Monday, September 28, 2009

Clean Train




Saturday, September 26th saw a major community mobilization in the West End of Toronto. The proposed rail, that was initially meant to be from Union Station to Pearson International Airport, but has been considerably cut down to a few stops. The rail is set to bisect many communities through the Georgetown-Weston regions, mostly low-income communities. To make matters worse the trains would be diesel fueled rather than electric.

It is estimated some 400-450 diesel run trains, spreading out harmful carcinogens, harmful to ashtmatics and including many cancer-causing agents, would be running up and down this corridor each day. Metrolinx is a company that is run at arms length of by the McGuinty Provincial Government. Sept. 26th was a massive day of action, a human train moving along the proposed corridor from 8:30am to 4:30pm, collecting people at various 'whistle stops'. By the end more than a thousand or so people attended.

We collected at a park where various representatives and other notable figures were present, includiong the NDP's Rosario Marchese, Peggy Nash, Olivia Chow, Cheri DiNovo, to name a few, including some progressive city councillors. Gerrard Kennedy was present from the Federal Liberal Party. Kennedy, for those who don't know used to be a member of the Provincial Liberals. He publicly stated that he was against the diesel trains, but then made the mistake of going on about how the officials in McGuinty's Government were ok and such, recieving some cat calls and light boos. He then started to point the finger at Harper's Government, but most people saw through his attempt at focusing the shift away from the McGuintites.

This day of action was a success and I hope it stirs up sh*t in McGuinty's Government. There is a really disgusting classist element here. Would Diesel run trains be going through Rosedale, or the Bridlepath or Willowdale? It seems people from low income communities are affected first and worst by environmental degredation and pollution. It seems working people have to stand up for ourselves, as our government, Liberal or Tory, does not seem to act in the interests of most people.


Sunday, September 27, 2009

HAHAHA!

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Dispatches from Frontlines

Just some random thoughts on politics in the past few weeks...

I was doing some volunteering at the St. Paul's by-election the past few weeks. I came across a rather peculiar flyer from the Libertarian Party of Canada. The gentleman (name now forgotten) was running in this by-election for the Libertarian Party in order to 'stop Big Brother' so to speak. I havne't had too much experience with the ideology of Libertarianism, but have met quite a few in my travels and activism. They say the difference between a Libertarian and an Anarchist is this: Libertarians have money.


The guy's flyer admitted that it is probably futile to run (something you never admit in a campaign no matter what) and that he was running for his grandson. He then describes how he's going to cut taxes (which he considers theft more or less) in every aspect, while dreaming of good schools and such. The only place government should spend money, in his opinion, is in police services. So, more or less I got this from it. Cut, cut, cut, don't tax anybody, cut back all public services but fund police to deal with the long-term consequences of cutting up public services.

So, kids are born into poverty? You can't go to a good school or get healthcare more or less. It sounds like he is running for his grandson, born with a silver-spoon in his mouth, at the expense of most other people's grandsons. This underlines the perile, selfish motive of the Libertarian. A Libertarian may see No Smoking By-Laws in Public Places as an infrginement of rights, uncaring if your child has asthma and is brought to an early death. Libertarians go against human social instincts and are ideologically quite dangerous in my opinion.

On another note, to broadly sweep another party into a category, I was flyering for the NDP at York. I approached a kind young woman who waved her hands when I approached and said "Nope, I'm Liberal!" as if it was an established and unchangeable fact. She had me thinking at that moment that she was some active member of the party or something. So I proceeded to ask if she really thought Michael Ignatieff was a good leader to which she replied: "Who's that?"

Most Liberals, now this is my personal opinion and experiences, are merely Liberal out of convenience. Liberals are the I-POD of Canadian Politics, shiny and trendy, but nothing in substance, made to be merely consumed. Most so-called Liberals when pressed as to why they are Liberals, simply do not know why. It is the party of political apathy and complacency, with a complete lack of the in-depth.

Now, the big issue this past by-election was on HST, the Harmonized Sales Tax, which will be detrimental, particularly to working people in this province and country. It is ironic that the NDP is always being demonized by media and nutjobs (sometimes both at once) for being all about making new taxes or increasing taxes. Here we have a new tax being promoted by both the provincial Ontario Liberals and the Federal Conservatives. Oh, and GST? Not our idea either. Truly ironic their doublespeak when they try to turn it on us.

