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The National Citizens' Coalition loves you - ha! ha! ha!
35 years of fighting for fat
cats while posing as ordinary citizens
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Toronto - It would be
hard to find a more mis-named organization than the National
Citizens' Coalition.
The NCC was founded 35 years ago by an insurance millionaire named
Colin M. Brown in London, Ontario. |
Brown
liked to jet off with rich pals to the Masters golf tournament in
Georgia, where blacks were barred until recent years, and women are
still banned as members.
One of the fires that burned in Brown's well-fed belly when he
launched the NCC was his hatred of public health care.
The motto he chose for the NCC was, "More freedom through less
government." It meant more freedom for the rich, not the poor, of
course.
The symbol Brown chose for the NCC was the bulldog. It was meant to
convey tenacity but works better at symbolizing the NCC's elitism, and
real interest, which is to keep the masses at bay and protect the
interests of the wealthy.
Brown and the NCC were also thin-skinned, quick to turn their lawyers
on those who dared to question or criticize the organization - another
habit that makes the bulldog image unintentionally appropriate.
Back to the
future
All this was many moons and much chest-thumping ago. Colin Brown died
in 1987.
But not much has changed. The chairman is now Colin T. Brown. You
guessed it - son of the late, great founder of this outfit that has
masqueraded for so long as a defender of the people - and still reaps
fawning attention from mainstream media.
In all that time the NCC (which has poured millions of dollars into
billboard campaigns, national newspaper ads and Supreme Court cases on
behalf of the elites) has never allowed any outsider, not once, to
look at the names of the "citizens" who actually make up its
membership lists - or to view its list of donors.
Nor, if you go to its web site, can you find a list of current
officers and board members. All for good reason, of course.
Despite a dusting of right-wing cranks who no doubt do send in annual
membership fees, the NCC is financed largely by corporate bigwigs, and
the corporate puppets who run it have little use for the masses.
Like chickens
voting for Colonel Sanders
The only ordinary citizens the NCC cares about are the chickens dumb
enough to vote for Colonel Sanders - and thus lend it a thin veil of
legitimacy. In a free society there are always a few - akin to the
hapless talk-show guests who submit to the tender mercies of Jerry
Springer.
The quickest way to see what the NCC really stands for is to read the
list of people, over the years, who have been awarded the esteemed
Colin M. Brown Freedom Medal.
Later this month, the NCC will proudly bestow its medal on Stephen
Harper, who served as NCC chairman before becoming leader this year of
the Canadian Alliance. That's all you really need to know about either
the NCC or the Alliance. They are peas in a pod.
In fact, some of the original founders of the Reform Party, which
preceded the Alliance, were NCC diehards in the 1980s, concentrated
mainly in Alberta.
Citizens dinner
special: $250
The medal presentation this year will take place at the Metro Toronto
Convention Centre on Nov. 21. Citizens are allegedly welcome.
Immigrants, single mothers, welfare recipients, street people, etc.
are free to line up for tickets at NCC offices in downtown Toronto or
Calgary. The price: $250 a plate (tux not included). Bring the kids
too, if you like.
For the record, here are some of the other great 'citizens' the NCC
has honoured over the years:
Conrad Black, Peter
Worthington, Ted Byfield, David Somerville, Mike Harris
(yes, him),
Ralph Klein, John Crosbie, Thomas Bata,
Michael Walker
and Diane Francis.
A finer club of fat cats would be hard to assemble. National Post
columnist Diane Francis (gentle soul that she is) is listed as a
recipient not once, but twice, in the NCC's current press release −so
great, apparently, has been her service to ordinary Canadians.
Meanwhile, Black, that beloved man of the masses, is no longer even a
citizen. He
abandoned Canada in a huff for England and now sits in the British
House of Lords, cheek by jowl with folk more attuned to his greatness
- such as renowned commoner Margaret Thatcher.
Straight Goods
Ken Georgetti, president of the Canadian Labour Congress, recently
wrote an article about the NCC for Straight Goods. Here is an
excerpt which offers a quick overview.
Straight Goods 27 May 2002:
The NCC was born out of opposition to national public health
insurance should be cause for serious concern. Health care is
the number one issue for Canadians. The future of Medicare and
public, equally accessible health services are being decided
today. And there’s Harper, leading the Opposition to whatever
solution is proposed by a government that has already
demonstrated its unwavering faith in the corporate agenda...
Despite it’s name and the rhetoric it employs, the NCC is a very
private organization. It claims to be funded through 'the
voluntary support of 40,000 Canadians', but the real money and
power sits with an advisory council drawn from this country’s
corporate elite. Chairs and members of this council have come
from the Bank of Montreal, the Canadian Imperial Bank of
Commerce, Power Corporation, Canadian Pacific, Brascan,
Goodyear, major insurance companies, advertising agencies, and
other corporations. It is this blue ribbon panel that provides
the connections to raise the funds that support the NCC’s
activities.
In bed
with Mulroney
The NCC has led campaigns, in the name of freedom, against
limits on third-party advertising during election campaigns.
This from the same group of corporations that spent an estimated
$19-million (more than all political parties combined were
legally allowed to spend) during the 1988 federal election in
support of the free trade deal advocated by Mulroney’s
Conservatives and the free trade agenda that has since killed
the Autopact and has farmers and workers in the forestry sector
on the ropes today.
They have backed campaigns by big grain companies to kill the
Canadian Wheat Board and trumpeted their opposition to having to
do business in French in the province of Quebec. They have
attacked labour with union-busting campaigns and calls to muzzle
the democratically elected representatives of working people
with claims they have a 'radical political agenda'. |
The
next time you see an NCC billboard or National Post ad bawling
about some 'populist' cause that sounds good, take a second look. It
won't have much to do with ordinary people. You can count on that.
(NUPGE: 8
November 2002)
Web posted by NUPGE:
8 November 2004
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