Isn’t it sad how our small town tolerates 400 demonstrators, many from outside, but not one local citizen who thinks differently?

Bambi would like to comment an article and a comment published by our Dear New Wark Times.

First, thank your Mr. Wark for reporting on how “Sackville Councillor raises questions about RCMP quarterly reports and opinion surveys“.

Second, Bambi is not surprised to read about the “general level of satisfaction with RCMP in New Brunswick” and thanks to this article for pointing for areas of improvement.

As far as Bambi is concerned, she is grateful to our police officers whose daily job consists of keeping us safe and sound.

Third, and this is what is the most shocking news to Bambi (again, thank you Mr. Wark for posting the comment). Yes, for a second, she thought she was perhaps in Iran, Saudi Arabia, or “Hezbollistan” when she read the following comment by someone she suspects she knows the identity of (although she has never met her in real life yet, she was delighted when she kindly commented on her blog in the past, thank you):

A few times hysterical people online have had the RCMP ‘sent’ to my house to speak to me…. I have nothing bad to say about the local police. They are polite and courteous to me.. that’s more than I can say for a lot of badly behaved members of the overpaid chattering class around here… and no I don’t make a habit of phoning the police because of my hurt feelings.” (comment on the Warktimes by Kata List Productions).

Can you imagine? Sending the police to someone’s house because of her different opinions that she expresses online?!

What world our we living in?

Is this the Canada we want?

Bambi is sorry to learn what Kata List Productions had to go through :(.

Instead of challenging our own opinions with new perspectives.

We could have easily told ourselves: We do not agree with her.

We can even decide not read her comments or blogs.

We may even disagree and keep reading, even if we do not agree.

We may even learn that she is right on some issues, even if they are to the right.

Just to give an example not related to right or left, Bambi saw once a video posted by Kata List Productions that she had all the reasons of the world to consider shocking at the time.

It was about the Beirut surrealistic explosion of August 4th, 2020. As a reminder, 6000+ persons were injured, 200+ lost their lives, over 300,000 houses damaged, etc. Her own niece, brother-in-law, and childhood friend were injured (the latter cannot take the stairs yet). Her parents’ apartment was destroyed and dad’s shop also badly damaged.

Yet, the video tried to argue that the BBC images from Beirut hospitals were fake and the whole story did not exist (conspiracy of some sort that did not make any sense given the shocking reality in Beirut).

Anyhow, Bambi watched that video just for fun and told herself: Well that person talking in it should perhaps chat with Rania (Bambi’s sister) who visited three hospitals to find her badly injured spouse (whilst her daughter was being taken to yet another hospital by a stranger).

She looked into the faces of surely over 1500 injured citizens at one single hospital— bloody faces— to try to recognize her husband.

So, yes, those images that toured the world were real, even if they appeared surreal.

All this to say, so what?

People are free to think what they want about whatever topic they wish. They are free to believe stories or not.

Whom are we to judge that we are the only ones to hold the truth to the point of sending RCMP to people’s private homes?

Perhaps Kata List Productions fully endorses that video. Perhaps not. Whatever. Bambi did not mind (her feelings were not hurt!).

To conclude this post on a lighter note, Bambi did not have a visit of the RCMP… yet ?, but she agrees: they are “polite and courteous“!

Mr. Nasrallah jubilates over “Trump’s humiliating downfall”. What does he have to say about his own country’s tragic downfall?

First, we learned yesterday that Mr. Nasrallah, the head of the Hezbollah was so happy over “Trump’s humiliating downfall“, to use his own words (OK, this even if almost half of the American population voted for Mr. Trump :)):

https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-election-lebanon-hezbollah-int-idUSKBN27R2UT

Many people, in the USA and around the world, were happy like Mr. Nasrallah. They were genuinely fed-up of Mr. Trump’s politics or pathetic personality traits.

Unlike Mr. Nasrallah though, they do not military control their country or its fate of war and peace.

Unlike him, they do not constitute a state within a state (the latter is is in a free fall now). They do not suffer from American sanctions whilst keeping to serve the interests of another country.

In other terms, they put their own state first.

Bambi wonders what Mr. Nasrallah thinks of the 80% devaluation of the Lebanese currency?

What does he think about the exodus of Lebanon’s brains?

What does he think about the Beirut port explosion that destroyed half, if not more, of his city?

