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Baffled by the Chaos in Canada? So Are Canadians.

 
 
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2022 08:54 am
Baffled by the Chaos in Canada? So Are Canadians.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/14/world/americas/canada-trucker-protests.html

The protests seem to challenge the cherished image that Canadians are moderate, rule-following and just plain nice. But was that really a myth all along?

By Catherine Porter

Catherine Porter is a Canadian journalist who worked for 16 years at the country’s largest newspaper before becoming Toronto bureau chief for The Times. She has spent a week talking to protesters, police and residents in Ottawa.
Feb. 14, 2022

OTTAWA — It seemed a classically Canadian moment in a scene otherwise torn from the book of Trump America.

Between the intersection transformed into a mosh pit and the graceful Parliament buildings cluttered with “fake news,” “the Great Resist” and “Covid red pill” signs, a middle-aged man named Johnny Rowe perched on a median last weekend with an amplifier and a simple greeting.

“Welcome to Ottawa,” he called out to the hordes streaming down the middle of the street, many hollering “freedom.” “Thank you for coming.”

If the outside world is baffled by the scenes unfolding in the streets of Canada, so are many Canadians. They are dumbfounded, perhaps none more so than the government officials who have stood by largely slack-jawed as giant trucks stake out ground in the normally placid capital, shaking and honking at night as people cheer and dance, neighbors be damned.

As demonstrations kept flaring, the government on Monday invoked the Emergencies Act, which greatly increases the government’s power to crack down on protest, and in Alberta the police arrested 11 people and seized a large cache of weapons. Earlier, traffic resumed over the Ambassador Bridge, a major international route blockaded for a week, and officials announced that they were lifting some contentious vaccine pass requirements.

The chaos of recent weeks has left many wondering if Canada is witnessing the birth of a political alt-right, or if it is a pandemic-induced tantrum that, once exhausted, will curl itself asleep, leaving behind a country bewildered but essentially unchanged. It could also be, some argue, that the so-called freedom convoy is not an aberration at all but a mirror to an integral part of the country that doesn’t fit the stereotype, and so is ignored.

https://static01.nyt.com/images/2022/02/14/world/14canada-2/merlin_202054014_d69afdd6-8c4f-4637-aeef-e560964e507b-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp

Counterprotesters confronting a small convoy in Ottawa on Sunday.Credit...Brett Gundlock for The New York Times

The unrest seems a rebuff to the cherished mythology imposed on Canada’s citizens from abroad and held by many Canadians themselves as moderate, rule-following, levelheaded — and just plain nice.

“It feels like a national nervous breakdown,” said Susan Delacourt, a veteran Canadian political columnist from Ottawa who like many of her fellow citizens is wondering what exactly is happening to her country right now.

Start with the pervasive slogan of the unrest, scrawled across trucks, hats, shirt and flags, an epithet startlingly vulgar by Canadian standards that urges Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to go away. Some say he should be not just deposed but imprisoned over the vaccine regulations governments in Canada have passed.

The anger is new. Over the past two years of public health crisis, Canadians have followed their classic playbook. Even right-leaning provincial governments dutifully took their lead, for the most part, from public health experts, passing strict pandemic rules that citizens then followed.

While there have been some mask protests, more outrage was directed at local governments for not doing more to protect their citizens, and at politicians who broke the rules. Wearing a mask, and getting the vaccine, was deemed a basic act of civic solidarity. Canada has one of the highest rates in the world, with more than 83 percent of the population over the age of 5 having received at least two vaccine doses.

“Let’s take care of each other in this time of need, Canada,” Mr. Trudeau tweeted in March 2020, days after his wife showed symptoms and he became the first G7 leader to self-isolate. “Because that’s really who we are.”

Maybe it is because Canada, unlike the neighbor that overshadows it, was born not from revolution but from negotiation that its approach to rebellion now seems more than a little unconventional, even quirky. But one thing is clear: The members of the so-called freedom convoy are not bellowing “compromise” or “care for one another.”

