summarized in the ancient Creeds) are formed by taking one tenet of the faith, true in itself, to excess.

 

More important, for the purposes of this discussion, than what is included in the “diversity” to which progressives demand our allegiance, is what is excluded.   It is quite clear, from the way progressives respond to those who dare to raise points such as those raised in the previous paragraph, that diversity of thought or opinion is not included in the diversity they praise and value so highly.   Indeed, this entire bad habit of turning an abstract idea into a flag is very inconsistent with the idea of diversity of thought or opinion.   Yet, for anyone who values freedom in the political sense as it was traditionally understood, this is surely the most important kind of diversity of all.   For that matter, for parliamentary government or democracy, in any sense of the word that is consistent with a free society, to function, diversity of thought must be the most important kind of diversity.

 

While this does provide a further illustration of how progressives, in raising new abstract flags, abandon those they saluted in days gone by, it has long been observed that even when liberals, the progressives of yesterday, expressed a belief in diversity of thought, their practice often contradicted it.   Remember that famous line of William F. Buckley Jr.’s “Liberals claim to want to give a hearing to other views, but then are shocked and offended to discover there are other views”?  He made this statement, in one form or another, numerous times, and I don’t know when he first said it, but the oldest version of which I am aware comes from his Up From Liberalism, first published in 1959.   “Duke” Morrison, the legendary actor who under the stage name John Wayne starred in countless films from The Big Trail in 1930 until The Shootist in 1976, in an interview with Tony Macklin in 1975 said:

 

I have found a certain type calls himself a liberal.   Now I always thought I was a liberal.   I came up terribly surprised one time when I found out that I was a right-wing, conservative extremist, when I listened to everybody’s point of view that I ever met, and then decided how I should feel.  But this so-called new liberal group, Jesus, they never listen to your point of view and they make a decision as to what you think and they are articulate enough and in control of enough of the press to force that image out for the average person.

 

If this could be said of liberals back in 1959 and 1975 it is all the more true of today’s progressives.   

 

One way in which this is evident is in their exclusionary rhetoric.   Progressives, especially those who hold some sort of office of civic authority, have become increasingly prone to issuing proclamations about how such-and-such a thing they disapprove of has “no place” in our community and society.  It would be one thing if what they were so excluding were things like murder, robbery, and rape which would meet with broad disapproval in pretty much any society in any time and place.   In most cases, however, they are speaking of some “ism” or “phobia”, usually one that has been that has been newly coined.   What these neologisms have in common is that each of them is defined in a special way.   On the surface, these “isms” and “phobias” appear to refer to varieties of crude bigotry but they are applied by progressives in actual usage so as to include all forms of dissent from the sacred progressive dogma that identity-group diversity is always good and that more identity-group diversity is always better, no matter how respectfully and intelligently that dissent is worded.   A couple of months ago the Orthosphere blogger who writes under the nom de plume Bonald after the reactionary philosopher who wrote against the French Revolution and its aftermath provided us with some disturbing insights into the implications of the growth of this sort of rhetoric.

 

Another way in which the progressive Left’s increasing rejection of the most important form of diversity for those who want to live in a free society with a functioning parliamentary government is in its use of the terms “denial” and “denier” as derogatory epithets for those who disagree with its dogmas.

 

This has become fairly standard practice whenever progressives run into disagreement on a wide assortment of matters.   The implications of this use of these terms are that either a) what progressives are asserting is so self-evidently obvious that one would have to be stubbornly, stupidly and willfully ignorant to disagree, b) we are under a moral obligation to believe what the progressives say and therefore are committing a moral offense in disagreeing, or c) a combination of a) and b).    Since progressives are not the authorities of a religious communion to which we all belong and have no legitimate authority to set dogma, the second of these implications is absurd.  Since progressives use the “denial” and “denier” epithets to avoid answering well-reasoned and evidence backed arguments against their positions the first of these implications is also ridiculous.

 

This becomes quite comical when the progressive assertions pertain to matters that have a large scientific component.  For decades now, anyone who has questioned the progressive narrative that states that due mostly to the emissions of greenhouse gasses by livestock and human industry the average temperature of the earth has risen and cataclysmic climate change is impending unless the population of the world is radically reduced, we all become vegans, and we stop using fossil fuels for energy has been labelled a “denier”.   A rather convenient way of avoiding answering difficult questions such as “why should climate change be assumed to be for the worse rather than the better, especially since historically human beings have thrived better in warm periods than cold ones?” and “why, since the earth’s climate has hardly been constant throughout history to the point that advocates of your theory have stooped to doctoring graphs of the historical data to hide this fact, should we expect it to remain constant now and be alarmed about the observed rise of about a degree in the earth’s average temperature over a century?”   In the last year and a half we have seen progressives accuse anyone who questions whether it is either good or necessary to sabotage the economies of every country in the world, drive small businesses into bankruptcy while enriching the billionaires who control the big online businesses, cancel our constitutional rights and freedoms, brainwash everyone into looking upon other human beings primarily as sources of contagion, exponentially accelerate the problem of people substituting their smartphones and computers for real, in-person social contact, establish anarcho-tyrannical police states in which acts that are bona in se and absolutely essential to healthy social and communal life are turned into mala prohibita crimes and hunted down with greater severity than real crimes that are actually mala in se, and bribing and blackmailing people into accepting an experimental new gene therapy in violation of the Nuremberg Protocol, all in order to combat a pandemic involving a virus that has proven to be less lethal than the vast majority of previous pandemics for which no such extreme measures were ever considered, let alone taken, of being a “COVID denier”.    To be fair, plenty of “conservative” political leaders, including the premiers of my own province (Manitoba), Alberta, and Upper Canada have all done the same, but the progressives have been much more monolithic about it.   The reason this is so comical is because real “science”, as anybody who understands the word knows, does not make dogmatic statements and therefore admits of no “denial”.   The comedy is greatly enhanced when those denouncing “COVID deniers” or “climate change deniers” advise us to “follow the science” or “listen to the science” as if “science” made dogmatic proclamations, or when they say “the science is settled” when, by the prevalent litmus test of the philosophy underlying science, for a theory to be scientific, it must be falsifiable, and therefore, science can never be settled.   Less funny and more sad, is when someone like Anthony Fauci or Theresa Tam admits the real nature of science, that it is always evolving, but uses this to back up a claim to absolute obedience of the nature of “you should unquestioningly obey my orders at any given moment, even if it contradicts what I told you to do the moment before” as if he, or allegedly she in the case of Tam, were Petruchio and the rest of us were Katherina the shrew.

 

It is far less comical when progressives impose a narrative interpretation on their country’s history in order to undermine the legitimacy of their country and its institutions and attack its historical figures, and then accuse those who point out the holes in their narrative of “denial”.   In this case, the progressives are walking in the footsteps of the French Jacobins, the Chinese Maoists, and the Khmer Rouge all of whom wrought tremendous devastation, destruction, and disaster upon their countries by insisting that their history was irredeemably corrupt and needed to be razed to the ground, along with all of the countries’ institutions.   This is what the progressives that infest Canada’s university faculties and newsmedia, both print and electronic, have been attempting to do in Canada for a couple of decades with their interpretation of the Indian Residential Schools.   In the real past, the past as it actually happened, these were boarding schools, initially founded by Christian Churches as a missionary outreach to Native Indians to provide their children with the kind of education they would need if they were to thrive in the modern economy.   The Indian chiefs of the nineteenth century wanted just this kind of education for their children and so, at their insistence, the stipulation that it would be provided by the Dominion government was included in all of the treaties.   Accordingly, the government funded and expanded these schools, as well as making provisions for day schools on the reserves.   If Indian parents neglected to send their kids to the day schools, the government would make the kids go to the residential schools, but initially it was mostly the kids of the chiefs and the elders of the bands who were sent to the schools at their own parents’ insistence.   By a century later, however, the government was making these schools serve the double function of schools and foster group homes for Indian children whom child welfare social workers had removed from their homes to protect them from such things as physical abuse.   Through utterly contemptible methodology, including a “victim centred” approach to testimony that could just as easily have been used to produce an equally damning picture of the schools to which wealthy, elite, white kids were sent, or for that matter schools of any sort because for any school you can always find alumni for whom the experience was something horrible to be “survived”, and which is completely in violation of the standards by which truth and guilt are assessed in the courtroom and the historical process, progressives spun a cock and bull narrative in which all the bad experiences in the schools were made out to have been the intent of the schools’ founders, administrators, and the Canadian government, and the  purpose of the schools was interpreted as the elimination of Native Indian cultural identities.   The progressives then used this narrative interpretation to claim that all of this was the moral equivalent of what the Third Reich did in its prison camps in World War II or what was done to the Tutsis in the last days of the Rwandan Civil war, which would have been a reprehensible claim even if the facts admitted of no other interpretation than that of their narrative, which is not even close to being the case.   The progressives insist that everything else in the history of Canada, especially anything traditionally seen as a great and positive achievement of either English or French Canadians, must take a backset to their interpretation of the Indian Residential Schools and that Canadians of all ethnicities, but especially English and French Canadians, must perpetually live in shame and submit to having their country “cancelled”.   In the last month or so the progressives have kicked this up a notch by claiming falsely that the discovery of the location of abandoned cemeteries on the grounds of the Kamloops Residential School – and more recently the Marieval Residential School in Saskatchewan – was a “shocking” new discovery (that such cemeteries were to be found has been known all along – an entire volume of the TRC Final Report is dedicated to this) and, irresponsibly to the point of criminal defamation of past Canadian governments, the Churches and the school administrators, faculty, and staff, that the graves constitute evidence of mass murder, the least plausible explanation, by far, of the deaths of the children.

