Posted on 07/11/2006 7:56:36 AM PDT by GMMAC
Celebrate the 'Canadian achievement'
John Geiger, National Post
Published: Tuesday, July 11, 2006
When Australian Prime Minister John Howard visited Canada in May, commentators noted just how much Stephen Harper owed to him -- from his family-friendly platform of tax benefits to his determination to strengthen ties with the United States. During their talks, Harper also expressed interest in emulating the Australian approach to climate change outside Kyoto.
But there is one policy area Harper and his government have yet to borrow and should, namely a Canadian version of Howard's concept of the "Australian Achievement."
Howard used his Australia Day address in January to pay tribute to Australia's ethnic diversity, calling it "one of the enduring strengths of our nation." However, this was not the usual litany of multiculti platitudes that Canadians have come to expect from their politicians. Howard went on to say that even diverse countries have "a dominant cultural pattern running through them. In Australia's case, that dominant pattern comprises Judeo-Christian ethics, the progressive spirit of the Enlightenment and the institutions and values of British political culture."
Of course, it is equally true for this country, but try to imagine for one moment a Canadian political leader with the courage to say so. Or to hail, as Howard did, the fact that his countrymen have "drawn back from being too obsessed with diversity."
Indeed, the contrast between Howard's remarks on Australia Day, and Stephen Harper's on something called "Canadian Multiculturalism Day," which was held on June 27, could hardly be more striking.
While Harper urged "Canadians to celebrate our nation's rich multicultural heritage" -- and elsewhere announced his government would dole out millions of dollars in compensation for a head tax on Chinese immigrants instituted in the 1800s -- Howard's emphasis was not on the debt owed by his country to immigrants but the debt the newcomers owe to their adopted country: "It would be a crushing mistake to downplay the hopes and the expectations of our national family. We expect all who come here to make an overriding commitment to Australia, its laws and its democratic values. We expect them to master the common language of English and we will help them to do so. We want them to learn about our history and heritage. And we expect each unique individual who joins our national journey to enrich it with their loyalty and their patriotism."
Howard has been acting on these sentiments, as well. Not only for newcomers but all Australians. He has said he wants to see students saluting the Australian flag at morning assembly, a practice abandoned four decades ago. And last week, Australia's federal Education Minister, Julie Bishop, promised to end political correctness in the country's school curriculum and to undo the damage done to the study of history by educators who filter it through Marxist, feminist -- and she should have added, multiculturalist -- interpretations, preferring to, as an editorial in The Australian newspaper put it, "see Australia as a racist and sexist country founded on a crime."
We are, as Harper said on "Canadian Multiculturalism Day," a "nation of immigrants." But diversity is not all that we should be celebrating. Yet judging from the messaging from Ottawa and the provinces, that is all that binds us. Here is a sample of the entertainment line-up Ontarians were offered at Queen's Park on Canada Day: Esmeralda Enrique Spanish Dance Company, the Indonesian Candra Kirana performers, Oplenac Serbian Cultural Association, Folklorico Mexicana, Punjabi Canadian Culture Group, Wushu-Chinese Martial Arts, Sankofa African Drum and Dance Ensemble, Huairapungo Ecuadorian Ethnocultural Group and the Brazilian TropiCaliente troupe. Such mutliculti feel-goodism is no doubt well-intentioned. But immigrants came to this country for freedom and economic opportunities -- not a smorgasbord of ethnic schmaltz.
Of course Canada should celebrate its diversity, but we should be celebrating our common heritage, too. Next year, Harper should strike "Canadian Multiculturalism Day" from the nation's calendar and instead take another page from Howard's playbook. Our "Canadian Achievement" is very real. What we need is a leader with the courage to speak of it.
John Geiger is editorials editor of the National Post.
jgeiger@nationalpost.com
© National Post 2006
PING!
Fantastic article.
Anybody hold out any hope that Fox's replacement in Mexico will be an improvement?
I do like the look of a bright sky on the horizon.
Harper-Bush-Howard - this era's dragon slayers?
Oh, and, how about this part? "Harper also expressed interest in emulating the Australian approach to climate change outside Kyoto."
This is a road we need to get out in the 'atmosphere' (along with getting more exposure on the REAL science, like the natural climatic cycles and bringing out little 'think about it' questions like: "The libRats claim "It's warmer than it has been since 400 years ago!" So, they are admitting it was this warm 400 years ago. How many SUV's were those Colonials driving in the early 1600's?) Speaking of SUV's, I sometimes suspicion that the libRats subliminal 'drive' to get us joe-six-pack folk out of 'em (you notice they don't practice what they preach)and into smaller vehicles is a back door population control agenda. For example: I had 5 children, long before car seat rules. With car seats, 3 to a car is the limit. but I digress...
WE need to mount an 'actual science' informational campaign, non-confrontational, actually ignoring the Gore Camp. Maybe a good rip-roaring "Pirates of the Caribbean" type movie on the Viking Sagas, showing how warm is was when they first settled in Greenland and established a community of 30,000 (most think it was only a handful) and how they lived there for 350+ years until the approaching mini-ice age drove them out and devastated Europe at the same time. It would give people an "Oh, It was MUCH warmer here 1000 years ago than it is now! Hmmm?" moment. - It would show the real agenda of the libRats - to redistribute the wealth: OURS to the countries not 'required' to sign onto Kyoto, like China, India, and hundreds of serfdoms.
Anyway, a good Vikings Saga movie that simply followed the actual sagas - and that would include Leif's voyages and escapades down our eastern seacoast - without mentioning global warming at all - would be a great eye-opener to the general public. (He he, just had a thought. Cast Kiefer Sutherland as Leif. Can't you see the film trailers now, with Lief (Jack Bauer) at the prow of a Viking ship? (Maybe Kiefer's dad, Donald, as Lief's dad, Eric The Red) It would be a blockbuster and viewers would start 'getting a clue' about 'global warming vs natural climatic cycles...without realizing they had been "clued in." (At the same time, they would realize that the Big Lie about Columbus having 'discovered America' is also hype - cementing the realization that all that is written ain't necessarily so.)
(For some historical data, google "Lief Ericsson" : ex: here's a good start:
http://www.mnc.net/norway/ericson.htm
Hmmm - how do we get this proposal to Kiefer? He's probably about the only one with enough clout/backing and mind-set to do it.
This is a very good article. Under Howard Australia has been a very united country.
It is ridiculous that cultures such as Canada, Australia, Britain and the US that have done so much to advance the cause of freedom and democracy should be bending over backwards to appease cultures that are antithetical to such freedom and democracy.
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