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Affirmative action

I’ve just finished David Remnick’s The Bridge, a biography of Barack Obama, and it’s a first class read. Not coming directly out of the book, but always in the overall scenario of a black man becoming President, is the cultural and economic straitjacket most Afro-Americans are born to, and have an enormous struggle escaping from. And it made me think of “affirmative action” as a social and economic tool.

When most of us think of “affirmative action” we remember the Bakke case where a white was excluded from medical school because a black with fewer qualifications was given a special spot. This was a hugely important case but it was not decided in the US Supreme Court on the issue of affirmative action per se, but on an interpretation of the Civil Rights case. The court did not decide that affirmative action was, in itself, wrong. And the Justices were all over the lot in their reasons.

Many cases of affirmative action arose out of contracts, mostly in the South, where “Jim Crow” rules gave public contracts, for example for construction, to companies in which most employees were white even though the area itself had substantial, sometimes majority black populations. Continue Reading »

Minimum wage

I thought Jim Sinclair, president of the BC Federation of Labour was right to demand a sizable increase in the minimum wage but after seeing that the Fraser Institute was against it I knew it was right. The reason workers in McDonald’s and their ilk are paid so pitifully is because the owners can get away with it. The direct result of this state of affairs is that the grief that comes from downturns in the economy is passed on, disproportionately to the minimum wage earner yet there is no win for him/her when the economy is good.

That the Fraser Institute would take the position they do is not surprising considering that a few years ago, one of their “fellows”, Dr. Walter Bloch, stood for voluntary slavery! If you don’t believe it, go to Google and find out for yourself.

They also believe that all rivers should be private property and that somehow this would mean that they would be better cared for because owners would make the best possible use of them. Actually, I don’t doubt that’s true since the best available use of a river is as a sewer for agriculture or industry.

We have a long history in BC of caring for one another – the left and the old Socreds because it’s the right thing to do, the right wing, Campbell & Co. grudgingly because they must.

People who don’t make enough to live on, too often find other ways to make ends meet.

Frankly, I can’t understand why a dime extra on a burger would be a big deal and I rather expect that the public would cheerfully do this to give those kids a living wage.

Several things on my mind today.

One of the great advantages to writing a column somewhere else, at thetyee.ca for example, is that people who respond do so with great candour. It takes care, in part, of Robbie Burns couplet, “O wad a power the giftie gie us, to see oursels as others see us.”

Quite often hostile letters claim that I have a political agenda and am looking for the opportunity. Well, I’m up to my ears in politics as it is thank you very much.

Later this month I’m starting a speaking tour throughout much of southern BC and Vancouver Island fighting against the Liberals’ wretched energy policy and other environmental evils for the Common Sense Canadian (www.thecanadian.org) and that’s what I intend to do for the duration. Continue Reading »

The Zalm Factor

Vander Zalm leading the charge... to where?


New Dems wise to keep their distance from Bill Vander Zalm, despite his HST-fighting success.

The HST business is having some interesting fallout.

One need hardly note that the Campbell government is spinning out of control, otherwise how can you explain the appointment of Hon. Wally Oppal, QC to head up the Pickton inquiry? Of course he’s a nice guy with a great record, but much of that record is political within the ranks of the Campbell government, and this smells like our Pinocchio premier’s payoff to the former attorney general.

If so, that doesn’t mean that Oppal won’t do a good job. I’ve no doubt that he will. But the exercise is tainted by the brush of Campbell, and it’s hard to think of a more awkward first fence to jump.

In politics, it’s said that six weeks is an eternity. How about six days or thereabouts? That’s the time it took after announcing his HST referendum for the chinks in the armor of the Vander Zalm fighting machine to begin to appear. During Gardener Bill’s highly successful campaign, recall was the principle tool of war. “Give us a referendum or we’ll bring down the government” was the cry. The problem is that they got the referendum (for which I say hurrah!) so that the threat became unnecessary and, in my mind, undoable. One could almost hear the hissing sound from the punctured balloons.

What to recall about recall

Recall, one must remember, is an American tool designed for a system much different than ours. No matter how many Washington state politicians are recalled, the government still survives; its purpose is to get rid of especially useless ones. The intent of the B.C. version was the same, but it’s in a system where recall can bring down the government. Thus it is, I contend, an abuse of the spirit of recall to use it to threaten a government’s existence rather than just for ousting bad MLAs.

During the NDP years, one recall effort started in Prince George against then-MLA and finance minister, Paul Ramsey. Right wingers, slavering at the chance to hurt the unpopular NDP government, flocked to Prince George where they railed against the government. I editorialize that this wasn’t the purpose or the spirit of the recall law, and that Ramsey should only be challenged on his record as an MLA. Whether or not that was the telling argument I cannot say, but the effort fizzled out.

Now that Vander Zalm & Co. won the HST battle, he will lose the war and in fact, as Paul Ramsey has noted, he will give Liberal backbenchers an excellent chance to be reintroduced to their constituents.

(By way of aside, my MLA, Joan McIntyre, complained that a recall petition in her riding would keep her from performing her duties. What duties, Ms. McIntyre? Going into the legislature with the other Liberal applauding seals and warmly supporting the worst, most dangerous premier in our history? Give me a break!)

Who’s your Zalm?

What will become very obvious is the reluctance of even New Democrats to let former and disgraced Bill Vander Zalm tell them what to do; they will stick up for the local kid no matter what they might think of the government in power.

In the minds of the B.C. voters there are three views of Bill Vander Zalm. Those who never did like the man. Those who have always loved him. And the main group which applauds him for his stance against the privatization of BC Rail and the HST debacle, but wants no part of him when it comes to their local affairs and looks in horror at the prospect of him returning to politics.