 

For several weeks now Chris Champion, author, historian, and editor of the history journal the Dorchester Review, one of the few publications in Canada still worth reading, has been attacked by progressives over tweets made on the journal’s Twitter account challenging this narrative.   Sean Carleton, who is associated with the Indigenous Studies program at the University of Manitoba, accused the Dorchester Review of being a “straight up garbage, genocide denialism, outfit” for agreeing with the Final Report of the TRC that “the cause of death was usually tuberculosis or some other disease”.   Janis Irwin, the Deputy Whip for Alberta’s NDP, also denounced Champion as “reprehensible and disgusting” for expressing this agreement with the TRC’s Final Report, and demanded that Jason Kenney scrap the K-9 social studies curriculum on the preparation of which, Champion had advised the Albertan government.   While this sort of thing is to be expected from those of Carleton’s and Irwin’s ilk, about a week ago the CBC, the Crown broadcaster paid for out of the taxes of all Canadians, ran a story by Janet French of CBC Edmonton,  full of quotes from people such as the Alberta NDP Education Critic, Sarah Hoffman, Nicole Sparrow who is press secretary to Kenney’s Education Minister, Kisha Supernant who is an archeology professor at the University of Manitoba, and Daniel Panneton of the Sarah and Chaim Neuberger Holocaust Education Centre in Toronto, all expressing how appalled they were at Champion’s disagreement with the progressive, Canada-bashing, narrative, this time in an article that appeared on Dorchester Review’s website under his byline on June 17th and which pointed out just how inappropriate the comparisons the narrative makes between the residential schools and what happened in Europe in the 1940s are.    

 

In his article, which is well-worth reading in its entirety, Champion wrote:

 

It is ridiculous to compare organizations of poor Oblates to machine-gun-toting Einsatzgruppen and Soviet NKVD.   And it is equally false and unjust to act as if every single nun or priest or brother or Methodist minister and his wife was a child-abuser or sexual predator. 

 

All of this is absolutely true and, it is worth noting, the second sentence is quite consistent with the TRC Report in which the testimony of those who experienced sexual abuse is overwhelmingly of the type in which older students were the abusers, sadly the common experience of boarding school students of all types.  Which is why all of Champion’s detractors quoted in the CBC article do not answer his arguments but merely accuse him of bigoted attitudes and “denial”.   “One photo of smiling children does not negate thousands of survivors’ stories”, which Kisha Supernant is quoted as having said, is the closest thing to an attempt at an answer that appears, although anyone who reads Champion’s article from beginning to end – since the CBC article appeared the same day it is questionable as to whether those quoted had done so – will know that nothing in the article negates the testimony of those whose experience at the residential schools was bad, only the spin by placed on that testimony by the progressive narrative, a narrative, incidentally, which itself negates the testimony of no small number of alumni of these schools whose experience was positive.

 

The progressives who have been attacking Champion and the Dorchester Review talk as if they think that someone who tells a story of having suffered victimization, especially of the sort that can be attributed to some prohibited “ism” or “phobia”, has a right to have “their truth” in current progressive lingo accepted without question or cross-examination.  A certain type of feminist makes this claim explicitly with regards to females who claim to have been sexually harassed or assaulted.   This sort of thinking runs contrary to the principles of courtroom justices, such as the right of the accused to confront and cross-examine his accuser, and the right of the accused to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, principles which exist for very good reasons, to prevent courts of law from being used as instruments of abuse by false accusers.   This kind of talk, however, is a rhetorical device that dishonestly equates criticism of the progressives’ ideas, interpretations, and narratives with criticism of personal testimony incorporate into these narratives.  

 

In all of these examples of progressive dismissal of their critics as “deniers” we can see how progressives have moved increasingly further away from the diversity of thought and opinion that is the most important diversity as far as the freedom of society and the functioning of parliamentary government goes.    In the last example, the diversity of thought they condemn as “denial” is disagreement with their narrative interpretation of the history of the residential schools, a narrative interpretation that they are presently using to attack the foundations and institutions of Canada, an attack which if it succeeds and follows its historical precedents will not bode well for freedom and parliamentary government in this country.   This makes the way progressives have run “diversity” up the flagpole and are constantly demanding that we salute it into a kind of sick joke.

 

Perhaps it is time we all got over this bad habit of turning abstract ideas into flags.

 

 

 

 (1)   In Evelyn Waugh’s Black Mischief, (1932) Basil Seal, having fled England to avoid the duties his mother was insisting he take up, is invited to help modernize the country of Azania by its Emperor Seth, an old Oxford friend of his.   He tells Seth “we’ve got a much easier job than we should have had fifty years ago.  If we’d had to modernize a country then it would have meant constitutional monarchy, bi-cameral legislature, proportional representation, women’s suffrage, independent judicature, freedom of the Press, referendums…” to which the Emperor asks “what is all that” and is told “just a few ideas that have ceased to be modern”.

Friday, May 21, 2021

The Holy Land Returns to the Old Normal

 

It would appear that a part of the “old normal” has finally returned.   Unfortunately, it is not the part where we all go about living our lives, being real families and neighbourhoods and communities and societies again instead of a pack of pathetic cowards so terrified by relentless media propaganda about a viral bogeyman that we willingly surrender all of this, along with the basic rights and freedoms of our friends and neighbours, and meekly accept massive government overreach in the hopes that the state, by preventing us from living our lives, might save them.   No, instead it is the part where Jews and Arabs are killing each other in the Middle East and the newsmedia is obsessing about this again.

 

Even though Israel, the Gaza Strip and West Bank, and the Arab nations are a continent and an ocean removed from us, it has long seemed that we in North America are for some reason required to pick a side in this conflict.   This is most likely a result of our unhealthy dependence on the new communications technology that, as Marshall McLuhan could see as far back as 1962, have turned the world into one big “global village”.    It makes everybody’s business our own even when it ought not to be and it would be for the best of all involved if it were not.   Consequently, everybody you speak to seems to believe either that Israel has the right to do whatever she wants and therefore is and always has been perfectly justified in everything she has done in her conflict with the Palestinians and her Arab neighbours or that Palestinian terrorists are all warm and fuzzy, cuddly innocents whose sole desire is to live in peace except the Big Bad Israel keeps huffing and puffing and blowing their houses down.   Both positions are, of course, utterly ridiculous.

 

While some make the argument that the Israeli-Arab conflict goes back to Genesis, to the rivalries between Isaac and Ishmael and later between Jacob and Esau, there seems to be more of reading current events into the text of Scripture in this than sound exegesis.   The personal and bitter rivalry between Jacob and Esau, while resolved upon the former’s return from Padan-aram, foreshadowed the later conflict between the post-Exodus Israelites and the Edomites.  What was left of the Edomites were forcibly converted to Second Temple Judaism in the Maccabean period.   Anyone descended from Esau today is far more likely to be a Jew than an Arab.   The Arabs are traditionally regarded as having descended from Ishmael and there is simply no support in the Scriptures for the idea of a perpetual conflict between the descendants of Isaac and Ishmael that would outlast that between Jacob and Esau and extend to the present day.