The streets of downtown Ottawa echo with chants and slogans steeped in the language of the American Revolution, right down to the Don’t Tread on Me pennants. “Freedom,” yells a man in a red mask waving a Canadian flag. “Freedom,” comes the ardent reply. Though the flag, it should be noted, was held aloft in a quintessentially Canadian fashion, attached to a hockey stick.

The repeated invocation of liberty is just one reason — along with the American, Confederate and Trump flags spotted in the mix — many believe the unrest is essentially a U.S. import.


For two years, Canadians have been largely stuck at home, and many have spent more time in front of the screen than ever. As they did, they absorbed the American culture war being played out from Fox News to Breitbart, and Trumpian ideas took root in Canada, said Gerald Butts, a longtime friend of Mr. Trudeau’s and his former top political aide.

It was not just ideas.

Right-wing activists in the United States and elsewhere have lent more than moral support to their new kindred spirits in Canada. They are opening their wallets. At least some of the money that has allowed the protesters to keep their trucks fueled and cover other expenses has flowed in from untraceable sources on crowdfunding platforms and cryptocurrencies.

Canadian political veterans have taken note.

“We ran the longest federal election campaign in history in 2015, and we spent $42 million, right?” said Mr. Butts.

By comparison, in just a few weeks, the truckers raised about a quarter of that.

“One of the most concerning things about this movement,” Mr. Butts said, “is it’s shown how easy it is to pour millions of dollars of dark money into Canadian politics.”

Traditionally, Canadian politics is a fight for the center, not for the fringes of the ideological spectrum. Political analysts point out that the far-right People’s Party of Canada, whose leader, Maxime Bernier, is a champion of the trucker protest, did not win a single seat in last year’s parliamentary election.

But, populism isn’t totally alien to the country, points out Janice Stein, a political science professor at the University of Toronto. A populist, the brother of the Ontario Premier Doug Ford, was once mayor of the country’s biggest city, Toronto, and for years, the Reform party rallied around a sense of Western alienation and socially conservative values.

“There’s a worrying tendency in Canada to define everything pushing against our founding myth as an import from the United States,” Ms. Stein said. “We have mythologized our niceness: ‘We are not polarized like France and Britain, and the only major democratic country in which the center has held is Canada, and that’s because we’re so nice and so caring to each other.’”

Canadian politics may in fact be more genteel than in many other places, but not because Canadians are innately kinder. That has just become a lot clearer.

“This is a myth-busting moment,” Ms. Stein said.

Sooner or later, the trucks will depart, but will the movement the prime minister dismissed as a “small fringe minority” continue to grow? Some have their doubts.

“This is a one-off political expression,” said Paul Summerville, co-author of the book “Reclaiming Populism,” which argues that Canada’s strong socialized medicine and affordable education system has given the country a sense of fairness and equal opportunity, inoculating it against populism.

“People are tired, they are angry,” said Mr. Summerville, a former investment banker in Victoria, British Columbia. “This is a very specific moment that has to do with people feeling very uncomfortable for the last two years, because of the pandemic.”

The unrest has infuriated many Ottawa residents, who have led counterprotests against what they view as an intimidating occupation of their city. But they have also drawn huge crowds of supporters, particularly on the weekends, when the downtown has been turned into what feels like a raucous tailgate party, alternative news convention and brewing witch hunt, all at the same time.

Strangers stop for impromptu conversations, hug and beam at one another, smiling widely — which after two years of mask wearing offers an emotional balm. One woman paraded the streets with a sign exhorting people to show her their teeth.

It does not take long to hear stories of personal suffering, and to understand why an ordinarily rule-abiding people might decide that a little rebellion is called for.

“Every single one of these people, has been catastrophically hurt,” said Mr. Rowe, the protester, lowering his megaphone for a moment. A Bikram Yoga instructor from the city of Kingston, two hours away, Mr. Rowe listed his losses over the past two years, tears brimming in his eyes: his home, his business and half of his retirement savings. And then there was the death of his brother-in-law.

“The suffering has gotten to a level where they have nothing to lose,” he said.

Compared with many countries, Canada was let off easy by Covid, with far fewer deaths per capita than the United States. But it came at a heavy cost.

