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Canada Report 2007 Part I Reaching for Subnation Status
by Jim Miles
Canadians have always prided themselves on the goodness if not the greatness of their country. Sitting north of the United States, Canadians struggle with an ideal that rejects many American ideas, yet accommodates in one way or another most of those ideas more so currently than in the past.
From medical care to military purpose Canadians view themselves as essentially different from their southern neighbours, who remain for the most part steadfastly ignorant of us. There is very much about Canada, however, that indicates that we are not quite as independent of thought and action as the average Canadian realizes. This statement by itself would not bother many Canadians, but on specific issues there is opposition to current policies.
Viewed externally, Canada does not rank so well as one
interviewee said, Canada is still considered and referred to as a
subnation and only in relation with the U.S. It has still to develop
an identity of its own.[1] That comment caught and held my attention
as the truth in it seemed quite apparent. In reality, while dealing
with foreign affairs, the environment, military matters (part of
foreign affairs), and other aspects involving international treaties
and agreements, Canada very decidedly falls under the category of a
subnation to the United States.
What follows is a
brief overview of some of the positions Canada has or has not taken
that give definition to our country as a subnation. We may believe
otherwise, but we are highly integrated into American life styles and
policies.
Aboriginal Policy
One of the
international agreements that Canada sides strongly with the U.S. is
the United Nations Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples.[2] The
four countries that voted against the declaration - Canada, the U.S.,
New Zealand, and Australia - are the four main British colonial
countries in which ethnic cleansing and genocide were most clearly
successful. Their success as British colonies turning into peaceful
democratic western nations under the British mould can be attributed
in large part to that feature, especially if one compares it to the
struggles engendered by the British in South Africa, and
India/Pakistan/Afghanistan/Iraq/Palestine - generally the whole Middle
East.
Article 26 of the UN declaration states:
"Indigenous peoples have the right to the lands, territories and
resources which they have traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise
used or acquired." Chuck Strahl, Canadas representative said the
government is moving ahead on "making an actual difference" in
improving the daily lives of aboriginal Canadians, instead of offering
"empty promises and rhetoric." His arguments for that cited Tory
initiatives such as including First Nations peoples in the Human Rights
Act, improving water quality on reserves and providing a compensation
package for victims of residential schools.[3]
Nice.
Heres some money for destroying your culture through the residential
schools, and well give you clean water, but were not letting you have
any rights to your aboriginal land and its resources, although it is a
legally determined right in part through the Royal Proclamation of
1763, the BNA Act, the Constitution, and various legal settlements.
Afghanistan, NATO, et al
The
rise in Canadian militarism may be insignificant as compared to the
rest of the world, but it is becoming more and more worrisome to
Canadians themselves. Under Stephen Harpers Conservative government,
Canada has adopted the rhetoric of their American leaders to the
south. Adding to the we are not going to cut and run mentality is
the belligerent positioning of Canadas claiming and strengthening its
attitude within global affairs. Translated, we have become the bullys
sidekick, the weakling runt that yells support from the side while
feigning a few punches at the victim. Our vision of ourselves as
peacekeepers, starting from Lester B. Pearsons plan to establish a UN
peacekeeping force, originating from the Suez Crisis of 1956, has been
altered to adopt the war on terror language used by the U.S. We are
now peacemakers, the folly of which is evident in Canadas role in
Afghanistan.
While there may have been minor
successes within Afghanistan a road built here, a school built
there we are still tied and incorporated into the overall American
strategic plan that looks to control the resources of the Middle East
and block the emergence of any entity Russia, China, a Caspian Basin
alliance that might contest that. As a result we are fighting an
American imperial war under the auspices of NATO and the UN. I have
dealt with the NATO position before[4] and will shorten it here to say
that NATO is now acting as an independent (of the UN and other
international organizations) global military governance body under the
command of the United States, a role the U.S. has unilaterally
determined for itself. [5]
Currently the majority of
Canadians are against the effort in Afghanistan, not by a large number,
but an increasing number. Harpers view is "Ultimately, where we need
to make progress is not turning Afghanistan into (somewhere) as law
abiding as (Ottawa). It's to really put in a situation where the Afghan
government is capable of managing the security threats itself ... I
think we're a couple of years away from being where we need to be."[6]
In
sum under the larger picture, Canada is supporting a puppet government
of the U.S. consisting of war lords and drug lords (probably one and
the same), a government that wishes to bring the Taliban into the
discussions of the countrys future, and acting as a subsidiary
military force to the American strategic plan for south Asia.
Security is the least of the American desires, other than strategic
security, and the people be damned.