 

In actuality, the roots of the Israeli-Arab conflict can be found in the so-called Enlightenment in the early period of the Modern Age.   Advocates of the “Enlightenment” characterize it as a revolt against superstition and embrace of reason but it was nothing of the sort.  In actuality, it was the birth of a new superstition – a superstitious confidence in human ability to understand and explain the world through his own rational powers and to use that understanding to re-fashion the world into a Paradise of his own making.   What was embraced in the “Enlightenment” was not reason but rationalism, which is itself fundamentally superstitious.   Closely related to rationalism as a child of the “Enlightenment” was its twin superstition of scientism.    

 

No, I have not forgotten my topic.   The reason the “Enlightenment” was the source of the Israeli-Arab conflict is because of the influence of its pernicious superstitions, especially scientism, on both Jews and the adherents of the dominant religions of the societies in which Jews lived. 

 

Between the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70 and the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948, Jews, adherents of the religion Judaism, lived entirely as a minority religious and ethnic group in the larger civilizations of other people and other religions.    For the vast majority of Jews, the civilizations in which they lived were the two that belonged to the other two religions that claim descent from the Abrahamic faith.   Christendom was the civilization that was the successor to the old Roman Empire and which has in recent centuries, due to the influence of the “Enlightenment” and modernity in general, degenerated into what we know call Western Civilization.   Its dominant religion, obviously, was Christianity.   In the civilization of the Turkish or Ottoman Empire, Islam was the dominant religion.    The relationship between the Jews and the adherents of the majority religions in these civilizations was marked by tension and often overt hostility that periodically erupted into violence.   While historically a large degree of mistrust has been the unfortunate norm between people living in this sort of diaspora and those of the larger societies hosting them, in the case of the Jews in Christendom the nature of the theological and religious disagreement between the two greatly exacerbated the situation.   The basic disagreement was one about which there could be no compromise.   Either Jesus of Narazeth is the Christ or He was not.   You cannot have it both ways.   If Christians are right, and we are, that Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ, then to reject Him as such is the ultimate rejection of God.   If Jews are right, and they are not, that Jesus of Nazareth was not the Christ, then we who accept Him as such commit blasphemy.   There is no middle ground here.

 

Those of a progressive bent, that is to say true believers in the “Enlightenment” superstitions of rationalism and scientism, who have all of the “Enlightenment”’s prejudices against orthodox religion, its authoritative texts and interpretive traditions of the same, would be inclined to seize upon everything I have just said as vindicating their cause.   The traditional religious beliefs of Jews and Christians, they would say, caused the historical enmity between the two groups, so if you get rid of these and replace them with reason and science, the enmity will vanish and the two will finally establish peace and get along.   History, however, tells a different story.

 

By the nineteenth century, while former Christendom remained churchgoing for the most part, faith in the teachings and beliefs of orthodox Christianity was in serious decline.  Similarly, the spread of “Enlightenment” superstition had broken the virtually absolute authority that the Talmud and its rabbinic interpreters had held over Jewish communities since the destruction of the Second Temple.   While many of the new non-believing “Christians” and secular “Jews” were willing to take a more liberal, in the better sense of open-minded and generous, attitude towards the other, many others sought new “rational” and “scientific” arguments to support their dislike of the other.   Inevitably, those seeking such arguments turned to a concept then prominent in the biological and anthropological sciences, that of race, that is to say, groups distinguishable within mankind by shared characteristics passed down from common ancestral stock.     When this concept is used to explain the hostility between Jews and Gentiles, however, it becomes an argument that they are natural enemies, biologically predetermined to hate each other, neither of which can ever trust the other, and who are incapable of peacefully co-existing within the same territory and under the same government.   Clearly this kind of argument carried with it the potential for generating a conflict between Jews and Gentiles that would be far greater and more destructive than the old conflict between Jews and Christians over religious doctrine ever had been.   Indeed, with the development of these arguments came a tide of publications purporting to document the undesirable and inferior racial traits of either Jews or Gentiles depending upon who was doing the writing and publishing.

 

Towards the end of the nineteenth century two new political movements arose, Zionism and anti-Semitism.   Counter-intuitive as this will no doubt seem to those only familiar with the post-World War II usage of these terms, these movements were often allies rather than enemies, sharing many of the same ideas and even in some cases the same members.   The goal of the Zionist movement was to establish a sovereign Jewish nation-state in a Jewish homeland.   The goal of the anti-Semitic movement was to free Gentile countries from Jewish influence.   It hardly takes a genius to see how these two ends coincide.   At their best, both movements wished to avoid the ugly outcome to which the racialization of Jewish-Gentile conflict was leading.   At their worst they were expressions of that very racialization.  While pre-Zionist discussions had taken place earlier in the century, the Dreyfus Affair of 1894 was the immediate motivation that turned the discussion into active organization.   Alfred Dreyfus, a Captain in the French artillery, had been accused of treason.   He was arrested, convicted, and sent to Devil’s Island.    The question of his guilt or innocence became a matter of hot dispute.   There was evidence pointing to another officer named Esterhazy as having committed the crime but those who had convicted Dreyfus were reluctant to reverse their decision.  Those who were convinced of his innocence long before it was generally acknowledged maintained that he had been railroaded because of his Jewish ancestry.   There is little to no evidence that this was the case, although prejudices of this nature were incorporated into some of the commentary of those who took the “Dreyfus is guilty” side in the dispute.   The advocates of Dreyfus’ innocence who made this accusation of anti-Jewish prejudice against the French military authorities and who would find their prophet in the novelist and playwright Émile Zola, themselves had the ulterior motive of driving from the Third Republic the last vestiges of the old, pre-Revolutionary, Catholic and royalist, regime, whose remaining base of strength was in French military.   Whether intended or not, the controversy shaped the next generation of French literature.   It is, for example, the single most important event in the historical background of Marcel Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu (1913-1927), in which it emerges from time to time into the forefront of the main story.   It was very early in the controversy that Theodor Herzl and his colleagues seized the opportunity it had created to organize their movement.   For a good history of all of this see Geoffrey Wheatcroft’s The Controversy of Zion: Jewish Nationalism, the Jewish State, and the Unresolved Jewish Dilemma, Perseus Books, 1996.

 

The formation of the Zionist movement, obviously, eventually led to the creation of the modern state of Israel.   It would never have been formed apart from the intellectual history starting from the “Enlightenment” summarized above.   Apart from the dependence of Zionism upon post-“Enlightenment” thought for most of its ideas, the movement was primarily one among secular Jews and, indeed, was always opposed by the strictest of religious Jews on the grounds that it was an attempt to do what only the Messiah could rightly accomplish.   This was why the movement was originally open to other options for the location of the Jewish homeland than the Holy Land and, indeed, when the movement finally settled on Palestine it was more for practical than theological reasons.   The timing, however, while right for the ultimate success of the project, was completely off for establishing healthy, peaceful co-existence with their new neighbours.

 

When the Zionist movement began, Palestine had been part of the Ottoman Empire for centuries.   Jews had always been present as a religious minority in the Ottoman Empire.   Their relations with the Muslim majority of that Empire had historically been less marked by mutual animosity than their relations with Christians in Christendom.    There are obvious theological and historical reasons why this would be the case.   Islam and rabbinic Judaism had not started out together in first century Palestine, late in the Second Temple period, both claiming to be the true heirs of the faith of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and the Sinaitic religion of Moses, but dividing from each other over the crucial question of whether Jesus of Nazareth is the Messiah promised by God through the prophets of ancient Israel or not, with the Christians rightly taking the affirmative and the Jews wrongly taking the negative, but neither being much inclined to a civil "lets agree to disagree" approach.  Prior to Zionism, the most tense moment between Jews and Muslims was when Islam was just getting started.  Muhammad, having been rejected and ridiculed in his own home town of Mecca, had fled to Yathrib which accepted him, and which he turned into his base of Medina.   At the time, he expected that Jews and Christians would be more accepting of his self-proclaimed status as Prophet than the pagans of his home town, which is why the earliest verses in the Koran are generally positive towards the "peoples of the book".   He was disillusioned when he discovered that the three most prominent Jewish clans in Yathrib rejected him.   He ordered them expelled, and in the case of one of them later chased them down and slaughtered all the males.   Apart from this nastiness, however, the relationship between the Jews and Muslims had been historically rather irenic.    Another important reason for this, and the one which is most relevant for our purposes, is that the Islamic world for a large part of this period had been under the rule of the Ottoman sultan who had the civil interest of maintaining domestic peace between the Muslim majority and the religious minorities of his empire.  When Zionism was born, Sultan Abdul Hamid II was still on the throne.   He refrained from giving his support for the Zionist cause on the reasonable grounds that it would divide his empire but the First Aliyah still took place in his reign.  In 1909, the revolutionary Young Turks who deposed him embraced the Zionist cause.   However, as is often the case with revolutionary movements that overturn long established dynasties, the Young Turks split into rival factions, one of which seized total power over the Empire and formed a one-party state that was short-lived due to its disastrous policies which brought the Empire into the First World War, which led to the Empire being defeated and broken up.

