- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Like Kirkhill, I find the idea of political parties and politicians as being "Leaders" to be rather disturbing. On a local level, my city council has exercised "leadership" and "vision" to the extent of spending $100 million on downtown redevelopment. This "leadership" and "vision" resulted in a drop in downtown property values of between $60 and 75 million dollars between 2000 and 2007 (the City's own Downtown Task force provides the figures, but fudge it so it is not clear which is the correct figure).
Rather than learning from that mistake (and the ballooning of the city's debt to over $360 million dollars in the same time period), or concentrating on fixing infrastructure (which has been crumbling for years), the local politicians are now exercising "leadership" and "vision" by attempting to ban drive throughs and actually banning bottled water in city owned venues. Oh, and they also want to spend another $125 million on Downtown redevelopment.......
On a grander scale, the "leadership" and "vision" of successive Federal governments has resulted in over half a trillion dollars in debt (plus about the same amount in unfunded liabilities through government pensions), with really precious little to show for it. The streets are not paved in gold, wait times for healthcare constantly escalate, our children's education is becoming rubbish (check out this billboard in Saskatoon) and we can go on and on. The cult of "leadership" has had some pretty negative effects in other parts of the world; the most dramatic example is to look at a night time photo of the Korean peninsula from space; you can really see the difference "Leadership" makes.
If the government (at any level) is to concentrate on protecting my rights of Freedom of Expression, Property Rights, and enforces the Rule of Law, then all Canadians are free to work to achieve their own goals. In that regard, I am not a big fan of the current government, although I realize that electoral politics in a minority government does hamper their freedom of action to some extent (Imagine what the lefties would say if Prime Minister Harper dismantled or even spoke out against the "Human Rights" commissions; despite the overwhelming evidence they are attacking free speech in Canada and are otherwise capricious and out of control institutions) still it would be nice to get an unambiguous signal that this and future governments will not be constantly crowding out individual choice and freedom.
Rather than learning from that mistake (and the ballooning of the city's debt to over $360 million dollars in the same time period), or concentrating on fixing infrastructure (which has been crumbling for years), the local politicians are now exercising "leadership" and "vision" by attempting to ban drive throughs and actually banning bottled water in city owned venues. Oh, and they also want to spend another $125 million on Downtown redevelopment.......
On a grander scale, the "leadership" and "vision" of successive Federal governments has resulted in over half a trillion dollars in debt (plus about the same amount in unfunded liabilities through government pensions), with really precious little to show for it. The streets are not paved in gold, wait times for healthcare constantly escalate, our children's education is becoming rubbish (check out this billboard in Saskatoon) and we can go on and on. The cult of "leadership" has had some pretty negative effects in other parts of the world; the most dramatic example is to look at a night time photo of the Korean peninsula from space; you can really see the difference "Leadership" makes.
If the government (at any level) is to concentrate on protecting my rights of Freedom of Expression, Property Rights, and enforces the Rule of Law, then all Canadians are free to work to achieve their own goals. In that regard, I am not a big fan of the current government, although I realize that electoral politics in a minority government does hamper their freedom of action to some extent (Imagine what the lefties would say if Prime Minister Harper dismantled or even spoke out against the "Human Rights" commissions; despite the overwhelming evidence they are attacking free speech in Canada and are otherwise capricious and out of control institutions) still it would be nice to get an unambiguous signal that this and future governments will not be constantly crowding out individual choice and freedom.