Kyoto and beyond
Canadians
are one of the largest creators of greenhouse gases in the world,
ranking 25th out of 29 OECD countries for greenhouse gas emissions (and
27th out of 29 on a per capita basis) with only the U.S., Great
Britain, Japan, and Germany creating more. Canadas initiatives sound
wonderful:
Canada signed the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change in 1992, and pledged to stabilize
greenhouse gas emissions at 1990 levels by the year 2000. In 1997,
Canada signed the Kyoto Protocol, formally committing to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions by 6% below 1990 levels by 2010.
Intentions need to be followed by action:
However
these international efforts to stabilize greenhouse gas emissions have
failed to bear fruit, as countries have been unable to agree on means
to calculate reductions. Canada, along with the United States,
Australia and Japan, has been criticized for blocking these
international efforts.[7]
The most recent exercise in
rhetoric has been the Bali conference. Before Bali even started,
Canada was being sidelined and criticized for its fawning role to the
U.S. and its lame duck aspirations. Canada has never lived up to
its previous agreements and Harper has sidestepped all issues, looking
towards Bali to provide aspirational goals. In a fully contradictory
statement, Environment Minister John Baird told a House of Commons
hearing, It is just foolish to try to exempt the big polluters from
taking meaningful action. It is a guaranteed recipe for failure."[8]
Baird
was referring to places like China and India and other third world
countries, but taken on a per capita basis and overall tonnage within
the OECD, Canada has no grounds on which to criticize other
governments. In George Monbiots foreword to the Canadian edition of
Heat How to Stop the Planet From Burning, he indicates that Canada
emits 19 tonnes of carbon per capita, only one tonne less than the
Americans, and well above his calculated permissible limit of 1.2
tonnes per person globally.[9] Events within Canada speak enormously
towards Canadas evasion of climate change responsibility.
First
and foremost, apart from the physical aspect, is the rhetoric coming
from Ottawa that is half and half denial and obfuscation. The line
borrowed from the U.S. is that of carbon intensity a phrase that
simply means that richer countries get to pollute more, as A reduction
in intensity under this act means, in reality, an increase in
emission
.As all economies tend to use less energy per unit as they
mature, Mr. Harpers proposal for tackling climate change amounts to
doing nothing.[10] The previous touted carbon credit scheme has the
same fault, that emissions will not stop, and the credits, like with
the mortgage based derivatives, will become another means for money
traders to make more money without helping the environment.[11]
Another
feature of the governments view is that of the denial machine or the
denial industry. In Monbiots work, he examines how the scientists
and PR firms that played a major role in trying to deny that cigarettes
and tobacco cause lung cancer are the same scientists who are now
working with Exxon, the U.S. government, think tanks and others to deny
global warming. Taken further, the CBC reported that these same
people, the same firms, the same rhetoric was now being used to provide
the Canadian government with their own rhetoric of denial.[12]
Much
more could be said about Canada and its own dereliction towards the
environment: the Alberta tar sands and the enormous amounts of energy
required to extract the oil and the impact on the environment and
indigenous cultures (hmm, see aboriginal rights above, it all circles
together); the NAFTA Chapter 11 clause giving the U.S. corporations
rights to sue the Canadian government over financial losses (real or
imagined) caused by our laws (environmental included); and the NAFTA
requirement that the U.S. gets our resources first in event of a
shortage (oil, gas, and probably later water).
The
amount of time devoted here to the environment reflects from my
perspective what the American Empire is all about the consumption of
resources and energy, the drawing to the American heartland of all the
wealth and power it can control from the hinterland, which today is
truly the whole globe. Canadas economy, our environmental rhetoric,
rests firmly in the hands of the U.S. government and its affiliated
military-industrial network in being part of this extraction of wealth.
Consumption and debt
On
a similar note, our consumer economy reflects that of the United
States, and while our dollar is currently strengthening against the
U.S. dollar, there are signs that Canadas economic trends could well
follow those of the Americans.
I often shake my head
when reading American media reports about the indoctrination of
whomever by whatever evil government they are railing against. What is
not generally recognized is that North Americans from birth are highly
indoctrinated into our societies consumptive habits and debt purchasing
from the very moment our children can focus their eyes on the
television screen. It is a kinder, gentler form of propaganda, and
much, much more successful.
The American economy is
undergoing a shakedown of its debt structures now, as the housing
market bubble, based on ever increasing debt and financial trading
structures that no one seems to really comprehend, is deflating rather
rapidly. American debt is huge, whether it is credit cards, mortgages,
national or international, with, ironically, the Chinese and Japanese
being able to control the markets as they own much of Americas foreign
debt, essentially money lent to the U.S. to keep the economy consuming.
