10 January 2007

M. Dion Speaks at Toronto Lawyer's Club

I had the good fortune to be in attendance at the Judge's night dinner tonight, which coincides with the opening of court and is always well attended by the Toronto bench and bar. Our guest speaker did not have much in common with his audience: we are all lawyers, and his predecessors as guest speaker include Mr. Turner (present tonight), Mr. Chretien, and Mr. Diefenbaker, who all held law degrees. M. Dion was a professor of politics, not law, and so I suppose the biggest thing he has in common with those gentlemen is the fact that he will also be the Prime Minister.

He began by noting that he rose to political prominence mainly during the time of the Charlottetown accord. That deal, in M. Dion's opinion, was designed to have something in it for everyone: a little pork for each province and major constituency so that each would swallow the medicine with its own spoonful of sugar. With one exception. The Charlottetown Accord - like so many of the deals that have or have attempted to unite this country - had nothing in it for Ontario. Of course, it's nice to have your ego stroked, but there is more than a kernel of truth to the compliment. Many Canadians criticize Ontarians for considering themselves to be the centre of the country, and perhaps the universe. This is a fair criticism, but with that sense of Canadian-ness also comes a sense of duty to a Canada that is greater than Ontario, and it is beyond question that Ontario more than any other province has committed itself and its resources very selflessly to this confederation for the past hundred and thirty some odd years.

Apart from this flattery, M. Dion was true to form - passionate and principled, taking up arms for the struggle (although I believe also largely preaching to the converted). He spoke of the three pillars, and stated bluntly that in addition to being a basic requirement for our future, environmental leadership is also a internationally desirable product that will make us "a megaton of money" if only we do, in fact, become leaders in the field.

Catering to his audience, he also spoke at length about his position on the rule of law with respect to the status of Quebec, and on crime in Canada.

On the first, he noted that it must be the will of the people that determines whether or not Quebec remains part of this confederation, but was adamant that any such move could only be completed within the context of the rule of law, and not on the basis of a premier of the province revoking the Canadian citizenship of its people by declaring himself President of a republic. So he defended his application to the Supreme Court on the clarity question, considered by many to be foolhardy at the time but almost common-sensical in retrospect.

On the second, he took the position of a scientist, criticizing Mr. Toews for introducing measures for getting 'tough' on crime that could not be empirically supported (such as mandatory sentencing and abolition of the gun registry). He noted that under criticism that the Conservative measures would not work, Mr. Toews could not defend his tried-in-America-and-proven-to-fail policies based on any appeal to reason, but rather was forced to rely on base appeals to fear, and nurtured the demonstrably false impression that ours is a violent society in need of drastic repair. He stated that a sound approach to the problem of criminal behaviour would include not simply harsher punishment but also stronger prevention; more support for police; more attention to communities and youth. He concluded by hoping that Canada would not follow in the footsteps of "tough-on-crime" jurisdictions like California, where more money is spent on prisons than on hospitals.

He finished his speech, not surprisingly, by returning to the question of the environment. He said that he has no less a hope than that Canada will be one of the great nations of the 21st century. In order to become that nation, we need to identify the great determining issue of the 21st century, which is sustainable development. He begged us not to become the first generation to hand our children a country worse off than the one we arrived in.

That last comment, I assume, was directed at the vast majority in the audience who are handing down the country. I myself am part of the group that is just now taking it, and I'm confident that we can and will abandon short-term political gain for the long term health and well being of our society and planet. My Canada will be one of the great nations of the 21st century, and while M. Dion will be chronologically our 4th Prime Minister of the century, it will be largely on the basis of the efforts of his Liberal government that we become that nation.

09 January 2007

Khan be Gone

There has been some speculation in these parts as to why exactly our friend Wajid Khan defected (apart from the obvious answer of pure self-interest). Now we know the answer.

As a Liberal, Mr. Khan would have been obligated to make his findings known to the Liberal Party. When he accepted his position in the summer, he told the Globe that:

"I want to make sure that the Prime Minister gets it and all parliamentarians get it, because my work is not limited only for the Prime Minister. I'll be talking to Bill Graham. The critics will have information."

Now he's a Conservative, and the report is being kept under wraps. Seems that Bill Graham, M. Dion, and others were right when they were concerned about the potential for a conflict. Turns out that Mr. Khan places a higher value on his new working relationship with the PM than on his constituents, parliament, his former party, or his promises from 5 short months ago.

Mr. Harper's plan to ensure every single piece of government information, communication, or action runs directly through his office has had another successful skirmish. Long live the King!

04 January 2007

Like Peter Pan, but with the brain of an infant

They are calling it "Ashley's procedure" since it's never been done until now, and our would-be protagonist was unlikely to be named Peter because she's a girl. But like The Pan, Ashley will never grow up. Doctor's did all sorts of weird things I'm sure I don't want to know about in detail, and now she'll stay little - Forever 9, although she looks younger.

Now I suppose if they could have stopped her growing when she was 3 months it would have been more symmetrical, because she apparently has the mental capacity of a 3 month old, and apparently always will. I don't even know how to being to assess the morality of this.

They can do that??

They DID do that?!?!?