Updates from admin RSS

  • Why the "Olympic Spirit" Thing is a Hoax

    Rick 1:10 pm on February 18, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: olympic spirit, olympics

    Dedicated to being the best at what they do

    I just read a glowing tribute to the “Olympic spirit” displayed by all the happy young Olympic athletes. The focus of the tribute was on how we can apply some of the dedication shown by Olympians to our personal, business and professional lives.

    Now I don’t want to come down on anybody, but I think a little bit of reality about this Olympic dedication thing would be a good thing. Surely the big question one must ask about dedicating yourself lock stock and barrel to snowboarding or skiing or (horrors!) mastering the luge is “Why am I doing this?”

    Glorifying the Winners

    Just saying “Because I want to be the best at what I do” is not a very good answer.

    First, the odds of actually being the best – or even in the top ten or twenty – is a long shot at best. So isn’t this a rather bad investment of your time, energy and (probably someone else’s) money if the likelihood of your success is so low?

    Yes, sure we glorify the winners once every four years. We see winners parading to the podium one after the other. But isn’t that rather an unrealistic picture given that there are probably at least 10 losers for every winner?

    That isn’t even to mention the thousands who never make it to the games. What about them? What about the guy who continually comes up 16th or 17th in the short program or the half pipe? Is he or she “living the dream”? Or are they just the fodder that keeps the machine humming along?

    Being the Best We Can Be

    Second, what’s so great about “being the best” anyway. Is it an ego trip these people are on? Are we encouraging them to be and feel superior to everyone else? Is it the monetary payoff that justifies it? Or is it just the “Olympic spirit” (whatever that is) or “being the very best you can be” that makes us all value this process so much?

    If “being the very best I can be” is such a cherished goal, why are not the rest of us doing it? If we say we value this sort of thing but don’t live it in our own lives, doesn’t that make us hypocrites?

    Probably, but there is a much more practical answer to why most of don’t care about “being the very best I can be”. It is impractical, hard work, and ultimately rather pointless. There is simply no payoff. Most of us are happy to make our moderate living, live our unspectacular lives, and play a round of golf with our buddies on the weekend.

    I’ve been involved in competitive sports pretty much all my life, and I know how addictive the idea of “winning” can be. But when all is said and done, in any competition there is one winner and a whole bunch of losers.

    Is Tiger Happy?

    If you go into a golf tournament, for example, to win, chances are you are going to be disappointed. Only Tiger Woods can consistently beat the odds and that doesn’t seem to have made him a very happy person.

    I am not just talking about being realistic about your chances of winning. I am talking about being realistic about how much of your “spirit” you should invest in trying to win.

    The Olympic Spirit

    This is really what the classic Olympic spirit is about – and sportsmanship in general. Playing the game because you enjoy it, and keeping it in perspective with the rest of your life.

    Today’s Olympians who are paid to devote their entire existence to training and striving to win are not exemplifying this spirit at all.

    When you get right down to it most of them are naive young people being used for the benefit of commercial and political interests. They are being pushed and cajoled by parents and coaches into performing to feed their egos and the public’s gluttonous (and often profitable) appetite for entertainment.

     
  • More Books from the Bargain Table - The Kindle2

    Rick 11:26 am on February 8, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Rick Hendershot

    I was investigating the Kindle the other day. In case you don’t know, the Kindle is a digital tablet designed for reading books in digital form and is sold (exclusively I think) by Amazon.com

    This technology has been in development for quite a few years, and the Kindle is already in its 2nd version (Kindle2), so it is approaching maturity, and obviously quite a few people like the idea.

    Like many others I enjoy what you might call the “tactile experience” of holding a book, turning pages, etc., but when you stop and think of it the idea of having to print out millions of paper pages just to read stuff we can get on our computer screens, iphones, blackberries and digital book readers doesn’t make a lot of long term sense.

    So it’s not the gadget-envy associated with the Kindle that interests me, and it’s definitely not the name. It’s more the idea of being able to download entire books in digital form and read them immediately without having to wait for the physical books to be shipped from somewhere a thousand miles away.

    Turns out you can do that now. There is a version of the Kindle software you can run on your PC or Mac. So you can buy the Kindle version of a book – if it is available – and then just read it on your PC. No Kindle required.

    Recently I went looking (on Amazon) for a number of books on Native American History. There were quite a few listed, and many were available for between $2 and $6 as used copies from various dealers.

    I plodded through the selection process and when I was done the books were about $15 and the shipping about $75. So I looked to see if Kindle versions were available.

    Nope. Just a few of the more obscure ones. So I cut my order back to the bare essentials and ordered the old fashioned Amazon way. About a week later I had one of my books. I’m still waiting (about two weeks later) for the others.

    Apparently the age of the Kindle has not yet arrived. At least not for the kind of books I am interested in.

     
  • The Primitive Indian Myth

    Rick 9:12 am on January 19, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: aboriginal culture, , american natives, Indian culture, , Primitive Indian Myth

    One of the enduring myths about life in the Americas before it was “discovered” by Europeans is that the entire “new world” was sparsely populated by nomadic tribes of simple-minded hunters and gatherers.

    This myth holds that these people had no permanent attachment to any specific piece of land, they did not live in permanent homes, and they did not live in towns or villages like the rest of mankind. Instead they lived in temporary shelters they could pick up and move at a moment’s notice. Their social group consisted of a tribe of 50 or 100 people, and similar tribes were scattered throughout the forests and plains of North, South and Central America. This is what we might call the Primitive Indian Myth.

    We think of these people as living in “harmony” with their surroundings – hunting and foraging for their food – wild animals and plants such as berries that grew naturally in the forest. They had no inclination to hoard or pile up food or any other kind of possession for that matter, so the idea of “selfishness” was foreign to them. They took only what they needed to survive, using only the natural elements presented to them for their day to day survival.

    According to this myth American natives were stone age people living from one season to the next on the very edge of survival. As with any simple-minded animals, they had a wild, untamed, unpredictable side. This made it impossible for them to coexist with others – even other tribes of natives – in a more complex organized society, and unable to be reasoned with in any meaningful and lasting way. Primitive Indians would simply turn vicious when their life, family, tribe or food supply were threatened. That is why there were called “savages” by Europeans.

