Contumely

Stephen Harper’s introduction of his new cabinet suggested his contempt for Canadian voters is even deeper than the contempt evidenced by his letting only the right sort, the chosen and sanctioned believers, attend his campaign rallies.

Of course given that In the Middle East citizens are dying as they demonstrate and march to win a say in their future by winning the right to vote – in open, free and fair elections, while in Canada citizens voted for an autocratic Harper majority government because “they didn’t want to have to vote again in two years” a certain distain for Canadian voters is understandable.

But not the level of contempt contained in Mr Harper’s appointment of three defeated Conservative candidates to that golden public feeding trough – the Senate.

Although I suppose one should not be surprised by the level of contempt demonstrated in Mr Harper’s Senate appointments. It is in keeping with Mr Harper’s demonstrated lack of need for either ethics [his reappointment of Bev Oda to cabinet as International Cooperation Minister after she repeated lied to parliament (and the Canadian people)] or honouring his stated positions [appointing three losing candidates to the Senate was not simply contemptuous of Canadian voters if reaffirmed that Stephen Harper only believes in something, such as his opposition to the Senate and the Liberals appointing Senators, when it is to his political advantage to do so and that as some as it is to Mr Harpers advantage he abandons his principles for expediency (after opposing the Liberals making Senate appointments Mr Harper appointed enough Senators to have a Conservative majority – and continues to appoint Senators)].

Despite Conservative claims of being good financial managers the Conservatives continue to mismanage Canadian federal finances, squandering the surpluses and solid economic management they inherited from the Liberal government; running record large deficits and running up the national debt to record levels and abandoning solid economic and fiscal policy in favour of ideology.

The Conservatives pay lip service to getting the deficit under control; then Mr Harper appoints his largest cabinet ever (rather than reducing cabinet in a show of leadership on deficit reduction) at a cost of an extra $9 million to the budget – and Canadian’s pockets.

If Mr Harper does in fact look to reduce the deficit his behaviour, actions and attitudes make it clear that restraint will not apply to Mr Harper or his conservative government. Which suggests that restraint and cuts will not fall on programs (billion dollar fighter plane boondoggles or billion dollar prison spending on programs that have been demonstrated in US state after state to accomplish noting – except the impoverishment of taxpayers) or groups (the wealthy, corporations, corporate executives) favoured by Mr Harper.

Not exactly an encouraging picture of the future, but as George Bernard Shaw said “Democracy is a device that insures we shall be governed no better than we deserve.”

And given the current behaviour of Canadian voters they do not seem to be deserving of a government of sound fiscal management, rational and considered decision making or that focuses on improving the life of all Canadians – not just corporations and the wealthy.

Unfortunately the consequences will fall not just on those who voted Conservative, but on all Canadians.

BC’s anti-volunteering legislation

I consider a love of reading to be the greatest gift my parents gave me. So, when I found out about the ‘Reading Buddies’ program at our local library, the opportunity to spend an hour a week sharing my love of reading and paying forward the gift of reading, I picked up an application.

While my mother gave me (and my siblings) the gift of reading, her alcoholism gave us the behaviour and thought patterns of children of alcoholism. I became a member of Alanon to deal with the profound negative effect growing up in an alcoholic household had on my life. The awareness of the profound negative effect growing up with alcoholism had, and would have continued to have if I had not found Alanon, is why I considered it important to volunteer when Alanon Sponsors were needed for our local Alateen group.

Being a dedicated swimmer led to meeting the male members of our local Special Olympics swim team as we shared a change room – they leaving practice and I arriving for the supper time length swim. When the team had a desperate need for volunteers……well, spending an extra 90 minutes in the water was not a real hard sacrifice for me to make.

While poverty may not permit me to financially support programs and organizations it has not prevented me from supporting programs and organizations in my community by volunteering. Even being homeless in Abbotsford, living in my car on the streets of Abbotsford did not prevent or interfere with my volunteering with the Special Olympic swim team.

No, it took BC government legislation to put an end to my volunteering.

Understand, I fully support the requirement for police checks for those working with youth or vulnerable individuals. Over the years I have had many police checks done .

When the province decided to bring in legislation to require police checks for all, rather than leaving the choice up to the individual organizations I felt it was only common sense. And since the organizations I volunteered with already required police checks, I foresaw no effect on me from legislating a police check as a requirement.

I do not know what had the government taking the sloppy route in drafting the legislation. It really doesn’t matter. What matters is that the government produced legislation that was seriously flawed.

When the legislation was introduced supporters of privacy and civil liberties pointed out to the government that the legislation contained an assault on both privacy and civil liberties of citizens. Mathematicians pointed out that statistical analysis showed a significant percentage of volunteers would be faced with the need to decide between violations/intrusions into their privacy, civil liberties and charter rights to get a police check or walking away from volunteering.

Which is the situation I found myself in and mulling over, meditating on and wrestling with this past week, after getting a call from the Abbotsford Police Department that they required my fingerprints in order to complete my Criminal Record Check. Never before, in over a decade of criminal record checks, has there been any problem.

Giving or being required to give the APD my fingerprints when I have done nothing wrong is a violation of my privacy, civil liberties and charter rights that I cannot countenance.

Last year I turned down an opportunity to attend (without any out of pocket cost to me) an interesting conference in the USA because of the privacy violations that go with flying into [or simply over] the USA. Even visiting my favourite used book store cannot tempt me into crossing the border into the USA. And Mr Harper’s cavalier selling out of Canadians privacy to the USA is among the top reasons on my ‘why I feel an uncontrollable need to kick Stephen Harper’s a** list’.

At a time when government cutbacks and funding cuts are making the services provided by volunteer organizations more and more vital, and at a time that many volunteer organizations cannot find the volunteers they need, the sloppy structure of the British Columbia Criminal Records Review Act is forcing volunteers to walk away from volunteering.

The sloppy drafting of BC’s British Columbia Criminal Records Review Act has added my name to its list of victims and has cost two local organizations a long time volunteer and denied another a new volunteer.

I have never had any problem with the need to provide a criminal record check and walking away from volunteering was a difficult and painful decision, that remains unsettling.

But I cannot, will not, allow the state (in this case BC) to violate my privacy, civil liberties and charter rights by forcing me to provide fingerprints, for the state’s convenience, in order to satisfy a piece of poorly drafted legislation.