Newsletter October, 2005
Table of Contents:
[A Middle Eastern View of 9-11] [Far too Much Fuzzy Thinking] [Summoning Courage in the Timid West] [China: Deceptions, Delusions and Denials] [Blood in the Foundation: A Remembrance Day Column] [Alexander Mackenzie's Bookshelf] [Voices of Freedom]
Editor's remarks
The primary goal of al Qaeda and the Jihadist movement
is to topple all non-Islamicist governments in the Muslim world and to replace
them with a new caliphate. It
should come as no surprise that the majority of their actions are aimed at
destabilizing those Middle Eastern economies and governments that have at least
cordial relations with the Western world.
For this reason, they singled out Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey for attacks in recent years.
As is typical for any particular brand of
revolutionaries, most of their victims come from the population they purport to
represent – the Jihadist movement has killed well over 200,000 Muslims so
far. One might surmise that, as is
true of so many ideologues, that if al Qaeda ever did get political mastery in
any nation, the deaths could soon be counted in the millions. This alone makes it vital to oppose
them.
However, the Jihadists do have a deep-seated need to
punish the West for having the effrontery to be wealthy, prosperous, and
non-Muslim. They specifically
identified (in addition to the default target of Israel) the US, the UK,
Australia, Spain, Canada and Italy for chastisement. Of all of the countries they have directly threatened, so
far only Italy and Canada have been spared a major attack launched against
their citizens" for now.
A Middle Eastern View of
9-11
The
following Egyptian TV interview on 9-11 was aired in 2005. It may be found on the internet at:
http://memritv.org/search.asp?ACT=S9&P1=844
. Egyptian Researcher Zaynab Abd
Al-Aziz is being interviewed on Iqra TV, May 26, 2005
Abd Al-Aziz: "When, in January 2001, the World Council of Churches
delegated this mission to the U.S. - what did the U.S. do? It fabricated the
show of... is it September 9 or 11?"
Host: "Eleven. Please explain this to me."
Abd Al-Aziz: "Yes, of course..."
Host:
"You mean to say that the World Council of Churches delegated the
mission of Christianizing the world to the U.S."
Abd Al-Aziz: "Yes. And how could the U.S. win legitimacy for this without anyone saying that they are perpetrating massacres and waging a Crusader war?
It fabricated the 9/11 show. I call it a fabrication because much has been
written on this. We are also to blame. Why do we accept a single perspective?
Countless books were written, some of which were even translated into Arabic,
like Thierry Meyssan's 9/11 - The Big Lie and Pentagate[1].
'Pentagate' like Watergate... He brings documents to prove that the method used
in destroying the three [sic]
towers was "controlled
demolition." This is an architectural engineering theory, which was
invented by the Americans. They teach it in their universities. They make movies
and documentaries about it. They incorporated it in movie scenarios and then carried
it out in real life. Why do we accept this?"
Host:
"My God, Doctor. This is unbelievable! You're saying that this
destruction..."
Abd
Al-Aziz: "...was a controlled demolition. The building collapsed in its
place, without hitting a single building to its left or right. The three towers
fell in place."
Host:
"In the same method they use in movies and plays?"
Abd
Al-Aziz: "Yes, Exactly like that. That is how the U.S. won
international legitimacy. You could sense the [9/11] operation was pre-planned because many things
were revealed in the days that followed. For example, 4,000 Jews caught
influenza on that exact day. They set a timer, and all 4,000..."
Host:
"By God, you crack me up! They
all set a timer and got influenza on the same day. So the building was completely empty of Jews."
Abd
Al-Aziz: "Much has been written about this. One hundred and fifty Congressmen demanded an inquiry."
As if this wasn't bad enough, the perennial skunk
cabbage of the American White Supremacist movement has been making a tour of
the Middle East to repeat the same story.
David Duke – a long time feature of the KKK and one time State
Senator from Louisiana – has been letting his Arab hosts imply that he is
a United States Senator, while telling his credulous audiences about the Jewish
plot to take over the United States.
"Nuff said about the quality of critical analysis in
so much of the Arab World. What is
surprising is that there are many Westerners who share this belief. Indeed, the learned Abd Al-Aziz even
cited one Western conspiracy addict's idiotic theories. More on this sort of fuzzy thinking
anon.
Far Too Much Fuzzy Thinking
Usually, responding
to requests to do phone-in shows is a pleasure; but increasingly this is an
experience that has gone sour, particularly when it comes to dealing with
terrorism. Inevitably, there is
the caller who – with the same breathless pride of a toddler announcing
that he has just gone to the potty by himself – tells me that "The real terrorists
are the United States". At least
the toddler's pride is understandable.
Usually Mr. "US is a Terrorist" is followed by some other idiot who
cites Noam Chomsky in the sadly mistaken belief that any deconstructionist must
be some kind of intellectual worthy of respect. As like as not, some member of the handwringer brigade soon
trails them, with the inevitable wail that all would be well if we only all
tried to get along.
If fuzzy thinking was
a disease, our society seems to be caught in a severe epidemic.
Others have noticed
this epidemic too. Francis Wheen
is the author of How Mumbo Jumbo Conquered the World: A Short History of
Modern Delusions. The book is an
excoriating attack on a lot of what passes for thinking nowadays, and deserves
much more attention that what it has received so far. But then, Mumbo Jumbo is a widespread ailment, and a lot of,
oh, book reviewers and talk-show hosts seem to be infected too.
