A tale of two countries.

Posted March 1, 2007 on 10:16 pm | In the category Terrorism, U.S. Foreign Policy, Canada | by Mackenzie Brothers

Condoleeza Rice made short hop up to Ottawa last week, perhaps to try to smooth ruffled feathers after George Bush once again failed to mention Canada in his discussion of countries contributing to the war effort in Afghanistan. But she was there long enough to be confronted by the unanimous verdict of the Canadian Supreme Court - 9-0 - that it was unconstitutional for the government to override the judicial system or the Canadian Charter of Rights in dealing with suspected terrorists. Shortly after that a solid majority in the House of Parliament voted to retire special legislation that had made circumvention of the usual legal practices in the wake of the attack on New York and Washington a possibility. The differences between the two countries five years after that attack could hardly be more startling.

While the US has allowed that terrible day to turn it into something of a rogue fortress state, demanding visas for citizens of the great majority of countries and passports for all visitors including soon neighbours travelling by car, Canada has changed very little other than by displaying increased vigilance by police authorities at border crossings and closer surveillance of suspicious groups in urban areas. A recent poll showing that almost 50% of foreign travellers considered the US (and not Russian or China) to be the most unwelcoming place to try to visit, while 2% chose Canada, shows one of the potential long-term consequences of these policies. According to a recent article in the NY Times, foreign business people are beginning to avoid travel to and meetings in the US. It may be that Canada will prove to have been a bit too naive in its mild response to terrorist threats, but it would be a hot winter day in the Yukon before you’ll find any Canadians who wish they were holed up behind the walls of a fortress.

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  1. The 9/11 attacks occurred on Bush’s watch and the intelligence failure of then-National Security Officer Condoleezza Rice was instrumental in its success. That it turned out to be the event that allowed Bush to scare the beejesus out of the country has made the American people the architects of their own fortress. Life in this fortress is perhaps marginally safer although I wonder if anyone seriously thinks forcing billions of air travelers to remove their shoes is especially useful. Certainly every trip to the airport is a reinforcement of how silly this administration has been in its response to 9/11. Color-coded emergency alerts, no lip-gloss on airplanes, arrogant, not-too-bright, poorly-trained TSA bullies yelling at passengers, etc.

    But certainly increased power usurped by the administration and its removal of basic constitutional rights of its citizens is the more significant development and hardly worth an elusive benefit. That the American people have sat back and allowed this to happen is a symptom of the fear that Bush-Cheney has nurtured in order to give themselves the kind of power that Bush evidently envied in his buddy, President Putin. More importantly, members of the U.S. Congress have done their part in lying down and rolling over and only now, after the cost of giving so much power to nincompoops has become so blatant, is the congress weakly trying to find a way out of the fix in which they are so complicit.

    So how can we get the Mackenzie Brothers to come down south and help us put ourselves together again?

    Comment by Jeff — March 2, 2007 #

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