Restrictions have been heavy and long. Almost two years after the pandemic hit Canada, the country remains in various stages of lockdown, with indoor dining banned in the country’s two largest provinces, Ontario and Quebec, until only recently. Residents of old-age homes were locked in for the better part of a year across the country. Students in Ontario missed more in-class learning than anywhere in North America, local newspapers state.

Recent polls show that most Canadians disagree with the tactics of the so-called freedom convoy, and worry that the country’s democracy is being threatened. But, many feel sympathy for protesters, particularly younger Canadians.

“Imagine storm clouds on horizon,” said Darrell Bricker, chief executive of the polling company Ipsos Public Affairs. “That has to discharge somewhere. This is part of the discharge.”

Among those people watching the scenes unfold in Ottawa is one of the city’s two poet laureates, Albert Dumont. An Algonquin elder, Mr. Dumont rejects not just the protesters’ notion of freedom, given its effect on local residents, but the whole idea that Canada was ever particularly nice, or even tolerant.

“My dad didn’t get to vote until 1960 — that’s not long ago,” he said. “There was a time when Canada was ugly and very cruel to Indigenous people.”
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2022 08:57 am
Hacked convoy data shows more than half of donations came from U.S.
Source: CBC

Although Canadians gave more money than Americans, more than half of the donations to the convoy protest made through the crowdfunding website GiveSendGo came from the United States, an analysis of hacked data from the site reveals.

The data — hacked illegally and released publicly late Sunday evening — sheds light on the identity of thousands of donors to the crowdfunding campaign.

A check by CBC News found that multiple names in the hacked data set correspond to names, dates and donation amounts collected independently by CBC News as the donations rolled in to GiveSendGo.

The data, which includes the home countries of donors, reveals that 55.7 per cent of the 92,844 donations made public came from donors in the United States, while just 39 per cent came from donors located in Canada.

Read more: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/convoy-protest-donations-data-1.6351292
georgeob1
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2022 11:30 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Well the increasingly unliberal head of the Canadian "Liberal" Party, PM Trudeau, has already proclaimed the ideas and motivations of the Canadian truckers to be "unacceptable". That certainly doesn't appear to be a very liberal attitude or acknowledgment of the right of Canadian truckers to think for themselves and peacefully protest his increasingly unrealistic COVID restrictions.

Today's news reports that the petulant and very authoritarian Trudeau has invoked Canada's Emergency act, giving him broad powers to seize the assets and take other measures against the truckers is disturbing. Theirs is a movement that appears to be exceedingly popular, particularly in Canada's Western Provinces (and also locally in Ottawa) , and which appeared to enjoy widespread, enthusiastic popular support on its journey to Ottawa.

That there is a degree of popular support in the United States, which is also suffering under similar and equally unjustified restrictions at the hands of the incompetent, but equally authoritarian "leadership" of our befuddled, idiot, is no surprise. The existence of this support in no way diminishes the significance of the resistance of Canadians to Trudeau's similar, no longer relevant, restrictions. This is merely a distraction used by people attempting to distract others from the increasingly evident facts attending the real issues here. Indeed it amply demonstrates their lack of any meaningful argument in defense of incompetent elected officials.

The irrational resistance of both "leaders" to the fast accumulating evidence that, (1) following the Omicron wave, their authoritarian restrictions are no longer needed, and (2) the increasingly evident harmful side effects they have created on economic activity, public health , and the upbringing & education of a generation of children, is a bit breathtaking. It suggests a serious lack of wisdom, self-confidence and leadership ability on both their parts.

How could self-proclaimed "liberal" political leaders be so narrow-minded in their fixation on authoritarian restrictions on the public they serve, while, at the same time demonstrating so little in the way of beneficial and effective measures to accelerate the development and deployment of new treatments for a disease that will be with us for a long time. Both have amply demonstrated their unfitness for the offices they hold.

Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2022 12:34 pm
@georgeob1,
georgeob1 wrote:
unliberal head of the Canadian "Liberal" Party
I don't want to open Pandora's box, but you do know, george, that 'liberal' has a different meaning outside the Usa. (The Liberal Party of Canada and the Canadian Group of Liberal International are both members of the Liberal International.)
georgeob1
 
  -2  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2022 01:37 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
Your comment looked a bit petty and pedantic to me, so I took the trouble to examine the material on the Website you posted to find some evidence of the goals and values of the version of Liberalism they advocate. Here, from their we site is a statement of the group's mission & values;
Quote:

Liberalism
Liberals are committed to build and safeguard free, fair and open societies, in which they seek to balance the fundamental values of liberty, equality and community, and in which no-one is enslaved by poverty, ignorance or conformity. Liberalism champions the freedom, dignity and well-being of individuals. Liberalism acknowledge and respect the right to freedom of conscience and the right of everyone to develop their talents to the full. Liberalism aims to disperse power, to foster diversity and to nurture creativity. The freedom to be creative and innovative can only be sustained by a market economy, but it must be a market that offers people real choices. This means that Liberals want neither a market where freedom is limited by monopolies or an economy disassociated from the interests of the poor and of the community as a whole. Liberals are optimistic at heart and trust the people while recognising the need to be always vigilant of those in power.


I don't see any contradiction at all here with the inferences I offered about Liberalism.. It is clear that Trudeau is not acting in accordance with the above values in attacking the ideas and motivation behind the fast growing public protests regarding their government's absurd and no longer needed COVID restrictions.

The common elements among the evil political movements of the late, unlamented 20th century, whether Fascist, Nazi or Communist, were totalitarian, authoritarian government control over all aspects of life, tyranny, corruption, mass suffering and the loss of loss of freedom. Liberalism, whether that off the classic 18th century model or the current one expressed above is quite incompatible with all of that. It is clear that in directly attacking the beliefs, goals and methods of this growing popular and peaceful movement, the petulant, authoritarian Trudeau is not acting in accordance with the Liberal principals presumably embraced by his party.

It's also evident that Trudeau is experiencing a significant loss of public favor among Canadians, and making an ass of himself in the process.

0 Replies
 
Albuquerque
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2022 02:16 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Copycats wanting to play America GTA V are all over the world, and that includes Canada...

Covid, Religion, alternative news, and whatever else is in fashion are all excuses, triggers not causes of stupid people gathering together to protest their obsolescence!
georgeob1
 
  -3  
Reply Wed 16 Feb, 2022 04:09 pm
@Albuquerque,
Shall I infer that you believe truck drivers are necessarily stupid & that truck borne transportation of goods and materials is obsolescent ? Interesting.

The fact is that, with his recent invocation of the Emergency Powers Act, Trudeau appears to be digging himself a hole from which he won't likely emerge without taking rather drastic action. This invocation itself appears to have increased public opposition to him among Canadians, and so far his threats to truckers and uncooperative towing companies appear to have only increased their commitments to resist.

Trudeau is behaving more like a petty, authoritarian bureaucrat than a real political leader. Indeed he has made himself a a model for the petty mediocrities who populate George Orwell's novel "1984", and who were the implementers of the fictitious "Big Brother's " evil tyranny.

The irony here is that the arguable need & justification for Trudeau's mandates is fading very fast, and with that, so are the various COVID restrictions across the United States, and in the UK & EU as well. Trudeau may soon finding himself alone, inflicting this injury on his country in defense of restrictions, already abandoned by the rest of the Western World. Very stupid indeed.
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Feb, 2022 07:11 pm
@georgeob1,
This is exactly why Emergency Powers are allowed: to maintain civil order, to maintain transportation routes, to protect the majority from the tyranny of a lawbreaking, violent minority.

These jerks are like the Bolsheviks.
georgeob1
 
  -3  
Reply Thu 17 Feb, 2022 10:41 am
@bobsal u1553115,
I believe your evaluation of the situation is dead wrong. The Canadian truckers appear to reflect the frustrations of a rather large number of Canadians with a government that persists in severe restrictions in public life & commerce, even in the face of the fast declining hazards of the COVID pandemic. Trudeau has ignored their views and condemned their, in fact, very peaceful protests, while foolishly accusing them of "racism" and, yesterday on the floor of the Parliament, "Nazism".

