• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

To wave the flag or not- that is the question of the day.

Cloud Cover

Army.ca Fixture
Subscriber
Reaction score
2,082
Points
1,160
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Winnipeg Free Press- Online Edition   

Thursday, June 30th, 2005 

 


Put out no flags

Not on this brooding Canadian's green property

Thursday, June 30th, 2005


Trevor Lautens


UNFORGETTABLY, though I've forgotten his name and can't find his exact words in 45 years of my notebook-diaries, a U.S. senator once said, in surveying his career: "I began by wanting to save the world. Then I wanted to save the United States. Now I want to save... (some local slough or woodland)."

Derivatively -- and what better time than Canada (nee Dominion) Day to quote or misquote an American? -- I once loved Canada. Then I loved my neighbourhood. Now I have some regard for the tree-clad slope behind my house.

It is partly my property, partly my neighbour's -- I met him after just 18 years of residence and he proved to be an agreeable fellow, though neither of us has felt an urgent need to communicate again in the intervening two years.

Possibly a metaphor lurks here. Or not. In what used to be regarded as old age (in my case, 70 is the new 90), Canada looks too big for intimacy, too big for the imagination. It has to be broken up into small pieces to be lived in and through. In its larger cities, even downtown is a place too far.

Politically, the country is uninhabitable. Pride in today's Canada is embarrassing, if not repelling. I won't be there for the fireworks tomorrow.

You can stay while I tilt my kitchen chair back and reminisce, or leave now.

There seemed to be a fresh new dawn in the 1950s, that decade scorned as boring and repressive by those who weren't there for it. The Canadian vocabulary unashamedly included kindness, thankfulness, manners, and such, and citizens quite often even put those words into practice. The actual and linguistic horrors of lifestyle, fulfillment, liberation, orgasm (good, better, best), closure (what of importance is ever closed, especially the death of the loved?) and that tool of the institutionalized New Bigotry, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, all gratefully lay far ahead.

Of course, there were unfairness and prejudice, but also -- still in the glow of triumph over evil in the last war, whose righteousness we may ever universally agree upon -- a strong sense of hopefulness, of better days ahead, real wrongs being really righted.

More than an aside on that war: In a Times Literary Supplement review of David Dilks's The Great Dominion: Winston Churchill in Canada, 1900-1954, Nathan M. Greenfield writes: "The Canada Churchill knew is almost unrecognizable, especially to those who have followed the country's reduction in military capacity. The Canadian army rushed to England in 1939 was the only army that could defend Britain in the months after Dunkirk."

Canada's wartime gifts to Britain "totalled one-quarter of those under the more famous American Lend-Lease Agreements -- and Canada's population was one-twelfth that of the United States." Furthermore, Canada supplied 44 squadrons in Britain by 1944, and had built 100 of the Royal Navy's ships and 1,223 of the 5,000 tanks the Allies shipped to Britain.

Since then, countless brains have been addled by an approved high-school textbook that ignored the soldiers and reduced the war to two consequential issues -- women's work (invaluable, certainly) and the expulsion of ethnic Japanese from the West Coast to virtual internment camps.

I've long admired what I call the Class of 1920, those born a few years on either side of that year who ground through a devastating depression, fought and won a war and, hardened into smartness, brilliantly provided Canada's leadership for decades.

Now Canada is uber-enlightened and people are afraid to go out at night. (One never knows, a crooked MP might be lurking in the shadows.)

Dismiss all this as an old man's grumbling if it makes you feel better -- or the mutterings of one who confuses happier times with his youthful self, an argument I grant has some merit. But, when not in danger of being overheard, people of my generation agree with me that it's not just rosy nostalgia for youth. Objectively, life in Canada really was better before the Hippies and the Me Generation and Generation X, and even, amazingly, human rights commissions and liberal judges secretly terrified of their ambitious and even-more-liberal young law clerks.

One finally learns that a single act of personal kindness and civility that lightens a heart and makes life more endurable is more virtuous than an act of Parliament. (To quote myself: All great crimes begin in committee.)

One also learns -- a subversive belief, unpopular and deserving of quick suffocation lest it gets around -- that the displacement of God and enthronement of Man has had only dimly understood but devastating social consequences. To think that we are the universe's highest beings should fill us with the greatest alarm and dread if we look around and, especially, inward. (This, as I always feel obliged to state, from a non-Christian, non-church-going, gin-swilling blasphemer. But that doesn't mean I'm stupid.)

