Wildrose Leader Brian Jean Tries To Rein In The Crazies

tay

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May 20, 2012
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The Wildrose Opposition’s “democracy and accountability” critic spoke at an anti-carbon-tax rally in Red Deer Saturday where Canadianized versions of the Confederate Battle Flag – universally used, recognized and loathed as a symbol of overt racism – were freely flapping in wind.

Jason Nixon – who is also the Wildrose Legislative Caucus’s whip, responsible for party discipline – told the media the flag flappers were, in the words of the Canadian Press reporter who covered the story, “apart from the main crowd,” and that he spoke with the flag wavers and condemned their “racist imagery.”

Well, sorry, but that dog won’t hunt.

If the MLA for Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre wanted to make a point about racist imagery, he could have sent the flag wavers packing from the steps of Red Deer City Hall, where he addressed the entire tiny group of carbon-tax opponents. Instead, he says, he spoke to the flag wavers for a few moments afterward.

According to the CBC, he then issued a statement saying, “I am sure that they would not have been welcome had they attempted to join the rally.”

Oh, please! Even if there’s no one standing behind the tree shown in the Twitter photo, the flag wavers are no more than a dozen steps from the rest of the protesters.

As Brian Mulroney famously said to John Turner: “You had an option, sir!” Mr. Nixon could have walked away and said why. He could have manned up and condemned the racist-flag wavers from the bully pulpit being an MLA provides. Instead, he bloviated un-memorably about the NDP’s carbon tax to handful of people the demonstration managed to attract.

My guess is that if the protest hadn’t happened on a weekend when the Progressive Conservatives were having a meeting in Red Deer, and a few PC members unhappy about the idea of a forced merger with the Wildrose Party hadn’t wandered by with camera-equipped smart-phones, none of us would know anything about this.

Joe Anglin, Mr. Nixon’s predecessor as Wildrose Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre MLA, told me yesterday that no public figure can just ignore a racist symbol like the Confederate Battle Flag at a rally and pretend it has nothing to do with them.

“It’s an ugly reminder of a dark time in American history,” the U.S.-born Mr. Anglin observed. “People of integrity don’t just disavow its presence. They remove themselves completely from participation in the event.”

And have no doubt about it, he added, “once the Confederate flag was unfurled, the event became a racist event. It is no defence … to say he spoke with the flag wavers to condemn the behaviour after the damage was done.”

Mr. Anglin, defeated at a Wildrose nomination meeting in July 2014 by Mr. Nixon, who had worked behind the scenes as the constituency secretary to unseat him, said he believes Wildrose ranks are far from free of racism and homophobia. “This association I regret.”

The fact is, we’ve got a broader problem with racism in Alberta and politicians who stand by in situations like this as Mr. Nixon did are tacitly contributing to it.

Alberta PoliticsWildrose whip condemns racist imagery after the fact? That dog won’t hunt! Jason Nixon should have walked away - Alberta Politics


 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
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racist flag?
geez
so the op hates the south unconditionally
i suppose after residential schools the Canadian flag and the cross are nothing but racist symbols too huh?
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
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...universally used, recognized and loathed as a symbol of overt racism...

...by left wing nutters.

If the MLA for Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre wanted to make a point about racist imagery, he could have sent the flag wavers packing from the steps of Red Deer City Hall...

...yes, if he was a left wing nutter that wanted to stifle free speech.

Why do you want to silence people that disagree with you?
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
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Rachel Notley "assassination chatter" :lol:

Isn't that why we have a the RCMP. The Queens Cowboys needs to get the lead out of their A$$ and find these bad guys.. or not. (It's the Sheriff Dept's job)

In fairness, neither Trudeau nor Mulcair spoke up when it was happening with Harper.

Farm safety bill spurs death threats against Alberta premier | Globalnews.ca

...a little over the top for sure.



Energy Minister Margaret McCuaig-Boyd crying, "I know who it feels to be Cyber Bullied;" please bitch if you can't handle the heat, get out of the kitchen and do Alberta a favour, fukking fat cow.

Also, I don't think there is anything criminal in what Ross Dobson stated; he is just hoping that some pissed off farmer shoots her.. he's not saying he would personally do it..

I have to say I share his sentiments.





Man, you're a horrible person. You're the sort of person who wants to put an end to democracy.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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THe right part of Canada. That being West of Ontario.

It's the angry part of Canada, that's for sure.

I have noticed in my travels that the richer and more privaleged Canadians are, the more miserable and unfriendly they seem to be.
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
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It's full of misogynistic right wing a$$holes who can't cope with the fact that in a democracy every now and then your party gets voted out.
Poor Slave. He must be shitting bricks at the thought of a pinko, commie, lefty coalition taking over the reigns on his province.
 

pgs

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Nov 29, 2008
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It's full of misogynistic right wing a$$holes who can't cope with the fact that in a democracy every now and then your party gets voted out.
Well that describes the Liberal party to a tee , hey who is in power federally ?