Interestingly, on
correcting a book store clerk who placed Wheen's book in the humor section, it
appeared that it was catalogued by the distributor to be placed there. How Mumbo Jumbo Conquered the World is sarcastic, not
satirical, and is intended by the publisher (and rightly so) for placement in
those shelves dealing with thought, political science, etc. Those who intend to acquire the book
should be advised to look for it in the right place.
Those who consider
themselves to be "Right Wing' or conservative; or who still think of themselves
as being "Left Wing' should receive an additional warning: Wheen happily slaughters sacred cows
from both sides of the pasture. It
is also true that sacred cows make a delicious barbeque.
Western
civilization is the product of long and painful centuries of intellectual
progress – culminating in the Enlightenment. The heritage we have from that era included (until recently)
the waning of absolutism and superstition, the rise of democracies with secular
or neutral institutions to encourage individual freedom, rapid increases in our
knowledge of history and science (particularly the natural world), liberal
economics, and that balance of freedom and law achieved by those two
masterworks of the Enlightenment:
The British Parliamentary System and the American Constitution.
The achievements of
the Enlightenment have always been under attack: The Romantic Era of the early 19th Century was
the first such attack, and its more poisonous legacies led directly to
Bonapartism, Communism, Nazism and a host of other murderous ideologies. The current threats to our
Enlightenment inheritance are more subtle but in their own way are just as
dangerous.
The first target in
Wheen's book is our trust in the market and the free-enterprise market
system. Now, normally these do
very well for us and remain institutions that are well worth preserving, but
periodically the market goes insane.
Charles Mackay's classic study from 1841, Extraordinary Popular
Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, begins with the Mississippi
Scheme and the South Sea Bubble back in the early 18th Century. Are we so sure the Dotcom bubble was so
removed from these classic sprees of irrational thought? The economy needs rational thinkers in
positions of leadership and too many of them are infected with Mumbo Jumbo.
Those invisible
hands at the tiller of the market also appear to be spending considerable money
on snake-oil salesmen" the pitchmen of "Greed is good' and "If it feels good,
do it' and similar mantras aimed at turning business into a religion of sorts,
but which has an immoral message.
Even more irritating are those who make a living out of selling common
sense as something "visionary' and "new'.
The end result of these supposed thinkers are those flashy companies
with "New Visions' and "Mission Statements' who redefine success by jiggling
with the books – corporations like Enron and other saboteurs of the
market.
However, these sins
of the market pale in comparison to those of academia. The barbarians of Wall Street are
nothing compared to the vandal hordes of deconstructionists who infest our
ivory towers. Of them, Barbara
Ehrenreich (herself a traditional Leftist) writes: "Students taking courses in literature, film, "cultural
studies,' and even, in some cases anthropology and political science, were
taught that the world is just a socially constructed "text' about which you can
say anything you want, provided that you say it murkily enough" One of my own
children, whose college education costs us about $25,000 a year, reported in
some classes you could be marked down for using the word "reality' without the
quotation marks."
Nor do the
Dervishes of Jacques Derrida (who is the first of the true postmodernist
deconstructionists) restrict their demolition work to the arts or foreign
policy. The blame for these clowns
goes back to the early days of the Soviet Revolution, and then to their
political partisans in the West who had to bend over backwards to apologise for
Lenin and Stalin without appearing to actually do so. It was a neat trick, and during these exercises, the old
Marxist Left learned that, with enough intellectual juggling, war does become
peace, freedom transforms into slavery and ignorance indeed becomes strength. Orwell warned us what this could lead
to, and now we know. The
deconstructionists that rose out of this tradition have a strength that is now great
enough to march through the institutions of today's great universities and
overthrow history, the arts, the wisdom of centuries, and even challenge
science.
The
deconstructionists both mock science – one even denounced E=mc2 as
a "sexist equation" – and yet seek to borrow its appearance to invest
their own shabby constructs in stolen finery. Others have denounced physics the same way, but it is
obvious they lack the courage of their convictions. We have yet to see deconstructionists leap off tall
buildings while denouncing gravity as a patriarchal European construct; and can
but hope that they try to do so.
Other
deconstructionists now try to lard their gibbering with inserted mathematical
symbols to imply that they have come out with an equation of sorts, and which
therefore must be true. This is an
odd approach for a school of thought that believes everything is false except
for the moral purity and introspection of the deconstructionist alone. One can dress up an ass in ermine
and purple, but it still is an ass.
The deconstructionists are certainly not the only
modern fuzzy thinkers who despise reality: There is a huge market for New Age quackery in lieu of medicine
(or for real spiritual discipline), for books on UFOs, a fascination with the
Millennialism and end of the World, and, of course, for conspiracy thinking.
With conspiracy myth addicts, any refutation of their
facts is only taken as further evidence of their beliefs. So how can you argue logically with
them? For example, some hoaxers
shot a grainy black and white film of an "alien autopsy" conducted by the US
Air Force and released it as real footage from 1947. The film was immediately embraced by many "UFOologists" as
proof of both the existence of extra-terrestrial intelligence and of a decades-long
effort by the US Air Force to conceal their existence. Enter the hoaxers with their triumphant
"Gotcha!', which had no effect. To
the true believers, the footage must have been real, and the hoaxers'
declaration was therefore only more proof of the cover-up plot as the USAF
would be obviously desperate to deny the validity of the film. If this makes sense to you, it might
already be too late to get clinical help.