So other hands will have to wave the flags tomorrow. The Canada I cherish -- still -- is a private and mystical one, somewhere up that backyard slope of wild greenery, where a chickadee announces his pert importance over a flower born to blush unseen.

Trevor Lautens lives in West Vancouver, B.C.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
© 2005 Winnipeg Free Press. All Rights Reserved. 
 
I wonder what kind of response flying the Red Ensign on Canada Day would garner... >:D

 
I agree with every word he said. The changes in this country since Trudeau have been staggering. Unfortunately, we have lost so much in the years since that I really fear that this country's run is almost over.
 
When will Paul Martin start flying the Canadian flag over his CSL ships?

I refuse to use the term "Honourable" in this instance. "Honourable is as honourable does"; and few in Ottawa have demonstrated themselves worthy.


Obviously, we can't trust this government in power, and history indicates we should never have trusted previous PC or previous Liberal party governments.
A gullible electorate doesn't find out until too much later just how much we've been had by liars and thieves who would have us all believe what fine, honourable gentlemen they are. Nothing's ever proven but the system ain't kidding anyone. It is expected that those who are in office control the courts and the police, and manipulate the laws with high-priced lawyers that we, the people, ALL pay for with our "taxes."

Gomery is no exception. Sure, Gomery is working on our behalf and we will, at the end of the whole thing, not only see how much was stolen from us (the proverbial tip) but will have the added insult of being presented with the bill for Gomery and all of the lawyers who have made "government" and its con men a growth industry for this country and the legal profession.


Our vaunted RCMP has become/is a joke. This "police force" is not autonomous and is certainly not an entity unto itself. So when criminals within government steal from the people they are sworn to represent, and are, at the same time, controlling those judges, the courts and police forces . . . who, then, really protects the people from those "honorable" members of government who are unworthy of the monicker and appear to function without morals, conscience or humility? Where (and when)does the buck stop?

You, yourself, were conveniently "unaware," as I recall, that your former company, CSL, had received one hundred and sixty million of our tax dollars. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I have always laboured under the (apparently false) illusion that tax dollars are collected to finance this country's military, healthcare, and various other infrastructures required to operate this country and serve its citizens. I would like to know when and under whose watch things were construed and manipulated into a "welfare fund" for private businesses and corporations who don't share their profits with the people of this country and, in fact, take every opportunity to exercise their rights, long ago put into place by old political friends repaying contributors, I'm sure, that enable these organizations to exempt themselves from paying taxes in this country or, if absolutely unavoidable, only on a minimal basis.

The people of this country are sick and tired of being "used and abused" by this party system that has high-jacked governments at all levels. And you cynically refer to yourselves as a "democracy"? Switzerland gives every indication of being a real democracy and it sure as heck doesn't smell like Canada's government. Quite frankly, I hope this causes the people of this country to stop believing and trusting all political parties who continually run roughshod over taxpayers and either deny them true representation or simply ignore their wishes. Time and again the stories circulate of citizens attempting to contact their representatives who hide behind voice mail and secretarial staff, or who totally ignore by neglecting to return phone calls or correspondence.

You and your government are all about creating perceptions, while at the same time denying realities on a scale similar to the French throne that saw Marie Antoinette lose her head to rioting citizens who had had enough.

If, indeed, the people of this country are destined, because of malfeasance (in this instance, by those directly and indirectly affiliated to and associated with the Liberal Party) to a "government" under HARPER, then the social programs currently in place should be protected by the equivalent of a "pre-nuptial" agreement that would save Canadians from Harper's real LIBERTARIAN agenda which, I'm sure, calls for privatization of our health care and social security programs for starters. How do the people of Canada get such an agreement? Or should we all simply roll the dice with our eyes closed and live with whatever result accrues? The sleazy and superficial political game apparently authored by Liberals under your predecessor has certainly taken away whatever few options we may have had.

Harper will prove to be no better and, I suspect, he is quite prepared to sell out our nation as we have known it; and will do so, thanks to the exposure of the sponsorship scam.