As per the Reuters article below, “Hundreds of disillusioned doctors leave Lebanon, in blow to healthcare“. We can read the story of a few of them, including a pathologist returning to the United States with his family.

As the article describes, this is huge loss to teaching hospitals, as these physicians teach at Lebanese universities in addition to practising medicine:

https://www.reuters.com/article/lebanon-crisis-healthcare/insight-hundreds-of-disillusioned-doctors-leave-lebanon-in-blow-to-healthcare-idUSL8N2HV2WX

When will Mr. Nasrallah stop playing with or talking the language of war?

When will he put his own country first, before serving Iran?

When will he show consideration toward his fellow citizens who are deprived of everything (i.e., lives, a government, access to their savings, housing especially post-surrealistic explosions, power, other governmental services like effective garbage processing, medication, decent healthcare, quality of life)?

When will he have enough humility to look in the mirror to see his own reflection, before judging the image of other politicians in other foreign countries?

Mind you, not any country.

A country he regularly calls for its death, like the Iranian regime chants (“death to America“).

Why can’t he turn this chant into “life to Lebanon” instead?!

Contrary to the USA which sees one administration leaving and another one replacing it (the beauty of democracy, even when imperfect!), the tragedy of Lebanon is the following:

Unlike Mr. Trump, Mr. Nasrallah is not potentially changeable after four years.

Unless the Iranian regime changes, he seems to be there forever (there was a reason why the US has been aggressive toward Iran and his group/allies).

In other terms, even if this man retires (from terror, politics, or… life) today, other mini future Hezbollah leading clones will fast replace Mr. Nasrallah.

This is the toxic ideology and reality behind Mr. Nasrallah’s group.

Lebanon deserves much better than this warrior mindset… and hegemony.

Lebanon deserves dignity, democracy, prosperity, and peace.

November 11: Thank you…

Citizens criticize our town (Sackville, New Brunswick) for many good reasons. However, today, Bambi would like to pause and thank the Town of Sackville for having remembered to honour our veterans with beautiful banners on the streets (many weeks ahead of November 11)!

In our current sad times where we seem to constantly put down our history, heritage, and values, such a gesture of thank you to our veterans is even more appreciated.

To conclude this post, below you can find: (1). A picture of a painting Bambi took last year in nearby Amherst, Nova Scotia (taken from last year’s post). It moves her heart every time she drives by it; and (2) an older post about Remembrance Day in Sackville from last year (2019… yes, pre-pandemic times).

Nearby town: Amherst, NS

Contrary to many others, Ms. Ensaf Haidar knows radical religiosity sadly too well. This is why she defends Québec’s secularism bill 21

Like Bambi, Ms. Ensaf Haidar believes that religion is a personal matter.

Apparently like Bambi too, Ms. Ensaf Haidar respects the choice of a majority in a society.

Bill 21 is Québec’s choice (with its majority government).

It is not up to a Canadian Prime Minister (hello Mr. Trudeau :)!) to impose his own approach to secularism on this distinct society.

As a reminder, this is not any society. It is made by, of, and for one of the three founding peoples of our country. It deserves our respect!

Immigrants who arrive to Québec choose it because of its secularism. Read this translated article below and you will understand.

Bambi’s own sisters and friends chose a French school for their children when they moved back from Québec to their birth country a few years ago, precisely because of the culture of secularism of that particular school. They did not go for a religious (i.e., Christian) school.

Like Bambi and Ms. Haidar, they believe that religions are a private matter. This regardless of any particular religion and with all due respect to all of them (tiny Lebanon has 18 religions or sects of religions).

To come back to Québec now, bill 21 includes a “grandfather” clause, which allows existing public servants to keep any religious sign in their positions of authority. In other terms, no one will be losing his or her job because of this new bill. How clever and thoughtful. How moderate too. Too bad that many Canadian media articles “forget” to mention this clause.

We may or may not like bill 21. We may not like how Québec’s society has chosen to live. That’s fine. However, at one point, we must accept that this is its own choice.

If we do not like this historico-cultural approach to secularism in the public sector, well we look for a job in the private sector.

Plus, as mentioned above, when immigrants (and Bambi is an old one) come to Québec, they know how Québeckers live. Again, they chose to live in the Belle Province because of its way of living.

If we absolutely cannot stand the values of this secular society, perhaps it is time to move to live elsewhere (rest of Canada, the UK, or the USA, with its different approach to secularism, called multiculturalism). Bambi has lived in three different provinces. Each part of our country has its own charm.

