Let’s get while the gettin’s good

By Leon Harold Craig
This year, Alberta is celebrating a century of existence as part of the
Canadian federation of provinces. What better time, then, to take stock of
Alberta’s place in this arrangement, of how well it’s been served in the
past and what are its prospects for the future?
The moment is especially propitious, since the whole country is being treated
to a rare public exposure of how corrupt the federal government, historically
dominated by a Liberal party centred on Ontario and Quebec, actually —
routinely — is.
AN INDEPENDENT ALBERTA
To be sure, the $250 million of graft involved in the Adscam racket is but a
small portion of Alberta’s annual donation to keeping Quebec tenuously
tethered to the rest of Canada, barely a week’s contribution of the $12
billion Ottawa sucks out of Alberta every year in “equalization” payments
(which the Liberal party then uses to buy votes east of Cornwall), a mere $60
of the almost $3,000 that every man, woman and child in Alberta pays per year
for the privilege of remaining in a federation governed for the benefit of
Ontario, Quebec and cronies of the Liberal Party of Canada.
Kept here, that same money would provide every family of four a $35,000 car
every three years. I’d rather have the car.
Better still, use the $12 billion to reduce the taxes on Alberta’s citizens
and businesses by that amount; let people spend their earnings as they please,
and transform Alberta, already the most vibrant part of Canada, into the most
attractive economic environment in all of North America.
True, the population would double within 10 years, but Alberta is a big place,
of almost unlimited potential. However, to realize that potential, we have to
do one small thing: Declare our independence — withdraw from the Canadian
federation, become an independent commonwealth with our own sovereign
government, directly answerable to no one but the people of Alberta.
The political reality Albertans need to face is that the sponsorship scandal
is not an aberration, but the epitome of the Liberal party’s secret of
perpetual success; it is its norm, and unusual only in the combination of
brazenness and clumsiness that allowed it to come to the public’s attention.
However, it is the reaction of that public that reveals the depth of
Canada’s sickness. For as is now clear to even the meanest intelligence, the
problem is not merely one of an arrogant, cynical ruling party that uses every
unscrupulous and several criminal means to maintain its grip on power; nor
that the bloated federal bureaucracies are thoroughly politicized, led by
careerists who understand their self-interests to be wedded to Liberal party
fortunes; nor that something similar is increasingly true of both the national
police and the military establishments; nor that the opposition parties offer
no credible
alternative (as has become painfully obvious).
All that is true, but what makes Canada’s political sickness practically
incurable is that a substantial majority of the citizens east of Thunder Bay
are essentially debased.
Like many hard truths people would prefer not to face, this bears repeating: a
majority of eastern
Canadians are not worthy of their civic heritage, as is shown by their passive
acceptance of the revelations of the Gomery commission and their casual
indifference to the Liberals’ squalid shenanigans in Parliament.
Doubtless many Albertans naively presumed that the vast majority of eastern
Canadians would be thoroughly disgusted by Liberal party hacks skimming and
outright looting public money under the guise of promoting national unity. Or
at the very least, that they would ashamed to admit to pollsters that they
would still vote for a party led by people who should be in jail.
But obviously they are not. Thoroughly propagandized in the fantasy that
Canada is the greatest country on earth, they are too cowardly to admit the
fact that it’s become a third-rate nation, a disgrace to its own history and
traditions, and is governed like a banana republic. And so they haven’t the
gumption to throw the rascals out.
If ever there was a people that got the government it deserved, Canada is the
place. But it doesn’t have to include us: we are not like them, and have no
wish to become like them.
An independent Alberta would be every bit as politically and economically
viable as Norway, Finland, Denmark, New Zealand and several other advanced
countries of comparable population (but of far less natural resources).
Begin with the economical considerations, which fall into two broad
categories.
First, what is the cost of remaining within the present Confederation? The
costs are very high. And what is the money we pay for the privilege actually
being used for (besides Adscam and other Quebec payola)? Gun registry,
bilingualism, aboriginal affairs mismanagement, the Kyoto scam, etc.
In the short run, the savings in transfer payments — to say nothing of the
enormous expense of supporting another whole level of unnecessary government
— could be used to defray the costs of our transition to independence. But
shortly thereafter, the saving applied to tax reduction would make Alberta the
most economically attractive locale in all of North America.
This bears directly on the second set of considerations, the viability of an
independent Alberta.