    The core feature of the Primitive Indian Myth is that American native life before contact with Europeans was basic, simple, undeveloped and primitive in virtually every way. Their tools, their weapons, their craftsmanship, their language, their literature, their art, their religious beliefs, their social structures, their political organization – all of these things were barely developed beyond the primitive level that must have existed thousands of years before.

    The Primitive Indian Myth has been created by stories told and written over the 500 years since “contact” in the late 1400s and early 1500s. It has been reinforced and developed in a very deliberate way in Hollywood movies stretching back to the beginning of movie making in the early 1900s and in popular novels and histories written as far back as the 1600s.

    Undoubtedly many believers in the Primitive Indian Myth were well-intentioned people, but at its heart the motives behind the promotion of the myth were sinister. As with most myths, this one was developed and promoted for specific social and political purposes.

    The promulgation of the Primitive Indian Myth has served as a justification for the systematic marginalization of American natives, the theft of their land and resources, the rejection of their moral and political claims to self-government, and the outright extermination of millions of American natives over the last 500 years.

    There are some important facts about pre-contact native life in the Americas that are distorted and misrepresented by the Primitive Indian Myth, and I will be discussing these in my next few posts. These include the following commonly held assumptions:

    - That the Americas were sparsely populated before European contact
    - That virtually all American natives were hunters and gatherers with no fixed attachment to villages, towns or places of residence
    - That American natives had no use or understanding of technology
    - That American natives did not engage in extensive agriculture
    - That American natives were incapable of more advanced social organization
    - That American natives held only simplistic, primitive religious beliefs
    - and more…

     
  • Books from the Bargain Table

    Rick 7:06 pm on January 5, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 1421, , China, Gavin Menzies, , reading

    In case you haven’t noticed, I like buying (and reading) books. Usually history or “ideas” books like Blink by Malcolm Gladwell or Traffic by Tom Vanderbilt, or 1491 by Charles C. Mann (a really awesome book if you are interested in the history of the Americas).

    Often I buy books when I’m travelling somewhere. Some airports have pretty good bookstores. For example a year or so ago I was stuck in Tampa waiting for my golfing buddies who were coming in on another flight. They were delayed about 4 hours because of a thunderstorm, so I had a lot of time to read. That time I found Mao: The Unknown Story by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday. This was one of the best books I’ve read in years, and really opened my eyes to how much of a rotten bastard Mao was. I’m currently reading it for the 2nd time (yes, all 700+ pages), and it has inspired me to find out more about China.

    Last week, for instance, on the bargain table at Chapters I found The Long March: The True History of Communist China’s Founding Myth by Sun Shuyun. The mythic “Long March” is also covered in Mao, but Shuyun’s version is much more sympathetic. Too sympathetic in my view. However I will comment on that at a later date.

    Also speaking of China and airports, about three years ago on my way to Prince Edward Island for another golfing trip, at the Toronto airport bookstore I found 1421: The Year China Discovered the World, by Gavin Menzies. This was another absolutely eye-opening book, and I recommend it highly. Menzies’ claim, in a nutshell, is that a massive Chinese expedition took place in 1421 at which time Chinese navigators sailed to virtually every continent (except, apparently, Europe), and mapped every place they visited. Menzies claims that Columbus had copies of these maps, as did Magellan, and virtually all the other Portuguese, Spanish and English explorers.

    I don’t want to get off topic here. The topic was “Books from the Bargain Table”. All I really wanted to say was you can find some good books for cheap on the bargain table at one of the bigger book stores. As I’ve mentioned, last week it was The Long March, and this week (yesterday) it was The Greatest Lies in History by Alexander Canduci.

    That one wasn’t particularly cheap ($17.99), but I thought it was worth it because it contains some nicely condensed information on some topics I am currently researching: Mao (perhaps history’s greatest bald-faced liar), and the subjugation and forced migration of Indian tribes in the southeastern U.S. during the early 1830s. There’s some other good stuff in there too, but that will also be fodder for more posts in the future.

     
  • Squashed Plato

    Rick 6:35 pm on January 5, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Glyn Hughes, history of philosophy, Plato, Republic, Squashed Philosophers

    Here’s a novel idea I found while using Stumbleupon. (In case you don’t know, SU walks you through a series of websites according to topics of interest you have previously chosen. It also learns what you like as you go along. You find websites that you probably wouldn’t have otherwise found in a hundred years.)

    In this case, the site I stumbled onto is called Glyn Hughes’ Squashed Philosophers. If you’ve ever wondered what Plato or Nietzche are all about, this gives you a good overview. In the case of Plato, for instance Glyn Hughes condenses Plato’s Republic down from about 130,000 words to about 15,000. That’s still a substantial read, but it’s a lot easier going than the original.

     
  • Why the History of Canadian Natives Matters

    Rick 10:02 am on December 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: canadian indians, canadian natives, department of indian affairs, indian affairs, indian poverty, indian reservations, indian treaties

    My primary objective in the first few posts in this series is to explore how Canadian natives changed from being autonomous self-governing people to becoming subjects of the British crown? This change in status is extremely important. By the time of Confederation (1867) natives – at least in Eastern Canada – were no longer free to roam on their ancestral lands, or to battle with each other as they had done for centuries for possession of tribal territory.

    In other words because of the encroachment of the new immigrant population and the establishment of British and then Canadian overlordship, their freedom as independent, autonomous peoples was removed, their way of life forcibly changed, and their ability to look after themselves dissolved. Perhaps if native leaders in 1814 could have predicted the fate of their peoples over the next 200 years they would have opted for more direct assimilation. Perhaps, but not likely, because even today many native leaders would never accept that assimilation is inevitable. They believe they can reshape their communities, restore their sense of fully autonomous selfhood, and become independent, self-sustaining “nations” again, within the framework of the Canadian federation, but no longer dependent on the Canadian government for support.