Crystal waving New Agers are easy targets, and Wheen
certainly doesn't pass up a chance to attack them either – lambasting Madonna,
Hillary Clinton, and Cherie Blair for choice. This last, despite being a declared Catholic, saw no problem
in consulting a Feng Shui "expert' to place furniture in 10 Downing Street, and
in using a "dowsing healer" to treat her swollen ankles with an infusion of
strawberry leaves grown in the "electro-magnetic field" of his homebuilt
backyard Neolithic circle. Just
how is a heap of stones one puts up in their backyard a "Neolithic' construct
anyway? Doesn't it need to have
been in place for 4,000 years first?
Hucksters of this sort have always been around, but snake-oil medicines
are big money these days.
Evangelical Christians might be discomfited to find
themselves squarely in Mumbo-Jumbo's
sights too. If Marxist
deconstructionists have failed to jump off tall buildings to demonstrate that
gravity is a social construct of the Caucasian Patriarchy, we have also failed
to see Evangelicals who believe that God micromanages every aspect of their
lives pulling the lighting rods from the roofs of their churches, or canceling
their insurance policies as unnecessary extravagances.
What might be particularly annoying to others besides
Wheen are the proponents of "Intelligent Design' as a supposedly valid
alternative to the ghastly horror of teaching students about Darwin's theory of
evolution and all which has sprung from it. If, according to what I hear in my church on Sundays, we are
God's children, shouldn't we examine the processes by which our omniscient
creator works – instead of being so freaked out by astronomy, biology, geology,
paleontology and similar disciplines?
What loving parent wouldn't take pride in the exploring spirit of his
children, and just what is time to an eternal and omnipotent God anyway? The intelligent design types seek to
stuff God and all of creation into a tiny little package that they can
understand and, frankly, it is embarrassing to their more rational co-religionists.
Wheen concludes his book with the following: "Visitors to the US Archives
building in Washington DC can read another of Santayana's epigrams chiseled
over the main entrance: "Those who
cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.' He described this as the condition of "children and
barbarians, in which instinct has learned nothing from experience.' But those who refuse to learn from
experience, and strive to discredit the rationalism that makes such
enlightenment possible – whether they be holy warriors, antiscientific
relativists, economic fundamentalists, radical postmodernists, New Age mystics,
or latter day Chicken Lickens – are not only condemning themselves to
repeat the past. They wish to consign
us all to a life in darkness."
As for those who insist on believing that the United
States is more immoral than Wahhabi Jihadists; that all the travails in the
world flow from America; or that – the most pathetic fallacy of them all
– there is no evil only misunderstanding, well". The gifts of the Enlightenment are for
the benighted too, but they should never expect respect for their opinions if
they cannot shuffle out of the dark.
Summoning Courage in the Timid West
-- Wesley Pruden, The
Washington Times, October
28, 2005
A
late education can be a good thing, and a deathbed conversion is better than no
conversion at all. But neither is easy.
Race
relations has become a big industry here, and even bigger abroad, particularly
in Britain where government boards have been established to "educate
whites out of prejudice towards ethnic minorities."
This
is sometimes good but often bad because the "educators" are often the
blindest bigots of all. The riots in Birmingham, once one of the great cities
of England, have revealed vicious hatred of whites and contempt for the
nation's history, customs and traditions among minorities who have no interest
in becoming "British."
"Multiculturalism"
has largely insulated the black and Asian communities, keeping them apart
except when they fight each other in the streets, and leaving them at the mercy
of rumor and tall tales spread by those with no interest in community.
"The
chairman of the Commission on Racial Equality," notes the London Daily
Telegraph, "has warned in recent months of the dangers of the multicultural
society. Lozells [a residential district of Birmingham and the scene of racial
rioting] proves his point. While it is correct that in a free society the
cultures and ways of life of different groups should be tolerated, toleration
almost to the exclusion of the cultural mainstream is highly dangerous. Instead
of having warring factions in our inner cities, we should have communities
that, first and foremost, regard themselves as British."
The
London bombings in July changed attitudes in Britain even more profoundly than
September 11 changed things in America. Perhaps it begins with respect for
language. The Queen's English belongs first to the British, after all, and most
Englishmen are not as eager as we are to cower behind clouds of euphemism, obscuration
and other poisonous gases.
The
most profound change in Britain, says Daniel Pipes, an American scholar who is
the director of the Middle East Forum, "is the sudden need of the British
and others to assert what it means to be British, Australian or some other
nationality. In the face of the Islamist challenge, historic identities taken
for granted must now be explained and codified."
Not
just the British, but Europeans, usually regarded here as made up in equal
parts of mush, cotton, hay and rag, in recent months have stood up to defend
the customs that make the West the West. Burqas have been banned in Italy,
reluctant German schoolboys are required to attend coed swimming classes and
male applicants for Irish citizenship are now required to renounce polygamy.
When a visiting Iranian government delegation demanded that a Belgian minister
drink no wine at his luncheon for them, the minister promptly canceled the
lunch and told them: "You can't force the authorities of Belgium to drink
water."
But
it's more than wine and water. David Cameron, a rising Tory star in Britain,
summons the courage to define "Britishness," and says it begins with
"freedom under the rule of law," and this "explains almost
everything you need to know about our country, our institutions, our history,
our culture -- even our economy."
Mr.
