Multiculturalism in Canada: Government’s Paradise
by Daniel M. Ryan
by Daniel M. Ryan
When I was
growing up, it was a habit amongst Canadian pundits to complain
that Americans knew very little about the real Canada. Americans,
they opined, saw Canada as the land of Sgt. Preston and Dudley Do-Right,
and consequently expected us to behave as if we were both truthful
and law-abiding. This, of course, rankled many of my elders, for
one reason or another.
I will never
forget an incident that took place in 1988 when I and the rest of
my family were taking a road trip through the United States. The
highway, which had a side road running alongside it, was blocked
for a reason I can’t remember. What I do remember, vividly, was
the sight of American drivers carving out an impromptu detour through
the packed dirt in order to reach that access road. Somewhat bemusedly,
my father complied with the rest of traffic. My eyes just goggled
– it was as much of a cultural shock as a shirtsleeve-weather December
was a physical shock. I was easily impressed by American liberty,
I have to admit: even the sight of a local Floridian electronics
store openly selling radar detectors in 1987 was surprising to me
– just as surprising, I am sure, as a (physically) big Canadian
man dithering his words, out of fear of giving offense to his fellow
Canadians, is to an American. (Sgt. Preston, after all, lacks X-ray
goggles.) There are quite a few Canadians who are afraid of belting
out the Canadian analog to "America The Beautiful," a
song called "The
Maple Leaf Forever."
Traditionally,
Canada is known for exporting raw materials to the world, especially
to the United States. Now, Canada is beginning to trade up. I wish
I could enumerate and relate a large list of high-tech innovations
that are replacing Canada’s traditional export staples, such as
agricultural products, metals and minerals (largely starved out
through green regulations), lumber products (ditto), and oil (not
yet strangled, thanks largely to the province of Alberta’s blessed
orneriness), but there aren’t many. You can look at a list of large
Canadian corporate campaign donors to get an idea of which companies
are at least trying to do so.
The government
official always feels excluded in Canada, unless he or she is included.
Once you understand this, you understand why Canada seems to be
on the slowish track with respect to development of initiative and
enterprise. You will also understand why one of Canada’s more successful
export products happens to be government policy.
Take bilingualism,
for those of you Americans whose state hasn’t already. Official
bilingualism has been official government policy in Canada for longer
than I’ve been alive. Ostensibly, it is merely the provision of
government services in either official language over all of Canada
and the promotion of Canadian unity in two-tongued diversity. In
reality, though, it has financed a bilingual elite who, ostensibly,
are selected by merit but are really held together by a common frame
of reference, bureaucratism. I could write a 900-word piece entirely
in French explaining why I’m not considered qualified for a bilingual
position, with no restaurateur or Berlitz fillips in it.
Has bilingualism
worked out for Canada? With respect to its ostensible aim, no. Only
a small minority of Canadians are bilingual; a large majority prefer
to stay with the language of their birth, their mother tongue, whether
it be English or French. Bilingualism has not only spawned a host
of government-fed pressure groups, it has also nurtured the dream
of many a Quebecker of founding an independent Quebec State, which
of course would be unilingual French. There have been two referendums
on the separation question in Quebec – one in 1980, the other in
1995 with approximately 40% in favor of "sovereignty-association"
in the first, and 49% in favor for the second. The next one will,
probably, return a majority in favor of Quebec leaving Canada.
Are average
Canadians angry about it? No, except for a sporadic drunken kind
of outrage which is inevitably followed by a guilt-hangover (hence
the two attempts and present plans for a third). The only exception
is a small, stigmatized minority in English Canada. Since the regular
Canadian isn’t exactly enamored at the chance of being identified
with Outcast Central,
it should be of little surprise that normal Canadians are so passive
with respect to Canada’s blooming secession crisis. Ostensibly passive,
that is.
Many Americans
may wonder why us Canadians put up with so much from our government,
especially given the wide-open spaces which Canada’s police couldn’t
even hope to cover thoroughly. It would seem that Queen Elizabeth
II, who is still Canada’s Sovereign, should be blamed for this state
of affairs, but her formal power is little more than residual nowadays.
Canada no longer has British aristocrats in the
Governor-General’s mansion; instead, we have either retired
politicians or pleasing personalities. There is barely a trace of
a landed aristocracy in Canada. It couldn’t be servility to King
and Baron that’s the cause.
No, it’s because
Canada now has a professional guiltmongering class latched right
on to the rest of us. Its original prototype consists of opportunists
who found out that beggaring works in a country where people are
expected to help each other out during emergencies without question,
which do occur regularly thanks to Canada’s cold climate. Back in
the olden days, such guiltmongerers mostly confined themselves to
trade – which has left a cultural residue of suspicion of entrepreneurship
that still exists in Canada – but nowadays the ones who have that
skill go right into government. It’s the perfect toadstool, as guilted
people tend to explode in resentment over being held to account
for faults not their own, and then regret it. Just consider what
a valuable export this is to officials of other governments.
In order to
keep the guilt game going, Canada’s political class has foisted
upon Canada something called "multiculturalism." This
is a policy of encouraging ethnic groups to stick together, and
to keep them from comparing notes with members of other groups.
It’s gotten so pervasive that all-too-many Canadians wax resentful
of tax-exemption privileges enjoyed by aboriginal vendors instead
of taking advantage of the resultant tax breaks as customers. Multiculturalism
has been official government policy for almost all of my lifetime.
The way the
multiculturalism game works is simple in conception: divide and
rule. Bribery from the public treasury is the usual means by which
garrison mentalities are financed, but sometimes threats are used,
too. The usual technique is to combine the two, in the order that
I listed, with regular use of the "Irish switch" to deflect
largely resentment-based hostility away from the fomenters of it.
As with any technique with a simple method, though, there are subtle
variations that are deftly deployed by the masters of this particular
game. The result is that the old government boys, the ones who tied
Canadian statism to pragmatism, have been elbowed out almost without
knowing it. They still are waiting for the current crop of politicos
to come to their senses and get back to the old public-works framework.
The same causal
forces are, of course, at work in the present United States. A government
huge enough to grow its own governing class will eventually find
it filled with people who are very skilled at keeping the government
dollars flowing. Hysteria amongst the disadvantaged is encouraged
to keep the guilt racket going. Enclaving is also encouraged to
keep the hysteria levels buoyant. Guilting is tied to increasingly
subtle levels of ludicrousness in order to keep the taxpayers pacified.
A demand for victims calls forth a supply of new ones. Enclave conformity
encourages real victims to stick with professional pleaders. An
increasingly aggressive moralizing begins to crowd out what used
to be the "impractical idealist" circuit, who also wait
for the new crop of governors to come to their senses.
Sound familiar?
Not as familiar as it is to a Canadian. Canada is America’s pilot
plant for government by hogwash, whose soap is guilt-by-association
– a lathering whose spread is surprisingly egalitarian.
July
7, 2006
Daniel
M. Ryan [send him mail]
lives in Canada a nation which had no bank runs during the Great
Depression, and got a central bank in 1937 as a "reward" for it.
He is currently working on a book on Objectivism. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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