February 20, 2005

Mark Steyn speaks

Feb. 20 - Mark Steyn's regular column in The Western Standard was on Canada's least-known person, Paul Desmarais:

... there has indeed been a Canadian making a difference in the world-and if The National wanted to do a 133-part special report on him, for once they’d have enough material. Most of us know Paul Desmarais as the . . . [those ellipses in original] well, let’s hold it there: most Canadians don’t know Paul Desmarais at all. You could stop the first thousand people walking down Yonge Street and I’ll bet no one would know who he is. But the few who do know him know him as the kingmaker behind Trudeau, Mulroney, Chrétien and Martin. Jean Chrétien’s daughter is married to Paul Desmarais’s son. Paul Martin was an employee of M. Desmarais’s Power Corp., and his Canada Steamship Lines was originally a subsidiary of Power Corp. that M. Desmarais put Mr. Martin in charge of. In other words, Paul Martin’s public identity--successful self-made businessman, not just a career pol, knows how to meet payroll, etc.--is entirely derived from the patronage of M. Desmarais.

Imagine if Jenna Bush married the chairman of HalliburtonÂ’s son, and then George W. Bush was succeeded by a president whoÂ’d been an employee of Halliburton: Michael MooreÂ’s next documentary would be buried under wall-to-wall Oscars and Palmes dÂ’Or. But M. Desmarais has managed to turn Ottawa into a company town without anyone being aware of the company. .. Power Corp.Â’s other alumni range from Quebec premiers to CanadaÂ’s most prominent international diplomat, Maurice Strong. In fairness, you donÂ’t have to work for M. Desmarais to reach the top of the greasy pole-Kim Campbell managed it, for about a week and a half.

And down to the heart of it:
we’re in the middle of the UN Oil-for-Fraud investigation, the all-time biggest scam, bigger than Enron and Worldcom and all the rest added together. And whaddaya know? The bank that handled all the money from the program turns out to be BNP Paribas, which tends to get designated by Associated Press and co. as a “French bank” but is, as it happens, controlled by one of M. Desmarais’s holding companies. That alone should cause even the droopiest bloodhound to pick up a scent: the UN’s banker for its Iraqi “humanitarian” program turns out to be (to all intents) Saddam’s favourite oilman.
Read the whole thing.

On a (relatively) lighter note, as the President begins his European tour, Mark Steyn asks and answers the burning question of the day: What's US policy on Europe? No giggling.

What does all this mean? Nothing. In victory, magnanimity – and right now Bush can afford to be magnanimous, even if Europe isn't yet ready to acknowledge his victory. On Thursday, in a discussion of "the greater Middle East", the President remarked that Syria was "out of step". And, amazingly, he's right. Not so long ago, Syria was perfectly in step with the Middle East – it was the archetypal squalid stable Arab dictatorship. Two years on, Syria hasn't changed, but Iraq has, and, to varying degrees, the momentum in Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the Palestinian Authority and Lebanon (where the Syrians have overplayed their hand) is also in the Bush direction. Boy Assad finds himself in the position of the unfortunate soldier in Irving Berlin's First World War marching song, "They Were All Out Of Step But Jim".

The EU isn't the Arab League, though for much of the past three years it's been hard to tell the difference. But it, too, is out of step. The question is whether the Europeans are smart enough, like the savvier Sunnis in Iraq, to realise it. The Washington Post's Fred Hiatt compared the President's inaugural speech with Gerhard Schröder's keynote address to the Munich Conference on Security Policy last week and observed that, while both men talked about the Middle East, terrorism and 21st-century security threats, Mr Bush used the word "freedom" 27 times while Herr Schröder uttered it not once; he preferred to emphasise, as if it were still March 2003 and he were Arab League Secretary-General, "stability" – the old realpolitik fetish the Administration has explicitly disavowed. It's not just that the two sides aren't speaking the same language, but that the key phrases of Mr Bush's vocabulary don't seem to exist in Chirac's or Schröder's.

By the Way, SteynOnline is off it's brief (?!) hiatus and open for your one-stop Steyn reading spot.

Feb. 23 - Austin Bay disagrees with Mark Steyn on the death of the West:

Steyn’s “bleakest last sentence” (to quote Roger Simon) is way too fin d’siecle. Steyn writes: “This week we’re toasting the end of an idea: the death of “the West".” Try and tell that to Ukraine and Poland– and for that matter, Denmark. Post- Theo van Gogh Holland may also object.
Valid point. I too have to remind myself to distinguish between "Old" and "New" Europes.

Feb. 28 - Mark Steyn responds to Austin Bay here (scroll down.) Very worthwhile read.

Posted by: Debbye at 03:00 PM | Comments (10) | Add Comment
Post contains 834 words, total size 6 kb.

