Letters to the Editor

Letters posted here are associated with the following article:
American soldiers are fleeing the Iraq war for Canada -- and U.S. officials may be on their trail. North of the border is no longer the safe haven it was during the Vietnam era.
The letters thread is now closed.
  • Two solitudes? Not quite

    A few years ago, our federal television station, the CBC, held a competition for several weeks which allowed Canadians to nominate famous (or not) Canadians for the title of "The Greatest Canadian". After the Nominees were in, you got to call in and vote for your choice. Among the nominees were stars such as Neil Young, Shania Twain, Maurice "The Rocket" Richard, and Michael J. Fox.

    The winner was Tommy Douglas; Baptist preacher of the 'social gospel', leader of the only socialist government in North America (in Saskatchewan), and father of universal health care. As a child of Scottish immigrants, Douglas suffered from a bone infection that did not improve after several operations and may have led to amputation but for the intervention of a surgeon who was visiting Winnepeg and offered to operate for free if his students could watch. This experience never left Douglas. Thanks to his socialist ideals and tenacity as Premier of Saskathewan, we have universal health care.

    What's my point? Just that, although we are so close, we are so far. That notch just to the left means that some ideas that are intrinsic to the Canadian identity are perceived as radical by our neighbors to the south. And yes, before you jump on me, I do think my country is better, but isn't that how most people feel about their country? It's my culture and few people can escape some feelings of cultural superiority.

    Having said that, I love San Francisco, I love New York, I love Lou Reed, and Arrested Development and Cary Tennis and hip-hop and Linklater films and the Grand Canyon and Popeye cartoons and how friendly Americans are (sometimes). I'll never get used to Canadian television (wooden acting, toronto accents, and twee storylines), but I still find Canadian comedy funnier (goofy, british influenced, improv based). Stars like Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Jim Carrey, and Celine Dion may be Canadian, but they all live in the US, because, for so many Candians, the opportunities south of the border are exponentially greater. I've travelled through the US twice, and will again because it is a magnificent country.

    But, like most Canadians, I still have not gotten over my shock that the US re-elected George Bush. After watching the ludicrous incompetence and scary bravado of his first term, I think most Canadians were pretty sure that he would receive the trouncing of a lifetime in '04. Watcing the election that night, realizing that he had received a mandate for another four years, part of me just snapped. For the first time, it felt like the citizens of the United States were from another solar system. Subsequently, my friends and I have often watched speeches and press conferences given by Bush, and wondered in vain what it was that Americans are seeing that the rest of the world cannot. The mere fact of George Bush as President points to a far greater cultural chasm between us that I had imagined, lulled as I was by years of Clinton (who enjoys near superstar status up here).

    The war on Iraq is a subject that, believe it or not, causes a lot of anger and pain up here. It is painful for many Canadians that our closest ally and neighbor has entered into a war that is generally perceived of as illegal, and that has resulted in so much death, mutilation, and smouldering animosity. It may seem crazy, but I still don't get it. Why? One might argue that this muck-up has been caused by marauding republicans, hell-bent on enriching the industrial military complex, but that's just not so. After 9-11, civilized liberal individuals with strong intellects advocated flattening the Middle East. Democrats presented no discernable opposition (and still have not). I hate to say this, and it is not meant to be hurtful, but I feel as though the United States suffered a tragic body blow on 9-11, and then proceeded to react at every turn in the worst possible way, betraying a paucity of grace, resiliance, and intellectual fortitude.

    Having said all that, I know that there are many brilliant, thoughtful Americans who are committed to a change, and I have a really good feeling about the next few years. Now if only we can oust our own special asshole in chief, Stephen Harper, deal with global warming, and eliminate child poverty, we'd be cooking with gas!

  • New Deal Democrat: It's called international law

    "It was their choice to join the military; now they seem to think they're civilians who can simply quit a job they don't like anymore."

    The problem with this often repeated refrain is that it ignores the rights of soldiers under international law. I know Shrub has been taking an extended leak on international law, but it still applies to this situation.

    http://www.notinourname.net/troops/hinzman-20apr05.htm

    "Jeffry House is convinced that Jeremy Hinzman has a strong case for refugee status and should eventually be granted it. He cites the Geneva Conventions on War and the Nuremberg Principles, which maintain that it is a soldier’s obligation to disobey illegal orders or to participate in war crimes. The U.S. war on Iraq, being neither defensive nor approved by the U.N., is illegal. Therefore, orders to fight in Iraq are illegal. Soldiers who refuse these illegal orders are obeying international law and U.S. law too, since the U.S. Congress has ratified these international laws and treaties.

    House also provided Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board with reams of documentation confirming that the U.S. military has engaged in a widespread pattern of systematic war crimes in Iraq. "If Jeremy Hinzman had gone to Iraq, he would likely have been put in a position of committing or supporting the commission of war crimes.""

  • Harper is our Decider

    A lot of Americans, when they think of Canada, think of the three m's - Mounties, Moose and Maple Sugar. We still have them, but now we have something new! We have our own "decider", Vice President, sorry, Prime Minister, Stephen Harper. Harper, a neocon wannabe, elected with the help of Republican consultants, is working hard to destroy Canada as we know it, and remake it into a little America. His greatest hope is to be petted on the head by his lord and master, Bush. Our minister in charge of "Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness", (read Homeland Security) Stockwell Day, a former high school teacher, jet skier and all round moron, has a picture of himself and your dear leader prominently displayed on his office mantelpiece. Stock looks very happy next to his "friend" and co-religionist. He should be. Thanks to the conservatives, Steve, Stock and their friends in the American nazi party, sorry, Republican party, are well on their way to putting the oil sands into American hands and opening up Canada for American colonization. Canada has the second largest oil supplies in the world, more than Venezuela, more than Iran, and more than Iraq. Fortunately there will be no need to invade Canada, as Harper and his friends will gladly give it to you.

    So it is no surprise to me that "we" are not being nice to resistors, "we" don't like them, "we" think that they should be in prison. After all this is a country that just found out that undercover New York city policemen were infiltrating peace groups in Montreal, and we had nothing, NOTHING, to say about it! Our press is becoming as controlled as yours, a huge chunk of our media are owned by one family, the Aspers, who are hard core Zionist Likudniks who never met an Arab who wasn't a terrorist, or terrorist symp. Everyday in the Asper press there is story after story about "the terrorist threat". Some of them are even true! We even have our own little mini Gitmo where we salt Terror suspects away on the basis of some fascist tool called a "security certificate" - secret trials, no you can't see the evidence, no you can't get out, never mind why, shut up! Sound familiar?

    So please don't send us your moral, your ethical, your huddled wretches yearning not to kill children, "we" don't want you. It might make the decider mad, and you might start to kill us too.

    Try Venezuela... it's warmer there.

    Trudeau is dead. Sorry bout that.