All posts by Raymond Tomlin

About Raymond Tomlin

Raymond Tomlin is a veteran journalist and educator who has written frequently on the political realm — municipal, provincial and federal — as well as on cinema, mainstream popular culture, the arts, and technology.

The Dark Side To the Liberals’ Success


wheres-gordo


Artist: Ingrid Rice

Here’s today’s roundup of provincial election news and views …
In his April 20th column in The Vancouver Sun, columnist Stephen Hume took the BC Liberals to task for wooing voters with their own money, for at the drop of the writ on April 19th greasing the skids for its candidates to shower voters with endless promises. For Hume, the end — election to government for a second term — does not justify the means.

Considering that our provincial Liberals are the same tough-love folks who just a short while ago were axing support for shelters for battered women fleeing abusive relationships, terrifying the poor and disabled with their hard-boiled approach to restraint, separating aged spouses to achieve efficiencies in nursing homes, beating up on hospital cleaning staff and telling us they had to endure the pain because there wasn’t enough cash, the ease with which they embarked upon the present spending spree is particularly odious.


In his April 27th column, Hume once again goes after the Liberals, and Gordon Campbell as the “architect of a heartless plan to balance the books on the backs of the most defenceless among us — battered and abused women, the disabled, the poor, the sick, troubled kids at risk, welfare recipients and frail seniors.” Read the entire column here.
Over at The Tyee, Russ Francis finds that BC Liberals haven’t delivered on their promise for “open, transparent and accountable” government, while Vancouver School Board trustee Noel Herron writes that “Once the BC Liberals’ increased pre-election education funding grant is spent, school boards almost certainly will find themselves back in the red …”
Meanwhile, the NDP continue to bash Gordon Campbell’s covert boy in the bubble campaign, saying that Liberal handlers are keeping Campbell away from the public by keeping a lid on the his daily campaign itinerary, staging events where only invited guests were welcome.
In an April 25th column in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Joel Connelly has this to say about the role of the Green Party in the provincial election …

A Bowron River-sized clearcut, visible from satellites: Naders of the North, the B.C. Greens once again threaten to split the center-left vote as British Columbia goes to the polls May 17. The likely result is re-election of the not-very-liberal B.C. Liberals of Premier Gordon Campbell. The Campbell government has dismantled the province’s environment ministry, blocked action on Victoria sewage dumping, and allowed the timber industry to cut virtually without restraint or regulation. Its main opposition, the leftish New Democratic Party, doubled the province’s provincial park system during the 1990s, but found itself targeted by the Greens in the province’s 2001 election.


Will the Greens once again prove spoilers in the May 17th election?
In his updated election prediction model, BattleGround BC, the Tyee’s Will McMartin has the NDP in line for solid wins in 9 ridings — adding sure NDP wins in Surrey-Whalley, Nelson-Creston, West Kootenay Boundary, Nanaimo, Victoria-Hillside and NDP leader Carole James’ home riding of Victoria-Beacon Hill — as well as likely to win in 9 additional ridings, and in contention in as many as 20 more ridings across the province.

Paradise Lost | Never To Be Regained


tsunami-in-aceh


In an article published in The Nation this past week, author and social commentarian Naomi Klein eviscerates the U.S. government in respect of its response to the peoples devastated by the December 26th tsunami, calling U.S. foreign policy “stunningly inept,” corrupt and incompetent.
In the body of the article, Klein defines “the rise of a predatory form of disaster capitalism that uses the desperation and fear created by catastrophe to engage in radical social and economic engineering.”

As in other reconstruction sites, from Haiti to Iraq, tsunami relief has little to do with recovering what was lost. Although hotels and industry have already started reconstructing on the coast, in Sri Lanka, Thailand, Indonesia and India, governments have passed laws preventing families from rebuilding their oceanfront homes. Hundreds of thousands of people are being forcibly relocated inland, to military style barracks in Aceh and prefab concrete boxes in Thailand. The coast is not being rebuilt as it was — dotted with fishing villages and beaches strewn with handmade nets. Instead, governments, corporations and foreign donors are teaming up to rebuild it as they would like it to be: the beaches as playgrounds for tourists, the oceans as watery mines for corporate fishing fleets, both serviced by privatized airports and highways built on borrowed money.


In January, Condoleezza Rice sparked a small controversy by describing the tsunami as “a wonderful opportunity” that “has paid great dividends for us.” Many were horrified at the idea of treating a massive human tragedy as a chance to seek advantage. But, if anything, Rice was understating the case. A group calling itself Thailand Tsunami Survivors and Supporters says that for “businessmen-politicians, the tsunami was the answer to their prayers, since it literally wiped these coastal areas clean of the communities which had previously stood in the way of their plans for resorts, hotels, casinos and shrimp farms. To them, all these coastal areas are now open land!”