    Whether this ever happens or not, it is clear that the loss of native autonomy took place during the several decades before and after 1800, and that this led to virtually all the policy decisions that were made by Canadian governments after that time. In short it led to the realization that the Canadian government must assume the responsibility for protecting the interests of Canadian natives as best they could, and for organizing and managing their lives.

    The policies that flowed from this realization included the Indian reservation system, the policies of what is now the Canadian Department of Indian Affairs, the almost immediate recognition of the importance of education to the development (and assimilation) of the native population, and the gradual development of the Indian Residential School system. Just as surely, the developments in the “modern” era of native affairs flow from the same source. This modern era began during the 1960s and continues to this day. It is characterized by a recognition that the old assimilationist policies have not worked, and a general recognition that natives must somehow be given the opportunity to look after their own affairs.

    How were Canadian natives subjugated to the British crown?

    The question remains as to how Canadian natives were subjugated to the British crown in the first place. Was it through agreements or treaties? Did they willingly accept this change in status? Were they forced to become subjects?

    My conclusion is that natives generally did not accept this change in status through a process of negotiation or treaty making. It was gradually forced upon them by events that took place in the decades between 1760 and 1814.

    If this is true then it supports the common native claim that the treaty making process that took place in previous centuries was viewed differently by whites and natives. For whites these treaties were legalistic agreements between two consenting parties. For natives signing treaties was an exercise in giving up a lot in order to gain a little. The alternative was to end up with nothing. In other words, it was a form of extortion. There is certainly something to be said for the claim that to sign an agreement with a virtual gun to your head is not to give free consent.

    In other words, treaties and agreements notwithstanding, Canadian natives did not freely give up their way of life, their claims to territory, or their right to run their affairs as independent peoples.

    Were native tribes ever autonomous self governing peoples?

    In order to accept this conclusion it is an important question of fact whether natives actually were autonomous self-governing people before their status was radically changed. Even to ask this question is almost an insult to the history and traditions of native peoples. But given that so much hangs on this question, even this claim is aggressively disputed by some authors, academics and political theorists.

    One of the most outspoken is Tom Flanagan, a political science professor at the University of Calgary. In his book First Nations – Second Thoughts, Flanagan deconstructs the claims made by native leaders (and their advocates) that they are not like the rest of Canadians.

    Most native leaders and their advocates claim that during the years prior to Confederation the British crown acknowledged native “sovereignty”, that natives never surrendered their sovereignty, and that their land and culture were taken from them through a combination of force and misleading treaty making.

    (Note: Native leaders and advocates often frame this argument in terms of “sovereignty” because they are fighting this battle in the courts where such terms have fairly specific meanings. I have preferred the term “autonomy” – literally, “self-ruling”. The term “sovereignty” is much more politicized, and ironically, much more the product of the very Euro-centric view of the relationship between governments and subjects that most native leaders say is so different from their own. Arguments about “sovereignty” are political arguments. Arguments about “autonomy” are moral arguments. )

    In examining these claims Flanagan discusses things like what being “first” is supposed to get you, whether natives lived in settled communities and occupied specific territories for long stretches of time, whether native tribes had any of the usual machinery we associate with organized “states”, and, perhaps most importantly, whether natives were “civilized” enough to count as equal parties in negotiations with white governments.

    According to Flanagan, this last question bears directly on whether it is legitimate (by which he sometimes seems to mean “morally justifiable”) for one nation to march into territory held by another and occupy and eventually take possession of that territory. We know this happens all the time in international affairs, but in the case of Canadian natives there seems to be some serious doubt that normal standards apply.

    Let’s grant for the moment the self-evident fact that the British crown signed treaties with the native occupants of British North America. And let’s also grant that, as many native spokesmen would have it, this implies the British considered them autonomous peoples – even “sovereign nations” (although that is doubtful).

    Flanagan seems to be arguing that even if this is the case – even if this was the British attitude when various treaties were signed – there is still justification for later disavowing these treaties, going back on their promises, or reneging on their agreements. Why? Because the native tribes were nowhere near as “civilized” as their white antagonists, their societies nowhere near as well organized, or their territories nowhere near as settled as is normally the case with nations.

    Therefore, as the argument goes, in the confrontation between a more civilized European culture and a much less civilized aboriginal one, the outcome is inevitable. The less civilized culture will be forced by perfectly natural processes to give way to the more civilized one. Because at least to some degree, “civilization” in this context refers to control of physical and intellectual resources, technological sophistication, social organization, and, in the language of political philosophy, the concentration of coercive power in the hands of what we now call “the state”.

    But this is not very convincing. It is hard to see how this amounts to much more than the claim that “might makes right”. Of course in the interplay of peoples and the confrontation of societies, power usually is the deciding factor between opposing parties. But what we are willing to accept in international affairs, we often are not willing to accept in domestic affairs.

    Precisely why this might be the case I will address in more detail in a later post. But I think it is clear that the fact that natives in Canada moved from being autonomous peoples, cooperating with the British, to de facto subjects of the crown, means they must be considered, at the very least, as fellow citizens. In other words, they cannot simply be written off as “conquered peoples” (as has been suggested to me), whose rights and privileges the rest of us have a supposedly God-given right to dictate as we wish.

    Why is this important?

    This is important, because it is one of the main points that the debate about right and wrong with respect to native Canadians turns on. There is the clear fact that the British made agreements and signed treaties with what they considered autonomous peoples. And there is the other clear fact that when circumstances changed (in the late 1700s and early 1800s) they no longer viewed natives as autonomous peoples. They now viewed them as subjects whose interests had to be balanced against the interests of other subjects. Not two (or many) nations, but one. Not two (or many) equal parties to agreements, but one government negotiating with one segment of the population to find a fair and just solution to benefit the whole nation.

    There is an important sense in which Flanagan’s arguments about moral and political justification are both irrelevant and important at the same time. We can look back on historical events and try to “justify” them, as Flanagan tries to do. But the fact that history has turned out the way it has makes these justifications somewhat irrelevant.