 

The fall of the Ottoman Empire removed the power that, belligerent as it often had been to its neighbours, especially Christendom, had maintained order, domestic peace, unity and civilization in the region of the Levant for centuries.   This created a vacuum.   The conquering Allied powers, while they wanted order, peace, and civilization for the region, were unable to fill that vacuum.  After the Armistice, the region was temporarily put under military government jointly administered by the British, the French, and the Arab armies that had rebelled against the Turks and fought alongside the Allies, and following the Paris Peace Conference and the formation of Woodrow Wilson’s League of Nations, the region was divided, with Britain and France each holding mandates from the League to govern portions of it temporarily as they prepared the peoples of the region for self-government, while the old Arab dynasties that had long been regional powers such as the House of Saud and the House of Hashim consolidated their strength in preparation for independence.    This may be beside the point, but I will point out here that the House of Saud proved more successful at this over the long run than the older Hashemite dynasty, successfully bringing more regions, including the Hejaz that had been the original realm of the Hashemites into its kingdom, whereas the House of Hashim began the post-World War I period reigning over several Arab kingdoms, but has long since been reduced to that of Jordan, the others having been turned into strong-man dictatorships that call themselves republics through the pernicious meddling of both the Americans and the Communists.   Since the House of Saud began its rise to power centuries ago by forging an alliance with the Wahhabi movement within the Sunni sect of Islam, a movement that could be very roughly said to be the equivalent of the Puritan movement within Protestant Christianity and which is believed by many to be far more prone to waging jihad than other branches of Islam, and retained that alliance ever since, while the Kingdom of Jordan has long been one of the safest, most stable, and peaceful of the Arab countries, this is perhaps not that irrelevant  after all.   More importantly, however, the presence of the new Arab nationalism that had sparked the rebellion against the Ottomans in the absence of a single, long-established, power over the entire region, ensured that as the Zionist movement set about establishing an independent Jewish state it would meet a hostile reception from its would-be neighbours.   The basic idea of Arab nationalism was that Arab peoples in Arab lands should be governed by Arab rulers instead of by others.   Initially the target of Arab nationalism was Turkish rule, but free of this after centuries, nationalist Arabs were not about to accept the creation of a state in their own backyard in which Arabs would be governed by Jews.

 

All of this became Britain’s problem because it was to the United Kingdom that the League mandate to govern Palestine fell.   Complicating matters was the fact that the United Kingdom had formally expressed its support to both the Zionist movement and the Arab nationalists during the war and was now expected to try and live up to her commitments to both.   In the interwar period the Zionist movement kicked into high gear building the civil infrastructure of what would become the state of Israel.   The Haganah, for example, was formed in 1920 to defend the Jewish settlements of the Yishuv against Arab attacks and it became the Israeli Defence Force after 1948.   As the Zionists were preparing for statehood they naturally wanted and needed more people and asked the British authorities to open wide the door for massive Jewish immigration to Palestine.  Britain, however, recognizing that this would be like striking a flint within a warehouse of gunpowder, slammed the door shut instead.   The timing could hardly have been worse as far as ex post facto optics goes.   It was the spring of 1939, the eve of the Second World War, a time in which the Jews of Europe, in anticipation of the conquests of Adolf Hitler who preached the most extreme form of anti-Semitism conceivable, were seeking to flee for their lives in droves (although most preferred the United States as a destination over settling in Palestine).

 

The Zionists in Palestine were understandably perturbed about this.   The response of some of them, however, set an example that would come back to bite them decades later.   Zionism, it needs to be noted here, was not a monolithic movement.   While the goal of establishing a sovereign Jewish homeland was common to them all, Zionism consisted of several factions with radically different ideas as to what the Jewish state should look like, and, in some cases, the means acceptable to achieving it.   The mainstream of Zionism in the period of the British Mandate wanted a Western European style liberal democracy, with some wanting American style capitalism, others, who would have been the majority at the time, preferring social democracy or even outright socialism.   The revisionist Zionists, however, led by Vladamir or Ze’ev Jabotinksy, a Russian-born Zionist who in addition to being an activist was also a brilliant man of letters, being an accomplished journalist, translator, novelist and poet, wanted to establish Israel as an ethno-state, and to extend its boundaries well beyond what mainstream Zionists wanted, and even beyond the limits of the territory controlled by both kingdoms in the Old Testament.   Like the mainstream Zionists, Jabotinsky was furious when the British restricted Jewish immigration to Palestine in 1939, but he took it much further, calling for the Jews of Palestine to take up arms against Britain and seize their independence by force.   He even had a private army at his disposal with which he made serious plans to put this into practice.   His follower Avraham Tehomi, originally a member of the Jerusalem Hagenah, had grown disillusioned with what he saw as that organization’s half-measures to protect the Jewish settlers from Arab violence, and had formed an alternative, underground, paramilitary group that he originally called Hagenah Beta, but soon renamed Irgun Tzeva’i Le’umi (National Military Organzation), more commonly called just the Irgun or “Etzel” (from the acronym IZL) that had far fewer compunctions about the kind of violence to which it was willing to stoop.   To put it bluntly, it was a terrorist organization.

 

When World War II broke out, Jabotinksy, who had been named Supreme Commander of the Irgun in 1937 following a re-organization after half the group had defected back to the Haganah, set aside his plans for an insurgence against the British because he believed that the war against the Nazis took priority.   The more extreme among his followers thought differently.   Around the time that Jabotinksy died in 1940, Avraham Stern founded a splinter organization that he called the Lohamei Herut Israel (Fighters for Israeli Freedom), which like the parent organization was better known by the acronymic Lehi or simply “the Stern Gang”.   The two terrorist groups divided precisely over Jabotinsky’s policy, continued by the Irgun after his death, of prioritizing the war with the Third Reich over the war with independence.   Stern of the exact opposite opinion.   I mean that quite literally.   He insisted that the British were the only real enemy, and in early 1941 sent emissaries to Hitler offering the German dictator his friendship, alliance, and support in his war against the British Commonwealth if he, that is Hitler, would assist in repatriating the Jews to Palestine and support Israeli independence there.   In this alliance proposal from the most extreme of Zionists to the most extreme of anti-Semites, the original convergence of these two movements became the ultimate caricature of itself!   What, exactly, the German tyrant thought of this, we don’t know.   There is no record of any response.

 

When the war ended, of course, with the defeat of the Third Reich and the Axis and the Pyrrhic victory of the British (the real victor was what Evelyn Waugh dubbed “the Modern Age at arms”, which originally looked like the Nazi-Soviet alliance, but ended up being the American-Soviet alliance) the source of the disagreement between the two organizations was eliminated and the Irgun joined the Lehi in waging a war of terror against the British, consisting of high profile assassinations and bombings, that ultimately proved successful when the United Kingdom declared that its mandate had come to an end and handed the matter over to the United Nations, which portioned the land into Israel and Palestine, most of the latter of which ended up being absorbed into the former when the league of Arab nations, most of which had attained their own independence only a few years earlier, teamed up to invade Israel upon her day of independence, and had their arses dramatically handed to them.