1 Hmm... Paul Desmarais seems like an excellent candidate for a Nobel Humanitarian Prize.

Posted by: bobthebellbuoy at February 21, 2005 12:34 AM (nV5cR)

2 Mr. Steyn, the penumbulate Eurosceptic seems to be far too harsh on the decadent French and Germans. If one of the litmus tests for his argument against the "Europeans" (code for continential EU members that don't jive with his political beliefs- last time i checked, UK was part of Europe) is based upon the use of the word "FREEDOM", then i would sincerly hope you re-evaluate the creedence you give to this man. Europe and the the United States are far closer than Steyn gives them credit for. Look at the preamble to the NATO charter- you will see that the Atlantic treaty talks about combing nations with similar democratic and liberal values. Additionally, Mr. Steyn also fails to notice that roughly 3/4 of the EU participated in the Iraqi war in some form or another (though in most states they were greatly opposed by the population as a whole). There is a unity between the United States and Europe that many people (such as Steyn and his ideological friends) do not wish to acknowledge it. They want to keep you thinking that the Contient is mired in Anti-Americanism and is fundamentally "ANTI FREEDOM". Neither of these beliefs are totally true and are misreadings of global politics. Perhaps the real reason Chancellor Schroder didn't use the world "freedom" is because he didn't wish to sound like the pandering childish and simplistic demogogue President Bush does evertime he speaks. After all-he doesn't need to win over Midwesterners in Germany.

Posted by: Blackglasses at February 21, 2005 12:34 PM (QLo0f)

3 Maybe Schroder does think the way you think, BG. Then again, maybe Bush and Schroder don't share the same vision. Or perhaps Schroder felt uncomfortable praising freedom when Germany had done so much to oppose the efforts of other nations to bring freedom and democracy to Iraq and hence the Middle East. The recent elections in Iraq heartened more than just Bush's heart. You can feel the stirrings now. I think Bush has 'infected' the ME with the taste of democracy. I think, in my simplistic way, that it is a good thing to spread freedom and democracy. If Schroder does not want to risk lives and treasure doing so, he could at least offer support to those who hope that they may one day have the right to select their leaders and live in freedom from tyranny.

Posted by: mikem at February 22, 2005 07:11 PM (EzNXf)

4 "A People's History Of The World" At some turning point in history, some fuckface recognized that knowledge tends to democratize cultures and societies so the only thing to do was monopolize and confine it to priests, clerics and elites (the rest resigned to serve), cuz if the rabble heard the truth they'd organize against the power, privilege and wealth hoarded by the few- for no one else. And did it occur to you that it's almost exactly the same today? And so if our schools won't teach us, we'll have to teach ourselves to analyze and understand the systems of thought-control. And share it with each other, never sayed by brass rings or the threat of penalty. I'll promise you- you promise me- not to sell each other out to murderers, to thieves... who've manufactured our delusion that you and me participate meaningfully in the process of running our own lives. Yeah, you can vote however the fuck you want, but power still calls all the shots. And believe it or not, even if (real) democracy broke loose, power could/would just "make the economy scream" until we vote responsibly.

Posted by: GUESS WHO at February 22, 2005 07:21 PM (Ojo2r)

5 Right on, man. Power to (my) People.

Posted by: mikem at February 22, 2005 07:56 PM (EzNXf)

6 Hehe, Mikem likes Propaghandi.

Posted by: Drum Roll at February 23, 2005 01:31 AM (Ojo2r)

7 The "Freedom" and "Democracy" rhetoric is a ruse. Americans don't really care about the "freedom" of the middle eastern people... We sure as hell need to be there if we're going to dominate the rest of the world forever though. God Bless America. I love you. Long live "freedom," even if it just rhetoric.

Posted by: Tyler Hunter at February 23, 2005 01:33 AM (Ojo2r)

8 Your off your meds Ty. And, dude, you sound stupid.

Posted by: Richard Cook at February 23, 2005 11:33 AM (Km34P)

9 Schroder didn't "oppose freedom". He opposed a war built upon a flimsy pretense of WMD and Saddam Hussein being a threat to the United States. The freedom angle was played up alot more when it became evident that the United States wasn't going to tfind anything tied towards a WMD program. Oh, and by the way...Its hard to argue someone is totally free when their country is still being occupied by a foreign power. But hey...at least they didn't elect an insane mullah this time around. And mikem? re-read the "Guess Who" post. I don't think you'll agree with it that much...

Posted by: Blackglasses at February 23, 2005 01:18 PM (Ojo2r)

10 Wishing for the good old days of Saddam. And of course, despite the revisionism that the nations that opposed the Coalition nations are trying to accomplish now, I well remember Saddam using WMDs. The Kurds and Iranians do also. I also remember Saddam admitting that he had them. I also remember every single "Bush Lied!" country assuring the world that he still had them, but that diplomacy could still work. Your rewriting of history requires a short memory. That will work with those whose damaged sense of morality and self esteem cannot quite accept being tagged as anti-democratic, but it will not work with anyone else. You are on the wrong side of history, but I am sure that story will change with time. Every family in France can now trace their history back members of the Resistance.

Posted by: mikem at February 23, 2005 08:39 PM (EzNXf)

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