    But Flanagan’s point is not so much about the past as it is about the future. If the justification results in a dismissal of some of the historical facts (the early British attitude towards native autonomy) then this clearly stacks the deck against the aspirations of many native leaders who want to re-establish that autonomy. If we agree with Flanagan that native autonomy and sovereignty never existed in any politically significant sense, then the claims of many of today’s native leaders are spurious and misleading, not to mention factually incorrect – hearkening back to a past that never existed.

    Impact on Government policy

    If this is true, then the willingness of Canadian courts and Canadian governments to even listen to native arguments for greater autonomy are misplaced and ill-advised products of a romanticized reinterpretation of history. Rather than seeing native “nationhood” as the solution to native problems, Flanagan would rather see the gradual dismantling of alternative native governments and the assimilation of natives into mainstream Canadian life.

    This would not necessarily mean the dismantling of distinctly native communities, but it would mean the gradual elimination of special native status, government subsidies for native communities, or special treatment for native institutions such as schools. Native land claims would also be abandoned, or at least seen in a very different light.

    It would mean natives would have the same rights as all other Canadians, no more and no less, including the right to own property (which non-status natives already have), and make their own way in the world. Natives could still band together in communities, associations, and commercial companies, to share resources and exploit joint opportunities, but these would be no different from other communities, associations and companies formed by other Canadians.

    I must admit, this view of the matter has a good deal of appeal, and I suspect that if presented this way, many Canadians would agree. In fact many native leaders might also agree if native band leadership and community organization were ever made more truly democratic. But to get from here to there is a long road, and it has to deal with the current fact of native dependence, poverty, lack of eduction, and poorly organized undemocratic (sometimes downright corrupt) political representation. It also has to deal with the moral prerogative that this be a free choice which natives themselves make.

    My own inclination is to think that the Canadian government and courts are trying to strike a balance, and that they are right in doing so. They generally acknowledge that natives had a self-sustaining culture before it was irretrievably dismantled by British and Canadian government forces. They also acknowledge that because of these historical facts, natives should have a special status, if they want it.

    Possibly, as is already happening, many more natives will not want special status and reservations with all their poverty, welfare-dependence, favouritism and undemocratic or currupt leadership will simply wither away.

     
  • From Allies to Subjects - Part 2

    Rick 2:47 am on December 22, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    As I suggested in a previous post, the Indian Residential School issue in Canada is a fairly good focus for a discussion of what went wrong with the dominant white culture’s relationsihp with Canadian natives.

    While the Residential School issue really belongs to the previous two or three generations of Canadians, the problems that school system was meant to address are basically still with us today. And the current solutions don’t seem to be much more effective than the schools were fifty or a hundred years ago.

    At the heart of the issue is that at some point in time Canadian natives lost their ability to run their own lives. Unlike other cultural groups within Canada most natives were unwilling or unable to adapt themselves to the changes taking place around them. For most native leaders, assimilation was out of the question. It was something to be resisted.

    As a result in many cases native groups were unable to look after their own affairs. Since they were unwilling to conform to the euro-centric ways of the rest of Canadians, they ultimately became dependant on the British crown, and, in turn, the Canadian government to protect their interests and provide for their day to day survival.

    How did this happen? How did Canadian native peoples lose their autonomy and become dependants of the state?

    Early Relations With the British

    For all intents and purposes during the early days of colonization in North America the British treated natives as autonomous peoples. They made agreements with them, used their services in commerce and war, and signed treaties with them.

    Somewhere between the late 1700s and mid 1800s natives ceased to be allies and partners in commerce and war, and became subjects and eventually virtual dependants of established white man’s governments. No longer able to fight in a meaningful way for their way of life, they became a “problem” standing in the way of colonization and the dominant culture’s idea of progress.

    The Revolutionary War and the War of 1812

    The new configuration of North America was essentially settled in the six decades between 1760 and 1814. During this period the French were driven out of North America, the British were driven out of what is now the United States, and war broke out between the U.S.A. and the rest of British North America (Canada). The effect of this war (the War of 1812) was to decide whether there would be one country (an expanded U.S.A.) or two (U.S.A. and Canada).

    The period prior to 1800 also represented the last great hope for North American native self-government. Traditional native lands and a large measure of native autonomy had been guaranteed by the British before the revolutionary war, but this arrangement was abandoned by the British after the war.

    The simple fact is that the numbers no longer favoured the natives. Euro-Americans greatly outnumbered natives in the U.S. by this time, and this was soon to happen north of the Great Lakes too. Britain could not ignore this fact when negotiating the future of the continent.

    In short, Britain’s objective during this period was to make peace with the Americans and get back to stable, predictable, and profitable relations with them. In spite of the fact that many natives had fought on the British side in the war, native interests were no longer important enough to be considered on the same level as negotiations with the Americans.

    In the post-war treaty between the US and Britain many traditional native homelands were split in two – straddling the new international border. Many natives viewed this as a betrayal by the British. Nevertheless, the political realities meant that the old arrangements were gone forever. There was no turning back.

    Prior to 1814, when the future development of the continent was still in question, the British had consistently viewed native tribes and confederacies as useful self-governing allies. In the late 1790s the British even entertained the possibility of creating an autonomous native state called Indiana in what the Americans referred to as the Northwest Territory – the land between the Ohio River and the Great Lakes. This new state would serve both as a homeland for natives and a buffer between the USA and British North America.

    Native Autonomy is Bargained Away

    As the reality of the new independent American nation began to sink in, it became clear that native issues would now be considered internal rather than inter-national matters.

    Jays Treaty, signed in 1794 between the Americans and British made it much less likely that such an autonomous state would ever see the light of day. In that treaty the British agreed to withdraw their troops from the forts between the Ohio River and the Great Lakes. In exchange, natives were given the right to pass freely back and forth across the international border. This arrangement has been honoured ever since by the U.S. (but not to the same extent by Canada.)

    The war of 1812-14 cemented this arrangement. Going into that war many Americans felt it was inevitable that the northern part of the continent would (and should) eventually become part of their new country. After the war this idea was abandoned. The United States officially accepted the British presence in the north and negotiated peaceful terms with the British and Canadians that have lasted almost 200 years.

    The big losers in this extended process were the natives of North America. By the time British and American relations were sorted out, native status had changed in a very significant way. Most native tribes had fought as autonomous allies of the British in both wars. But when those wars were ended they had essentially become non-players on the international scene.