Further below, you can find a quick translation of an article published today in the Journal de Montréal by Mr. Erika Aubin (with Mr. Michael Nguyen) featuring Ms. Ensaf Haidar who supported bill 21 in court:

tps://www.journaldemontreal.com/2020/11/09/la-femme-de-raif-badawi-appuie-la-loi-sur-la-laicite

Thank you Ms. Haidar for being both congruent and fair to Québec, unlike Mr. Trudeau… and sadly the rest of Canada.

In Bambi’s non-expert citizen’s opinion, if our PM keeps pushing thus far his disrespect of Québec, he should not be surprised if people end up rekindling the sovereignty movement.

This being said, Ms. Haidar’s support to bill 21 on the state’s secularism is significant given the tragic and unfair story of her spouse, Mr. Raif Badawi.

Mr. Badawi is still in jail in Saudi Arabia. As a reminder, he was sentenced to 1000 lashes, a 10 year sentence, and a fine of 200,000 Saudi Arabian riyals (CAD $69,381).

Why? Well, he was writing on a blog, just like Bambi! His writings were considered offensive to Islam. By our own Canadian standards, his posts would be simply “benign” (https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/what-did-raif-badawi-write-to-get-saudi-arabia-so-angry).

Bambi prays that Mr. Badawi will be finally free so he can enjoy living with his family in secular Québec, free to be secular or observant!

Because Bambi grew up in Lebanon where Islam is largely moderate, thankfully her experiences or observations are different from Ms. Haidar or the other persons who also testified in court. However, these citizens are courageously pointing to the real issue underlying Islam in many countries unless this religion manages to reform like others (i.e., judaism at one point in its history): In Islam, there is no distinction between private and political life. In Québec, there is.

Which laws should apply in Québec: Sharia, Trudeau’s rigid multiculturalism, or simply Bill 21?

Logically, bill 21 in Québec, according to Bambi.

In Canada, it is multiculturalism.

As simple as that…

——–

Beginning of the article in question:

“Raif Badawi’s spouse supports secularism bill. She testified Monday in Montreal at the trial that seeks to invalidate this bill.

The spouse of political prisoner Raif Badawi, a refugee in Québec since her spouse was sentenced to 1,000 lashes in Saudi Arabia, came out in favour of the secularism bill on Monday at the trial to invalidate it.

“The veil is not religion. Teachers are the leaders for children. We are not going to implicate religion”, Ensaf Haidar told the court.

According to the woman who has become a symbol of freedom of expression, the hijab is a political rather than a religious accessory. To support her claim, she cited Iran as an example, where the wearing of the veil has become compulsory for women in public.

With her testimony, she hopes to convince the judge that the law on secularism is “the only solution to live without religion“.

The law prohibits the wearing of religious symbols by government employees in positions of authority while performing their duties, including judges, police officers and teachers.

Religion, a personal choice

I left [Saudi Arabia] because it is difficult for a woman to live a normal life there. I’m a Muslim, but religion is personal”, she argued.

Ms. Haidar moved to Lebanon before settling in Sherbrooke in 2013 with her three children.

Her spouse, a freedom of expression and gender equality activist, has been jailed since 2012 in Saudi Arabia. In addition to being sentenced to 10 years in prison, he was also sentenced to 1,000 lashes.

Lawyers who challenge the law, formerly known as “Bill 21”, have not ventured to cross-examine her, unlike witnesses who followed it.

The hijab at the heart of the debate

Since the beginning of the debate surrounding this bill, the hijab has aroused passions.

Last week at the civil trial, teachers testified that it was inconceivable for them to remove their veils, even in a professional setting.

After Ensaf Haidar’s testimony, two other Muslim witnesses addressed the court on Monday to oppose their child having a female teacher wearing a veil.

The veil is a pernicious Islamic symbol. This is a message that the woman cannot be respectable if she does not wear it because her hair is part of her nakedness, argued Algerian Boushi Laoun.This is not an education that I want to pass on to my two children“.

A mother from Algeria then explained that she sees the veil as a symbol “which testifies to the inferiority of women“.

I experienced the arrival of fundamentalist [Islamism]. I saw my freedoms trampled. I could no longer walk the streets [without a veil] without being called names. They wanted to tell me what to wear, even inside my own home, ”she told Judge Marc-André Blanchard.