Cameron rises to bluntness: "The driving force behind today's terrorist
threat is Islamist fundamentalism. The struggle we are engaged in is, at root,
ideological. Islamist thinking has developed which, like other
totalitarianisms, such as Nazi-ism and communism, offers its followers a form
of redemption through violence."
Bluntness
inspires bluntness. The international relations minister for Quebec says
immigrants who respect neither women nor the rights in the Canadian civil code
are not welcome. The prime minister of New South Wales says immigrants who
don't want to become Australians first should stay out. Australia's education
minister told prospective Islamic immigrants that if they can't commit to
Australian rule of law "they can basically clear off."
Lately
George W. Bush has shown signs of acquiring a late education, saying for the
first time what everybody knows, that the radical enemy within the gates does not necessarily embrace
"a religion of peace." It's not much, but it's a start.
China: Deception Delusions and Denial
The following was a presentation by Brian McAdam on
September 7th, 2005 to Public Forum: Focus on China, University of Ottawa. It
comes with the permission of the Yang Hongmao Society – a group dedicated
to the study of China's relations with the Western World.
***
Canadians have to contend with five myths about China
that have been perpetuated for a very long time. These are very powerful myths that have been the foundation of Canada's relationship
with China.
Myth #1 Trade with China is beneficial to Canada
Hints are thrown out that China has 1.3 billion
customers and everyone should jump on the bandwagon. The government of China is adept at providing incentives for
foreign countries and companies -- incentives to support China's needs and
purposes. Those who fail to comply
with China's wishes are told there may be dire consequences. For example Canada's trade with China
will be greatly affected.
In fact Canada's relationship with China trade seems
to trump everything – especially human rights and even Canada's own
security. So I wish to present to
you tonight some facts that are rarely said.
Trade with China may be beneficial for a select few,
but not for all Canadians. Yes,
Canada is exporting more to China – natural resources such as coal and
oil to fuel their industries, but few ever talk about the other side of the
coin. Instead, officials parrot
the hype:
"China is a priority market for Canada. It is
the fastest growing economy in the world; it ranks in the top 10 world
economies, currently on par with Italy, and ranks second in terms of purchasing
power. China's emerging middle
class has the potential to soon become 200-million strong."
"Canadian companies and their government see that
the train is leaving the station and they want to catch it. If we
don't someone else will. In short,
in today's interdependent world, China's continued success is vital to our
continued success. China is now
Canada's largest Asian trading partner.
Globally, China is Canada's second largest two-way trading partner with
over $23 billion in bilateral trade in 2003. Preliminary figures for 2004 indicate growth of more than 30
percent in two-way trade between our two countries" China -- as evidenced by
the number of Canadians in this room – is at the top of Canada's priority
list as an export market and investment destination."
The reality is that Canada has been rapidly developing
a significant trade imbalance with China instead of "a modest balanced trading
relationship" we had a decade ago.
The deficit with China was larger than with any other single
country. On a dollar basis, Canada
imported four times as much from China as it exported.
[Authors's emphasis, with material drawn from Statistics Canada].
Canada's recorded merchandise trade deficit with China
has increased almost ten-fold since 1993, reaching to a record of $17.5 billion
in 2004.
China is exporting hi-tech items to Canada like
computers, cell phones, video recording equipment, etc., while Canada is still
mainly exporting agricultural products to China; contrary to expectations. The structure of trade between China
and Canada would make you wonder which one is the developed economy and which
one is the developing country.
To make things worse, Canada is also losing out in its
exports to the US as China is able to under-cut Canadian prices.[2]
Listening to the China trade hype one would think the
amount of exports to China must be enormous. In fact, less than 2 percent of Canada's total exports go to
China, while 86.9 percent of Canada's exports go to the United States.
Canada's trade with China is not beneficial.[3] There is also a hidden cost most
Canadians never consider.
"According to estimates from the Laogai Research
Foundation, there are 6.8 million people incarcerated in China's 1,100 labor
institutions making slave labor goods being consumed by free-spending
Westerners oblivious or indifferent to the plight of these poor souls."
Myth
#2 China has 1.3 billion customers
Cracking into the billion-consumer market has always
been the goal of the Canadian government and has dominated the China/Canada
relationship.
Many are lured by the idea that "If you can sell a
widget to every person in China then that's a billion dollars and you can go
play golf the rest of your life."[4] But all the evidence, historical and
actual, shows this market to be a mirage.
Phil Brennan of Newsmax explains:
"That 1.3 billion-person market shrinks
dramatically once it is looked at with cooler eyes: A whopping 900 million are peasants earning incomes so tiny
it's doubtful they could afford a bottle of Coke. An additional 100 million are unemployed rural workers who
have moved into the cities seeking work.
Without incomes, they are without purchasing power.
"Using any arithmetic, that's a cool billion "
driven from the equation. The 1.3
billion shrinks to 300 million, a population roughly equivalent to [the US].
Among them is an emerging middle class with incomes a fraction of that
of Americans.
"The Chinese have companies too." China, he adds, is "not a commercial void. Chinese businessmen are just as
interested as American businessmen in selling to the Chinese. And they're better positioned.
"Finally, there is that matter US businessmen are
not prone to talk about: China is
a communist dictatorship with a huge and corrupt bureaucracy that tends to
stick its fingers into every phase of Chinese life."