    It is true that the existence of trans-border native homelands was tacitly accepted (in Jay’s Treaty). But this was (and still is) completely at the whim of the US and Canadian governments. By becoming secondary players in the negotiations between the British and Americans, their status as autonomous peoples was essentially eliminated.

     
  • Natives in Canada - From Allies to Subjects

    Rick 3:34 pm on December 20, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Canadian indian history, first nations, Indian residential schools, north american indians, treaties

    In this series of posts I consider some of the historical, political, anthropological and philosophical background to Canadian “native” issues. Along the way I touch on some interesting things I have recently (and not so recently) discovered about the native Indian presence in Canada. (Note: I use the term “native” to cover those people normally referred to as North American Indians, aboriginals, or First Nations people. None of these terms are without their problems.)

    Old Sun Indian Residential School, Gleichen, Alberta - 1945

    Old Sun Indian Residential School, Gleichen, Alberta - 1945

    First, a little bit of personal background. My own awareness of native issues in Canada is indirect at best. The area I have the most direct interest in is the “Indian Residential School” problem. A fairly close member of my family actually spent a number of years at one of these schools back in the 1950s. Not as a “resident”, but as the child of one of the staff members. She lived alongside the residents, as much as that was possible back then, and still fondly remembers the years she spent there.

    In Canada the debate about “Indian Residential Schools” has more or less been politically settled. The Canadian government has issued an apology, along with several of the churches who ran the schools, and in one form or another “compensation” is being issued to native people who were negatively affected by the government policies of the day.

    (Note: Unfortunately much of this money is going to lawyers who have a direct interest in dragging this process out for as long as possible. This is one of the great scandals associated with the Residential Schools issue – possibly even larger than the alleged abuse and cultural deprivation the natives are being compensated for. But that will be a subject for another day.)

    There are many people who believe the Indian Residential Schools issue is just symptomatic of a general mis-handling of the native affairs in Canada. But to be a bit more fair to those (like my family member) who participated at the ground level, the attitudes that gave rise to these schools, along with the policies aimed at dealing with natives were the product of centuries of history.

    The time period in which residential schools were conceived and operated covers roughly 100 years, from the late 1860s to the late 1970s. The policy of compulsory residential schools was not actually implemented until the 1920s. But the political environment that made them possible was developed in the period from the early 1700s to 1860.

    Early Treaties in British North America – From Allies to Subjects

    Before the 1800s North American natives were a force to be reckoned with. From the Euro-imperial point of view, natives served a useful economic purpose. They provided the labor that fed the fur trade centered in Montreal and Quebec. This economic fact was extremely important to the French rulers of Quebec prior to 1759 (when they were defeated). And it remained important to the British conquerors after that.

    Treaties signed during the late 1700s reflected the desire of the British to safeguard the economic role of the natives, and to avoid costly conflict with native tribes. Until the early 1800s natives formed a significant military force, so keeping peace with them was an important objective.

    We usually forget that after the British defeated the French and officially took control of what is now eastern Canada (in 1763), British colonies stretched from Hudson’s Bay to Florida, and potentially the entire North American continent.

    From the beginning, embedded within the governance of this huge and rapidly developing area was a conflict between the interests of the British imperial masters and “the people” of North America – that is, the immigrant settlers who had occupied what was soon to become the United States of America.

    On the one hand, the British crown wanted to protect their economic interests centered on the Quebec fur trade. And on the other, speculators within the American colonies – represented by people such as Benjamin Franklin – wanted to deal directly with natives to acquire land for American expansion.

    In 1755 the British crown had handled this conflict of interests by giving itself the sole right to negotiate treaties with natives. No longer could a government in Pennsylvania, for example, negotiate with local Indians for land. Such negotiations could only be conducted by the British crown.

    The net effect of this policy was to protect native lands from the encroachment of speculators, and to preserve their right to a “traditional” way of life – where “traditional” was understood as feeding the fur trade and supporting British military causes in North America.

    In 1774 this policy of the crown being the sole negotiator with natives was extended to the administration of Quebec. And since Quebec’s traditional sphere of influence extended down into the Mississippi valley, this was viewed as a direct encroachment on the interests of the American Colonies.

    This was a major factor leading to the American Revolutionary War in 1776. After the Revolutionary War, at the Treaty of Paris in 1783, the international border between the US and the Quebec colony was redrawn to look much as it does today.

    In the process, previous treaties between Britain and natives in the American colonies were ignored, and the native lands were divided up with no native involvement in the negotiations.

    This treaty represented a new low point in Euro-Indian relations, and began what we might think of as the modern era of treaty making. In this new era natives were considered secondary participants with no direct say in the outcome.

    According to the Canadian Encyclopedia,

    When it came to the highest level of international treaty making, Indian nations were not even invited to the Paris negotiations though it was their lands that were traded back and forth as if they were subhumans with no inherent right to a say in charting their own political destinies. This racist relegation of treaty making with aboriginal peoples to a lower order of law making that can be violated by nonaboriginals with impunity, tends to continue until this day.

    Why did this happen? Why did natives go from participants to expendable pawns, from allies to subjects?

    One factor is certainly the realization that native military support for the British cause was becoming less and less significant. After all, the British and Indian alliance had lost the Revolutionary War, and it was just a matter of time before native interests in the new U.S. would be over-ridden by those of the expansionists.

    The British had to make peace with the new country (the United States), and that meant they had to make a tradeoff. They gave up trying to protect or insist on the rights of natives in the new U.S. territory, in order to retain control of the native trading posts in the northern Mississippi valley. This area was not yet considered part of the new United States, and while the British were clearly concerned with preserving the fur trade, natives came to see this as a continued effort by the British to resist unbridled American expansion west of the Ohio River.

    It is clear that the native tribes were no longer considered “allies”, but rather “subjects” of either the British crown or the American republic. If it had not always been the case in Euro-native affairs, it now became clear that negotiations with natives were essentially about moving them out of the way by buying them off. By this time natives lacked the political and military muscle to support their claims and their fate rested in the hands of their political masters.