In 2011, she chose Québec as a land of welcome to, among other things, offer secular education to her daughters.”

Ms. Dorothy Shea, the US Ambassador in Lebanon, replies to Mr. Gibran Bassil’s own words after he was hit for “corruption” by her country

Corruption is a human temptation.

Up to a certain point, many politicians, even in so-called developed or high-income countries, may be tempted to receive bribes or a favour in one form or in another.

Luckily, there are ethical and legal processes to avoid or deal with conflict of interests.

Ultimately, it is the people who decide that someone does not deserve their trust anymore as a public servant.

In the Lebanese revolution, people revolted against ALL their leaders (“all of them means all of them”) upon the Lebanese financial crash (i.e., banking fraud) on October 17, 2019.

Despite this, Mr. Gibran Bassil’s name came over and over in songs, jokes, in anger statements or cries of despair on the streets, etc. He was Minister (of Energy… and there is still no power, mind you!).

Without knowing him (since Bambi has left her birth country over 30 years ago), she can recognize his style, which represents both arrogance and arrivism. There is also of course nepotism (which is sadly too common in Lebanon).

You may think: Oh well, isn’t this what political leaders are all about anywhere :)? Maybe, but there is a significant difference in corruption magnitude (in addition to civilized versus uncivilized societies). The extent of corruption is notoriously higher in developing countries… Perhaps, even higher in states heading toward failure?

Perhaps states fail when corruption is taken to endemic levels, without any accountability. Only power talks, including the power of both weapons and elitism. So, imagine when both go hand in hand (i.e., mutually protecting and strengthening each other).

Sadly, in addition to its mafia-like politicians, tiny Lebanon has serious issues (e.g., geopolitics, internal divisions or wars, regional armed conflicts, refugees, financial frauds, pandemics, ammonium nitrate-related surrealistic explosions, etc.).

Is Mr. Bassil the only corrupt figure? Of course not, but he is surely a symbolic figure of Lebanon’s tragedy.

This is why it is not surprising to the people of Lebanon to see him hit by the USA for “corruption”:

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-54823667

Below is what Mr. Bassil said on TV, as per 961:

Below is a video by Ms. Dorothy Shea, US Ambassador in Lebanon. It is a statement meant as a reply to Mr. Bassil’s own press conference.

To conclude this post, just for the fun or re-watching this, below is an interview where you can see Mr. Bassil in Davos (January 23, 2020). He had a funny exchange with the Dutch Foreign Trade Minister, Ms. Sigrid Kaag related to his “friends” who privately flew him to Europe 🙂 (as a former Minister).

Mr. Biden’s election is SAD news, not for Trump or America, but for Lebanon

Iran’s President is already calling for Biden to return to Iran nuclear deal:

https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-donald-trump-iran-foreign-policy-tehran-da8c870cacf6109ae1cad62108535634

If the Iranian regime wants to go back to that deal, what does this tell us about it?

Is this good for any hope for peace in the region, both short- and long-term?

Is this good news for Lebanon (i.e., strengthening Iran and, thus, Hezbollah’s influence over it)?

Is this good for the innocent Iranian people in the longer term (i.e., one day seeing a change of their awful regime)?

The truth of the matter, whether we are allergic to Mr. Trump’s personality or not, Lebanon had imminent hope to be saved from the hell it is FAST diving into.

For example, the USA tried to do something for the corruption in Lebanon (and Syria).

Recently, the USA helped Lebanon in the process of negotiating its Maritime borders with Israel, opening the way for gas production. This is like a miracle by itself. Thank you Mr. Trump’s administration as this can bring much needed prosperity (of course assuming it won’t be stolen by the political corrupt elite).

It is Bambi’s hope that Mr. Biden will be lucid enough in order not to reverse all what his predecessor’s administration did. Not everything was bad, even if it was signed by Mr. Trump.

Yes, he is a big mouth, a vulgar man, a narcissist, and much more! Yet, if Bambi rises above all this, she sees that many of his policies/positions (or rather their effects) made more sense than his awful personality and what the intellectual elites of our world and the media want us to believe.

With all due respect to Mr. Biden (she will leave out Ms. Harris, as this is a different story for a different post), if only to save what is left of her birth country, had Bambi been American, she would have voted for the populist Mr. Trump (perhaps she would have voted differently with other candidates at the other governance levels).