Yet despite all these drawbacks, American business
continues to dream" largely ignoring such markets as India, which the New
Yorker points out also has a billion
people who are better educated and
many of whom speak English.
"US companies are sometimes forced to transfer
technology to Chinese partners
as a condition in business deals.
The Chinese government violates its WTO [World Trade Organization] obligations when it
expressly requires technology transfers as a condition of doing business. It is also able to compel such
transfers through use of its regulatory powers as well as its extensive role in
the economy. These technology
transfers pose substantial economic and security concerns for the United
States." (2004 US-China Economic and
Security Review Commission Annual Report to Congress).
Myth #3
China is becoming democratic
The Canadian government's commercial diplomacy with China
includes the faddish belief that what seems to be China's move towards
capitalism will lead eventually towards democracy. However, "the ruling Chinese elite holds a different view,"
and does not "see China fated to evolve into a liberal democracy," according to
academics at Columbia and Princeton universities. The elite believe the Communist Party should stay in power.[5]
The Communist Party is not, as is invariably said, in
transition from communism to a freer and more democratic regime. It is, instead, an autocracy while some
also believe it is a maturing fascist regime.[6]
Myth #4
China has improved human rights
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is responsible for
the deaths of more people than both Hitler or Stalin combined: An estimated 47-75 million people, and
has an abominable record of abuse of human rights.[7]
Despite these facts, China's leaders were given warm
welcomes when they visited Canada; so too were the head of China's intelligence
who was involved in China's murderous Cultural Revolution and the PLA (People's
Liberation Army) general who carried out the Tiananmen Square massacre.
The former and current administration is very reticent
to criticize China's human rights abuses such as forced abortions, religious
and political repression, selling prisoners' organs, mass executions and
torture.
The Canadian government's sycophants, apologists and
propagandists do not want to address that the Chinese Communist government
still actually and literally imprisons and tortures people, often to death, for
their religious beliefs or activities.
Before former prime minister Jean Chretien's first
Team Canada trip to China, Foreign Affairs' China experts advised him that
instead of uttering the words "human rights" he should use the phrase "good
governance and the rule of law."[8]
A representative of Amnesty International said last
week [in late August 2005] that "there is no improvement in human rights in
China, and in certain areas, it has deteriorated."
Myth #5
China is benign
Few in the Canadian government are familiar with
China's dark history. Most do not
know nor have they made any effort to learn about the symbiosis of crime,
business and politics in China.
Most Canadians cannot conceive of what Asian crime
expert Bertil Linter describes as the "tangled web of bankers, gangsters,
soldiers and spies" that exists in China and among the Overseas Chinese
Diaspora.[9] Nor do they have any understanding of
the implications of China's emergence as a new superpower, which will use any
means to achieve its ends even if it means the deaths of millions of its own
citizens – or other people.
Not knowing contemporary Chinese history, few can conceive of the
barbarity and evil that the Chinese Communist Party is capable of.
Here are some reasons why we should not consider China
to be benign:
Espionage: A joint CSIS/RCMP study in 1997, code
named Sidewinder, warned the
Canadian government about China's espionage activities in Canada. It was aborted and denounced as a
"conspiracy theory." Eight years
later we learn that China is indeed carrying out espionage activity in Canada.
Chinese defectors recently revealed that Beijing
maintains a vast espionage network of more than 1,000 spies in Canada. Another Chinese defector warned
Canadians of Beijing's spy operations:
Guangsheng Han says the luggage of important foreign visitors to China
is routinely searched, Chinese delegations that go abroad frequently include
spies and foreign embassies and consulates routinely engage in espionage.
China's intelligence services have systematically
targeted Canada's science and technology sectors and use Chinese students and
visiting scientists to steal technology for military use and to enhance the
country's global economic competitiveness. It is possible that Chinese spies cost Canada $1 billion
every month through industrial espionage in terms of lost sales and
markets. This loss represents
twice the value of what Canada is exporting to China!
Spies are also charged with intimidating Falun Gong
members in Canada. Falung Gong is
a spiritual movement that was banned in China in 1999.
FBI Director Robert Mueller told the United States
Congress that China has more than 3,000 "front" companies in America whose real
purpose is to direct espionage efforts and acquire US technology for military
purposes. "In Canada, intelligence
reports indicate the number of Chinese front companies to be between 300 and
500," according to an Asian Pacific Post article.
China's Alliance with Chinese organized crime
groups: As they did in the past – gangsters, officials, and
China's military are once again in an alliance. They collaborate to buy and spy to get high-tech secrets and
political influence. Canadians are
oblivious to what is happening and the threats this poses to Canada's security.
Bertil Lintner, author and Asian crime expert
writes: "Without the criminal
underworld on its side, it would be almost impossible for Bejing to extend its
writ beyond its frontiers, and that is what makes the new nexus between the
Triads and China's present leaders so dangerous for the rest of the world.
China is, even more than North Korea, a state that feels that it has to engage
in criminal activities such as drug running and the printing of counterfeit
dollars to survive. And China needs the underworld to help it steal industrial
secrets from more developed countries and to influence the politics of what is
becoming its main rival, the United States."[10]
The American government identified that Asian
organized crime in Canada now poses a security threat to the United States! The report, entitled International
Crime Threat Assessment, details how Chinese crime organizations from Hong
Kong, Macau and Taiwan have exploited Canada's lax immigration policies to
establish a base for operations in the United States.