    Some resources;
    The Canadian Encyclopedia – Native Treaties

    History of Indian Residential Schools

     
  • What We Can Know for Sure

    Rick 3:56 am on November 15, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: epistemology, knowledge, perception, Philosophy, pragmatic, , Theories

    My golfing buddy and I have been playing golf together for more than ten years now. At least once a week during golf season, and often two or three times a week we drive together to one of the courses we play at. The outing usually involves at least a half hour drive. So we have lots of time to talk about things that matter to us.

    Sometimes it’s baseball or basketball. Sometimes it’s about cars and driving habits. Often we talk about rules – rules of the road, rules of social interaction, the legal system - how they control and direct our lives, whether they should be considered strong (non-negotiable) or weak (guidelines), how they should enforced, the power police should or shouldn’t have. Sometimes we talk about ancient and not so ancient history – something we are both very interested in – and sometimes we get into religion and philosophy.

    We generally agree on most things, but sometimes we disagree in what seem to be fairly profound ways. Usually our most vigorous disagreements are about somewhat “esoteric” things. These are what might be called “deep” philosophical questions such as “the nature of reality” or ”the meaning of life”.

    From my perspective what runs through these main areas of disagreement is the old philosophical bugaboo – How do you know? – what philosophers in the western tradition call epistemology or the theory of knowledge.

    “You say ‘reality’ is such and such. Well, how do you know?”

    “You say ‘rules’ should ultimately be considered guidelines rather than non-negotiable laws. Well, How do you know?”

    Now I must admit that when I studied philosophy in school I had a fairly profound dislike for epistemology. Boring, boring, boring. A lot of our time in those introductory philosophy courses was spent on worries about the imprecision of perception. You know, some people see blue as green, so how do we know what colour the thing really is?

    This always seemed pretty trivial to me. In the end, don’t we pretty much take it for granted that entry-level perception is fairly unreliable. And so doesn’t that mean that most of our conclusions about the “reality” of objects, landscapes, etc. is simply pragmatic?

    When it comes to our perception of the physical world, isn’t “the nature of  reality” pretty much irrelevant to our normal day to day affairs. And isn’t that why for more technical things like building bridges and splitting atoms we use more sophisticated devices for looking at, measuring and manipulating things?

    Over the intervening decades since my school days I’ve developed a much greater appreciation for epistemology. I’m still not much interested in the relationship between our perceptions and “reality”. I still don’t think it matters.

    But what I am interested in is the truth-value of our social, psychological, historical, scientific, ethical, metaphysical and religious opinions. In short I am most interested in the validity of “theories” – the somewhat complicated conclusions we’ve arrived at to explain various aspects of life. 

    Here are some of my own general observations about these things:

    1. No two people ever completely agree on anything.
    2. Everyone has a theory about most things, but most people don’t know what they are talking about most of the time.
    3. Most if not all “metaphysical” theories are pretty much pulled out of thin air.
    4. Most if not all religoius doctrines don’t make much sense when you divorce them from their psychological, social and political objectives.

    and so on…

    These things are decidely negative. Which indicates the extent to which I am skeptical of any claims about our ability to know THE TRUTH about relatively complicated theories.

    Now getting back to my sometimes heated arguments with my friend about these things. There is a certain irony in our disagreements that I find quite interesting.

    On the one hand my golfing buddy is much more skeptical than I am about the “truth” of so-called factual claims. I’ll say something like “There are facts that we all (or most of us) can agree on. Facts like the colour of the sky, or, in golf,  the distance to the hole (as measured by one of several electronic gadgets.) At least we seem to agree on them. If not, why do we use that measurement to decide which club to use?”

    But he’s not impressed by that kind of logic. As far as I can tell, he doesn’t want to know what we can agree on. He wants to know what is really the case.

    On the other hand he is much less skeptical about our ability to get to the truth about more sweeping theories about the nature of reality, the meaning of life, the truth behind the illusion. He is much more willing to give the benefit of the doubt to such theories, where I am much more inclined to dismiss them as, at best, overly speculative, or at worst, groundless wishful thinking.

    Now I could be completely wrong about this, but I think this odd situation arises because my friend believes there actually is a “reality” behind the illusions of every day life, and that we can somehow get at it. This is not an unusual point of view. In fact I think most people, and perhaps most philosophers, scientists and religious thinkers would agree.

    But I’m not one of them. The older I get and the more I think about it, the less this makes sense to me. For me “knowledge” isn’t about a mysterious “reality”. It is about getting things done in our day to day lives, getting from point A to point B. And that’s all.

     
  • Merge Strategies and World Views

    Rick 3:09 am on October 28, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Driving, merging,

    One of the books I have been reading most recently is called “Traffic” by Tom Vanderbilt. The subtitle is “Why We Drive The Way We Do (and what it says about us)”.

    This is not the kind of book you would normally think of as an entertaining read. But like most people who drive a decent amount I have some fairly strong opinions about driving habits, rules and customs. So clearly this is a topic that promises to be of interest to someone like me.

    “Traffic” takes a very interesting (and detailed) look at some of these habits, rules and customs, and analyzes some of the (often mistaken) assumptions we make about things like speeding, congestion, lane changing, traffic safety, and so on.

    A word of warning: if you are looking for support for a pet theory (such as “large trucks cause lots of accidents” or “slow drivers are more dangerous than fast ones on 4 lane highways”) you probably won’t find it here. Generally speaking this book is an examination of the statistical evidence that supports such theories, and for the most part the simplistic theories that you and I have – especially if you have contrarian views - are not supported by the evidence.

    One interesting suggestion the author makes right near the beginning of the book has to do with the practice of “late merging”.  This is what you do when you come to a “merge left” sign (usually because of construction or an accident on the highway). 

     There are three possibilities at such a sign: early merge (get over as quickly as possible), gradual merge (merge gradually, but don’t wait until the end of the lane), and late merge (go right up to the end of the disappearing lane and merge at the last minute). 

    The most socially acceptable method of merging in such a situation is the early merge. We Canadians, being the polite people we are, seem to consider it almost our duty to get over as soon as possible – what you might call “extreme early merging”.