Why is Bambi saying so? Because she is personally fed up of hearing all those who say the good yet empty words in life or blindly follow all the globalized trends without much thought. She is thinking here of our own Mr. Trudeau (et al.). Mr. Biden may be a more powerful or a smarter version of our own Mr. Trudeau (same for Mr. Obama, mind you).

Mr. Trump is a bad boy and a bad loser. However, at least, in his own bad way and with his own family clientelism and pandering to Israel or rather to Christian Evangelicals, he worked for his own country (Canada economically suffered from this). He truly put America first and genuinely wanted to make it great again.

Will Mr. Biden do so concretely and not just in beautiful words? Time will tell. Congratulations to him and best wishes to his administration!

Is the Scottish cabinet secretary for Justice’s bill on “hate speech” totalitarian?

The answer to this question lies in a thoughtful article by Dr. Mathieu-Bock Côté published today in the Journal de Montréal, and entitled “Scotland and the thought police” [“L’Écosse et la police de la pensée”]:

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2020/11/07/lecosse-et-la-police-de-la-pensee

Below is quick translation for you:

let’s keep an eye on Scottish news. Because at the rate that ideas are circulating today, especially the worst ones, the strange debate Scotland is going through at the moment should worry us.

Hatred

Humza Yousaf is the Scottish Minister for Justice. And he has embarked on a fight against “hate speech” by proposing a very ambitious bill, the “Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Bill”.

We know that any criticism of progressive ideology has the potential to fall into the category of hate speech. Nothing is more free today than accusations of racism, sexism, Islamophobia or transphobia.

With this in mind, Humza Yousaf intends to control private conversations in homes.

His theory?

Why should what is forbidden in the gallery, restaurant or pub be allowed in a private home?

Shouldn’t virtue reign everywhere? The new inquisition, to be effective, must it not enter homes? The home is no longer sacred.

Humza Yousaf thus intends to create the conditions for a generalized denunciation of private conversations which could offend the sensibilities of groups deemed to be minority by the dominant ideology.

Don’t you reproduce the orthodoxy of the regime in your private conversations? We can denounce you.

Stasi

Be afraid of your guests who might misreport your words if they misunderstand, distort, or dislike them.

Fear your children socialized in a school system which pushes to see microaggressions everywhere.

In the name of the fight against hatred, we will even come to hunt down ulterior motives. It is already being done in the corporate world, through the famous implicit association tests that claim to detect your unconscious prejudices.

All of this is reminiscent of East Germany and the Stasi. I do not think I am exaggerating in saying that. The fight against “hate speech” is the new mask of totalitarianism.”

Even after his chat with Mr. Macron, Trudeau still does not name Islamism. What does this say?

If you read this official statement, you understand between its lines, that Mr. Trudeau is letting down France, freedom of speech, and with it all the innocent populations in Europe and the Middle East (+ South Asia) aspiring for safety and the freedom to be/remain free. Why is Bambi saying this? Because of all the platitude in his statement. We can read about his concern for the fight for climate change even :), but… not the topic of the day, that is the fight against Islamist forces!

Isn’t it this sad given the recent tragedies not just in France, but also Austria and Afghanistan (i.e. in Kabul University)?

https://pm.gc.ca/en/news/readouts/2020/11/05/prime-minister-justin-trudeau-speaks-president-france-emmanuel-macron

In contrast to our PM, Mr. Aoun, Lebanon’s President, courageously stood up for France, in his personal name and in the name of Lebanon, against Islamist terrorism (Bambi thanked him in an earlier post).

Note that he is the President of a country with a large proportion of Muslims.

He is even aligned with an Islamist party (Hezbollah), who was vocal about the cartoons and against Mr. Macron.

He also has some Islamist dormant (sometimes not that dormant) forces in his tiny country. Mr. Erdogan is agitating them against France. They even criticized the President for speaking as he did.

How ironic that the President of tiny Lebanon showed more dignity (and courage) in his position than our own Mr. Trudeau who clearly is in less danger.

Not only Mr. Trudeau did not defend free speech in Canada. With his silence about Islamism and his choice of words, he seems to be choosing his side. It is not the side we would have expected from Canada.

Mr. Christian Rioux (Le Devoir) & Mr. Mario Dumont (Journal de Montréal) analyze the American votes thus far

The United States of America are divided in a dramatic way.

