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Emily
Friday, June 29, 2012
Friday, May 11, 2012
Letter to the Island Tides
Dear Editor,
Thank you to Elizabeth May for her May
3rd article, “The Ongoing Attack on Charities”. I very
much appreciate Elizabeth's representation in parliament and I am
continuously impressed at her commitment to staying in touch with her
constituents. Thank you Elizabeth!
There is one point in her article with
which I disagree: when she suggests that Canadians are losing our
sense of outrage in the face of suppression of dissent. This is not
what I sense.
In my experience, Canadian democracy
has operated on a good faith system: the assumption that politicians
would try their best to do what was right for the public interest
including those who did not vote for them. All we had to do was to
vote, stay informed on the issues and politely speak our views. We
always expected neglect from our leaders, but we expected them to at
least make a show of trying.
The tables have turned rather abruptly
though, with the emergence of tactics such as the willful misleading
of voters away from their polling stations, secrecy of committee
meetings and foreshortening of parliamentary debate. The threat to
charitable organizations is just the next in a line of
anti-democratic actions which this government is taking.
This quick shift from good faith to
suppression of dissent has, I think, caught us all off guard. It is
all too clear that we are talking to people who do not wish to
listen. The abundance of online petitions and the opportunity to try
and find our poling station every four years is obviously no longer
enough for Canadians, the problem is
that we don't know what else there is for us to do!
Sincerely,
Emily McIvor
Friday, May 4, 2012
Subjectivity and Alienation through Kony 2012
Walking home earlier today, I saw a
Kony 2012 poster. The graphics were catchy, the message, popularized
by abundant social media, very clear. What caught my attention the
most however, was a catch phrase at the base of the sheet which
stated, “(finally!) one thing we can all agree on.” I smiled
sadly at the irony.
Kony 2012, the campaign, has in fact
been immediately and hotly contested from many sides. The arguments
against it include disgust at an effort to bring fame to someone
responsible for the horrific recruitment and use of child soldiers in
Uganda; impatience with simplistic solutions to remote and complex
problems (the main one having been along the lines, “get 'im”)
and concerns over political association and the financial background
of the producing organization. All of these immediate and impassioned
arguments sounded reasonable. But then so did the campaign video.
What I was left with after hearing
abbreviated accounts of all this from my sons was an initial anxiety
at the ferocity of the argument but also a general sense that there
are in fact some important issues that we could all agree
about. Among these: that the use of child soldiers is absolutely
evil, that response to awful things in foreign countries may be
complex and that being really clean and up-front about vested
interests in any action is important.
In fact, despite the fact that members
of my immediate family have taken opposite positions on this
argument, the more I think about it, the more optimistic I feel. The
campaign itself is evidence of an urgent awareness of moral right and
wrong (something occasionally thought missing from modern life) and
the criticism reflects active critical capacity among observers. The
key to satisfaction over this popular political debate lies in three
ideas: that there may not be one single universal truth; that it's
okay if we disagree about really important things and that a creative
discussion of the issues is essential.
Shifting the discussion from positions
(answers) which are fixed and tend to be linked to identity (“It's
right because it's my idea”) to interests
which are more often common goals (keeping kids and communities safe)
can help us to see the good in what others are saying. This allows us
to see what we have in common with others and helps us to take our
attention off the conflict
and put it toward building unity and common purpose. Kony 2012, in
their plea for one thing we can all agree on, voiced an anxiety
which is relatively unique to modern thinking. The places we tend to
get hung up are identity (a statement's validity depends on who said
it) and alienation (feeling unable to join in the discussion).
Discussions like this are what
poltics is and
we are already doing it. All of our voices are important, all of our
truths are a part of what it is to be one of a group which despite
all thoughts to the contrary is the reality we live.
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