Saturday, 21 January 2012

On Limiting Activism and How to Make the Irrelevant Relevant: The NCC and the Bob Rae Vid

With Valentine’s Day rapidly approaching, surely the National Citizens Coalition will be investing in some roses and chocolates to show their appreciation to various members of the local and national media. For if it were not for these various media members, the current ad getting the NCC so much attention would doubtlessly have died a quiet, painless death. Instead, the NCC ad has been given not only life, but a temporary national platform for its brief piece which was released during the Liberal Convention.

The 51-second video is rather unremarkable. It simply—and accurately—points out some of the lowlights of arguably one of the worst managed periods of Ontario’s history, the 5 years that Bob Rae’s NDP ruled it. There is no “character assassination” as University of Toronto Professor and Liberal author Stephen Clarkson has outrageously claimed. In fact, had the both the Liberals and media simply left the ad alone, the only issue that would have likely been raised was the ridiculous timing of it. Yes, NCC Director Stephen Taylor released the clip and took to his Twitter account in mid-Convention to alert his 13,000 plus followers of its existence, and yes there was originally no mention of the fact that the NCC authored it, so clearly Taylor was aiming to capitalize on the moment. In this, at least unlike the CBC and their “interview” with Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, Taylor didn’t wait in Rae’s driveway to shoot footage.

But precisely what kind of moment was it that the NCC capitalized on? The ad attacks an interim Leader (who is looking less “interim” by the day), less than one year after an election, and some four years before the next. Even if Rae becomes leads his party into the next national election, is anyone really of the opinion that a voter showing up to cast their ballot in 2015 will look back on the calendar and point to the week of January 15th, when they viewed a YouTube ad from a partisan lobby group as being the defining moment for them in deciding who to vote for some four years forward? Had the rather clear absurdity of this notion occurred to those who vehemently condemned the video, only the NCC and its patrons likely ever would have seen it. Instead, by Tuesday it had over 5000 views on YouTube; as I write this on Saturday, that figure has swollen to over 13,000. Whatever the NCC paid for the ad (and judging by the quality, one hopes not much), the amount of free publicity it has received and the undoubtedly increased donations because of it, the organization surely can now afford a small token of gratitude this coming Feb. 14th to the aforementioned media members for helping generate such a wonderful non-troversy for them.

Considerably more troubling however, are the calls coming from various corners to limit the already strictly limited contributions by third-party groups or individuals. In the case of Liberal MP John McCallum, this can and should be seen for what it is: sour grapes from a biased source (much as the ad from Mr. Taylor and his group should have been viewed). However, it becomes a source of concern when arguably the most influential Canadian political columnist takes up the cause.

Certainly Andrew Coyne is entitled to and paid to express his opinion. In fact his article (http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/01/20/andrew-coyne-a-less-comedic-balance-for-the-political-marketplace/) brings up some very valid arguments which would seem to support easing on the highly-restricted spending Canadians currently suffer under. It falls short though in its final solution: Coyne’s proposed $10,000 ceiling for annual political advocacy.

Mr. Coyne is points out that to the U.S. Supreme Court, ‘“money is speech”: to prevent people from spending money to express a view amounts to preventing them from expressing it.”’ This view however, is only partially true. The moral reality is that the resources of the possessor belong to them; the state has no more right to tell that individual how to use one resource it possesses (say speech or intellectual prowess) then it does another more material one: money. If I am free to use my brain to support the cause of my choice freely, I should be equally free to use as much of my material resources on that same cause provided I do no harm to another, or I am not truly free. “Partial freedom” does not exist in a truly free society.

The inevitable end to capping freedom in any area leads to freedom infringed on other areas. This should be a point of great concern especially in this particular example to the media. To use Mr. Coyne’s example, who determines what group has become overly partisan, and therefore should be governed by his restrictions? When does a publication known for having, for example, left-leaning columnists and articles cross from being a “paper” to being a tool for political advocacy? And who makes that distinction? And now how do we impose our “$10,000” max?

Any system is flawed. Those of questionable moral standards will seek to exploit the weaknesses of it in whatever way they can. However, it is much more preferable to take one’s chances on a system which maximizes the freedom of the individual to use their physical and material gifts as they deem worthy, rather than have any state or third-party impose arbitrary restrictions on them, which history shows will eventually be circumvented by those same people of questionable standards. Restricting freedom of opinion is as oppressive as restricting the freedom of individual commerce; both are acts of censorship. Coming from a profession that regularly stands up for freedom of expression when publication bans are imposed, I would think Mr. Coyne would be more sympathetic to that truth.