Professional economists have repeatedly shown that it would flourish, which
our being able to offer the most attractive tax regime in North America would
only further enhance. Even now north-south trade is as important to the
Alberta economy as east-west trade. Among other consequences, our population
would increase dramatically within the first decade, as disaffected Canadians
of enterprise and sensible social views moved here, replacing several times
over the incorrigible Liberals sentimentally attached to Canadian Welfare
Nannyism — who (one hopes) would move to Ontario, where they would feel
right at home.
You can’t beat that: a perfect “win-win” outcome.
However, the economic benefits would not be the most significant advantage of
independence. Far more important is the fact that we would gain effective
control over the social and political culture in which we live our daily
lives. We would no longer be subject to the dictates of Liberal appointees to
the Supreme Court of Canada pursuing a political agenda Albertans would reject
were they given the chance to vote on it.
Instead, as what could then be a genuine democracy, the laws and policies of a
sovereign
Alberta government would reflect the views of the people who live here — on
crime and punishment, on marriage and other family matters, on environmental
protection, on religious freedom, on wildlife management, on firearm
regulation, on narcotics, on immigration, on relations with the U.S. — all
without regard for whatever “higher enlightenment” happens to be in
fashion among Toronto’s pontificating class and the mandarins of Ottawa.
We can establish a social environment that will nurture the qualities of
character that we naturally admire — self-reliance, enterprise, honesty,
fairness, attachment to liberty, loyalty to friends — and thus belong to a
country we can be justifiably proud of, one that is tolerant but principled,
that actually stands for something positive, governed by one primary concern:
the common good of Alberta. That is, our legislators, in framing laws and
policies, would no longer be saddled with the necessity of keeping one eye on
the feds, on their use of our money and absurd Charter interpretations to
manipulate our affairs.
We could leave the problems of Canadian federalism and its endemic corruption
behind us, once and for all.
Whereas, if we remain subject to the decadent cultural and moral influence of
central Canada for another generation, we will ourselves become increasingly
infected with the qualities that since the Trudeau era have come to define
Canadian “national” character — sanctimonious, resentful, whining,
spiteful, hypocritical, preening,
cowardly, feckless, weak.
Some basis for pride.
And what a contrast to the Canadian character of the preceding century, now
sadly forgotten and even mocked by a majority of the population elsewhere in
the country.
Recently in a column for the Western Standard, Mark Steyn argued that the
socio-political collapse of Europe is imminent, and that Canada — “an
honorary member of the EU” — may soon suffer the same fate.
I wouldn’t bet against it. As a ship of state, Canada is structurally
unsound, sailing aimlessly in a perpetual fog, captained by an endless
succession of faux-genteel poseurs, pilferers, con artists and outright
crooks.
Sooner or later, it is bound to end up on the rocks and founder, and there is
nothing we Albertans can do about that.
But there is no reason for us to go down with it.
Any naive hope one might have placed in the reconstituted Conservative party
has been short-lived. The depressing spectacle of its desperate efforts to
avoid doing or saying anything that might upset the welfare mentality of the
Maritimes, or provoke the wrath and ridicule of the so-called national media
(actually the public voice of the Toronto-Montreal axis), while vainly
pandering to the sensibilities of Quebec, simply confirms for the umpteenth
time that nothing short of regime change can salvage political decency in
Canada as a whole. But there’s no chance of that.
One can hardly blame the Conservatives, for they’ve done the math:
two-thirds of the seats
in Parliament are at the disposal of voters in Ontario and Quebec, people
cowed and corrupted by two generations of degenerative Liberal maternalism and
endless streams of self-righteous propaganda. And being politicians, the
federal Conservatives wish for success now; they have no stomach for spending
years in the wilderness vainly striving to reform the moral posture of that
decisive sector of the Canadian electorate.
The basic facts determining the distribution of political power will not
change, hence the “me, too” character of their public policy positions.
And, hence, the practical impossibility of structurally reforming the Canadian
regime, wherein the Liberals have every reason to regard themselves as its
natural rulers in perpetuity, and so can and do treat the whole country as
their fiefdom.
For anyone who understands the political reality of Canada as presently
constituted, “The West wants in” is a foolish irrelevance; our slogan
should be “the West wants out!”
Why stay? Why fritter away our resources to remain in association with eastern
provinces so alien to us that demonizing Alberta — portraying it as rustic,
benighted, intolerant, selfish — is the Liberals’ most effective electoral
strategy (as the recent federal election once again clearly showed).