It is not just for economic reasons.

It is also and perhaps more so for cultural reasons (or visions) of the world.

Hopefully, their new Presidents, now and the ones in the years to come, will be skilled in uniting their country.

To do so, they must know how to govern for all the Americans, that is especially for those who did/do not vote for them.

Anyhow, Bambi loves the USA from the bottom of her heart. She wishes our neighbours the best. If they are doing well as a country, we would all be doing well with them, whether we admit or like it… or not.

When writing the above, Bambi is thinking of Canada, of the Western world by extension, and of tiny Lebanon whose fate depends much on the external policy of the future administration, especially with Iran, the big master of the Lebanese Hezbollah. The latter, along with the endemic corruption, have hijacked tiny bankrupt yet beautiful Lebanon.

It is that policy that would be key for Lebanon, whether led by Mr. Biden’s or by Mr. Trump’s administration… or by anyone else.

This being said, below you can find a quick translation of the two articles in question.

The thoughtful analyses of these journalists overlap, as you will see.

Let’s start with Mr. Rioux’ article first. It is entitled “Blindeness” [“Aveuglément”]:

https://www.ledevoir.com/opinion/chroniques/589257/l-aveuglement

“No one believed it in the fall of 2016. The Republicans had given themselves the most atypical candidate in recent American history. This vulgar, rough-hewn man couldn’t take her to the top tier of progressive, feminist, and globalized East Coast elites that Hillary Clinton represented. And yet, the impossible happened. Donald Trump became the 45th President of the United States!

For a moment, these same elites wondered. The prestigious New York Times even went so far as to wonder what it had missed. Perhaps, from the skyscrapers of New York, Portland and San Francisco, weren’t you seeing exactly what was going on in the deep country? Like the children at New Year’s Eve, we therefore made resolutions. The New York Times even went so far as to hire centrist columnist Bari Weiss from the Wall Street Journal. She has since resigned!

For the denial immediately regained its rights. In the faculties, long theses were written that were as poignant as they were smoky, explaining that Donald Trump was nothing more and nothing less than Mussolini’s reincarnation. For four years, the well-meaning left repeated until more thirstily in all the stands that this monster had no legitimacy to govern and therefore had to be deposed. In short, that 2016 had only been an electoral accident.

Moreover, the 2020 election would be a shining demonstration of this. We would see what we would see. The Democratic sweep was underway. Happy globalization would resume its course as if nothing had happened. All the press and the biggest pollsters were convinced of this.

Tuesday evening at around 11 a.m., when it was learned that Donald Trump had just won Florida, this huge castle, carefully built for four years, collapsed. Because reality is stubborn. It took four years of denial to demonstrate that 2016 was not an accident.

Basically, whoever the president takes the oath on January 20, the election will have been played out of pocket handkerchiefs. In a way, Republicans are coming out even stronger in this historic voter turnout. Not only are they retaining the Senate and Supreme Court, but the Democratic majority is weakened in Congress.

Above all, it will be necessary to explain by what mystery a president who has been called a “white supremacist” for four years was able to increase his vote in all layers of the population, except … among white men! Not only did Donald Trump get more of the Hispanic vote in Florida and Texas, but more African Americans voted for him than in 2016.

No doubt some will repeat what a paternalistic left once said about these “insane” workers who were unconscious of voting for capitalist parties. Rather than admitting that, even outraged by the disgusting murder of George Floyd, many black voters do not share a racist ideology, that they have nothing to do with the “defamation” of the police, and that they enjoyed even less the long weeks of riots that set their neighborhoods on fire and bloodshed.

It seems indeed that the openly clientelist strategy adopted by the Democrats as well as the choice of Kamala Harris as candidate for the vice-presidency have not stood up to the economic results of recent years, which have benefited the poorest, among others. which there are many blacks. By signing the First Step Act, a bipartisan bill, Trump has also helped ease the sentences of many black offenders who populate American jails.

That doesn’t make Donald Trump a saint, let alone the greatest president of the United States, far from it. His astonishing statements on election night reduce politics to a power struggle. But that does not prevent him from being a candidate in whom half of the American population – including those strata that have suffered most from deindustrialisation and who do not identify with the societal reforms of the Democrats – can legitimately identify with.

This election bears witness above all to the monumental failure of the American elites. A blindness that has a lot to do with the contempt in which the new graduate elites hold those portions of the population that do not participate in the knowledge economy and that the British political scientist David Goodhart describes in his last essay (Head, hand, heart, The arenas).