Political Interference: In the
article Feeling the long arm of China:
The Consul-General is making sure politicians know where her country
stands, Jan Wong states "Interviews
with politicians, community activists and documents obtained by the Globe
and Mail show that the Toronto
consulate and its friends have repeatedly tried to influence political
decisions at the federal, provincial and municipal levels that conflict with
the interests of China's Communist regime."
There are signs that the Canadian judicial system has
become poisoned by Communist China's misinformation.[11]
Military Threats: The US Government has
cited China as the number one threat to global security.
China has been posing an increased threat to the rest
of the world for a long time, with generals threatening nuclear attacks. It can launch nuclear weapons that in
30 minutes could kill one hundred million Americans.
A Pentagon report states that much of China's defense
strategy seems to be derived from guidance that then Premier Deng Xiapoing gave
to the military and national security establishment in the early 1990s. This guidance, known as the "24
Character Strategy," advises military planners to "observe calmly; secure our
position; cope with affairs calmly; hide our capacities; and bide our time."
The Epoch Times recently reported on a briefing General Chi Haotian, China's former
minister of defence allegedly made to China's senior military leaders: The War is approaching us and War is not far from us and is the midwife of the
Chinese Century [emphasis in original]. The following lowlights of what he
allegedly said are shocking:
"Would the United States allow us to go out to gain
new living space? First, if the
United States is firm in blocking us, it is hard for us to do anything
significant to Taiwan and some other countries! Second, even if we could snatch some land from Taiwan,
Vietnam, India, or even Japan, how much more living space can we get? Very trivial! Only countries like the United States, Canada and Australia
have the vast land to serve our need for mass colonization.
"There has been rapid development of modern
biological technology, and new bio weapons have been invented one after
another. Of course, we have not
been idle; in the past years we have seized the opportunity to master weapons
of this kind. We are capable of achieving our purpose of "cleaning up" America
all of a sudden. When Comrade Xiaping
was still with us, the Party Central Committee had the perspicacity to make the
right decision not to develop aircraft carrier groups and focus instead on
developing lethal weapons that can eliminate mass populations of the enemy
country.
"This yellow land has
reached the limit of its capacity.
One day, who knows how soon it will come the great collapse will occur any
time and more than half of the population will have to go,"
"We must prepare ourselves for two scenarios. If our biological weapons succeed in
the surprise attack [on, presumably,
the United States but bioweapons would not be any great respecter of our common
border – ed], the Chinese people will be able to keep their losses at
a minimum in the fight against the United States. If, however, the attack fails and triggers a nuclear
retaliation from the United States, China would perhaps suffer a catastrophe in
which more than half of its population would perish. That is why we need to be ready with air defence systems for
our big and medium-sized cities."
Yes, there are more skyscrapers, cell phones, cars,
and Gucci products in China, but there is less freedom. Many are tortured, and China now has
missiles targeted at the United States and has spies employed in stealing
America's nuclear secrets and technology from Canada.
Since Marco Polo first visited China 700 years ago,
the Western World has believed that there are untold riches in China. The importance of China's supposedly
vast markets has been trumpeted for centuries, but "recent history is littered
with the dashed plans of foreign companies that made disastrous miscalculations
about China."[12]
With very few exceptions, these ventures were
disastrous, according to a new book The China Dream: The Quest for the Last Great Untapped
Market on Earth by Joe Studwell. He writes that political leaders,
international agencies and analysts have also been misled many times by the
apparently unlimited opportunities in China.
In the 1990s, the "China gold rush" went to
unprecedented levels as foreign investors to this day want to believe that
dreams do come true. But, as
Studwell argues, that century after century, China's economy crashes and their
dreams turn to dust. He predicts
China's economy will stall again with potentially catastrophic results that
will be felt around the world.
Studwell, who is one of the most respected business journalists covering
China, predicts a full-blown economic and political crisis for China.
Canada has taken a Pollyanna, head-in-the-sand
approach toward China, seduced by hopes of selling billions of widgets to
China's 1.3 billion people. The
Canadian government is not only ignoring the threat China poses, it is also
turning a blind eye to China's despicable human rights policies – which
are repugnant to Canadian values.
The Canadian government has failed to understand
China's strategy of trade, influence buying, and espionage to achieve their
goals of building a modern military and to support the aims of the People's
Liberation Army and the Communist Party that rules China.[13]
The Canadian government has based its foreign policy
relationship with China upon myths and delusions, while steadfastly denying
that there are any problems with their relationship with the most evil and
blood-soaked regime in the world today.
In addition, there are those that willingly conspire with the Chinese
Communist Party either for ideological purposes, or out of sheer greed.
How far will the Canadian government go to please
Beijing?
Blood in the Foundation:
A Remembrance Day Column
There is an ancient belief cited in James George Frazer's
The Golden Bough that making a
human sacrifice in laying the foundations of important buildings would give
them strength and durability. Sometimes it was assumed that blood made mortar
stronger and bone conferred stability.
The Canada that we know certainly had enough sacrifice
taken during the laying of its foundations. Modern Canada only ceased to believe that it was little more
than a British colony as a result of the First World War; our sense of national
pride was especially kindled by the Canadian victory at Vimy Ridge in April
1917.
It might be said that the blood and bone of over 59,500
Canadians was laid into our foundations between 1914 and 1919. Some of that blood comes from my great
uncle.