Disaster, it seems, is the new terra nullius.

Better To Die On Your Feet, Than Live On Your Knees


homelessness


photo, copyright Strawberry Tea Productions, 2005

In the past four years homelessness across British Columbia has grown to such an alarming extent under the Gordon Campbell Liberal government that, for the first time, scenes such as the one above have become a common feature of the urban landscape. The deinstitutionalization of mental patients has succeeded in emptying government-funded beds, filling the streets with the chronically mentally ill, many of whom have been denied the most basic assistance from the Ministry of Human Resources.
While business and the wealthiest 10% of the population received a $3.5 billion tax cut, $350 million was slashed from the budget of the Ministry of Children and Family Development. The consequence?
Almost one-in-five children in British Columbia now live in poverty, an increase of 41% since 2001; that’s 167,000 children, more than the entire population of Victoria and New Westminster combined. The BC rate of child poverty, at 19.6%, is the third highest in Canada, significantly higher than the 15.6% for Canada as a whole.
In the past four years, the population of seniors has grown by 11%. Yet, according to a report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives …

  • There has been a net decrease of 1,464 long-term care beds since the election of the Liberals in 2001. Between 2001 and December 2004, BC also cut 2,529 residential care beds, and closed 1,200 hospital beds, while BC’s aged population continued to grow. BC now has the lowest level of access to residential care beds in Canada for seniors aged 75 and over, falling 13 percent below the national average;
  • The budget for home support (personal care) was also slashed, by 13% since 2001, while home care (i.e. professional nursing) was cut by 8%. In the rural areas of our province, the situation is even worse, as home support hours per client was 18 to 19 per cent below the provincial average.

The cuts have affected not only seniors but each and every one of us: working people, children, and the disabled in communities across British Columbia. Here’s a list of just a few of the devastating changes to the social, cultural and political landscape of British Columbia that have come to pass since the election of a provincial Liberal government in 2001 …

  • The implementation of a $6 an hour training wage, in concert with the introduction of the most regressive child labour legislation anywhere in the western world;
  • A $100 million budget cut in services to people with physical and mental disabilities, women fleeing abusive relationships, and children in violent homes;
  • The elimination of funding for safe houses for 13 to 15 year old homeless, runaway children, as an uncaring B.C. Liberal government showed more interest in saving money than saving lives, and contempt for the safety of our most vulnerable, preyed upon, children;
  • Cuts to the number of special education teachers by 17.5%, the elimination of 20% of ESL teachers, the closure of more than 100 school libraries, and the elimination of 23.4% of teacher librarians;
  • Draconian cuts to legal aid, the closure of 37 women’s centres, plus 35% cuts, or higher, in funding to government oversight agencies such as the offices of the Ombudsman, the Auditor General, Information and Privacy Commissioner, and the Police Complaints Commission;
  • The permanent, life-long banning of protestors from the British Columbia Legislature, meaning the very real crushing of political dissent in BC;
  • The tearing up of legally-bargained-for collective agreements, and the Supreme Court of Canada decision just this past Friday to hear a case challenging a controversial provincial labour law, Bill 29, that allowed the Liberals to invalidate collective agreements, contract out work and lay off health-care workers;
  • The erosion of basic rights to working people, including the elimination of overtime pay, stat holiday pay for part-time workers, and the repeal of pay equity legislation;
  • The expansion of gambling in British Columbia, expected this year to take half a billion dollars out of the pockets of the most vulnerable;
  • The sale of BC Rail and two-thirds of BC Hydro, and the attendant scandals surrounding each sale;
  • The privatization of hospital services, leading to skyrocketing surgery wait lists, the loss of 7000 frontline health care worker jobs, and a radical decline in the quality of food and support services, and dietary and hygiene standards;
  • The retreat from the promise of universal child care, with 57% fewer subsidized child care spaces, a 49% decrease in enrolment, and a 31% rise in fees.

This shameful list of degrading wrongs committed against the interests of all British Columbians could go on and on. What are we to do?
Over the course of the past four years, Gordon Campbell and his far right-wing, agenda-driven Lie-beral government has brought British Columbia to its knees. The time has come for all of us to stop living on our knees, and stand up and fight for the rights of each and every one of us, for a better and fairer British Columbia where social justice once again becomes a central tenet of a British Columbia by the people and for the people, where democracy shall not perish but flourish.
Take action.
Get up off your knees, and help someone else off their knees. Volunteer for the candidate in your local riding who is most likely to defeat the Gordon Campbell Lie-beral candidate. Work in office reception, canvass door to door, fold brochures, place signs for your candidate throughout your riding. There is so much that needs to be done to work for change.
You can change the world. Start today. Volunteer. We need you.