The virus has evolved, as most do, to more communicable, but less deadly forms ( natural selection at work here). The deployment of the initial round of vaccines, plus the now very significantly increased level of natural immunity, following the Omicron wave, have created a situation in which the focus of most governments is fast shifting to restoring social & economic life; dealing with the adverse side effects of the once necessary, but now, largely irrelevant, COVID restrictions; and accelerating the deployment of fast-improving treatment modalities for a disease which will be with us for a long time. Trudeau has demonstrated very little awareness of this evolution and what he should focus on now. If he gets his way ( something that appears very unlikely) Canada and Trudeau will find themselves nearly alone in a Western world that is fast moving precisely on that path.

As a side note, I believe that Trudeau's inept leadership, childish petulance, and demonstrated inclination to characterize those who merely disagree with him as racist Fascists, will likely end his political career in Canada. Our equally petulant and inept President has demonstrated similar failings and they have put him in a similar situation. Both appear to be self-absorbed lightweights, devoid of lasting principles and weak leaders, focused on their control of details, as opposed to real leadership the achievement of meaningful goals.



Mame
 
  4  
Reply Thu 17 Feb, 2022 11:05 am
@georgeob1,
There is not a 'rather large number of Canadians' who is frustrated. It is a minority. Most of us are not frustrated. Fed up, perhaps, but not frustrated. Here in Alberta, the exemptions have been lifted, so the unvaccinated can now go anywhere they like, as long as they wear a mask for the next couple of weeks.

As for his attitude and behaviour ending his political career, I would say that it depends more on what the Conservatives do re their new leader. They need to get their **** together and stand behind whomever they choose. Many people don't like or respect Trudeau, but the opposition has to have a viable leader. That party is so fractured.

I say this as a non-card carrying member of any party.
georgeob1
 
  -2  
Reply Thu 17 Feb, 2022 12:03 pm
@Mame,
It is interesting that most of the Western provinces have lifted their sanctions following the demonstrations.

I suspect Trudeau may well have inspired the Conservatives to do just what you suggest. How well they may do that remains to be seen.

Leaders set goals; inspire their people to meet them; welcome the competition of ideas relative to meeting those goals, particularly ideas of people directly involved in the process of meeting them.

Bureaucrats (who generally make themselves unaccountable for the results they achieve); manage processes; and enforce rules.

Effective leaders are rare: bureaucrats are abundant.

Trudeau is a self-absorbed bureaucrat.

Mame
 
  3  
Reply Thu 17 Feb, 2022 12:24 pm
@georgeob1,
I couldn't agree more about Trudeau. The Western provinces, with the exception of BC, have always had a justified sense of alienation.
0 Replies
 
georgeob1
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 18 Feb, 2022 06:41 pm
The unfolding events in Ottawa are a bit strange. News Reports here indicate that a systematic police action is now underway to remove or arrest the truckers who continue to block Ottawa's streets. In addition I heard a report that debate in Canada's Parliament regarding Trudeau's invocation of the National Emergency Act has been suspended. What this might mean regarding any potential requirement for the Parliament affirmation or approval of the PM's action is something I don't know.

Meanwhile, yesterday Australia announced the end of its previous regime of fairly rigid COVID restrictions. I could understand the initial effort on the part of Australia and New Zealand to prevent and import of the virus, based on their relative remoteness from the sources, however that possibility faded quickly after the start of the Pandemic. Despite, that both continued their restriction regimes - until Australia's announcement yesterday.

The juxtaposition of these events in Canada and Australia creates an interesting but stark contrast. It appears increasingly clear to a fast expanding segment of our populations that it is past time to seriously consider the tradeoffs between the vanishing benefits of these restrictions and their increasingly evident adverse side effects on our economies, social mobility and the health & education of our children. The effective deployment of vaccines and new treatment modalities for COVID infections; plus the emergence of the now dominant, more contagious but less deadly Omicron variant, which has vastly expanded the number of people with acquired immunity (now known to be even more durable than that resulting from vaccination); have together fundamentally changed the character of the challenges before us and the remedies appropriate for them

Strangely some governments, and the elites that support them, appear unwilling to surrender the authoritarian controls and power the COVID emergency has given them. They appear to rationalize their retention of extraordinary powers with the assumption that they (alone) know what is best for everyone else. I can think of few more apt and pointed confirmations of their totalitarian authoritarianism.