    This is not so much a matter of traffic efficiency or even driving etiquette as it is a reflection of our character. You know - that guy who busts past you in the right lane and expects other people to let him in ahead of the rest of us obedient drivers. Isn’t that queue jumping?

    Well, it turns out that according to Vanderbilt, studies have been done (of course they have!) that show it is more efficient to late merge. If you go right up to the end of the lane and then merge into the adjacent lane you win on two counts. First, you maximize the available space by keeping the disappearing lane full. And second, there is much less jockeying and anticipating as you look for someone to let you in.

    In other words, late merging is more efficient. And it would be even more efficient (and safer) if drivers just accepted the same kind of rule they accept at a four-way stop. Stop, let somebody from the other lane go, then go.

    That’s pretty simple, but it’s not the rule we use because, as Vanderbilt says, “there seems to be a whole worldview contained in each of the merge strategies that have been tried.” And many people simply cannot get over the attitude that “I’m acting like a selfish SOB if I push right up to the end of the line.”

    I found this especially interesting because of another contrarian merge strategy I use every time I merge onto the highway just outside of our town – often several times a week. It’s what I call the “inside move”, or in this context might be called a “delayed merge”.

    The scenario is this: a long two-lane on-ramp merges from the right with the regular three lanes of the highway. Well back on the ramp people are told a merge is coming and they obediently line up in the left lane. Not only does this slow the entire left ramp lane down, but it leaves the right lane virtually empty.

    So with the “delayed merge” instead of slowing down and moving left I just stay in the right lane and cruise by everyone in the left lane. By the time I reach the actual merge point (extended over about half a mile), everybody has started to move left anyway and I can just move over with them.

    Whenever I do this with a passenger in the car I notice they tend to get a bit uneasy. “What’s going to happen when we have to move over? Aren’t we going to get squeezed into the right-hand guard rail?” Happily after doing the delayed merge hundreds of times I have yet to take out my first guard rail.

    I suppose if too many drivers were to use the delayed merge it might be a bit chaotic at the merge point, and it might be more dangerous too, since by this time cars are moving more quickly.

    But as Vanderbilt demonstrates over and over in his book, you can’t take an assumption like that to the bank. You simply cannot say with any certainty how drivers will behave in an unfamiliar situation. There are lots of things the traffic engineers can predict about driver behavior. And lots of things they can’t predict.

     
  • Stick Your Green Tips Up Your...

    Rick 11:03 pm on October 21, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: conservative, freedom, global warming, green, liberal, liberty,

    For the past few months I’ve been conducting an email campaign where I give away “Green Tips for Homeowners” to real estate agents. I make this offer to hundreds of thousands of agents and have hundreds who take me up on the offer.

    But occasionally (twice to be exact) a guy (so far it’s always been a guy) will say something like “Stick your green tips up your a**. I don’t want anything to do with your green Al Gore-loving liberal bs.”

    Usually I just ignore this kind of message and take them off the list. But a few days ago when I got this kind of message I decided to send a response to see what would happen.

    I innocently thought that if I explained that these “green” tips had nothing to do with “global warming”, but were basically about saving money, this would suddenly make the guy at the other end of the message more receptive.

    It didn’t work. He thought I sounded like a “liberal”.

    I resisted the temptation to explain that, well, yes I am a kind of liberal, but I’m also a kind of conservative, and that I think people (mostly American people) throw these terms around without really knowing what they mean.

    As far as the man-in-the-street is concerned the term “liberal” has been defined in recent years in a negative way by people like Rush Limbaugh. It is hard to understand exactly what guys like this don’t like about “liberals”, but whatever it is, they sure have strong feelings about it. The man in the street who listens approvingly to guys like Limbaugh know even less why they disapprove of “liberals”, but dammit, they just do.

    The superficial answer is that “liberals” are in favour of things like big government, universal health care, handouts to the poor, wasteful social programs and high taxes. Perhaps more to the point, “conservatives” think “liberals” are slippery when it comes to things like right and wrong, and individual responsibility.

    Now this is getting us closer to the meat of the matter. What “conservatives” want are solid answers, black and white distinctions between things like right and wrong, good and bad, the individual and society. Liberals, on the other hand want to be free to be noncommital about values.

    In other words, “conservatives” like things black and white. “Liberals” only see shades of grey.

    This can (and does) get confusing because “conservatism” sounds like a principled stance, but on its own really has no content, no inherent core principles other than conserving what already exists. A “conservative” wants to conserve good old fashioned values simply because they are good and old fashioned, not because they are inherently good or bad.

    This is really a kind of pragmatism. For a “conservative”, values are worth conserving in any given society because they have become part of the fabric of that society. They have worked in the past, so there is no good reason why they shouldn’t work in the future.

    There are obvious problems with this “pragmatic” rationale for conservatism. Clearly, different societies have different “good old fashioned values”. Chinese traditional values are different from American traditional values, and both are different from the traditional values of Iran. Could it be that simply conserving these in any given society is automatically a good thing?

    Of course most “conservatives” would deny that their position is inherently unprincipled. But this is where the “principled conservative” as opposed to the “pragmatic” one starts sounding vaguely like a “liberal”.

    Because there is no question that liberalism does have principles – or at least one. Its most cherished principle is “freedom” or “liberty” – the origin of the word “liberal”. Practising “liberals” are just hesitant to cash this general principle out in terms of simplistic things like traditional values, or some particular society’s view of right and wrong.

    What they want is the freedom to choose – the freedom, as it were, to be free of traditional views, or the views of the elite, or of a bunch of priests or lawyers or bureaucrats, or of loud-talking guys like Rush Limbaugh.

    Which brings us back to slippery – the thing that “conservatives” most dislike about “liberals”. “Conservatives” want to say “This is right and that’s wrong” while “liberals” want to say “Hold on. It may be right in your eyes, but there are other things we have to take into consideration.”

    Does this make me sound like a “liberal”? I’m afraid it does.

