The motto should be changed to 'The True North, Strong But No Longer Free'!
From Crisis
By Donald DeMarco
Canadian voters have re-elected Justin Trudeau as
their Prime Minister. The October 21 election shows that the Liberal
Party garnered 157 seats to 121 for the Conservatives. Four other
parties gained 60 seats total, which means that a Liberal minority will
be in power. The popular vote was much closer with the Conservatives
getting 34.4 percent of the vote while the Liberals received 33.06
percent.
What is most striking about the election for this observer, living in
Canada, is that many Canadian voters seemed indifferent to the fact
that their culture is clearly shifting in a totalitarian direction. A
profile of the candidates is a sufficient indication of this. The
Trudeau government required students applying for government-funded
summer jobs to sign an attestation professing their support of abortion,
same-sex marriage, and the LGBTQ coalition. He banned certain Christian
summer camps serving underprivileged children from participating in the
Canada Summer Jobs Program because of their religious beliefs. (This
“is nothing short of anti-religious bigotry,” commented Justice Centre
staff lawyer Marty Moore.) He has committed $7.1 billion over the next
ten years to promote abortion at home and abroad. He will not allow
Liberal MPs to vote their conscience on matters of abortion and LGBTQ
matters, and he will not allow pro-life candidates to run as Liberals.
He opposes conscience rights for health care workers.
The leaders of the New Democratic Party and the Green Party think the
same way concerning abortion, same-sex marriage, LGBTQ issues,
doctor-assisted suicide, and the decriminalizing of marijuana and
prostitution.
This promotion of a unanimity of thought, together with an
intolerance of dialogue, have received considerable impetus from
academe. In a university textbook titled Sociology, for
example, Marlene Mackie of the University of Calgary states that
“Canadian society could not continue to exist unless the thousands of
new members born each year eventually learned to think, believe, and
behave as Canadians. The continuity of our society requires that
children come to embrace societal values as their own. Citizens must
adhere to cultural norms because they themselves view those norms as
right and proper,” What this sociologist is really saying is that the
aim of universities is to discourage students from thinking.
Michael O’Brien, in his 1993 booklet The Family and the New Totalitarianism,
warned his Canadian readers of a new form of totalitarianism that they
might not recognize as such. He wrote that the old totalitarianism
conjured up images of “barbed wire, jack-boots, and thought-control” in
people’s minds. Most Canadians fail to see the new and oncoming
totalitarianism because it is fed to them in the deceptive context of
diversity and inclusivity. The watchdog is distracted by the bait and
lets down its defenses.
What are the signs of totalitarianism? We may list seven: 1)
unanimity of thought, 2) suppression of criticism, 3) denial of
conscience, 4) abdication of reason, 5) government coercion, 6) mass
conditioning of thought and will, and 7) persecution of dissenters. All
these signs are evident in Canadian society and they became crystal
clear throughout the campaign. Omitted from all the discussion was the
importance of spiritual values. In his book, The Crisis of Western Education,
the eminent historian Christopher Dawson remarks that ignoring the
“spiritual component in human nature and in the human psyche is a
blunder so enormous that no advance in scientific method or educational
technique is sufficient to compensate for it.” The economy and
scientific progress are unquestionably important, but they do not
satisfy the essential needs of the human spirit.
“Unanimity of thought is the arteriosclerosis of society,” said
Anatole France. Dialogue—dealing with differences of opinion—is required
in a democratic society. Free citizens believe in the value of dialogue
because they believe in the persuasive power of reason. Ideology
smothers reason for the sake of a unanimity that is held together by
power. Liberalism is not liberal when it attempts to force people into a
mental straitjacket. As Christopher Dawson has stated in his book Religion and the Modern State,
“Once society is launched on the path of secularization it cannot stop
at the half-way house of Liberalism; it must go on to the bitter end,
whether that end is Communism or some alternative type of ‘totalitarian’
secularization.”
Canadian “liberals” would do well to read Pope Benedict XVI’s statement of Truth and Tolerance:
“In all known historical cultures, religion is an essential element of
culture, is indeed its determinative center; it is religion that
determines the scale of values and, thereby, the inner cohesion and
hierarchy of all these cultures.” The Canadian election is much more
significant than merely the election of certain individuals. It has been
the election of untruth and intolerance.
Donald DeMarco is professor emeritus at St. Jerome’s University and
adjunct professor at Holy Apostles College & Seminary. He's a
regular contributor to the St. Austin Review.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are subject to deletion if they are not germane. I have no problem with a bit of colourful language, but blasphemy or depraved profanity will not be allowed. Attacks on the Catholic Faith will not be tolerated. Comments will be deleted that are republican (Yanks! Note the lower case 'r'!), attacks on the legitimacy of Pope Francis as the Vicar of Christ (I know he's a material heretic and a Protector of Perverts, and I definitely want him gone yesterday! However, he is Pope, and I pray for him every day.), the legitimacy of the House of Windsor or of the claims of the Elder Line of the House of France, or attacks on the legitimacy of any of the currently ruling Houses of Europe.