Just some random thoughts from the frontlines...

Friday, September 11, 2009

Leftards

Ahhh...so good to be back at York U. Gonna write a lot during the election, but here's a blog on a topic that has been bothering me for years now...

Being an activist I've taken part in so many political demonstrations, activist meetings and movements. Over the years, solidifying my Leftward politics, I've met enough far, far Left groups at these demos and I still cant help but laugh at the dynamics they bring. At the same time I find them so frustrating and counter-productive it gets depressing.

Now, what I am referring to is those small, uber-Left-wing Socialist groups that protest on the streets, give out their newspapers and have a load of opinions (coupled with almost nil social skills). Often these groups are formed of a few individuals, rather than being an actual movement. The people believe in extremely narrow, stringent, almost religiously obeyed views, some calling themselves Trotskyist, Marxist, Marxist-Leninist, Revolutionary Socialists, etc. etc. Now, I'm on the Far Left of what is considered politics (at least in Canada), I mean, I'm in the NDP, but I am also on the far left-wing spectrum of the party, but even I gotta laugh at these guys, which I shall now dub Leftards.

I remember one time my buddy and I were at a demo and a member of a small group called 1917 sold us a paper. We were then followed by someone from an Internationalist Socialist group who was trying to pursuade us to buy his paper instead, denouncing 1917 for making an attack on them in their paper. So, these groups more or less spend more time fighting one another than the capitalists or the powers that be.






I remember a few months ago I was helping out a group, just volunteering and learning, that is a Left-leaning force within the NDP and during our small conference two other groups, 1917 and Spartacist showed up, trying to discredit the group and one another. They'd get into fights over their 'particular' brand of socialism. One guy came up to me, started talkign at me, showing me this thick binded book he'd written on how to make a revolution and overthrow capitalism, giving exact steps to do so, criticizing those who would deviate slightly from HIS perscribed formula. Now, is it just me or with many of these groups is it more about their individual egos than really helping people?

The worst of these groups is Spartacist. If you are ever in a demo or any other political action and Spartacist members approach you, I'd recommend you ignore them. They wrote an article I read once trying to justify groups like NAMBLA (North American Man Boy Love Association), thus justifying child molestation, citing rules like the age of consent being bourgeouis morals imposed on the proletariat. Ok...they are nuts. So yeah, they dont realize how much they are in actuality hurting the Left.

I remember a while back I was at sit-in at York University during the strike. I was mentioning the NDP and my involvement in it, when some of the students present (only a few) started bashing the NDP for not 'being Left enough', since the NDP's brand of social democracy simpy wasn't enough for them...turns out more people there supported the NDP afterall, but it was ironic because in the end of the strike the NDP was one of the few mainstream voices defending the union.

Sure, you can criticize those on the Left who are in the NDP instead of one of these tiny useless pseudo quasi-religious Leftard groups...but at the end of the day, at least we are actually doing something positive in the lives of working people, rather than just sitting and talking about it in our tiny little clubs.

Socialism, and Left-wing politics in general, is meant to be about people uniting and working together no matter our differences to achieve a better standard of living for all, not breaking off and fighting one another over tiny things like the wording of our ideal, or the exact methods of achieving change. These tiny groups will always be a laugh and will be unproductive in every way but turning people away from radical politics and new ideas.

To the Far, Far Left-Wing splinter group members...grow up, get over yourself and join the rest of us struggling for real change!


Sunday, September 6, 2009

Fighting Anti-Semitism in Canada


*I just read this right now, had to post it. I've been thinking this for years. I love this guy already!


Dr. Yakov M. Rabkin


Canada's parliamentarians have formed a committee to fight antisemitism.
All initiatives to combat racism deserve praise, provided this work benefit Canadians, rather than serve the interests of foreign powers. One such power is the State of Israel for whom antisemitism provides its raison d’ĂȘtre.

According to the Israeli author Tom Segev, the founder of Zionism Theodore Herzl considered antisemites «our friends and allies»: antisemites want to be rid of Jews while Zionists want to gather them to Israel.

Many Jews realized this and opposed Zionism from its very beginning in the late 19th century: they saw that Zionists played into the hands of their worst enemies, the antisemites.

Indeed, the Zionists’ cooperation with antisemites was usually harmonious. Thus, in the 1930s, Zionist emissaries in Germany established a smooth working relationship with the Nazi authorities.