Canada,
while still well behind this level of debt, shows some discouraging
signs. The average Canadian household debt is $69,450 with the
overall household debt through personal loans, lines of credit and
mortgage debt equalling $731 billion. That is well short of the
American debt of $8.4 trillion, but given the population factor of 10,
it is about equal per capita. The debt to income ratio is currently 105
per cent, in simple terms saying we are spending more than we are
earning (in 1983 it had been about 55 per cent.)[13]
In
addition, the Canadian tax scheme is more and more becoming similar to
the American with income taxes. It is noted that countries with fewer
social benefits tend to have higher disparities in income and greater
tax advantages for the rich. This pattern is becoming more evident in
Canada. The top 1 per cent paid a lower tax rate than the bottom 10
per cent in 2005. Marc Lee, a senior economist with CCPA, says,
Canadas tax system now fails a basic test of fairness. Tax cuts have
contributed to a slow and steady shift to a less progressive tax system
in Canada. A combination of federal and provincial tax cuts have
effected this shift, with the poorest 20 percent of taxpayers,
[paying] three to five percentage points more in taxes.[14]
Accompanying
this are the increases in user fees, a form of regressive taxation,
the incremental incursions of a two tiered medical system with the
encroachment of private medical groups along the American model, low
corporate taxes with many subsidies (as per the Alberta tar sands
project above), and an as yet low but increasing military budget, set
to double in the next five years.
Subnation status
In
foreign affairs, in domestic spending, domestic taxation, in our
environmental laws, in our increasing belligerence as an aggressor
nation, Canada is very rightly to be considered as a subnation to the
United States. Our internal identity is hockey and beer with a bit of
French thrown in to prove we are not American, but in all our consumer
habits, our spending habits, our changing attitudes towards the
environment and the military, our denial of international norms that
accompany this along with the norms for indigenous rights it
becomes a fair argument that Canada has not yet determined and indeed
is undermining its own sovereignty. If the rest of the world no
longer sees Canada the way a majority of us would still wish to be
seen, the reasons are becoming more evident and stronger with each new
development by the provincial and federal governments. The
corporations are winning, the people are losing, a subnation we shall
remain.
NEXT: Canada and Palestine/Israel: Following the American way.
Jim
Miles is a Canadian educator and a regular contributor/columnist of
opinion pieces and book reviews for The Palestine Chronicle. His
interest in this topic stems originally from an environmental
perspective, which encompasses the militarization and economic
subjugation of the global community and its commodification by
corporate governance and by the American government. Miles work is
also presented globally through other alternative websites and news
publications.
[1]
Chua, Amy. Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance
and Why They Fall. Doubleday, New York, 2007. p. 310.
[2]
___________ United Nations Declaration on Rights of Indigenous
Peoples. September 13, 2007.
www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2007/ga10612.doc.htm
[3] Strahl, Chuck. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2007/09/13/
canada-indigenous.html?ref=rss#skip300x250
[4]
Miles, Jim. Time to exit NATO. Palestine Chronicle, September 16,
2007. http://www.palestinechronicle.com/story-091607164340.htm
[5]
Schell, Jonathan. The Seventh Decade The New Shape of Nuclear
Danger. Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt and Company. New York, 2007.
[6]
Harper, Stephen. Cited in Afghanistan in very difficult situation:
Canada PM, Thursday, December 20, 2007.
http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/
idUSN2014844520071220?feedType=
RSS&feedName=politicsNews&pageNumber=2&virtualBrandChannel=0
[7] ____________ CLIMATE CHANGE: Greenhouse Gas Emissions. http://www.environmentalindicators.com/htdocs/indicators/5gree.htm
[8]
Baird, John. Cited in Gorrie, Peter. Climate change critics fear
Canada's influence. December 02, 2007.
http://www.thestar.com/sciencetech/Environment/article/281789
[9] Monbiot, George. Heat How to Stop the Planet From Burning. Anchor Canada (Random House), Toronto. 2007.
[10] Ibid, p. xi.
[11]
See also, Miles, Jim. Its not about the carbon. Countercurrents.
October 10, 2007. http://www.countercurrents.org/miles101007.htm
[12] __________ The Denial Machine, CBC Fifth Estate, October 24, 2007. http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/denialmachine/
[13]
__________ By the numbers: Credit stats and facts CBC Marketplace,
January 15, 2006.
www.cbc.ca/consumers/market/files/money/debt/numbers.html
[14]
Lee, Mark. Canadas rich not contributing fair share in taxes: study.
November 08, 2007.
www.policyalternatives.ca/News/2007/11/PressRelease1751/index.cfm?pa=A2286B2A,
The study Eroding Tax Fairness: Tax Incidence in Canada, 1990 to 2005
can be accessed at:
www.policyalternatives.ca/documents/
National_Office_Pubs/2007/Eroding_Tax_Fairness_web.pdf
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