essaysbysean.blogspot.com
The downtown
Langevin bridge over the bow, named after a dead straight white male who did much
good, is now being renamed in order to blot out his name, make him an unperson,
at least as regards a bridge, like something out of Nineteen Eighty-four by George Orwell. I understand there has been
some self-congratulation over the matter.
Besides the good
he did, Langevin’s “crime” was to be involved in starting up Canada’s infamous
residential schools for persons of aboriginal heritage. As Canadians know, these
were boarding schools, not fancy like in Harry Potter, more like hasty drab
World War Two buildings. The schools were run by religious people, but run abusively,
even criminally.
After the story
ran in the newspaper, the next day another story ran that a school named after Langevin
might be renamed too. This would be logical, if the original “un-personing”
made sense. But did it? The news was that the parents and teachers were not immediately
on board with changing… (I can’t truly know the sense of it, as I wasn’t part
of the elite’s dialogue)
As it happens, my old
girlfriend’s home was in a high-rise downtown called the Langevin building.
Shall we delete the name of her home sweet home, for her own good? No.
Sometimes, as part
of an elite, feeling good in a group with others, call it “happy herd think,”
trumps your common sense. Yes, it’s nice to feel good, but in my humble
opinion, if you’re a politician or other leader, then you need to be careful
about believing that your little group, anchored in a precarious little ledge
in time and space, is smarter than the rest of us. Society, down the years, has
its own sensible wisdom, often surpassing that of the fashionable elite.
As for happy herd-think, before
me is the Wednesday January 25 Calgary
Sun, open to page comment 17.
There are two articles, with no advertising on the page.
Earlier in the same
newspaper, on page 8 News, I read
that Brews, 34, has been charged by Edmonton police with assault and uttering
threats, after an incident with a female reporter making a video for a
conservative medium, The Rebel.
On comment 17, the top story by Candice
Malcolm concerns an incident at a crowded women’s protest against President
Trump:
QUOTE “…(New) Feminism has
lost sight of its original goals, like the novel idea that violence against
women is never permissible, never justifiable.
Some men—weak men
like Dion Bews—use violence to intimidate and assert power over women.
And new feminism
bizarrely enables this behavior, ironically, even at a rally for women’s rights.
Both at the rally, and later online, many on the left have rushed to defend
Bews.
…their true
colours, …where a feminist man, even a violent one, comes ahead of a
conservative woman. UNQUOTE
I think feminists have a
right to change, to forget how what they think now is actually new to the
feminism of the 1970’s. I’m not saying whether I agree with this particular
change that Candice has noted, not when I have been involved in equality since before
Helen Reddy sang. But I am saying it is their right, even if I grimace.
…The other piece
is by Muslim columnist Tarek Fatah, who was in India listening to President
Trump’s inaugural address:
QUOTE … I wasn’t alone. With
me were a WASP Canadian, a former Wall Street Sikh banker who has taken up
farming, a Columbia-educated Hindu environmental engineer and a Kashmiri pundit
who is the assistant editor at India’s leading newspaper.
All of us looked
at each other with that stare that says: “OH MY GOD! …What did he just say?”
We never expected
to hear Trump’s words from any leader of the Western world, expressing
sentiments that are usually uttered in hush-hush tones.
Trump said: “We
will reinforce old alliances and unite the civilized world against radical
Islamic terrorism, which we will eradicate completely from the face of the
earth.”
…The next morning,
was I in for a surprise!
No western
newspaper I saw, other than The
Independent, had Trump’s promise of eradicating “Islamic terrorism” from
the face of this earth, on its front page.
Not the Wall Street Journal, nor the New York Times, certainly not the Toronto Star and unfortunately, not even
my own Toronto Sun its sister
newspapers across Canada.
… No reaction was
sought from rulers of Islamic countries or the mosque establishment in Europe,
North America or even in India (where I am right now). UNQUOTE
As Canadians know, Muslims
over here believe “Islam means peace.” As for non-peaceful believers, if they now
get a free pass, if the media and the elite and even a two-term U.S. president,
who was known to never utter the
phrase “War on Terror”— if all of society would prefer that, Nineteen Eighty-four style, we never
think any incorrect thought-crimes about Islam, and we never utter certain
words about non-peace, then I guess that is their right, even as I turn my head
in disgust to spit. Is there a conspiracy, “cowardice and complicity,” as Fatah
put it, among the media and the elite? I don’t know, but—call me a liberal—I admit
that’s their right … And then I have the right to vote the elite out of office.