Poor Slave. He must be shitting bricks at the thought of a pinko, commie, lefty coalition taking over the reigns on his province.
No one is taking over anything cliffy , we will be back at the polls soon enough . Once the legislature starts sitting the disfunction will become so obvious that a new election will be called .
And when that happens watch that green vote evaporate .
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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After Charlottesville, police and activists look to counter Alberta's extreme right


Compared to the bloody clash in Charlottesville,. — with its torches, swastikas and bodies on the pavement — the Edmonton rally wasn’t much. But for Vaugeois, the rage and the hatred were familiar.

“Charlottesville, it just made me sad,” said Vaugeois, who went to observe the Edmonton rally as president of the Alberta Hate Crimes Committee, which works to combat hate-motived offences. “Because I know the reality here in Alberta is we do have those sentiments. And the tensions are increasing every time something like this happens.”

Far-right nativist and white supremacist groups like those seen in Charlottesville have been around longer than Alberta has been a province. Barbara Perry, a University of Ontario Institute of Technology professor who studies far-right extremism, estimated there were between 12 and 15 hate groups in Alberta in a 2015 study and likely more today. Hate crimes in the province have spiked in recent years, many targeting Muslim residents.

Howard Palmer’s book Patterns of Prejudice traces the origins of Alberta nativism to the province’s first immigration boom. The flood of non-English immigrants that arrived between 1896 and the First World War challenged the province’s Anglo-Saxon elite, some of whom turned to nativist ideologies from Britain, Eastern Canada and the United States.

Ku Klux Klan organizers first came to Alberta in 1924. By 1930, the Klan had 11 locals throughout the province and claimed as many as 7,000 members. Then-premier John Edward Brownlee ordered the Alberta Provincial Police to monitor the group. The Liberator, the Klan’s propaganda arm, was published out of an office in downtown Edmonton and claimed a (likely exaggerated) circulation of 250,000.

Anti-Catholic and anti-Semitism movements also took root. In the 1930s, members of William Aberhart’s Social Credit government vilified an international Jewish conspiracy in justifying their outlandish monetary policies. In recent decades, new anti-immigrant and xenophobic groups formed, including the Aryan Nation, the Aryan Guard, Blood and Honour, and various anti-government Freemen on the Land.

Despite its long history of far-right extremist groups, there are no organizations like the U.S. Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) or Anti-Defamation League (ADL) that closely monitor hate groups in Canada, said Perry.

“We’re in denial,” she said. “We imagine ourselves — as I think a lot of the world does — as this bastion of hope and inclusivity and multiculturalism, and while for the most part that’s true, I think that overlooks that there are still some really serious problems.”

more

Alberta’s far-right has a long history
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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Well that describes the Liberal party to a tee , hey who is in power federally ?


No one is taking over anything cliffy , we will be back at the polls soon enough . Once the legislature starts sitting the disfunction will become so obvious that a new election will be called .
And when that happens watch that green vote evaporate .

16 months to recall.

After Charlottesville, police and activists look to counter Alberta's extreme right


Compared to the bloody clash in Charlottesville,. — with its torches, swastikas and bodies on the pavement — the Edmonton rally wasn’t much. But for Vaugeois, the rage and the hatred were familiar.

“Charlottesville, it just made me sad,” said Vaugeois, who went to observe the Edmonton rally as president of the Alberta Hate Crimes Committee, which works to combat hate-motived offences. “Because I know the reality here in Alberta is we do have those sentiments. And the tensions are increasing every time something like this happens.”

Far-right nativist and white supremacist groups like those seen in Charlottesville have been around longer than Alberta has been a province. Barbara Perry, a University of Ontario Institute of Technology professor who studies far-right extremism, estimated there were between 12 and 15 hate groups in Alberta in a 2015 study and likely more today. Hate crimes in the province have spiked in recent years, many targeting Muslim residents.

Howard Palmer’s book Patterns of Prejudice traces the origins of Alberta nativism to the province’s first immigration boom. The flood of non-English immigrants that arrived between 1896 and the First World War challenged the province’s Anglo-Saxon elite, some of whom turned to nativist ideologies from Britain, Eastern Canada and the United States.

Ku Klux Klan organizers first came to Alberta in 1924. By 1930, the Klan had 11 locals throughout the province and claimed as many as 7,000 members. Then-premier John Edward Brownlee ordered the Alberta Provincial Police to monitor the group. The Liberator, the Klan’s propaganda arm, was published out of an office in downtown Edmonton and claimed a (likely exaggerated) circulation of 250,000.

Anti-Catholic and anti-Semitism movements also took root. In the 1930s, members of William Aberhart’s Social Credit government vilified an international Jewish conspiracy in justifying their outlandish monetary policies. In recent decades, new anti-immigrant and xenophobic groups formed, including the Aryan Nation, the Aryan Guard, Blood and Honour, and various anti-government Freemen on the Land.

Despite its long history of far-right extremist groups, there are no organizations like the U.S. Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) or Anti-Defamation League (ADL) that closely monitor hate groups in Canada, said Perry.

“We’re in denial,” she said. “We imagine ourselves — as I think a lot of the world does — as this bastion of hope and inclusivity and multiculturalism, and while for the most part that’s true, I think that overlooks that there are still some really serious problems.”

more

Alberta’s far-right has a long history

Would these hate groups include our human rights kangaroo court?