In the opinion of Howard Sachar, American historian sympathetic to the Zionist movement, Adolf Eichmann, who was then in charge of Jewish emigration, “dealt cordially and cooperatively with Zionist representatives from Palestine. When the Zionists sought permission to open vocational training camps for future emigrants [to Palestine], Eichmann willingly supplied them with housing and equipment”.

Ever since 1948, when the Zionists unilaterally declared independence against the will of Palestine’s non-Jewish majority, Israeli leaders openly worry about Jews becoming again a minority in the Holy Land.

To counter this spectre, they encourage immigration of Jewish citizens of other countries. Since most immigrants have moved to Israel under the threat – real or perceived – of antisemitism, rather than for ideological reasons, antisemitism has served Israel’s interests.

The former head of Israel’s intelligence services Y. Harkabi warned a few years ago: “It would be a tragic irony if the Jewish state, which was intended to solve the problem of antisemitism, was to become a factor in the rise of antisemitism. Israelis must be aware that the price of their misconduct is paid not only by them but also Jews throughout the world.”

Nowadays Jews in Canada and other countries are increasingly associated with Israel’s bomber aircraft, gun-toting soldiers and Zionist settlers that fill the TV screens of the world.

However, Israeli authorities are not concerned that their policies towards the Palestinians breed antisemitism around the world. To the contrary, the rise of antisemitism supports their claim that only in Israel can a Jew feel safe.

At the same time, “vassals of Israel” (a term coined by the former Israeli ambassador to France Elie Barnavi for individuals often mistaken for Jewish leaders), not only proclaim their loyalty to Israel, they defiantly fly Israeli flags at the entrance of Jewish institutions, including old-age homes and hospitals.

This irresponsible conflation of Israel and Jewish Canadians provokes antisemitism and invites hostility. The standard Zionist claim that Israel - a distant and bellicose state most Jews neither control nor inhabit - is "the state of the Jewish people” implicates innocent Jews in Canada into what Israel is and does. This is what foments antisemitism in our country.

Ironically, while these “vassals of Israel” contribute to the growth of anti-Jewish sentiment in Canada, they hurl accusations of antisemitism at even the most moderate critics of Israel. It is this heavy-handed tactic that generates resentment and feeds antisemitism.

Conversely, Canadian Jews who speak against Israeli abuses of power – such as Independent Jewish Voices – profoundly undermine antisemitic beliefs. They embody the diversity of Jewish life – “two Jews, three opinions” – that flies in the face of the antisemitic canard of the world Jewish conspiracy.

In the wake of the Holocaust, many prominent Jews, including the philosopher Martin Buber and the political scientist Hannah Arendt, warned that establishing an ethnic state for Jews would plunge the entire region into incessant violence.

They believed that only a pluralistic state for all inhabitants of Palestine would ensure peace. Since then, over a million Israeli citizens have left their perennially threatened ethnocracy for liberal democracies elsewhere. Many more Israeli Jews have settled in Canada than Canadian Jews who have left their country for Israel.

Canadians mean well when they associate Jews, who suffered in the Holocaust because of their ethnicity, with the state of Israel, which has assured this ethnic group a monopoly on power.

Thus they uphold the myth according to which Israel represents the Jews around the world and constitutes their natural homeland. This does not help to fight prejudice.

To fight antisemitism, it is crucial to dissociate Jews and Judaism from the State of Israel and its behaviour. Our parliamentarians should affirm the right of all Canadians to criticize Israel like any other country in the world, without the fear of being labelled antisemitic. This would be a sure way to rid Canada of the scourge of antisemitism, new and old.

Dr. Yakov M. Rabkinis Professor of History at the University of Montreal.

His recent book, A Threat from within: A Century of Jewish Opposition to Zionism (Fernwood), has been translated to eight languages and nominated for the Governor General Award.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Cops in Schools @ Jane-Finch?

I was working for a Jane-Finch youth oriented program this summer. It's given me a lot of perspective on my roots in the general area and J-F community. Here is an initiative to assure that police officers wont be in high schools in the area, where those funds can be used to revitalize the community properly and make programs for the youth. I attended C.W. Jefferys myself and due to cutbacks we had no programs, sports teams or even soap in the washrooms...funding makes that huge difference, as the school got progressively worse and less safe over time.


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

3rd World

Going into 4th year International Development in a week, thought this track was appropriate...




I will never stop my activism no matter what happens...