I personally don’t think the common people are ready to forget about
fighting the war, at least, not without a “peace
and closure” ceremony, since forgetting would mean their sons and daughters in
Afghanistan struggled there for no good reason. (There’s no oil in that dusty
country) But if they did forget, as I shake my head, then that is their right.
I am saying a society is
like an individual, remembering and forgetting, down the years, as best serves the
culture. For example, in the U.S. children have stopped being prejudiced against
British children, stopped calling out, “The Redcoats are coming!” At the same
time, Americans still remember General Benedict Arnold as a traitor, conveniently forgetting that Arnold was
a good general who did not switch sides to fight for his king until the U.S. Congress
screwed him around. Conveniently, because
it serves their narrative of national unity. As a person of Canadian
heritage, am I offended? Of course I am, but that’s how it goes.
One of my favorite
TV shows is Star Trek. Remember the
peaceful federation’s “prime directive”? Of not teaching anything to another
culture? I think it’s safe to break the directive here, now, on Earth. Why?
Because, with all due respect to the conservative idealists of Star Trek, when a society, or an
individual, is not ready to learn, then it swiftly forgets what you say. But
then again, to paraphrase the Buddha, I also believe that when society is
ready, the teacher will appear.
What if, at
lunchtime, I taught some Yankees—by shouting, from a rooftop, the truth! People looking up from below would
be surprised, and shocked …and by next morning they would have forgotten again.
They may not shout, “the redcoats!” anymore, but they would still say, “Don’t
be a Benedict Arnold.” That’s how it goes.
We live in a world
where proud soldiers can serve at Calgary’s CFB Currie Barracks, (now Garrison Woods
housing development) without ever caring to learn who Currie was. My elementary
and high schools were both named after people, but none of us ever knew whom,
and I don’t suppose our teachers did either. Their role was to ground us to
believe what Canada officially believed, not to leave us drifting rootless in a
void. We learned of heroes, but not of villains. Now that I am my teacher’s
age, I agree: No one too young for college should know the word angst.
My schools were both
at least two kilometers (one and a quarter miles) away. And the new mall was
two miles. I walked, of course, right from grade one. (There was no
kindergarten) The children in Langevin school, if their mothers let them happily
walk the river bank, may walk several nice bridges, innocently, without ever caring
to know whom any bridge is named after.
Today the children
won’t know of Langevin, or that, according to his honest society, of his time
and space, he died known as a good man, having a good funeral. If my city elite
want to do the “happy herd” thing then OK; “you guys have your fun,” as I
grimace and spit to the side, but know this: It just won’t matter to the children.
Nor to posterity.
Sean Crawford
February
Calgary
2017
My favorite web
essayist, Paul Graham, says to use footnotes to contain digressions. OK then, here
is one footnote, one sidebar and one afterthought:
Footnote:
Everyday examples
of being “ready to learn” are when a husband says, “I get it!” and the wife wearily
replies, “Yes, I’ve been telling you that for years;” or they buy a Prius, and
they say, “Wow, all of a sudden we see lots of Priuses on the road.”
Sidebar:
The courts agree:
If a crime is committed in the past, then the accused today is to be tried
according to the laws in effect at that time. A judge might say: If we want
people of the past to respect us, then we must respect them, as we would in
turn hope our grandchildren would respect us. We here today in this room are
not magically Right For All Time.
I would agree with
the judge. It seems to me, if we have a voting age of 18, then we can still
respect our grandparents who innocently believed voting should be at age 21. And
if tomorrow we outlaw war, then I would surely still respect innocent young
soldiers of the last two world wars, even if by our new laws they would be—ahem!—wrong.
Afterthought: As for our
U.S. cousins, I guess it isn’t politically correct for me to give them advice for
either of their ongoing wars, against drugs or terror, still:
If you will declare a war
you won’t intend to win, where you won’t intend to both try hard and demonize
the bad guys, a war you and your president intend to forget about, then I won’t
label you losers, because I don’t think you would take responsibility to own the
label.
But I will say you
owe an apology to a lot of parents of dead sons and daughters.
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ReplyDeleteI am blown away that a quote of the magnitude stated was never picked up by the western press. I say this primarily since it seems anything "that man" says, especially if he can be shown in an unfavourable light gets printed.
ReplyDeleteMaybe someone will see it here and alert the press. Always interesting, Sean.
Say, maybe it was a Star Trek thing, where the media was not ready to face it, giving priority instead to easier things. Not so much a conspiracy then, as weakness.
ReplyDeleteJust as the eastern elite may be genuinely clueless about the working class and folks in the armed forces. I was just reading where an elite lady in graduate school couldn't believe a fellow student was an ex-marine.