Why stay? Consider Canada’s position internationally: it has become such a
nonentity that there is no advantage in remaining a part of it, and some
serious liabilities resulting from the souring of our inescapable relationship
with the United States.
The federal Liberals have done enough stupid things of late to attract all the
wrong kind of attention to Canada. Nor were these merely temporary lapses on
their part; the gratuitous, and largely ignorant abuse of the U.S. issues out
of a petty, resentful mentality that has been long and deeply cultivated, and
is now the permanent mind-set of a majority of eastern Canadians.
Simply compare Canada’s standing in the world right now, repeatedly
disparaged by its NATO allies for its feeble contribution and despised by the
nation it relies on to protect it. Compare this with the status of Australia,
a robust, loyal, and active ally of the most powerful nation on earth — and
as such, respected by all nations. Were we on our own, would we not be able to
have a far more productive and wholesome relationship with America?
Why stay? This is a serious question, and it deserves a serious answer — not
vacuous platitudes and emotional rhetoric, but sober, solid, rational analysis
addressing the economic, moral, cultural, and political advantages of staying.
I do not believe a case for staying can be made. And whatever temporary
dislocations would attend separation are negligible compared to what we risk
by doing nothing, allowing ourselves to drift further into the morass of
contemporary Canada.
Our province, having been a distinct political entity of a hundred years
existence, with an established institutional and geographic integrity, our
focus must be on achieving independence for Alberta. We should not, that is,
become mixed up with some amorphous “Western separatism,” which to succeed
would require creating an all-new political entity, a prospect subject to
endless practical difficulties. If other provinces similarly opt for
independence, that is their business, and we would wish them well. Or, if
other provinces, or parts of provinces, should later wish to join an already
sovereign and flourishing Alberta, that
would be a matter for subsequent negotiation. In the meantime, our personal
relationships with friends and family elsewhere in Canada need not be in the
least affected by our becoming independent.
We should undertake a move toward independence with a whole-hearted intention
of achieving it, not as simply a tactic whereby to get (temporarily) a
“better deal” from Ottawa (i.e., get some of our money back, provided as a
sop to assuage “western alienation”).
What Albertans have to understand is that the present Canadian reality is
profoundly prejudicial to the interests of our children and grandchildren —
economically, culturally, morally, politically — and that there is no
realistic prospect of it ever getting better in their lifetime.
Quite the contrary: there is every likelihood that it will only get worse, as
Canada goes the degenerating way of Old Europe: stagnant, corrupt, spiritless,
impotent.
Independence is not an impossible dream. It would take time and planning. The
first step should be enactment of something like the “firewall” agenda:
establish our own provincial police, collect our own taxes, take charge of our
retirement and health care systems, etc.
Equally important would be a sustained effort of public education to get the
Alberta populace used to the idea (overcoming anxiety about its consequences,
appealing to pride and a sense of enterprise and adventure, detailing ad
nauseum the incorrigible moral bankruptcy of Canada as presently constituted
and governed).
Ultimately, success will depend on the emergence of some committed, shrewd,
attractive political leadership. But if the ground is sufficiently prepared,
someone of suitable political qualification and ambition will see the
opportunity it presents, and seize it. Alberta has produced such leaders in
the past, and can again. Build it, and they will come.
The single greatest obstacle to our declaring independence is sentiment. As
the whole contemporary world bears witness, sentiment, and emotions,
generally, are of massive importance in politics. Hence, rationality in
politics depends on people coming to feel what their reason indicates they
ought to feel.
We ought to feel indignation. But for now, Albertans’ sentimental attachment
to Canada remains very strong. A succession of polls have shown that Alberta
is the most patriotic province in the country; this is part of our virtue, and
we should be proud of it.
But we could as easily — and far more justifiably — be proud, patriotic
Albertans. For the Canada that Albertans love is partly one of an illustrious
but (sadly) bygone history; mainly, however, it’s the Canada we know
firsthand, and that is Alberta — truly a distinct society unto itself in the
alien context of the New Canada fostered by the political establishment of the
central provinces.
We need have no fear of what could be a great adventure: founding a new
country. Think of it. Think of the adventure of becoming masters of our own
political house. Is this not an enterprise that could engage the spirit of
Albertans, young and old? The only real obstacle is in ourselves: our
misplaced sentimental attachment, which must and can be transferred from a
weak and pacifistic Canada to a sovereign Alberta, strong and free.
LEON HAROLD CRAIG
IS A PROFESSOR EMERITUS
OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA.