Friday, November 04, 2022

An Ill Wind

The bullies are in the catbird seat. Marsha Lederman writes:

We are living in what is increasingly a culture of meanness and bullying. And that bullying is infecting not just the public discourse, but the way government operates.

Witness Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s Keeping Students in School Act, so named to earn sympathy from parents and the public. Using the Charter of Rights and Freedoms’ notwithstanding clause to suspend workers’ rights and impose a contract a union rejected – as the Ford government proposed – is a bully move, and it is being threatened against education support workers.

This morning, the province's lowest-paid education workers went on strike:

These are the support workers who clean up your kids’ vomit, who track you down when your child is sick, who pick up discarded needles from playgrounds before children arrive for school. These are the educational assistants who help special needs students learn with their peers. These are the early childhood educators who care for your children in the tender kindergarten years.

Even before inflation sent prices through the grocery-store roof, the pay for these workers – mostly women – was insufficient. Now, they face a government willing to pass a bill to suspend their right to demand better through fair bargaining and striking – an extraordinary move, and an extraordinarily nasty one.

Yesterday, Ford wasn't in the House when the bill passed third reading. However,

on Monday, as this bill was in the works, Mr. Ford posted a video of his smiling self in his Muskoka sweatshirt, carving a pumpkin and reminiscing about Halloweens past. Leave it to Beaver‘s Eddie Haskell came to mind: grinning politely at Mrs. Cleaver, but when her back was turned, picking on Beaver and Wally – the children.

And, in Ottawa, we're taking an inside look at the Freedom Convoy:

You want to see what happens when the bullies take over? Check out the Emergencies Act inquiry. The “Freedom Convoy” rode into Ottawa and harassed the city with its horns and its hot tubs. And its participants and leaders are now trying to gaslight the country by claiming the protest was a positive event, not meant to disrupt the city. It was like Woodstock! Peace and love, baby!

A description of a stuffed dummy with the face of a howling baby and the word “honk” on its chest outside the inquiry was a perfect illustration of the immature behaviour this gang was – and still is – up to. The mocking laughter, the childish memes they post, their profane flags targeting the Prime Minister – these were the actions of people who suddenly felt powerful, and decided to use that power in the pettiest of ways.

The disease drifted in from the south:

It shouldn’t be a surprise, I suppose, that this culture of meanness has infected the hallowed halls of governance, given that that’s where it got its big boost, south of the border. When you have a presidential candidate who mocks a disabled reporter, or suggests women accusing him of sexual assault were not hot enough for him to have done so, and people actually laugh and, worse, go on to elect him – something’s up with society.

Donald Trump is gone from power, but the nastiness remains. In the American south this summer, I saw a billboard that read, “Every tongue will confess Jesus is Lord – Even the Democrats,” next to a picture of a devil’s pitchfork. I saw a bumper sticker on a pick-up truck that read, “This truck runs on liberal tears.” At a wholesome theme park, one patron wore a T-shirt declaring, “I’m not one of the sheep,” over a map of the United States.

Nancy Pelosi’s husband was attacked in a home invasion last week, and instead of receiving unanimous cross-party condemnation and expressions of concern, this vicious assault was used laughingly by certain Republican elements. Donald Trump Jr. retweeted a photo of a hammer over a pair of men’s underwear with the words, “Got my Paul Pelosi Halloween costume ready.” Imagine amplifying something crude and cruel like that to score political points? Imagine something like that having the ability to score political points?

It is an ill wind that's blowing.

Image: Quarter To Three


14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ignorant is as Ignorant does. Anyong.

lungta said...

The entitled, the hope to be entitled.
To a billionaire a fine is just a user fee, freedom from jail is just a legal deal away and if you make the law; they will favor the ideals of lawmakers first, supporters next and appease enough others to pass.
Then the "mean for fun" of any class. The mentally perverted.
Pretending entitlement, indulging in the dreamed delusion.
Curiously the pure capitalist is a twin (and usually entitled).
The perfect equation to a capitalist would be
$0 for labor plus $0 for material plus zero culpability and regulation plus zero operating expense.
Equals 100% profit at any price. Any increase above is a loss, a threat to the entitlement money brings
Both are the selfish, self-centered freedoms of the sociopath.
The old normal of monkey troop hierarchy stripped bare is the new normal.
The thin veneer of civilization on the human animal
Is just that... very, very thin. ... Fun Times.

Owen Gray said...

Fascism thrives on ignorance, Anyong.

Owen Gray said...

Human ugliness is on full display these days, lungta.

e.a..f. said...

What Ford is doing by legislating people back to work is subverting their rights as people living in Canada. His use of the not withstanding clause is a fascist move. He is doing it because he believes can and it will help his political career. Its not like he is doing it "for the kids". We have only to look back how he treated autistic children.

Ford doesn't think this will impact his career but the teaching assistant jobs are hard, pay little and there are other jobs one could get or the same job in other provinces. B.C. just settled with people who work in the schools and doctors. Both groups got deals they're happy with. Not all details are public, but as I understand it, doctors will receive an extra $135K to help they defray the cost of running a business and the base pay for teachers will be approx. $100K.

Salaries need to go up because the cost of living has gone up. Rents, gas, heating of homes, price of housing are through the roof in Ontario as they are in B.C. In B.C. raising wages will enable workers to have less stress and be able to feed their kids. Guess Ford wants teaching assistants to go to food banks and live in their cars, so his political career will prosper.

This is just plain old union busting and Ford most likely figures if he acts like a tough guy now, he can bully other sectors into accepting what he wants or his business friends want. Of course the workers can always move to B.C.--higher wages, better weather, etc.

Owen Gray said...

That's exactly what it is, e.a.f. -- union busting.

Trailblazer said...

How soon before Ontario becomes a right to work Province?

TB

Owen Gray said...

Good question, TB. Mr. Ford is sending us a clear signal.

the salamander said...

Lungta mentions ‘the thin veneer’
It’s a word I use a lot lately..
veneer re Poilievre Inc et al

Although my language can be .. uh ‘quite blunt at times’
I made a pact with myself.. that no animals would be demeaned
I made an exception re ‘parasites’.. it seems obvious

I also use ‘camouflage’ a lot.. and the term sociopathic
I’ve never used the term ‘septic tank’ or word toilet so much !

I felt the need to invent words, terms.. like Pretendo & ReformaTory
I exhume old terms & soothsayings.. Oh deary me ! Little Bo Peep
And horrendous grammar is a real goody
‘He disappeared hisself’

A lot of scatalogical reference too ‘don’t shit me’
but I have farm lad cred.. so can wank with the best of them
The Boss is a staggering Apex Cusser
Her dad was a veterinarian & she rode shotgun with him
Coincidently, his best pal at U of Guelph
was our vet.. so how did I not meet her back then !
Regardless I absorbed his muttered midnight profanities

May I remind you who my patron saints are..
George Carlin, Tom Wolfe, Hunter S Thompson
and of course Marshall McLuhan.. who never swore
I’m a disciple of Mark Twain of course..
and the threats of Aunt Polly ring in my mind

I’ll sign off with ‘a call’

-it’s dosie doh & jump to the call
aliman right & around we go

-the fats in the fire
that’s Doug in the middle
-Cat got his tongue
but he ain’t worth spittle

🦎

Toby said...

Keep an eye on how Ford and crew treat private schools. I hear that Alberta has been generous with private schools while abusive to public school teachers.

Owen Gray said...

Indeed, sal. He ain't worth spittle.

Owen Gray said...

Ford has made it clear that he sees private healthcare in Ontario's future, Toby. And his education minister is a graduate of a private high school -- St Michael's College School in Toronto.

Lulymay said...

I didn't get to vote in elections until 1980, when I turned 21. I was working in a bank and the day before the federal election (my first) the manager sent word that when the door was locked (at 3 pm in those days) he wanted us all to gather on the side of the building where ONLY men worked. I must say he couched his words very carefully, but his message to all of us was to think carefully about who we voted for because, after all, we would still want to be employed on the Monday after the votes were counted.

I'll never forget that little pre-vote speech (which I assume was vetted by his bosses).

Owen Gray said...

Talk about voter intimidation, Lulymay. Blatant and unashamed.