Sunday

The Long Road Ends At Another Road

Well that took a while, but finally we're there. Writ dropped, election officially in place this morning, and driving around this afternoon I see men with poor motor-skills trying to tap stakes into the ground to support their election signs.

Tip: Obese senior citizen with a big sledge hammer - wielding that thing takes a bunch of arm strength you haven't been working on since your late 60's. Let the young guy do that part before you bust the guys arm.

Listening to a cross country call in show, I'm hearing positive things and scary things. Some pragmatic perspective from BC where an existing carbon tax gives them some perspective. Some blinders-wearing Albertans who are content living in a one-party system, at federal and provincial level staying on script.

I heard some brilliant comments from an immigrant man, and a middle aged lady. From the former, echoing my thoughts, the fear of a Harper majority, given a blatant disregard for democratic society (e.g. free media who are included in the workings of government) and the hidden ideologue's agenda.

The lady on the green shift idea made an excellent point that took me a bit of time to parse - but she said (to paraphrase) "being against the green shift isn't going to make gas and fuel costs come down, and if you think we need to make some changes because of the evolution in our fuel driven economy, perhaps this is the way to go."

I think the green shift plan, as it's proposed was a terribly poor strategic move going into an election, but is probably an astute direction. I think we'll hear many commentators quoting Kim Campbell in the coming weeks: "An election is no time to discuss important issues" (to again attempt a quote from memory).

So out on the trail go our politicians, and the outcome is uncertain. I must say though that I truly am worried about where we might end up. Particularly that an Environics poll suggesting a possible Conservative majority might be accurate and sustained. I think we'd see the loss of treasured Canadian institutions such as our healthcare system and the CBC, and quite possibly loss of identity pulling us closer to Americans through the scuttling of our currency, our resources and our independance in foriegn policy.

I remember waking up after a Mulroney victory and how dismal things looked - and much of that was well founded. This current Conservative group scares the crap out of me, and I can only hope that some other party - any party can keep them at least to a minority, or if not, someone else can get into a minority position through some dynamic changes during the course of the campaign.

Watch this space for more avg guy on the Capital streets perspective.

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