 

The Arab countries were slow to learn the lesson of 1948, which was, of course, that they could not win in a direct war against Israel.   They fought against Israel again in the Six-Days War of 1967 – although in this case Israel had begun the hostilities with a pre-emptive airstrike that took out the Egyptian air force – and in 1973 when the Syrian-Egyptian alliance attacked Israel on Yom Kippur.   No such war was ever attempted again, probably because the Americans made it clear in the 1973 war that they would intervene on Israel’s behalf should anything of the sort happen again.   The Arabs should have been able to guess that things were heading in that direction as far back as 1967, for in the course of the Six-Days War Israel deliberately attacked an American naval research ship, the USS Liberty, and got away with it because the American government refused to conduct a proper inquiry into the incident.    See James M. Ennes Jr., Assault on the Liberty, Random House, 1979.   Anyone wishing to understand why need look no further than the remarks of Barry M. Goldwater, the long-serving Republican Senator for Arizona, in his second autobiography co-written with Jack Casserly.   He said that as an American Senator he “was never put under greater pressure than by the Israeli lobby” and that said lobby “is the most influential crowd in Congress and America by far.”  (Goldwater, 1988, p. 21)   As he described the pressure, the lobbyists would bring old Jewish friends of his from Arizona to Washington, whenever a vote that somehow affected Israel came up, in order to pressure him to vote in what they saw to be Israel's interest.   According to Goldwater, who despite his last name was not Jewish himself (his father was Jewish but he was raised in his mother’s Episcopalian faith), he always firmly told them that he would vote what he believed to be in the interest of America and her constitution, which were the things that he lay awake worrying about at night, rather than Israel’s.   Other American Congressmen and Senators have testified to having put under a lot more intense pressure than this by the same lobby, including tactics that most people would call bullying or intimidation.  Plenty of examples can be found in They Dare to Speak Out: People and Institutions Confront Israel’s Lobby, Lawrence Hill, 1985, by former Republican Congressman for Illinois, Paul Findley.  

 

Long before the Arab countries learned this lesson, they had learned a different lesson from the experience of the Irgun and Lehi.   When, therefore, the initial Arab-Israeli War of 1948 ended in their being routed, most of the territory allotted to the Palestinian Arabs being annexed by Israel, and thousands of Palestinian Arabs being driven into exile, rather than comfortably re-settle the refugees in their own countries, they kept them in miserable refugee camps in order to turn them into embittered radicals willing to wage a proxy war on behalf of the Arab powers conducted by means of terrorism against Israel.   In 1964, the Arab League formed the Palestinian Liberation Organization, which would wage just such a war against Israel for decades.   The tactic worked for them as it had for the Zionist terrorists in the 1940s.   In 1993, Israel signed the American-brokered Oslo Accords with this organization, in which they granted it official recognition and the foundation for establishing the Palestinian Authority was laid.

 

Before that happened, however, the Israeli government had committed the most boneheaded move in all of its history.   The PLO was a secular organization.  Its ideology was informed by the secular Arab nationalism discussed earlier.    Its commitment to the destruction of Israel, therefore, had no underlying basis in immutable religious dogma, and therefore was open to negotiation, as history bore out when the organization acknowledged Israel’s right to exist.  The Israeli government, however, latched on to the idea that the influence of the PLO among Palestinian Arabs could be countered by promoting an Islamic revival among the same.   So, after the Yom Kippur War it began supporting and funding the charity that Ahmed Yassin had founded on behalf of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood which had already begun a mosque-building campaign throughout the Occupied Territories, especially Gaza.   They realized their mistake in 1987, when Sheik Yassin organized the large following he had developed into Hamas, and declared the First Intifada.   Hamas’s war against Israel is built upon Islamic doctrine.   To weaken a foe that it would soon thereafter negotiate a sort of peace with, Israel had assisted in the creation of a much more enduring enemy. 

 

Had Israel been governed by people who took theology, their own and that of others, seriously they would have been less likely to make this mistake.   They would have informed themselves about Islamic theology and perhaps learned that to allow territory that had been part of Dar al-Islam, as all of Palestine including Israel had been under Ottoman rule, to fall under non-Muslim control and leave it that way is completely unacceptable to the orthodox of all Muslim sects.  The leadership of Israel, however, like that of the Zionist movement that created her has been hopelessly secular right from the beginning.   The only difference from the days of David Ben-Gurion to today, is that Israel has shifted from the left-secularism, committed to liberal democracy and socialism, that was dominant in the three decades that the Labour Party controlled the Knesset to a form of right-secularism in the decades since in which the Knesset has most often been controlled by the Likud.   While under almost any other circumstances I would call that an improvement the situation in Israel is far from normal.  

 

The Likud was founded by Menachem Begin who served as the party’s first Prime Minister in Israel.   Begin was the unrepentant former terrorist – he led the Irgun in the period in which it joined the Lehi in waging terrorist war against Britain – who as Prime Minister persecuted Christians in Israel, began to institute the “Greater Israel” expansionist policies of his mentor Jabotinsky, and ordered the brutal invasion of Lebanon in 1982.   Margaret Thatcher, whose premiership in the United Kingdom began shortly after Begin’s in Israel, told the French president of those days, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, that she “never had a more difficult man to deal with.”  When you consider that Captain Airhead’s father, Pierre Trudeau, was the Prime Minister of the Dominion of Canada at the time, this was saying a lot.   Begin’s successor, both as leader of the Likud and Prime Minister of Israel was Yitzhak Shamir, another unrepentant former terrorist.   He was one of the triumvirate who had taken over the leadership of the Lehi after the death of Avraham Stern and who led it in the same period in which Begin led the Irgun and in which most of its crimes and atrocities were committed.

 

When Shamir was defeated by the Labour Party in 1992 and Yitzhak Rabin returned to the premiership, Shamir resigned the leadership of the Likud which was then taken up by Benjamin Netanyahu.   Since Netanyahu is the current leader and the current Prime Minister of Israel I shall postpone saying anything about him until I have discussed the fourth Likud leader and Israeli Prime Minister.   This was Ariel Sharon who took over the party leadership in 1999 and became Prime Minister in 2001, resigning the leadership in 2005 to form the Kadima party, shortly before a stroke ended his premiership in 2006.   Before entering politics, Sharon had been a career military man.   He had served in the Haganah in 1948, rather than the terrorist groups, and had fought with the IDF in all of Israel’s major wars.   In his controversial military career he early earned a reputation for slaughtering civilians.   The most notorious atrocities associated with his name, however, are from 1982 when he was Begin’s Defence Minister.    In that capacity, he had been the mastermind behind the bombing of Beirut and invasion of Lebanon, in which the IDF laid waste to civilian neighbourhoods in the name of taking out PLO based.   The biggest atrocity of that conflict was not directly perpetrated by the IDF but the Phalange, a milita of Lebanon’s Maronite Christians, who slaughtered the residents of the Sabra neighbourhood of West Beirut and the refugee camp of Shatila that was located nearby.    While the Phalange committed the massacre they had been trained and armed by the IDF, which had surrounded the neighbourhood, allowed the militia in, were fully aware of what they were doing, and prevented the victims from escaping.  The Israeli commission that investigated the incident, found Sharon responsible, and insisted that he be removed from office (in 1983 he was shifted to a different portfolio).   In his memoir, An American Life, Ronald Reagan, who had been president of the United States when all of this was occurring, gave his impression of Sharon as “a bellicose man who seemed to be chomping at the bit to start a war”.   It is very rare, by the way, that Reagan mentions anyone in his autobiography about whom he could not find anything positive to say.

 

It ought to be observed, at this point, that it took thirty years after Israel achieved independence, before they became so fed up with their neighbours’ refusal to accept their existence, periodic attacks, and constant funding of terrorist harassment against them, that they started electing a party led by terrorists and war criminals because it promised to be ruthless with their enemies.   By contrast, the moment the Palestinian Arabs were able to vote for their own government they elected Hamas.    If anybody really feels the necessity for picking a side in this ridiculous conflict, that is something to consider.

 

As leader and Prime Minister Sharon was initially embraced by the hard core support base of the Likud and they remained confident in his leadership as he ordered the IDF to crush the Second Intifida in 2002 and began erecting a spite fence around the West Bank, but by the end of his premiership they regarded him as a traitor for ordering the unilateral disengagement of Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip and voiced his support for a Palestinian state.    What they had apparently overlooked was that unlike Begin and Shamir, he had never been an ideological follower of Jabotinsky.   He was a military man, and military men, even ruthless and nasty types like Sharon, tend to be practical.

 

Which makes it very interesting that the Likud opted to return the leadership to Netanyahu after Sharon resigned.   Netanyahu, who had begun his first term as Israeli Prime Minister around the time that Bill Clinton was seeking refuge from the hen-pecking of his harpy and harridan wife Hilary in the mouth of White House intern Monika Lewinsky, was no more of a Revisionist Zionist ideologue than Sharon had been.   Too young to have served in either the Haganah or its terrorist rivals – he was born the year after Israel attained independence – Netanyahu had by the time he was thirty, established a reputation for himself as an intellectual expert on anti-terrorism.   It was around the same time that he first became involved in diplomacy and politics.   What he actually is, if truth be told, is the first real politician to lead the Likud party.   His vices are not those of ideological terrorists or hardened military war criminals but the old-fashioned vices of the ordinary politician.   Early in his fourth term as Prime Minister – he is now in his fifth – the Israeli police began to investigate charges of corruption against him and in 2019 he was formally indicted for the same.  

