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Del Mastro And The Politics of Self-Destruction

Posted: 07/12/2012 7:13 am

It was the cause of significant debate during my sojourn in Parliament: do we respond in kind to the Conservative attacks ads? The professionals within the Liberal Party were keen to do so, claiming, with some merit, that since the Conservatives had taken to the American-style of "slam, slam all the time," that all Canadian parties would eventually have to travel down that road. Not being a professional, I was against it, feeling that it would erode the Canadian construct of civility.

Something happens when you get into politics that I have yet to fully comprehend. You run the danger of becoming less human, more primordial. Worse, you grow detached, little realizing that how you utilize power could well have devastating effects.

Consider the rather comedic retort offered by the Prime Minister's Parliamentary Secretary Dean Del Mastro concerning accusations about financial irregularities during one of his election campaigns: "I'm not an average person on the street." I understand he has been flummoxed lately, but in that brief phrase he inadvertently pointed to so much that's wrong with politics these days. He is just an average guy. Being elected means you become a servant of the public interest, not its master.

This same man who day after day hammered opposition members in the House for years in a crude and denouncing manner is now understanding what it feels like when others, including the media, decide, with some justification, that you're the target.

This is where negative politics gets us -- isolated politicians, derision for the electorate and the media, the use of the bludgeoning hammer over the incisive scalpel, the ascendancy of the party over the constituency, corporations over citizens. This isn't some football contest, where illegal antics on the field make little difference in the stands.

This constant derision of one party against another in the halls of Parliament or in the media undermines the confidence and civility of the entire country. Those losing faith in the political operations of the nation often check out of their citizen responsibilities just out of disillusionment. Behind every partisan attack these days lay problems unmet, challenges unfaced, and promises unkept. People are in more severe trouble every year through poverty, unemployment or poor health while policymakers take aim at one another instead of the vital causes of such growing epidemics.

Strange to say, America's very first president, George Washington, foresaw this day. Speaking to an audience during his final days as the leader of the nation, he concluded:

"However political parties may now and then answer popular ends, they are likely in the course of time to become potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion."

There it is in a nutshell: short, simple, and ultimately damning. By promoting their own harshly worded negative ads against the Prime Minister before an election, the main opposition NDP party has informed Stephen Harper that his negative tools are not his alone for deploying. Within the political bubble it all carries a certain rationale. But the effect on the country as a whole will have debilitating results - as ever. When all of our federal parties reach the stage where they feel the only way they can defeat an oppressive foe is by adopting his tactics it is a sign that we are a nation in decline. Only citizens can stop it, but they have been turned off in sufficient numbers by the partisan displays that they can no longer respond in sufficient enough strength to save themselves and the future for their children.

We are rapidly coming to the outcome Charles de Gaulle reached during World War Two: "I have come to the conclusion that politics are too serious a matter to be left to politicians." Perhaps. But if not them, who? Us? At the moment, we hardly seem ready for the responsibility.

 

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It was the cause of significant debate during my sojourn in Parliament: do we respond in kind to the Conservative attacks ads? The professionals within the Liberal Party were keen to do so, claiming, ...
It was the cause of significant debate during my sojourn in Parliament: do we respond in kind to the Conservative attacks ads? The professionals within the Liberal Party were keen to do so, claiming, ...
 
 
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08:29 AM on 07/13/2012
MONEY TALKS -------politicians lip sync as part of the show
08:21 AM on 07/13/2012
some astsute american said --------the price of liberty is etrenal vigilance -------

yet how many simply put on the team jersy and head down to the polls once a cycle then go back to sleep for the duration ----

unaware of the silent coup d'etat being waged by the unethical,cunning , ruthless and amitious
members of the monied classes

eternal vigilance??? ------keep an eye on and hold responsible those with whom we have entrusted power and authority
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toofarleft4thisworld
The Right Is So Wrong
06:53 AM on 07/13/2012
"Those losing faith in the political operations of the nation often check out of their citizen responsibilities just out of disillusionment."

THIS is the very point. The regressives want us to become cynical and disillusioned. keep the vote down. if 100% of the citizenry voted their interests, we'd never have a Tory government.
11:06 PM on 07/12/2012
Your article is a bit doomsday, and why only blame the politicians? The reality is the voters only start paying attention when it gets rough - is that because politicians have them jaded or is it because they're too complacent to care unless there's a gossipy battle going on? As for the ndp "attack-style" ad, well - when a bully comes after you ... sometimes you can't sit by and sing Kumbayah, sometimes you gotta meet fire with fire. And finally, as for the voters who aren't paying attention - I blame them, and them alone.
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Newfoundlander
I'm a pessimist, an optimist with experience!
10:26 PM on 07/12/2012
Del Mastro: "I'm not an average person on the street."
*****************************

Yes, you ARE an average person (if not below average), and you'll be on the street after the next election. That overweening opinion you have of yourself is not shared by the public, nor is it supported by your actions. Now that you have become the target of the barbs you previously threw at others, all I can say is: "Ain't karma a bitch?"
02:51 PM on 07/12/2012
A DAMAGING, REACTIONARY CONSERVATIVE-REFORM MENTALITY

I hope German operative Kalrlheinz Schreiber, who contributed important money resources to funding the Reform Party, enjoys from his German retreat the havoc the Reform-Conservatives wreak upon our country, Canada, on its morals and its morale.

