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jmacleod said:Canadian politicians, particulary the for life natural governing Party, define "policy" by what appears in Canadian media. The Liberal Party, with the notable exception of the Trudeau years has no real intellectual depth ...
I disagree â “ this generation has some good, solid people. I don't agree with most of what most of them espouse but I respect a good many of them. I think Trudeau had an exceptionally shallow cabinet and party. He disliked deep people â “ even those who agreed with him and he drove them away, out of politics. Mulroney's front bench was very strong, by comparison.
jmacleod said:... the net result, shallow foreign policies, designed to maintain
the liberal media's preception of Canada, as a kindly, do gooder type of society, epitomiized by the various voices of CBC reporters and commentators - one known in our offices as "ms. menopause" Twenty plus years ago, Canada was a better country - my rant for today. MacLeod
That kindly, do gooder type of society is precisely what Trudeau and Ivan Head espoused. I agree with MacLeod that the mainstream media is shallow â “ because it is a reflection of its shallow hero: Pierre Trudeau.
The 'rot' lies in the deeply flawed 1969 foreign policy White Paper which is still much loved by the commentariat and large parts of the foreign policy establishment. It entrenches a Little Canada position which has weakened Canada and continues to do so to this day. Tony Blair's recent snub just highlights the point: he is trying hard to drum up support for his Africa position at the forthcoming G8 meeting, trying everywhere except in Ottawa because he knows that, despite all the rhetoric, Canada will not â “ because it cannot â “ play any useful role. We are a faded, toothless cheerleader with a weak, off-key voice. Trudeau did that to us; Mulroney, Chrétien and Martin helped, but Trudeau did it because he was too intellectually vacuous to think things through.
I think Trudeau was a puffed up petty little provincial â “ he had a good education but he preferred the very, very small pond of Québec where is pretensions passed for depth. He had charisma and that, his handlers learned from Theodore H White's Making of the President (1960), was all that one needed to win elections in Canada. We, Canadians, were desperate for a Kennedy of our own in the mid '60s (we always want a Canadian ______ - fill in the blank with whatever celebrity the Americans worship this week); we had Dief the Chief and boring old Mike Pearson. Coutts and Davey et al could, and did, run a fool and win so long as they ran a young, hip, photogenic, TV savvy, charismatic fool. Trudeaumania was and, I guess, still is real and few, way too few Canadians ever looked at the man. Those who did saw a lightweight and a poltroon but that didn't matter: he had charisma.