 

That he has managed to remain in power seems almost miraculous.   Shortly after he has formally charged with corruption, the World Health Organization handed him what must have seemed like a dying man’s reprieve.   They declared the Wuhan bat flu to be a pandemic and recommended that the countries of the world prevent its spread by putting into practice Red China’s experimental new universal quarantine, which has since been dubbed “lockdown”.   Netanyahu, seizing the opportunity, locked down Israel faster and harder than most if not all other countries.   Indeed, he earned himself the dubious distinction of being the world leader who has done the most to suppress Jewish observation, practice, and religious freedom since Adolf Hitler.   He imposed the second wave of extreme lockdown right before the Jewish New Year of Rosh Hashanah and timed it to extend through Yom Kippur, the festival of Sukkot, and basically all the holiest days on the Jewish calendar.   In one bizarre incident that would almost seem to suggest a novel reinterpretation of the Greater Israel concept along the lines of Germany’s arrogant claim to the right to boss Germans around even in other countries, his top health official called up the president of the Ukraine and asked him to close his borders to Jews seeking to make their annual Rosh Hashanah pilgrimage to the tomb of Rabbi Nachman in Uman.  For what it is worth, when angrily confronted about this by non-Israeli Jews who were refused their pilgrimage, Netanyahu later denied being behind this strange act on the part of his health commissar.

 

If the idea had been to use the lockdown to escape from the bad publicity of the corruption charges it failed.    Netanyahu’s popularity began to tank and the anti-Netanyahu demonstrations over the corruption charges grew as their numbers were swelled by the addition of defiant Orthodox Jews who did not take kindly to having their synagogues shut down and their festivals cancelled and by an Israeli government no less.  Kudos to them.   The Orthodox Jews similarly stood up for their rights against the Governor of New York, holding a non-socially distanced street party where they embraced and burned their masks.   I was reminded of this the other week when I watched a news show in which members of the Muslim community here in Winnipeg were being interviewed about the end of Ramadan.   They expressed sadness that they could not have the usual big family gatherings but took a “what can you do” attitude towards it and talked about how they had adjusted the celebration to accommodate the fascist health restrictions.   I guess they just don’t make Muslims the way they used to.  Where were all the fatwas?   Sir Salman Rushdie had one pronounced over him for less than this.   Somebody owes him a big apology.

 

Had Israel been a religious Jewish country rather than a secular Jewish country Netanyahu would be long gone by now.   As it was, Operation Save My Arse With a Lockdown had proven to be a total failure.   As he was faced with the imminent collapse of his government, his fall from power, disgrace, and quite probably a long prison sentence, the fairy godmother of Likud Prime Ministers, Hamas, came to Bibis rescue.   From their base in Gaza they resumed their favourite pastime, hurtling primitive rockets at Israel.  It is a mostly harmless pastime as far as the Israelis are concerned.   On the rare occasion that a rocket makes it past the Iron Dome defence system it can do some damage, depending upon where it lands, but for the most part it is mainly a fireworks display.  For the Israelis, however, it is a casus belli, and a goldmine for Likud Prime Ministers because there is nothing more guaranteed to boost their popularity then when they hammer down hard on the Palestinians in retaliation.   The most ill-kept secret of the Middle East is that Likud Israeli governments and Hamas each rely upon the other to maintain their popular support among their own people.   The Palestinians expect Hamas to keep on harassing Israel.   The Israelis expect their government to brutally punish the Palestinians.  Each, therefore, provides the other with the excuse to do what they need to do to play to their own crowds.   So we come to May of this year.   On the sixth the Palestinians hold a protest in East Jerusalem, on the seventh the Israelis crack down and storm the al-Aqsa mosque, on the tenth Hamas issues an ultimatum which Israel naturally ignores and the rockets start flying, on the eleventh the Israeli Air Force begin several days of bombing the hell out of Gaza.   On the twentieth, having given their fans the show they were looking for, Netanyahu and Hamas agree to a ceasefire.   Bada bing, bada boom, it is all over in a fortnight, mission accomplished, everyone is happy, high fives all around.   Too bad about all the people who had to die, but didn’t someone somewhere at sometime say something about an omelet and eggs?

 

Remind me again why we are expected to pick one side or another in this deranged circus?

 

Friday, February 5, 2021

From Dubya to Dhaliwal

 I am a Tory rather than a true libertarian.   Actual libertarians would say that government is either a necessary evil or an unnecessary one, depending upon whether the libertarian is one who believes in the “nightwatchman state” model or one who believes that the state is a criminal plot against the rights of the individual.   I hold to the classical view that laws are necessary and that government is a good thing in the sense that it is an institution that was established and exists to serve the good of the public.   The degree to which any specific government in any specific time and place can be said to be either good or bad depends upon the degree to which it actually accomplishes this purpose.   Having said all of that, I am the kind of Tory who, like the novelist Evelyn Waugh and his son Auberon, has a great deal of sympathy for the minimal government type of libertarian.   As the elder Waugh once put it “I believe in government; That men cannot live together without rules but that they should be kept at the bare minimum of safety.”     It is from this perspective that I make the following observations. 

 

Whenever government declares “war” against something other than another country, whether it be drugs, crime, poverty, whatever, it is for the purpose of expanding its own powers.    This expansion of government is never necessary and it always involves the diminishing of the civil rights and freedoms of the governed.   It is very difficult to contract the powers of government after they have been expanded and to restore rights and freedoms after they have been diminished.   Any time, therefore, that the government starts talking about wars against abstract enemies we should take this as an alarm bell telling us to stand up for our rights and liberties before we lose them.

 

You are perhaps thinking at this point that I am about to apply this to the militaristic language our governments have been using while announcing totalitarian restrictions as their response to the spread of the bat flu.   While that is certainly a valid application, I will let you make it for yourselves.   Instead, I wish to consider another example from twenty years ago, the ramifications of which are now becoming most evident.

 

On September 11, 2001, al-Qaida, an Islamic terrorist organization that had evolved out of the CIA-trained mujahideen that the United States had employed against the Soviet Union following the latter’s invasion of Afghanistan decades earlier, attacked its former sponsor by hijacking planes and flying them into the towers that symbolized American and international commerce in Lower Manhattan.   The American President at the time, George W. Bush, shortly thereafter declared a “Global War on Terror” and gave the rest of the world an ultimatum to either stand with the United States in this battle or be counted on the side of the enemy.

 

By declaring war on the abstraction of terrorism in general rather than merely the specific, concrete, terrorist organization al-Qaida that had attacked America, Bush signaled that he had a far more ambitious project than merely settling the score and punishing the perpetrators of 9/11.   While terrorism is notoriously difficult to define due to a lack of consensus with regards to certain of the particulars there is a general understanding that it occupies the space where the kind of violence that law enforcement deals with and the kind that requires a military response overlap each other.   This makes it a particularly bad choice for an enemy in an abstract war.   In addition to the problem common to all wars against abstract enemies, that they can never be won and brought to a decisive end because abstract enemies cannot surrender or be toppled or killed, a war against terrorism is an invitation to merge the law enforcement and military functions of government in a way that threatens the privacy, rights, and freedoms of the governed.

 

This is precisely what happened with the Bush administration’s War on Terror.    In the first month of the War on Terror the Office of Homeland Security was established which about a year later would be expanded into the Department of Homeland Security, a creepy body, like something out of a totalitarian dystopia, in which the line between law enforcement and the military is all but eliminated.   In less than two months after 9/11 the Bush administration had drafted and pushed through Congress the draconian Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT) Act, which stripped Americans of anything but nominal constitutional protection of their privacy rights and turned the American republic into an Orwellian surveillance state. 

 

I knew full well at the time that this was a power grab aimed at expanding the powers of the American government at the expense of the privacy, rights and freedoms of ordinary Americans.   I knew this because this is precisely what the men who were rushing to do this in September of 2001 had been saying about similar efforts on the part of the Clinton administration in the 1990s.