A grotesque finish, nevertheless foreseeable from early on just by examining the opportunistic, reactionary hodgepodge that constitutes Reform-Conservative ideology.
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albertarick
These are questions for wise men with skinny arms
01:38 PM on 07/12/2012
Or maybe we should stop electing carsalesmen and unemployed "Economists".
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mxd89
I'm a bit sick of labels these days.
12:57 PM on 07/12/2012
Well, Jean-Jacques Rousseau stated that even the best laid down state will eventually decay. It's just a matter of time, the only thing we can do as citizens is (during formation of the state) ensure a good constitution and (after formation) try to be vigilant against usurpers and degradation in the political discourse.
02:52 PM on 07/12/2012
... LET US NOT GIVE IN TO FATALISM... THAT IS WHAT THE CONS WANT OF US...
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mxd89
I'm a bit sick of labels these days.
06:18 PM on 07/12/2012
It's not fatalism, it's realism. No empire, no matter how well constructed, lasts forever. Even the millennia old Egyptian empire fell apart in the end. This doesn't mean we can't live together as a society and try to improve it!
12:04 PM on 07/12/2012
Here's a question that's never asked. If a political party is advertising, isn't that campaigning? If so, then wouldn't that spending also fall under the election spending limits?

I understand that the Election Act doesn't address this, but it should.

When the bully on the block has stolen all the lunch money, he shouldn't be allowed to use it against the kids he stole it from.
Hafingnetonne
A few words
11:14 AM on 07/12/2012
Oh beautifully well said. Remembering that you are a servant not a master. There should be behind every politician an evening person clothed in dark somber suit mentioning it to her or him. "Have you been a good servant today? " Have you said- I am a servant- not a master? Humility -tons of it- are needed and a genuine sincere desire for the commonweath not for personal glory ortriumph of ideology.
09:30 AM on 07/12/2012
Thank you for this lucid explication of the current perilous state of democracy in Canada. I cannot help but feel, however, that the political disengagement ensuing from all of the negativity infecting the current landscape, brought to new levels under the Harper government, is the goal of the Conservatives. With fewer people turning out to vote, the greater the power of the 'true believers' at election time.
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
01:24 PM on 07/12/2012
Re: " With fewer people turning out to vote, the greater the power of the 'true believers' at election time."

Exactly. I believe this is just ONE of the dirty tricks the CONs have up their sleeves for subverting electoral democracy in Canada.

They are pathetic and totally lacking in integrity.
03:22 PM on 07/12/2012
Although Harper has certainly widened the divide that separates the discourse of political parties in this country he is by no means the creator of this. The same problem exists south of the border, perhaps even moreso. Its generally acknowledged that this all started when Newt Gingrich came to town in the 1980's. For the most part, both sides of the US House of Rep's have generally worked together to create legislation. During the Reagan years the Lower House, controlled by Democrats, created and enacted the tax cuts of the Reagan years so often touted by the right as a demonstration of responsible government. In other words, although they disagreed with the president, they respected the office and the process and did as he asked. When Newt came to town, that all ended. When the Republicans finally won a majority in the House in the early 90's, Newt changed the way the House operated. Instead of working with and for the President he schemed to use the power of the House to find some way to bring down the President. And he did, when he managed to get Clinton impeached except the Senate blocked it. Fast forward 15 years. Harper, with his eye's and ears constantly scanning southward, has picked up this infection and brought it home to the Canadian Parliament. As so often is the case, Harper has never had an idea or a plan that didn't form years before in the bowels of the American far right wing.
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12:11 AM on 07/13/2012
it actually started with Lee Atwater who later recanted before he died from a horrible disfiguring death. there is a doc on this but I can't remember the title.
09:28 AM on 07/12/2012
This is an excellent article.
The only other thing that I can add is my concern that we can't blame all of our leaders - they are the barometers of the moral depravity of the society that has brought them forth.
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Justin Flontek
10:34 AM on 07/12/2012
If you want to put a rabid dog down, you don't attack the tail, only to have it turn and bite you. You take out the head and the rest of the body will follow closely behind.
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mxd89
I'm a bit sick of labels these days.
12:54 PM on 07/12/2012
Silly, every generation has grumbled about the "moral depravity" of the society in their day.

“I see no hope for the future of our people if they are dependent on
frivolous youth of today, for certainly all youth are reckless beyond
words… When I was young, we were taught to be discreet and respectful
of elders, but the present youth are exceedingly disrespectful and
impatient of restraint”

“The young people of today think of nothing but themselves. They have
no reverence for parents or old age. They are impatient of all
restraint. They talk as if they alone knew everything and what passes
for wisdom with us is foolishness with them. As for girls, they are
forward, immodest and unwomanly in speech, behavior and dress.”

“The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for
authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place
of exercise. Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their
households. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They
contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up dainties
at the table, cross their legs, and tyrannize their teachers.”

By Hesiod, 8th century BC, Peter the Hermit 1274
A.D., and attributed to Socrates by Plato (likely apocryphal)
respectively.
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09:22 AM on 07/12/2012
Well said (again), Pearson.
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
09:03 AM on 07/12/2012
Re: "Being elected means you become a servant of the public interest, not its master."

It certainly SHOULD mean that, but the CONs believe it is the public who become servants in the process.

That such a group of selfish and dysfunctional individuals now holds nearly unstoppable power in a majority government clearly demonstrates one of the biggest flaws of the First Past the Post electoral system in Canada.
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Justin Flontek
09:02 AM on 07/12/2012
Del Asstro along with the other Cons have more to worry about than their self entitlement issues. Many of them are under investigation for election fraud. Some have already been convicted. There is also the matter of several accounting errors, like the F-35 scandal and Toews recent, premature victory celebration over the savings of 1.4 billion dollars. Even Del Asstro's cousin, David Del Asstro is under suspicion of using his company to launder money into Del Asstro's war chest. There is a clear pattern of corruption begging to appear in the ranks of the Cons. It's about time we started treating corrupt politicians and their prarties as the organized crime they are and tossing them in jail.