Tuesday, 3 January 2012

Interventionists, Isolationists, and Cranks

Interventionist: Pronunciation: /ɪntəˈvɛnʃ(ə)nɪst/
Adjective
Favouring intervention, especially by a government in its domestic economy or by one state in the affairs of another.
Noun
A person in favour of interventionism.
Noun
[mass noun]
Interference by a state in another’s affairs
Isolationism: Pronunciation: /ʌɪsəˈleɪʃ(ə)nɪz(ə)m/
Noun
[mass noun]
A policy of remaining apart from the affairs or interests of other groups, especially the political affairs of other countries

A couple of points: the definitions above are taken from the Oxford Online Dictionary, and they are in response to a tweet Jonathan Kay sent out (I think in response to mine) where he says that “Dear Ron Paul followers: The only people buying your rebranding of isolationism as "non-interventionism" are other Ron Paul followers.”  I am still at a loss to understand how people that smart who actually get paid to write stuff that is in theory informed, can fail to grasp concepts so simple, and then accuse others of “rebranding.” I feel like everyday I read lunacy like this that I understand better why the esteemed author and Professor Thomas Sowell has referred to the intelligentsia as "musheads." 

Let me try it again: we believe in promoting peace through trade. That is not isolationism. We don't believe in bombing the hell out of every perceived or "made-up-so-we-have-an-excuse-to-invade" threat (see Iraq, nukes). Or just check out this: http://www.indianapolisrecorder.com/news/international/article_1fcc2fde-2cce-11e1-b170-0019bb2963f4.html

This post was a letter I sent to the National Post in response to the article I ref below from Jonathan Kay. I sent it really late, it didn’t get published, and to be honest I should have reworked some of it because I was exhausted and sick when I wrote it. But the points are still relevant, and as today is the Iowa Caucus, and those of us who embrace freedom and liberty are eagerly anticipating the results.

Dear Sirs,

Perhaps Jonathan Kay (http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2011/12/29/jonathan-kay-what-ron-paul-is-good-for/) could enlighten us. While he rightly identifies that Rep. Paul is the only GOP candidate (actually, you could include President Obama as well) who “understands that superpowers can’t maintain 11 carrier battle groups, win Afghanistan, protect Israel, take on Iran, out-educate China, and run a humane society, all while disemboweling government” he doesn’t seem to agree with any of the ways Dr. Paul would set about correcting the problems listed.

Mr. Kay, along with the other suddenly-panicked media who now realize that Rep. Paul is a credible threat to win the GOP nomination, errantly describes Paul as an “isolationist,” without stopping to consider that Dr. Paul has vehemently opposed “isolating” his country—often voting against his own party in doing so—from the rest of the world through the popular means of trade sanctions or embargoes (Paul’s voting history on this is too long to account for). I find it ironic that proponents of the constant US cycle of propaganda-sanctions-invasion-Empire Building are never viewed as “isolationists” despite the fact that few acts can be as isolating as sanctioning a country to starvation and trying to over through its government (see Castro, Fidel). How has our society crumbled to the point where those of us who believe in military action as an absolute last resort are seen as “isolationists?” Isn’t it ironic that the “isolationist” Paul enjoys a support base of current and former servicemen and women that is greater than those of his combined rivals? Perhaps those who have served and dealt with the results of American interventionism are on to something the rest of us could learn from.

We also have—according to Mr. Kay and the rabid anti-Paul group—proof of Paul’s isolationist theories on two other international fronts: Israel, and foreign aid. Regarding the former, it is odd that in the Eric Dondero piece Kay refers to (this from a man who is capitalizing on Paul’s surge in a manner a porn star sleeping with Tiger Woods would be proud of) where Dondero claims intimated to him that he was against the formation of the Jewish state, Dondero goes to great lengths to affirm that Paul is not anti-Semitic (nor for that matter, racist or homophobic). Has anyone who accuses Paul of anti-Semitism because of his non-interventionist policies (which extend to the world, not just Israel) considered that perhaps Israeli leaders like Benjamin Netanyahu are actually tiring of America telling them how to run their country? It seems much of the rest of the world has already done so; why we would ascribe a different sentiment to a nation that the US interferes with on a regular basis?

Regarding the termination of foreign aid: Imagine the impudence! With Ron Paul as President, a country that is $15 TRILLION in debt with an annual deficit of $1.5 trillion would end the insane notion that it could bankroll the rest of the world while climbing into an abyss so financially steep that next three of its generations will not be able to pay off. These ideas must be the thrust of Mr. Kay’s affirmation of Dr. Paul’s “weirdness.”
Perhaps though Mr. Kay’s criticisms are valid. Indeed, he too sees the problems that block the paths to “America’s greatness” as Mitt Romney puts it, but is equally clear that Rep. Paul, the “classic American crank,” isn’t offering realistic solutions to them. As none of the other GOP candidates—nor for that matter, President Obama—seem to have an idea of how to correct them, and all preach a policy that amounts to more of the same irresponsible government which got America into her current mess, Mr. Kay must have a more realistic solution on how America can right her ship.

We cranks are eager to hear it.