 

In the spring of 1995 I was finishing my freshman year as a theology student.   At the very end of the semester a terrorist attack in the United States was all over the news.   A truck loaded with a homemade bomb had been detonated outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.   Bill Clinton immediately began pointing to this event as demonstrating the need for the Omnibus Counterterrorism Bill that his Attorney General Janet Reno's Department had drafted and that had been introduced in the US Senate a couple of months earlier by none other than the present occupant of the White House who at the time was Senator for Delaware (Chuck Schumer was the sponsor of the Bill in the House of Representatives).   The bill met with strenuous opposition from civil libertarians of the left and right and consequently it was only a very emaciated version that was signed into law by Bill Clinton on Hitler's birthday the following year.  When, barely a week after 9/11, Bush's Attorney General John Ashcroft had the draft of the PATRIOT Act available - a bill so long that few who voted on it had been able to read the entire thing - this was because he had basically recycled Clinton's Omnibus Counterterrorism Bill, adding a few bells and whistles here and there.   Ashcroft is said to have called up Joe Biden to tell him that it was essentially the same bill that he, that is Biden, had introduced seven years earlier.   Now, although Clinton had failed to get the surveillance state he sought in 1995-1996, he did not let up in his efforts to enhance government powers in the name of fighting terrorism.   Indeed, he brought the matter up with increasing frequency as his many indiscretions began to surface and his administration became enmired in scandal.     Around 1997, for example, he wanted the FBI to be given the power to intercept and read all internet communications.   An excellent article was penned in opposition to this by the said John Ashcroft, who at the time was Senator for Missouri.   The article was entitled "Keep Big Brother's Hands Off the Internet" and included such wise observations as the following:

 

"The Clinton administration would like the Federal government to have the capability to read any international or domestic computer communications...The proposed policy raises obvious concerns about Americans' privacy...There is a concern that the internet could be used to commit crimes and that advanced encryption could disguise such activity.  However, we do not provide the government with phone jacks outside our homes for unlimited wiretaps.   Why then, should we grant government the Orwellian capacity to listen at will and in real time to our communications across the Web?...The administrations interest in all e-mail is a wholly unhealthy precedent, especially given this administration's track record on FBI files and IRS snooping.   Every medium by which people communicate can be subject to exploitation by those with illegal intentions.   Nevertheless, this is no reason to hand Big Brother the keys to unlock our e-mail diaries, open our ATM records, read our medical records, or translate our international communications".

 

Indeed.   It appears that some time between 1997 and 2001 one of the pod people from Don Siegel's 1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers had replaced Ashcroft with a look alike who instead of the above sound reasoning espoused rhetoric about how those raising concerns about the PATRIOT Act's impact on civil liberties were aiding and abetting the terrorists.   He was hardly the only one.  The same could be said of a great many of the most prominent figures in American conservatism who had talked like Ashcroft about the Clinton administration's threat to American liberties in the 1990s, only to turn around and support the PATRIOT Act in 2001.   It was at this point that I lost all respect for American conservatives - other than those like Pat Buchanan, Ron Paul, and Charley Reese who were manifestly the same people, espousing the same principles, regardless of whether a Clinton or a Bush was in power.

 

 

It was a couple of years later, when Bush and Ashcroft were again talking about expanding their powers to fight terrorism – they had drafted the Domestic Security Enhancement Act, nicknamed “PATRIOT II”, but it was never presented to Congress – that the late Sam Francis wrote an article explaining the case against all legislation of the type, in what was the single best response to the annoying “it’s okay when our side does it" attitude among the Bush “conservatives” that I ever read.   He wrote:

 

But the larger point is not what this administration does or doesn't do with the new powers.

The point is that the powers are far larger than the government of any free people should have and that whatever powers this administration doesn't use could still be used by future ones.

 

That, of course, is how free peoples typically lose their freedom—not by a dictator like Saddam Hussein suddenly grabbing power in the night and seizing all the library records but by the slow erosion of the habits and mentality that enables freedom to exist at all.

 

Instilling in citizens the notion that the power to seize library records is something the state needs is an excellent way to assist that erosion.

 

Most libertarians, of the left or the right, will tell you how we have been eroding those habits and that mentality for several decades now.  – Samuel Francis, “Bush Writing Last Chapters in Story of American Liberty”, September 25, 2003, Creators Syndicate.

 

The truth of Sam Francis' words is now glaringly obvious.   

 

The White House is now occupied by the decrepit swamp troll who had introduced the first draft of what would eventually become the PATRIOT Act back in 1995 and he is calling for even more anti-terrorism legislation.   He has also openly turned the War on Terror against those whom the Clinton administration had in mind when they attempted, unsuccessfully, to launch their own War on Terror that year - American citizens who stand up for their rights and freedoms, especially Christians who are serious about their faith, white people who object to being vilified for the colour of their skin and turned into scapegoats, and gun owners.   

 

The Department of Homeland Security has issued a bulletin that implies that those who are unsatisfied that the outcome of last year's election was legitimate, are opposed to the lockdown measures that trample all over their rights and freedoms ("frustrated with the exercise of government authority" is how the memo words this), or both, are potential violent threats to the United States.    A government that regards around half of the people it governs as threats is no longer a constitutional government that respects limits on its own power for the protection of its citizens and their rights and freedoms.  It is more like a government that fears and has declared war on its own people.   The progressive media that during the last administration defended its monolithically hyper-adversarial stance with slogans like "democracy dies in darkness" has been calling for Republican senators such as Ted Cruz and Rand Paul and in some cases the entire Republican Party to be designated "domestic terrorists".  The United States is a two-party country.   If you criminalize one of the two parties you are left, of course, with a one-party state.   Otherwise known as a totalitarian dictatorship.   The kind of state that the United States, the capital city of which is now under military occupation by its own army, is giving every impression of becoming.

 

From up north in the Dominion of Canada it is appalling to watch our southern neighbour turn itself into the world's largest banana republic, both because of what it means for our American friends and because bad ideas and trends down there have a nasty habit of migrating up here.

 

Think back to 2001 once again.   Our Prime Minister at the time was Jean Chretien, who was in my opinion a creepy, sleazy, low-life scumbag, to list only his better qualities. While Bush, Ashcroft, et al, were making a big noise about the PATRIOT Act and all the other things they were going to do in fighting their War on Terror, Chretien, relatively quietly had Anne McLellan introduce Bill C-36, an anti-terrorism bill of his own into Parliament.  It quickly passed the House and Senate and received Royal Assent in December of that year.   It consisted of amendments to several different pieces of existing legislation, such as the Criminal Code and the Official Secrets Act.   Some of its provisions, at the suggestion of Bill Blaikie who at the time was the Member representing Winnipeg-Transcona in the House of Commons, were given sunset clauses which caused them to automatically expire in five years. Other provisions remain to this day.      

 

I will provide an illustration of how this led to the shameful abuse of government power twenty years ago before returning to the present.

 

One the pieces of legislation amended was the Canadian Security Intelligence Services Act, which created CSIS in 1984.   The amendment replaced "threats to the security of Canada" with the much broader wording "activities within or related to Canada directed toward or in support of the threat or use of acts of serious violence against persons or property for the purpose of achieving a political, religious or ideological objective within Canada or a foreign state".   CSIS, when it took over the RCMP's intelligence functions, also took over the issuing of security certificates, a provision of the 1978 Immigration Act which allowed for those who were not Canadian citizens to be declared a threat to national security and deported in a streamlined manner.

 

In December of 2001, just as Bill C-36 was going into effect, American immigration officials arrested Ernst Zündel, who had left Canada in 2000 vowing never to return, rather understandably as he had on three separate occasions been persecuted by our government for his unpopular political-historical views.  He had married an American citizen, the Russian-German Mennonite novelist Ingrid Rimland and, had he been anybody else, would have been on track for American citizenship himself.    Interestingly enough, in February of that year the men’s magazine Esquire had published an essay by journalist and war correspondent John Sack in which Zündel featured   The essay was entitled “Inside the Bunker” and recounted the writer’s experiences at the previous year’s conference of the Institute for Historical Review where he met holocaust revisionists such as Zündel.   The essay, which was later selected for inclusion in the anthology, The Best American Essays 2002, edited by Stephen Jay Gould, was more-or-less the opposite of every other article which had ever appeared about holocaust revisionists in the mainstream press.  Sack treated them respectfully, pointed out a few places where they were demonstrably right, and gave reasons for rejecting their conclusions that were based on evidence rather than abuse, for he presented them all in general, and Zündel in particular, in a sympathetic light as basically ordinary people, who were more hated than guilty of hatred and whose views arose defensively, in response to post-World War II German bashing, rather than out of anti-Semitic bigotry.  Evidently, the essay had no impact on the American and Canadian authorities.   The Americans charged him with overstaying his visa and sent him back to us.   CSIS issued a security certificate against Zündel, which it would not have been able to do prior to Chretien’s anti-terrorism bill becoming law because he was by no means a threat to the security of Canada having been a peaceful and non-violent man for all of the decades he had lived here.   Under the Anti-terrorism Act, however, they were able to stretch the very flexible new wording of their mandate to include him on the basis of people he had associated with.