Ever since the university youth replaced the old working-class base in the left-wing parties, one has the impression that these ugly, dirty and wicked people no longer have the right to exist. As if four years of blindness were not enough, we see a proliferation in the press of paternalistic sermons which teach 48% of American voters. Who for their racism, who for their sexism, who for their homophobia.

Ironically, these sad sires resemble that character of Bertold Bretch who, from the top of his ivory tower, wondered whether it would not be “easier … to dissolve the people and elect another”.”

End of Mr. Rioux’ article for Le Devoir.

Now, Bambi will present a quick translation of Mr. Mario Dumont’s article, published in the Journal de Montréal, entitled “Distrustful Latinos” [“Les Latinos méfiants”]:

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2020/11/06/les-latinos-mefiants

Donald Trump’s convincing victory in Florida was directly linked to the Hispanic vote. Many Latinos are extremely suspicious of the Democratic Party, because of the presence of more radical left elements in it.

It was primarily Cubans and Venezuelans who largely voted for the Republican candidate. The least we can say is that we are talking about citizens who have a “privileged” relationship with everything that calls itself the radical left.

For half a century, Cubans have lived through a Castro-style communist dictatorship. Little freedom, no free access to information, a life in poverty and rationing.

The reality is not always easy for them in the United States, but no one wants to return to live in Cuba.

Now imagine the Venezuelans who have tasted Hugo Chavez. The coups, famine, unavailable drugs, a regime of terror in a country in permanent crisis.

Nationals of this country who are fortunate enough to live in the United States are grateful.

They misunderstand?

What bothers me is the analysis done in most media of their vote.

It seems to be insinuating that they were wrong in voting Republican, but that they should be forgiven given the circumstances in their country of origin. They would be voters a little less enlightened since traumatized.

Can I claim the opposite? In terms of mistrust of the touting speeches of the radical left, we could well see these Latinos as particularly competent and lucid people.

Their life experience, the damage experienced by their families, are they not concrete realities that illustrate the dangers associated with revolutionary movements on the left?

Cubans and Venezuelans have heard the beautiful promises: “social justice”, a better world when the working class has crushed the economic profiteers and the big companies.

Then they experienced the deprivation of liberty and economic misery. The apprehensions of those who have lived through this misery should be understood as a life experience rather than as a political deviation.

Not with a 100-foot pole!

I understand that Joe Biden has nothing to do with Fidel Castro and that the more extreme minority in the Democratic Party will not bring the United States into socialism. Not at all.

But I note that those who have known leftist revolutions closely do not want to know anything.

To the point of rejecting from the outset a party that houses a minority wing of socialists.

Their opinion is worth at least as much as that of thousands of pseudo-intellectual professors who tout campus socialism while enjoying the comforts of life in the United States.

As much as that of the media which rightly denounce the far right, but with a smirk come to terms with the excesses of the far left.

This time, the alternative choice of a Cuban from Florida was Trump.”

The guy who has proven to us again with his behaviour of the last 24 hours that he is no match for a leader.

But they will have chosen what is the least worse for them.”

Canada-France: Bambi is (still) disappointed and ashamed of Mr. Trudeau…

Whether he fully realizes it or not, his words on the “limits of freedom of expression” have…

Aligned us with radicalism over freedom of expression.

Seemed to align us with Turkey’s Neo Sultan, Mr. Erdogan, over France’s President, Mr. Macron.

Aligned us with Islamists over Muslims (the moderate silent majority!) in the Arab world and South Asia.

Put French resources and interests in the world at risk.

Put Mr. Macron’s safety in Lebanon a risk.

Put Lebanon at risk, undermining France’s efforts to support the Lebanese people.

Aligned us with stupidity and terror over freedom of expression.

Seemed to further align us with this collective craziness of our times, called political correctness, that the tyrants of our world know how to instrumentalize.

Lately, Mr. Macron thanked Mr. Legault for his position. He did not thank our Canadian PM. Can you imagine? This tells us something about Mr. Trudeau’s misjudgment.

Bambi hopes that it is not too late to correct his position in his phone chat with Mr. Macron… and hopefully be sincere about it.

https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/trudeau-slated-to-speak-with-macron-amid-furor-over-his-response-to-attacks-in-france-1.5176294

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