Our hapless President Joe Biden is one, though it increasingly appears that he is holding the American people hostage to these restrictions in preparation for a fatuous announcement in the forthcoming State of the Union address confirming his imagined "shut-down of the virus".

PM Trudeau of Canada may be even worse, in that he has openly accused Canadians who disagree with him on this matter as being the grip of "unacceptable ideas" and racist & Nazi sympathies, while mobilizing his police to remove protesters and potentially seizing their assets, vehicles under his declared Emergency powers. …. all to what end? one might ask.

Happily both countries are Federal Republics with state & provincial governments which retain substantial local powers. In both countries Governors and Premiers are quickly abandoning or reducing the restrictions under their control in response to both the evident facts and the expressed demands of the free people they govern.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sat 19 Feb, 2022 07:11 pm
Fox News Contributor Admits to Creating Fake Story About Canadian Woman Being 'Trampled' to Death


After leaving up the bogus tweet for nearly a day, it was pulled down after a request for comment from The Daily Beast.

Fox News contributor Sara Carter has walked back her entirely fictitious claim about a woman dying after being trampled by a Canadian authority on horseback amid ongoing trucker-led protests.

While the claim wasn’t accurate, the tweet was red-meat for her over 1.3 million conservative Twitter followers, who quickly amplified the baseless death as evidence of Canadian government wrongdoing.

“Reports are the woman trampled by a Canadian horse patrol just died at the hospital ... #Trudeau #FreedomConvoyCanada,” Carter, who purports to be an “award-winning correspondent,” tweeted Friday evening.

Shortly thereafter, conservatives picked up and amplified the tweet, including former Fox Nation hosts Diamond and Silk and Republican Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX).

https://www.thedailybeast.com/fox-news-contributor-sara-carter-admits-to-creating-fake-story-about-canadian-woman-being-trampled
0 Replies
 
georgeob1
 
  -2  
Reply Mon 21 Feb, 2022 10:55 am
I've seen news reports indicating that most of the Trucks associated with the demonstrations in Ottawa have been removed by the police; a number of the protestors/owner-drivers have been arrested; and that some actions to seize their assets under the Emergency Act have occurred. Is all that really true?

The world is quickly abandoning the COVID restrictions at issue here, and Trudeau's punitive actions in defense of them appears to be unreasonably authoritarian.

I had thought that Canada was a free, democratic country.
Mame
 
  3  
Reply Mon 21 Feb, 2022 11:06 am
@georgeob1,
Yes, it's all true. They've arrested about 170 people and frozen the bank accounts of the organizers and some protesters and supporters - about 76 so far. The Emergency Measures Act has never before been used. It's an abuse of power, IMO. They could have managed without using it. Overkill.
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Mon 21 Feb, 2022 11:07 am
@georgeob1,
georgeob1 wrote:
I had thought that Canada was a free, democratic country.
It doesn't matter who wants what, a democracy cannot blackmail itself.

I support - also actively - any kind of protests that are peaceful and non-violent and do not threaten anyone.

The moment critical infrastructure is attacked, people are threatened and ultimatums are issued, it has nothing to do with democracy.
0 Replies
 
georgeob1
 
  -2  
Reply Mon 21 Feb, 2022 11:40 am
@Mame,
Thanks -- a sad outcome that won't benefit anyone, particularly Trudeau.
Mame
 
  4  
Reply Mon 21 Feb, 2022 11:51 am
@georgeob1,
He's gone off the rails. He's not a good leader. He's a liar and a phony. He's arrogant and smug. He's entitled. He's not a statesman. He caters to China. And to Quebec, who can do no wrong.

He's basically a drama graduate with delusions of grandeur, and a recognizable name, of course. I can't recall who was running for the leadership of the Liberals when he won, but there must have been a real dearth of candidates. He was young, good-looking, fluent in French, and a Trudeau. He also presented well at the time.

To be fair, he has done some decent things, but the consensus among my group is that he can't be trusted.
0 Replies
 
 

 
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