Wild Zontargs wrote:There is no provision in
the PCPO Constitution for forcing a leader to resign, nor a duty to behave in a particular manner. There is a procedure for replacing the leader:
24.1 At the first general meeting of the Party following an Ontario general election in which the Caucus does not form the Government of Ontario, and only at such meeting, the delegates shall be asked by secret ballot: "Do you wish to have a leadership election?"
24.2 In the event that more than 50% of the votes cast are in the affirmative, the Executive shall call a leadership election and such election shall occur at the earliest convenient date as determined by the Executive.
I do not have access to any internal documents (if any) governing what did happen.
Okay. But that doesn't provide a very compelling argument that the party violated its own rules, or that Brown was the victim of a major injustice. Certainly not enough to make me sympathetic to spite votes for Ford.
But what does your bringing the MeToo label in have to do with this discussion? What does the term "MeToo" have to do with the credibility of the allegations or the justification of Brown's removal? Because it seems to me as though you are (unfairly) invoking the MeToo association as a way of dismissing the credibility of the allegations as a basis for Brown's removal.
I certainly acknowledge that the allegations are unproven, and are not contesting that point.
Or people in the party deciding (reasonably) that they did not want to join their fortunes with those of someone accused (accurately or not) of groping. Labeling it "an opportunistic coup" is making an implication about the motives of the people involved, one which you have not provided evidence to substantiate.
Should they have done it in a more deliberate and up-front manner? Maybe so. But going from there to "There was a conspiracy to remove him which just used the allegations as an excuse" appears to me to be moving into the realm of speculation.
That would seem to lend credence to the idea that voters backed Ford as a backlash over the Brown's removal, rather than support for Ford's policies (though of course there are other possible reasons). But it doesn't invalidate my main point here, which is that this seems to me to be a really weak reason to vote for someone like Ford, unless one thinks that the allegations against Brown were lacking in credibility, or not serious enough to justify his removal.
And 2/3rds didn't. What of it?
See my pervious point regarding the complexities of why people vote, and how a candidate waving "I have x-number of (insert group) voters" means very little. Hell, lots of (mostly white) women voted for Trump. All that means is that they valued their racism, or their hatred of Hillary/the Democrats, or whatever, more than they valued the rights of women. Waving around "we got X number of women voters" means very little here, in my opinion.
No, I'm trying to head off a "because racism/sexism" argument, particularly when you're using "ALT-REICH" at the drop of a hat.
As to your reasons for bringing up immigration, I'll acknowledge that I may be too quick to view immigration simply in Left vs. Right terms, and I apologize if I misconstrued your position. That said, I don't really feel that going into a discussion about the supposed failings of multiculturalism, and the supposed threat immigrants pose due to cultural conservatism, is particularly on-topic or particularly accurate. And since you brought those views in to the discussion, a defense of immigration from a Left wing perspective was necessary.
I also think that its contradictory to call yourself a Libertarian but oppose immigration, but then, I am of the opinion that Libertarianism (of any stripe) suffers from an inherent self-contradiction on the subjects of immigration, globalization, and national sovereignty.
I happily acknowledge that the PC is not the Republican Party (thank God), and that they do not peddle the kind of blatant racism we see from the likes of Donald Trump. But many of the things being said and done in American politics right now would have been mostly unthinkable to people even five or ten years ago. There IS an undercurrent of racism, xenophobia and even Neo-Nazism, on the Canadian Right as well as on the American Right. I (to my regret) know some of these people in real life. Hell, I'm related to some of them. Its not as prominent here, yet, but it
is here, and it is growing in strength. The PC may not be overtly racist, but if it is socially conservative on sexual and gender issues (even by Canadian standards), it will hold some appeal to the Alt. Reich* crowd, and if it benefits from their support, there will be incentive for it to cater to their views in the future. This gives them a foot in the door. Give those fuckers an inch, and they will take a mile, burn it down, and salt the Earth.
In any case, I do not see "They're not racist, they're just outraged over someone accused of groping losing the nomination" as a resounding endorsement.
We don't get to just say "no, you're wrong" in a multicultural democracy.
Strictly speaking, in a democracy, you can
say pretty much whatever you want. Actually getting others to go along with it is the tricky part.
Unless you can convince your opponents to agree with you, or you have sufficient support without them to enforce your side's views through legislation, they get a say too. If enough Ontarians don't want the new sex ed curriculum, it goes bye-bye, regardless of what the "right" answer is.
Indeed. But that's not a debate I'm afraid of having, and its not a debate that we have to, or should exclude immigrants from in order to win. That's all that I'm trying to say.
My apologies. As I said, I'm used to thinking of immigration in terms of being a Left/Right issue, and perhaps that is overly simplistic.
*I call it that because "Alt Right" gives it a sense of normalcy, of respectability, that it does not deserve and should not possess. Especially considering that it was basically
created by American Neo-Nazi Richard Spencer:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alt-right
White supremacist Richard Spencer initially promoted the term in 2010 in reference to a movement centered on white nationalism and did so, according to the Associated Press, to disguise overt racism, white supremacism, neo-fascism and neo-Nazism.
Its Nazism rebranded for the 21st. Century, to fool people who are angry and looking for a target to lash out at but would not feel comfortable identifying with something openly calling itself Nazism into supporting it.
It has expanded far beyond hard core Neo-Nazis and white supremacists, of course, but that's kind of the point- its
meant to give Neo-Nazism a foothold in mainstream politics by duping people who would not otherwise support it into finding common cause with it. Something at which it has, regrettably, succeeded very well at to date.
"I know its easy to be defeatist here because nothing has seemingly reigned Trump in so far. But I will say this: every asshole succeeds until finally, they don't. Again, 18 months before he resigned, Nixon had a sky-high approval rating of 67%. Harvey Weinstein was winning Oscars until one day, he definitely wasn't."-John Oliver
"The greatest enemy of a good plan is the dream of a perfect plan."-General Von Clauswitz, describing my opinion of Bernie or Busters and third partiers in a nutshell.
I SUPPORT A NATIONAL GENERAL STRIKE TO REMOVE TRUMP FROM OFFICE.