George Conn was born in Scotland and came over with
his immigrating parents in 1910; settling in Brockville on the Ontario shore of
the St. Laurence. When he enlisted
in August 1914, he probably still thought of himself as a Briton. If he had lasted until the Canadian
victory at Vimy Ridge in April 1917, it is very likely that he would then have then
been thinking of himself as a Canuck, first and foremost. However, he was killed in action two
years earlier, on April 22nd, 1915.
When Canadians think of the First World War, their
thoughts tend to centre on Vimy Ridge, which was an impressive victory that
marked the coming supremacy of the Canadian Corps as the elite formation in the
Allied forces on the Western Front.
Canadians have good reason to commemorate that accomplishment, as it was
one of the signal events that marked Canada's maturation into a self-confident
nation. Yet it was a losing fight
on another ridge that marked the debut of Canadian troops in the war, and which
first drew attention from their allies and enemies to their future potential.
The volunteers who flocked to join the enthusiastic
(though quite clumsy) formation of Canada's expeditionary force around
Valcartier in August 1914 had little idea of what lay ahead of them. Armed with the inadequate Ross Rifle (a
pet-project of the buffoonish Sir Sam Hughes, then Minister of Defence), they chaffed
to get 'over there' to 'do their bit'.
As battalions formed and reformed, with almost daily changes in command
-- again thanks to Sir Sam's erratic micromanagement -- somehow or other, a
young Scottish quarryman ended up in the 13th Battalion as a private
soldier. He was still with them
eight months later when the Second Battle of Ypres began.
The 13th Battalion was largely based on the
Royal Highlanders of Canada, a Montreal militia regiment officered by young
McGill students and the social elite of the city. They were brash, eager, and quite under-trained by the later
high professional standards of the Canadian Corps. However, when the German Army unleashed its big spring
offensive designed to cut the Allied line in two and drive towards the vital
Channel ports, the Highlanders were a part of the 3rd Brigade, 1st
Canadian Division who were in their way.
The division was in the front line for the first time.
Actually, the 1st Canadian Division wasn't
alone in the German's path. Some
of that honor belonged to French-African troops, most of whom fled or died when
the Germans began their offensive on April 22nd, 1915 with the first
effective poison gas attack in military history. This left a large gap on the flank of the Canadian division,
and the left-hand battalion – the 13th – was left
exposed. The Highlanders, advised
by a Canadian chemist in their ranks, improvised the first crude gas masks by
urinating on handkerchiefs and tying them over their faces. Then they stretched out to cover both their
old position and part of the new gap in the line. As the gas cloud drifted away, the Germans launched a
torrent of shells and attacked.
The expedient gas masks often didn't work. My family doesn't know exactly when
George died, only that it was reported to have occurred on the 22nd. Maybe he was among the Canadians who
drowned as their chlorine gas-seared lungs filled up with their own bodily fluids
out in a newly occupied trench.
What then happened to the now severely overstretched
13th was that they spent that afternoon and evening being the anvil to the
German hammer. The Ross Rifle
certainly let its faults be known to the Canadians at Ypres, and the 13th
Battalion were the first to realize them.
The Ross was very accurate, but jammed very quickly when fired rapidly
– the usual circumstance in combat.
The survivors of Second Ypres were quick to later discard their Ross
Rifles for the much more reliable British Lee Enfields. Nevertheless, a lot of Canadians died
during German assaults while frantically hammering at the bolts of their jammed
rifles as the Germans stormed their trenches. Maybe my great uncle George Conn went this way, clawing at
the bolt of his useless rifle as the Germans bayonets drew near.
Out massed, gassed, stretched thin and with faulty
rifles, it was a wonder that the Royal Highlanders lasted as long as they did,
but eventually the Germans worked through their lines, and the rest of the 13th
had to fight their way out on the morning of the 23rd – along
with the survivors of other Canadian battalions stuffed into the near empty
line that night. A lot didn't make
it. Canada's first Victoria Cross
of the war was won -- posthumously -- by one of the 13th Battalion's
young NCOs. Lance Corporal Fred
Fisher, a McGill University student nine months earlier, was only 18 when he
fought to the death with his Colt machine-gun to give other Canadians a chance
to win safety. Maybe this was also
how my great uncle died, but he was already reported as dead when the line
broke.
What we do know from the history of the War is that
the whole of the First Canadian Division put up a very stiff fight during their
debut in battle, and blunted the German's initial drive. It was a costly debut, in five days,
over 6,000 of its members were killed and wounded (though no other battalions
paid as high a price as the Royal Highlanders did for their baptism of fire). The rest of the battle, like so many in
the First World War, didn't go well for either side; but the Canadians were
pegged down by both the British and the Germans as troops to watch. The Canadians were relieved on the 27th.
There are two other legacies of that day, one for the
nation, and one for my Mother's family.
One Canadian physician, a doctor who was teaching at McGill when the war
began, was keenly aware of what was happening to his friends, neighbors and
students. Major Dr. John McCrae was
running a forward dressing station through most of the battle (even after the
Canadian troops had been pulled from the front line), giving the first
treatment that a lot of the wounded received. For many of them, nothing more could be done and they went
under row on row of crosses in a field of poppies near McCrae's station. It seems unlikely but perhaps George
Conn died here, and his was one of the temporary graves that inspired part of
the vivid imagery for McCrae's poem 'In Flanders' Fields'.