"Sedition is the tradition" in Quebec, and it is high time the Bloc was taken down many pegs by a government with the balls to stand up to it when they continually threaten to leave this nation. I can sympathize with their stand as they feel their culture is threatened - much in the same way as I feel Canada is on the verge of being completely swallowed by the United States.

Personally, I'm fed up with the machinations and spin we've all been getting lately, and while I am no supporter of the current system. So who has done dishonour to our flag more often than not? I love my country, but man right now I having a hard time with this day we call "Canada Day" and flying a flag that has been stained by the corruption of our party system.

I am disgusted with the whole lot.

.


Wayne Coady
Cole Harbour N.S.
 
Organization time:

July 1 2006; all Army.Ca mambership will fly the Red Ensign and celebrate Dominion Day.
 
Since then, countless brains have been addled by an approved high-school textbook that ignored the soldiers and reduced the war to two consequential issues -- women's work (invaluable, certainly) and the expulsion of ethnic Japanese from the West Coast to virtual internment camps.

Man, aint that the truth. 

The WWII unit in Gr. 10 histroy was just like that.  Gr.10 was the first year we actually did anything on WWII (before that it was mostly about  New France and the early begining of Canada (which is important). 

We finally do a unit on WWII and we learn almost nothing about the actual battles that were fought. >:(
 
Maybe we could get old Sheila to sponsor our flag waving demonstration, for old time sake.
 
Canada Steamship Lines had a ship called the Rt Hon Paul J Martin. As soon as Paul Junior took the helm, (with the help of Power Corporation) he had the name of the ship changed. So much for perpetuating his Dad's legacy. ::)
 
index.php
 
scm77 said:
Man, aint that the truth.  

The WWII unit in Gr. 10 histroy was just like that.   Gr.10 was the first year we actually did anything on WWII (before that it was mostly about   New France and the early begining of Canada (which is important).  

We finally do a unit on WWII and we learn almost nothing about the actual battles that were fought. >:(

I was lucky enough to have Gen Young as my highschool history teacher, so our classes went into quite a bit more detail on Canadian participation in WW2 and Korea.  If it wasn't for him, I'd be just as ignorant about our involvement in those wars as is the average Canadian.
 
Where else would you rather live? Canada is in the heart of every one of us, yes we have our problems but protests in lieu of actually trying to do something are all just so much wasted effort. I say wave the flag and be proud... :cdn: :cdn: :cdn:
 
I waived my Red Ensign, but all three of my daughters waived the maple leaf  :cdn:.  I am a proud Canadian, I served under the leaf, my father and grandfather under the ensign, and those before under the Union Jack, with only a tag on their uniform to denote that they served Canada.  Ours is the finest country in the world.  It is not what it should be, less than it could be, and ours to correct.  Many of you old timers are ready to give up, you can.  You have spent years fighting the good fight, to defend Canada, and keep it worth defending.  The fight now belongs to us.  Canada is still worth defending, it needs some cleaning up, and yes a good long look at Ottawa makes me long for my FN again, but we are a democracy, and will always be changing to reflect the will of the people.  It is for us to make sure that the our vision for a better Canada wins out.  The True North will be Strong and Free as long as any of our kind draw breath, if it is a little light on the strong, and heavy on the free right now, that can be corrected.  I spent too much time abroad to ever want to live anywhere but Canada.  The only country other than Canada that I could ever consider is Australia, and they could almost be us, if they had real mountains, a few more trees and decent bears. :cdn: :salute:
 
2332Piper said:
"In days of yore, from Britain's shore..."

I guess I'm a little young for that, but on Canada Day while I 'celebrated' I also lamented the passing of a flag and an anthem that I was too young to experience.

Maybe I'm just getting old, but Dominion Day, the red ensign and the Maple Leaf Forever better represent Canada to me then O'Canada and the Maple Leaf flag.

While searching WinMX (a peer 2 peer program for those who don't know) for "The Maple Leaf Forever" I found (what I thought) I was looking for.  A version with someone (Anne Murray I think) singing the lyrics.  This was the only version I was able to find with lyrics.  And what do I hear upon listening, some bastard version with completely reworked PC lyrcis.  This truly pissed me off, as I have always felt Maple Leaf Forever was always far for patriotic than O Canada.  Does anyone know any place I can get a vocal version of Maple Leaf with the proper lyrics?

 
Back
Top