     
  • Rick 10:12 pm on October 21, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: conversation, jibber jabber, talking, yammering

    Talk about stereotypes! There’s this classic image of a guy and a girl sitting across from each other at a cafe. It’s been lampooned in any number of commercials and sitcoms. The girl is yapping non-stop about who knows what and the guy sits there nodding, “Uh huh, Uh huh, Uh huh,” while the bubble over his head is filled with images of cars or golf clubs or whatever…

    Well, just about every time I go to my favourite coffee shop I see this scenario in the flesh. Tonight I could here this rapid-fire one-way stream of jibber jabber coming from two tables over.

    How anyone can keep talking that fast for so long about nothing is completely baffling to me.

     
  • Rick 10:01 pm on October 21, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Wordpress updates

    Damn! I see Wordpress version 2.8.5 is now available. Don’t these people ever stop making changes.

     
  • Time for a change

    Rick 9:56 pm on October 21, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Every six or nine months I decide to change the focus of my blogging efforts. For the last three years or so I’ve blogged about various aspects of marketing. But the truth is I find it all kind of boring.

    The only reason anyone really cares about marketing is out of necessity – the necessity to run a successful business, to make a splash in the world – ultimately to make a living. There’s really not much more to it than that. Try as we might to make marketing ideas sound exciting and insightful, there is very little that is inspiring about the quest to get people to buy more of your products.

    So instead I am going to write about things I care about: politics, history, society, technology, ethics, music, philosophy, and other things I’m sure I’ve left out. That should be enought to keep me busy.

     
  • Choosing Juicy Sarah Palin-like Keywords

    Rick 6:43 am on August 28, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: copywriting, Sarah Palin,

    This blog post about effective SEO copywriting comments on the way Sarah Palin gets good Google coverage because of her choice of popular keywords. The article itself was published last October, so it is a bit out of date, but the point is still well taken.

    In fact the article is an example of the point it is making – namely, by choosing the keyword “Sarah Palin” it immediately becomes readable and, in the eyes of Google at least, potentially noteworthy.

     
  • Could You Benefit from a Blogging Alliance?

    Rick 10:47 am on August 27, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: blog alliance, blog network,

    A blogging alliance involves a number of bloggers in the same niche and having blogs of similar maturity getting together and sharing resources.

    They comment on each other’s blog posts. They link to each other’s blogs. They write posts for each other. They run joint promotions, and so on.

    In a recent article called “Let Me Show You Inside a Secret Blogging Alliance” Darren Rowse of ProBlogger.com details a conversation he had with a blogger involved in this kind of alliance.

    If you have a struggling blog and are looking for ways to make it more successful, you’ll be sure to get some helpful ideas from this article.

     
  • Rick 11:23 pm on August 21, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ,

    Haven’t had time to post for the last few days. We’re going crazy with article writing and video creation for new clients. I am also testing Article Post Robot and so far have a very favourable impression of it.

     
  • 5 Million Lessons from United Breaks Guitars

    Rick 11:35 pm on August 18, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    This is not a new story – at least not new in the fast moving world of viral videos – but there’s a whole bunch of things to be learned from this.

    It’s the story of a not-so-well known band called the Sons of Maxwell and the band’s leader Dave Carroll from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    It happened in the spring of 2008. Dave and the band were flying by United Airlines to a gig in Nebraska and while sitting on the tarmac at Chicago’s O’Hare airport Dave witnessed his guitar being thrown about by baggage handlers. The guitar was severely damaged and in spite of expensive repairs was never the same again.

    Dave tried to file a claim for damages, but after getting the runaround for nine months he was finally told (by the now infamous Ms. Irlweg) that the airline would not be taking responsibility. He was out of luck.

    Dave then told her he would be writing and recording three songs about the experience and posting them on Youtube. Here is the first one, posted on July 6, 2009, which has so far had just under 5 million views.

    Read Dave’s complete story here.

    The big loser here is obviously United Airlines for being so stupid. As Dave says, “The system is designed to frustrate affected customers into giving up their claims and United is very good at it.”

    One thing that bothers me is that Dave gives Air Canada a pass in this instance. That just doesn’t seem quite right. For booking purposes Air Canada and United are joined at the hip, and they just left Dave (and I’m sure many others) twisting in the wind claiming it was not their problem.

    Anyway, here’s the first video:

     
  • My Twitter Experience So Far

    Rick 1:20 pm on August 13, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: followers, , ,

    As I’ve reported elsewhere, I originally signed up with Twitter about 6 months ago and then gave it up because it seemed like a waste of time.

    About three weeks ago, in response to the popular Perry Belcher videos I decided to give it another try.

    Here are some conclusions so far:

    1. You can definitely drive traffic with Twitter. You need followers, content, and well written tweets.

    2. The best way to get followers seems to be to…

    - define your niche properly
    - keep cranking out tweets
    - write tweets that get attention
    - use the appropriate keywords in your tweets

    3. If you have a stubborn niche, follow first in order to get followers. For example, I created an account called the “kwtweetnet” to see if I could zero in on just local tweeters (in the local Kitchener-Waterloo Ontario region). The best way to get followers is to find local tweeters (I used Twellow.com), follow them, and then wait for them to reciprocate.

    Keep cranking out the tweets, but make them substantive pointing to good content on your target sites.

     
  • Getting Off Kohl's Email List

    Rick 2:54 pm on August 11, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Kohls, ,

    I recently started receiving emails from Kohls, whoever they are. I’ve never heard of Kohls before a couple of weeks ago, and certainly never signed up for their email “alerts”.

    I’m not an email spam alarmist. If you’ve read any of my stuff you know that I think “opt out” email is perfectly acceptable under most circumstances… and in any event there’s not much we can do about it, even if we don’t like it.

    But I would think a credible company (like I assume Kohls is) would have a simple opt-out (unsubscribe) policy.

    Not Kohls. After you unsubscribe they tell you your email address will be removed within seven days, during which time you may receive a couple more “alerts”.

    This is BS. I suspect it is an out and out corporate lie. I have now unsubscribed at least three times over the course of the last two weeks or so.

    We’ll see what happens. In any event I won’t be buying from Kohls…wherever they are.

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
esc
cancel
Powered by WP VideoTube