McCrae, then a lieutenant colonel, later became a
victim of the war himself. He died
in 1918 from an illness brought on by exhaustion after three more years of
exertion in tending to the wounded.
We do know that my Grandfather John Conn, who was George's
younger brother, volunteered three times to get into the war after April
1915. As he was only born in 1900,
it took some creative economies with the truth and apparently a sympathetic
recruiting sergeant before he was enrolled in November 1916. He did get to France, but only as a
member of a Forestry Battalion.
Quite possibly other sympathetic NCOs didn't call him out on his age,
but they didn't let him transfer to the infantry either. However, he did live the war out,
surviving as a farmer and mine foreman until 1967. He had three daughters and saw the birth of 12 grandchildren
– from whom would later come an additional 22 great grandchildren (so far)
and the first of the fifth generation who are all a part of his legacy to
Canada.
As an extended family full of artists and engineers,
machinists and entrepreneurs, we are adding our own stories to our country, but
we know something of the price that was paid to build it. Blood and bone of our own is mixed into
Canada's foundations.
Alexander Mackenzie's Bookshelf
This is to be a new feature of the Institute's
newsletter – a quick summation/alert of new books which deserve wider
attention. While we are at it, we will also be plugging some older classics from time to time.
Stewart Bell, that excellent reporter from the National
Post, has another book to his
credit: The Martyr's Oath: The Apprenticeship of a
Homegrown Terrorist profiles the
background, recruitment and brief service in al Qaeda of Mohammed Mansour
Jabarah. Raised partly in Canada,
Jabarah left St. Catherines Ontario to become one of the inner circle of Osama
Bin Laden's followers before being arrested in early 2002. This book is a solid piece of
reportage, profiling how a young Muslim with all the advantages decided to
become a terrorist. (Wiley, Mississauga, Ontario 2005). Bell occasionally cites the old Eric Hoffer book, The True Believer, which is also a must-have in any library that
concerns terrorism.
Robert D. Kaplan is a veteran journalist and author,
with a number of impressive books to his credit. Well traveled in the unsettled marches of the world, he is the author of Balkan Ghosts, The
Coming Anarchy and The Ends of the
Earth. In the last three years, he has again traveled to the
World's trouble spots – this time in the company of US soldiers and
marines. Imperial Grunts: The American Military on the Ground (Random House, New York, 2005) is the best piece of reporting on how America's troops function as
the new Legionnaires out on the edges of the civilized world. Kaplan, always an astute and clinical observer, was awestruck by the men he watched.
It was also clear that Kaplan had been doing his homework, judging from
the many references to historical works like Colonel Callwell's 1896
masterpiece Small Wars.
A welcome contribution to the library comes as a gift
from Barry Cooper, a professor of political science at the University of
Calgary. His first work on
terrorism, New Political Religions, or An Analysis of Modern Terrorism (University of Missouri Press, 2004) is an
illuminating work. Cooper cites
the work of Eric Voegelin and uses them to explore the differences between
terrorists who pursue a "first reality' of legitimate political grievances and
those who add a "second reality' – a fantastic objective seen only by
those whose rationality has been bent by what Cooper terms a pneumopathological
consciousness. Cooper's first
foray into the world of terrorism gives much food for thought.
Kim Bolan's book Loss of Faith: How the Air India Bombers Got Away with
Murder is also on the shelves
(McClelland & Stewart, Toronto, 2005). Bolan probably knows more about militant Sikhs in Canada
than any other reporter, especially after having covered the issue for years
– sometimes at personal risk.
The book is a damning indictment, not so much of CSIS and our police,
but more to the rest of us and our political leaders for simply refusing to
recognize the gravity of the threat the Khalsa posed both within the Sikh
community and to Canadians generally.
While there was much to object to in Jared Diamond's Guns,
Germs and Steel, it also made a
number of points that were worthy of consideration. Diamond's latest book Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed (Penguin Group, New York, 2005) yields the same
result. Jared uses a five point
framework to explore how human societies can overstrain their environment and
collapse. These are the practices of any society with respect to their
environment; climate change (a frequent occurrence throughout human history
– heck, our species probably evolved as it did because of the rapid
changes in climate over the past 600,000 years); the hostility of neighbors;
the nature of friendlier ties with the same neighbors; and the ability to find
and adopt changes when these are necessary. His book comes well armed with numerous examples of success
and failure.
Voices
of Freedom
"It's always interesting when people don't seem to feel
shame or embarrassment – but it's often not a very good sign."
-- Christopher Hitchens
"Since the 1960s, Canada has tried to achieve moral
leadership in the world by observing strict neutrality between good and evil."
-- George Jonas, Beethoven's Mask: Notes on My Life and Times. [For those who are sadly unfamiliar with this excellent columnist – buy this
book too!]
Soldiers are supposed to keep their opinions to themselves,
but sometimes their T-shirts say a lot"
"You give peace a chance, I'll provide cover."
One Canadian soldier who isn't keeping his opinions to himself
– and right welcome ones they are – in the new Chief of Defence
Staff, General Rick Hillier.
"It is the soldier, not the journalist, who guarantees
freedom of speech. It is the soldier, not the politician, who guarantees our democracy""
-- General Hillier at a funeral oration for two dead Canadian
troops, Petawawa, 2003.
John Thompson is President of the Mackenzie Institute which studies political instability and terrorism. He can be reached at: mackenzieinstitute@bellnet.ca
CLICK HERE FOR MORE ARTICLES
|