This has all played into another political game — a new party of the middle vowing to recapture the ground that the old Socreds under Bennett I and Bennett II occupied. The moribund Conservative party of B.C. is entering the political arena as well, apparently oblivious to the fact that the political vacuum is in the centre, not the right, and thinking that if they can bring in the said Vander Zalm, former premier Rita Johnston and the former premier of Newfoundland and Labrador, Brian Peckford, the public will flock to their colours. Yeah, right!

Delaney’s love affair with Zalm

An interesting move — interesting if you like the minutiae of B.C. politics, that is — was the recent move by perennial member of the B.C. politics minutiae group, Chris Delaney. He has left Vander Zalm and the HST campaign to become the official spokesman for the BC First Party and, one suspects, its putative leader. Delaney’s cross to bear is his association with and great affection for Bill Vander Zalm, as evidenced in Vaughn Palmer’s excellent column in the Vancouver Sun on Sept. 29.

Palmer quotes Delaney introducing Vander Zalm at a political meeting, where he compared the Zalm to Lincoln, Gandhi and Martin Luther King, closing with: “I thank God for sending us a great leader… I thank God for Bill Vander Zalm.”

I’ve known and liked Chris Delaney for some time now and have always been impressed with him personally and his grasp of the issues, however the above quote makes me think he’s like the clock that once struck 13, never to be fully trusted again.

Time will tell how these loosely connected issues: HST, recall, the straw-grasping BC Conservative Party, the BC First wannabes and the political spirit of Bill Vander Zalm, play out.

At this stage, the game is still Carole James’ to win, provided she learns what the political rules are in down-and-dirty politics and starts to play by them.

Last Saturday Dave Barrett, Shirley, his wife of 57 years and their family celebrated his 80th birthday, a good moment, I think, to look back on his career.

Dave became leader of the NDP in 1969 when the NDP under my old classmate, Tom Berger, lost yet another election to WAC Bennett. He led them to an upset victory in August 1972. He was later an NDP MP and ran for the leadership of the national party – and lost – but it’s his term as premier that I want to look at today. Continue Reading »

My diverse musical taste

I love music but perhaps in the sense Sir Thomas meant in his aphorism, “the English hate music but they love the noise that it makes!”

As a young person I had a sizeable record collection (that’s what music came on folks, before you downloaded onto an iPod).

In High School I wrote an article for the school paper called “Rattling Records With Rafe”. I actually collected a bit of slush as the lovely Helen, who ran the records department for Thompson and Page in South Granville, would slip me the occasional record free. Whether I took that as a bribe to write nice things about the record and Thompson and Page I simply will not discuss! Continue Reading »

The environmental process in this province is awful. It’s especially awful because it exists in a form that looks fine on paper but is an exercise in futility for anyone who really wants to learn what’s planned and put their two bits in.

I do a weekly little radio spot called the Political Panel with Erin Chutter on the “right”, Moe Sihota, president of the BC NDP on the “left” and me God knows where. Moe and I had a bit of a dustup some weeks ago about the Environmental Assessment Hearings in the province which he, when Environment Minister, set up. He praised them if not to the skies, pretty high and I said, essentially, that they were a farce.

In support of his position (after I’d declared that they hadn’t turned down a single private power project) he retorted the Klenaklini project had been kyboshed whereas in fact that wasn’t so – it had been turned down not for any environmental reason but because their proposed transmission lines and roads went through a park. My point isn’t criticism of Moe – he agreed, upon consideration, that I was right. The reason none have been turned down for environmental reasons is that this is not the purpose of the hearings! The hearings are after the approval has been given in principle and the question becomes the terms of reference for subsequent deliberations by technical people. Continue Reading »

Chauncey the dog

I’ve been a bachelor this past week as Wendy has been in Winnipeg visiting her daughter and young granddaughter. When Madeleine was born a year ago,  Wendy made it clear that she wasn’t going to be like I was, an absent grandparent (6 of my 8 grew up in Toronto or Kamloops) and I heartily support that decision. She takes a week every other month off and that’s great with me – except. Except that leaves me alone with Chauncey, our chocolate lab.

Until Wendy went on her first granddaughter sojourn I thought that we more or less divided the dog responsibilities. Not so. Not so by a long shot.

First thing in the morning as I’m trying to do the impossible – make a cup of coffee, pour some cereal into a bowl adding milk, and get some orange juice for my two vitamin pills, Chauncey arrives completely destroying my concentration. “What do you want, Chaunce”, I ask trying to disguise my annoyance. I scratch my head and there’s the answer – he gets a certain kind of biscuit called a toothbrush every morning at that time so I break my complicated routine and get him one then repair to the sunroom table for breakfast and the papers. But there he is, staring at me, head cocked and raised ears. Continue Reading »

What the hell is in it for us?

I hate to sound ungracious towards our friends and neighbours by asking that question but it’s occurred to me quite often and I, for one, would like an answer.

With fish farms, what the hell is in it for us with them?

Over 90% of the farms are foreign owned and none of them is owned in BC. The license fees we collect are like a handful of sand is to Vancouver’s beaches. Our wild salmon are destroyed, the environment desecrated and the loot all goes to big companies and their shareholders, mostly in Norway. Furthermore, because these companies are from out of province they don’t give a fiddler’s fart how much damage they do. Continue Reading »

Let me start by saying that I would like to see every Liberal MLA re-called. They are an appalling  lot and dishonest both as a caucus and the Gordon (Pinocchio) Campbell led cabinet.

Having said that, I have serious doubts about Recall as a process in the areas where it’s planned.

I might say that I made the same case when the NDP were in and the target of Recall was Finance Minister Paul Ramsey. Continue Reading »

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