Published on Alternet (http://www.alternet.org)
Even
in Canada, a Dark—and Trump-Like—Politics Is Rising
By Robert Fisk [1] / The Independent [2]
March 16, 2017
Funny
how another nation’s sectarian hatred comes seeping over the national frontier
of its neighbours. Mexico is now fighting off the US President’s wall mania.
Justin Trudeau’s Canada looks squeaky clean compared to America. You can
forgive the Prime Minister’s vanity – Trudeau is now posing Tom Cruise style,
eyes narrowed in love towards his wife in her cringe-making Women’s Day
photo-op with her husband. Not long ago, the same couple blessed the cover of
Vanity Fair. But he’s the guy who walks talk on immigration, welcomes Syrian
refugees with affection, tells them they’re “home” and generally makes
Trump look like a scumbag.
But
the contagion has already arrived in Canada [3].
Inspired by the racism of the Trump [4] regime,
we now find that a Canadian Conservative Party leadership contender wants to
give newly arrived immigrants a “values” test. “Are men and women
equal…under the law?” they would be asked. “Is it ever OK to coerce or use
violence against an individual … who disagrees with your views?” “Do you
realise that to have a good life in Canada, you will need to work hard to
provide for yourself and your family, that you can’t expect to have things you
want given to you?”
This
tosh is, of course, doubly racist. Since only Muslims supposedly rate women as
second-class citizens, this snide question is obviously directed at them. And
since the question assumes a Muslim would actually announce that they do not
regard men and women as equal, the question also treats them as simpletons.
Tory leadership contender Kellie Leitch’s set of “Canadian Values” were
released on the very day that Oklahoma Republican John Bennett published his
own American questionnaire for Muslim constituents who want to meet him. His
question number one was: “Do you beat your wife?”
He
might as well have asked Muslims: “Do you lie?”
Maybe
this is all just a trifle childish, although we might remember that the former
Canadian Tory Prime Minister, whose party leadership Leitch wants, came close
to producing laws that would make criticism of Israel a hate crime.
Leitch herself obviously regards Muslims as not only violent misogynists
but also scroungers – hence the insulting question about whether they realise
they’ll have to “work hard” in Canada.
But
the contagion doesn’t end with Leitch. For only a few days ago, the right-wing
National Post in Toronto carried a stunning story whose sectarian thread
obviously pushed it onto the front page – but without its racist content being
explicitly pointed out by the writer. The first two sentences, however, will
certainly alert The Independent readers as to what is to come. Trump, the
paper announced, “has been single-minded when it comes to immigration, pledging
… to keep certain people out, especially if they happen to be from Mexico or
some Muslim nations. But a bipartisan bill introduced in the House of
Representatives …would actually open the door wider to one group: older
Canadians who winter south of the border.”
Faced
with an avalanche of tourist cancellations from Canada and Europe now that the
Trump regime is settling into a racist border policy, congressmen are
desperately hoping that the Promoting Tourism to Enhance our Economy Act will
help to keep the cash flowing into America – because it aims to let Canadians
of 55 and over who own or rent property in the US stay there for an
extra two months a year. The 55-year old lower age limit for property owners or
renters suggests to you that wealthy white Canadians might be the tourists
which Republicans (and Democrats, one should add) have in mind.
And
you’d be right. Because this is the villainous explanation for the bill – which
would allow certain Canadians to spend more time per year in America than in
their native land – provided by its cosponsor, Republican Ted Yoho of Florida:
“We want people with good standing to come here and stay as long as they care.
We come from similar backgrounds, we believe in the same thing. There’s no
assimilation [necessary]. The morals and mores we have are pretty much the same
as they have, so it’s pretty much an easy transition.”
I have
spared readers the endless “sic” markers which would otherwise be littered
across this paragraph. But let us dwell briefly on the semantics.
“Similar
backgrounds” doesn’t sound to me like an invitation to 55-year-old Muslim
Canadian immigrants. As for no “assimilation” necessary… Well no, there
wouldn’t be, would there, since those friendly, older, ever-so-similar
Canadians would be from the same “background” as older Florida Americans.
Which
means that 55-year old Muslim Canadians and older are not quite the chaps whom
Republican Yoho wants to welcome in Florida. “Morals and mores”, well, we know
what that means – folk who don’t, in the immortal words of Oklahoma Republican
John Bennett, beat their wives. As for “an easy transition”, that pretty much
says it all. White non-Muslim Canadians welcome, Muslim Canadians of any
colour, don’t waste your time in coming to the border.
In
fact over these past few days, I’ve met quite a few Canadians – regular
visitors south of the border – who have no intention of visiting the States for
the present – either because they are Muslims or because they object most
profoundly to the racist, sectarian ideology now being peddled by the Trump
regime. These include a prominent doctor who has chosen not to attend a medical
conference in the US, even though he is a 100 per cent Canadian citizen. One
Quebec-born Canadian citizen was stopped by US immigration last month and
ordered to hand over his mobile phone so that American officials could look
through his Facebook page. He was a Muslim.
And
this works both ways. While Canadian immigration authorities have the resources
to document hundreds of refugees crossing from the US over ice and snow and
seeking asylum without passing through official crossing points – if they try
to pass through Canadian border posts, they can be turned back on the grounds
that the US is their country of first asylum – this could change in the spring.
Warm weather will mean easier transit through forests and fields. Canadian
civil rights groups now fear that their government will privately urge American
Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly to enforce restrictions on immigrants
trying to reach the border from within the United States. And Kelly is expected
in Ottawa within days to discuss this very policy.
That’s
exactly how a sectarian anti-Muslim President in one country can infect the
lives of thousands outside as well as inside his borders. That an American
representative can try to seduce one group of Canadians to holiday in the US
while indicating there will be no welcome for another group because they are of
the wrong colour, religion or ethnic origin shows not only contempt for Canada
but a deliberate attempt to divide a multicultural nation into its constituent
parts.
It’s a
custom not far removed from the Middle East. When the Sunni Muslim Saudis
needed to call upon the Pakistan army – longstanding mercenaries of the Saudi
regime when their own Saudi soldiers can’t handle a battle – to help in the
Yemen war, Riyadh asked Pakistan to send only soldiers of the Sunni Muslim
faith. Shiites would not be welcome. The Pakistani parliament rightly expressed
its outrage that a Muslim nation (Saudi Arabia) should attempt to sectarianise
its armed forces.
So
will the Canadian government now cooperate with any US attempts to prevent
Muslims crossing the border to seek asylum in Canada? Will it seek just such
cooperation? It’s a very serious question. Canada has every right to protect
its own sovereignty. But if by doing so, it assists a malicious and dishonest
US president to pursue a policy of racism, it will be forced to decide whether
security or morality governs Canada’s “national interest”. Thus does a
political contagion slip across a national border even more quietly than the
refugees on the ice and snow.
Robert
Fisk writes for the Independent [5], where this column
originally appeared.
[7]
Links:
[1] http://www.alternet.org/authors/robert-fisk
[2] http://www.theind.com
[3] http://www.independent.co.uk/topic/Canada
[4] http://www.independent.co.uk/topic/DonaldTrump
[5] http://www.independent.co.uk/
[6] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on Even in Canada, a Dark—and Trump-Like—Politics Is Rising
[7] http://www.alternet.org/
[8] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
[2] http://www.theind.com
[3] http://www.independent.co.uk/topic/Canada
[4] http://www.independent.co.uk/topic/DonaldTrump
[5] http://www.independent.co.uk/
[6] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on Even in Canada, a Dark—and Trump-Like—Politics Is Rising
[7] http://www.alternet.org/
[8] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
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The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
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