Lumber said:
I am, and while I was even "younger" when the Gommery commission took place, Ive always paid more attention to politics and Canadian events than most my age (why do you think I'm so involved with THIS thread?)
Like I've said on many occasions, I don't expect any party to operate very differently than any other. We don't arrest politicians for what amounts to stealing ;instead, we hold commissions that end up costing ten times what the actual infraction was.
Complaing about liberal corruption is like complaining about conservative attacks ads or the economic untenability of an NDP platform; you're not wrong, but I'm tired of hearing it.
Im more interested in seeing the uproar from whomever's party loses this election than anything else in this election. Nothing significant is going to change. The bureaucrats will keep the legislature in line.
Maybe it's an age thing, or maybe just a matter of preference, but ...
1. Misrepresented or missing or just plain silly "costings" for election promises are just a fact of campaign life ... no one, not even the governing party, in most cases, has a really good, "bomb proof" cost for most things;
2. Attack ads are an irritant. I wish they weren't so effective but, if they weren't we wouldn't see so many. I'm tired of them, but resigned to them, too; but
3.
Corruption (and yes, I often emphasize it when i discuss it in the China thread, too) is a problem of a whole different order for me.
Corruption tells me about the very DNA of a political party. It was never surprising that the Liberals were more corrupt
than the CCF/NDP or the PCs/CPC; they were, always, the big party and the party of Big Business, the Big Banks, Big Labour and Big Special Interests; until recently, until the Chrétien reforms to election financing (2003) they took a lot more money than
the other parties ... and they dispersed a lot more, too ~ too often illegally. The Liberals felt self-entitled and they got careless; but
curruption was endemic in that party and I know that many, many Canadians found it more than just "business as usual"
or something "they all did."
So, while I agree that all three are "problems," they are, for me, problems of much different orders.