 

He was detained and held in solitary confinement in a tiny cell for over a year while he was tried in his absence before a prejudiced judge on the grounds of evidence to which neither he nor his lawyer, Doug Christie, were given full access, and ultimately was deported to Germany where he was arrested over things he said or written in North America, charged, and sentenced to five years in prison.

 

To summarize, the greater flexibility that had been given to our “intelligence” agency on the grounds that it was needed to protect our country from the threat of terrorist violence was used pretty much immediately after it had passed into law, to once again persecute a man whom our government had been persecuting for his political-historical opinions since 1984, this time denying him the protection of due process that had been available to him previously and which had ultimately prevailed in those cases when the Supreme Court struck the laws under which he had been convicted down.

 

This was a most disgraceful episode and one that clearly demonstrates that governments that seek to expand their own powers and flexibility in order to combat foes like “terrorism” cannot be trusted to confine the use of those powers to that purpose.

 

Parliament did take greater precautions than the US Congress in passing the Anti-terrorism Act.   I have already mentioned that certain provisions came with sunset clauses that would cause them to expire in five years unless the House and the Senate agreed to an extension.   The Act also required that the House and Senate appoint committees to conduct a comprehensive review of the Act within its first three years, which would be a necessary preliminary step towards any extension.   While a short extension was agreed upon after the first review, ultimately these provisions were allowed to expire in 2007.   By this time Stephen Harper had become Prime Minister, but the expiration of the provisions should not be attributed to any great concern for the privacy, rights, freedoms, and due process of Canadians on his part.   In his final year as Prime Minister he introduced a new Anti-terrorism Act, Bill C-51, which was more like the USA PATRIOT Act than Chretien’s Anti-terrorism Act had been, and which greatly expanded the powers and mandate of CSIS.   Readers might recall that this loathsome piece of legislation was the reason I vowed never to vote for the Conservatives again as long as Stephen Harper led the party.   The Conservatives were defeated in the election that fall, which I would like to think was in retaliation to Bill C-51, except that they were replaced in government by the only party in Parliament that had supported them in passing it.

 

Now let us return to the present.   One of the provisions of Chretien’s Anti-terrorism Act that remains in effect was the creation of a list of groups officially designated as terrorists.   It is odd, actually, that this was allowed to stand, because it is one of the worst provisions in the Act.   It essentially functions like a decree of outlaw, depersoning everyone in the groups placed on the list, stripping them of all constitutional protections.

 

One might think that the New Democrat Party, Canada’s officially socialist party (as opposed to all the unofficial ones), with its long history of human rights rhetoric, would have a problem with this.   Back in 2015, when they were led by Thomas Mulcair, they were on the right side, the opposing side, of the Bill C-51 debate.   In 2021, however, they are led by Jagmeet Singh.   One might think that Singh, considering his open support for the cause of separating Punjab from India and Pakistan and turning it into the Sikh state of Khalistan, a cause that has frequently been supported by acts of terrorism, including one of the most notorious – if not the most notorious – to take place on, well, not on Canadian soil, but in Canadian airspace, the bombing of Air India Flight 182 in 1985, would have even more cause than other NDPers to oppose the official terror list.   At the very least one would expect him not to be throwing stones from within this particular glass house.   One would be very, very, wrong in all of this.

 

Not long after a number of unarmed and oddly dressed supporters of Donald the Orange temporarily delayed the Congressional certification of the Electoral College vote by entering the Capitol in Washington DC causing everyone to break out into histrionics screaming “coup” “insurgency” and the like, Singh tweeted that the event was an “act of domestic terrorism” and stated that “the Proud Boys helped execute it”, “Their founder is Canadian”, “They operate in Canada, right now” and that he was “calling for them to be designated as a terrorist organization, immediately”.

 

What is this “Proud Boys” that Singh thinks deserve the terrorist designation more than the mass murderers of Hindus?

 

It is not, as its title would seem to suggest, an organization devoted to advancing the alphabet soup cause.   It is a group that has attained notoriety over the last five years mostly for its confrontations and clashes with antifa.   Antifa are those groups of masked thugs that go to events organized by right-of-centre groups and lectures featuring speakers with views that leftists believe ought not to be heard and try to disrupt and shut down these events and lectures through intimidation and bullying.  I don’t know if this was the original intent when the Proud Boys was founded but it quickly gained a reputation as a group that was eager and willing to fight back.

 

The media, which has tacitly and sometimes explicitly, supported antifa for years, has attached all sorts of labels to the Proud Boys that seem to completely disregard the group’s account of itself.   It is frequently called “white nationalist”, for example, despite the fact that it has always been multiracial, that its founder, the Canadian born “godfather of hipsterdom” and co-founder of Vice magazine, Gavin McInnes, is a civil nationalist who explicitly rejected racial nationalism, and its current leader, the one who has been charged with regards to the incident on Capitol Hill, is an Afro-Cuban.   McInnes described the group as “Western Chauvinist” but he explained this quite clearly in terms of the values of Western Civilization, which anyone from any race can adhere to and which, in an irony totally lost on his progressive critics, are entirely liberal – in the sense of classical liberal – values.  

 

Since the facts obviously conflict with the claim that the Proud Boys are white nationalists, why do the media and the self-appointed anti-hate watchdog groups continue to so designate them?

 

Obviously it is because they are not using the term to convey any meaningful information about who and what the group is but as a weapon to demonize, discredit, and destroy it.

 

The exact same thing can be said about Jagmeet Singh Dhaliwal’s call to designate the group a “terrorist organization”.   There is little if anything in the facts that would support this designation in any meaning-conveying sense.   The violence perpetrated by antifa which exists solely for the purpose of using violence or the threat of violence to suppress opinions with which the left disagrees and silence those who hold such opinions far more closely fits the meaning of the word terrorism than pushing or punching back against said violence, whatever else one might think about this sort of responding in kind.   The designation is not intended to be meaningful, it is intended to destroy a group that Singh opposes for political reasons.

 

This is a terrible misuse of a law that seems like it was written to be terribly misused.

 

Singh followed up on his tweet by raising the matter in Parliament and bringing it to a vote.   The House unanimously voted for a motion recommending that the government add the Proud Boys to the terrorist list.   There was not a single dissenting vote.   Anybody in the Conservative Party who might have thought that antifa and BLM deserved to be on that list much more than the Proud Boys kept that thought to himself.   Anybody in the NDP or Green parties who might have objected to the terrorist list even existing on the grounds that it is a threat to human rights, kept that thought to himself.   This unanimous vote to declare the group a terrorist organization for entirely political reasons, depersoning its members and stripping them of their constitutional protections, speaks extremely poorly about the politicians we have sent to Parliament, and bodes very ill for our country’s future.

 

The motion in Parliament had no binding force on the government.   Bill Blair, the ex-cop who is Public Safety Minister – a title from the French Reign of Terror which ought not to exist in a free Commonwealth realm, back to Solicitor General, please – told the CBC that the decision would be based on “intelligence and evidence collected by our national security agencies” and that “Terrorist designations are not political exercises”.     On February 3rd he declared that the Proud Boys, along with a bunch of obscure groups that few have ever heard of before, had been added to the list.    

 

Jagmeet Singh was elated, although it was reiterated on the occasion that his motion was not a motivating factor in the decision (yeah right), and he called upon the government to go even further in eliminating groups that disagree with him.  He was quoted by the CBC as saying:

 

We need to build a country where everyone feels like they belong. Those hateful groups have no place in our country.

 

Clearly all anti-terrorism legislation needs to be repealed immediately.   Anything that gives such a man, who is so completely stupid that he cannot see the glaring contradiction between these two sentences, this kind of power to destroy those he doesn’t like is a far greater threat to our country than terrorism itself.