Thursday, November 20, 2025

The Truth about Taxes

I received the following article by Alex Himefarb.  It was written about a decade ago, but it is very relevant in this age of far-right conservatism.  I would like to share this piece with you.  It is lengthy but well worth reading.  It is thought-provoking and it makes sense.  It provides an excellent analysis on the subject of taxation.

- Joanne


Why We Hate Taxes – And Why We Shouldn’t


By Alex Himefarb

About a year ago, my son Jordan, some friends and colleagues and I put together a book on taxes in Canada, Tax Is Not a Four-Letter Word. We had quite different views about how high taxes should be, what kinds of taxes are best, who ought to be taxed more and who less, but one thing we all agreed on: we in Canada, as elsewhere, were having a dangerously distorted conversation on taxes. Taxes had come to be seen as a burden, even a punishment, and so the less the better. We seemed to welcome every new tax cut promise—and just about every politician was offering us just that: more tax cuts, more change in our pockets. But we embrace these promises, vote for them, without asking ourselves or our political leaders just what we were losing with these cuts – tens of billions of dollars of federal and provincial cuts over the last 15 years. We haven’t asked about the costs to public services and future choices, to our resiliency and well-being, to the shape of our country.

Over the past months, thanks in part to the Metcalf Foundation and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, I had the opportunity to talk taxes with communities across Canada. The intent was to make the case for taxes, but these conversations turned out to be more than I had reckoned on. Tax talk triggers intense reaction and not exactly as I had imagined.

Predictably, conservative pundits described us as tax apologists as though it took some nerve to challenge the benefits of tax cuts. And a minority, the Fraser Institute and a few like it, attack all and any taxes, whatever their level and whatever the benefits, as an unfair burden and a constraint to our freedom. Clearly a discussion of taxes does expose ideological differences in how we understand the role of government, how we define fairness, just how much inequality we are prepared to tolerate. But there’s no simple right/left divide.

Across all ideologies the tax discussion triggers widespread anger with government, almost universal perceptions of rampant waste and inefficiency, and a growing skepticism about the competency and capacity of government to tackle the big issues or even to deliver on its promises. A conversation about taxes, then, is inevitably a conversation about the kind of Canada we want but also about the kind of Canada we think is possible.

I don’t want to suggest that there was ever some golden time when we all just loved paying taxes, though in the past we were perhaps more likely to see taxes as an expression of our shared citizenship and mutual responsibility. Nonetheless, it’s probably safe to say that grumbling about taxes is about as longstanding a tradition as taxes themselves. Writing 500 years ago, Machiavelli advised the Prince to avoid being too generous to the people lest he have to raise taxes, not very popular then or since.

Getting the bill is probably never our favourite part of shopping. And taxes are, after all, the way we pay the bill for the things we have decided to do together because we cannot do them as well or at all alone. For my small-business-owning parents, tax grumblers though they were, those things we do together included safe communities and free schools and some old age security and what was to them the miracle of medicare. For much of the time that they were alive, raising a family and building a business, all manner of taxes were going up. And public services were improving. So they grumbled but they knew and liked what they were buying.

How is it that we don’t now ask of these tax cuts upon tax cuts: What will be the consequences for these public goods, goods that most of us continue to value, that demonstrably contribute to the general welfare? In part the answer may be that we devalue public goods because they are not priced and so we underestimate or simply take for granted their value. We surely don’t think very often, if at all, of how much it costs to light our streets, or ensure that clean water pours from the tap or that we can more or less trust the food we eat. But these are all things we buy with our taxes because together is the only way we could ever afford them.

Furthermore, public goods don’t give us any edge over our neighbours. Unlike the bigger house or the fancier car, our access to high quality education or healthcare confers no special status. Perhaps that is one reason that some, usually rich, Canadians insist that they should be able to buy their way to better or faster service even when the evidence is overwhelming that that would make things worse for the many. We ought to be asking whether more money to fuel the consumption race is really what we need, whether a little more change in our pocket is more important than strengthened public goods – better health care, affordable child care, first-rate infrastructure, access to justice…

Of course the rewards from a little more change in our pockets are immediate while the payoffs from some public goods—say, investments in scientific research or environmental protection—are pretty abstract or long-term. As University of Toronto philosopher Joseph Heath has argued, for all these reasons – competitive consumption, a preference for immediate payoffs, the invisible price of public goods – public goods and the taxes to pay for them typically get short-changed. We often go for the cash in hand.

In addition, the last 30 years have given us an almost constant assault on government. Since the 1980s it has become commonplace for politicians to describe government as the problem. In what is sometimes referred to as the neoliberal counter-revolution ushered in by Thatcher and Reagan, the answer to all our woes was less government, more market; less public, more private. For this new brand of conservatism, the way to reduce the role of government, the only sure way, was to cut taxes. While these ideas entered Canada more slowly and subtly – they were a harder sell here – their impact, especially recently, is undeniable. By last year the gap between the size of our central government (relative to the size of the economy)and that of the US had just about disappeared. The libertarian Cato Institute pointed to Canada as a model of limited government and low taxes. The 2014 federal budget figures projected spending and tax as a percentage of the economy to hit lows not seen for seventy years.

No doubt government—like all large institutions—needs reform, needs to be brought into the information age. Governments just about everywhere saw almost uninterrupted growth for about 100 years. And as they grew they became increasingly remote, opaque, authoritarian. Little wonder that people question government’s role and performance. But instead of focusing on reform, the new market rhetoric undermined the very idea of government, equating it with waste and corruption.

This in turn allowed politicians to claim that they could cut taxes deeply without any impact on public services. In the 1980s the claim was that the cuts would generate so much economic activity that they would pay for themselves—though the monstrously high debt loads these policies created soon put the lie to that promise. Now, the claims are typically that taxes can be cut without destroying public goods and services—simply by cleaning government up, ending the “gravy train,” cutting waste and enhancing efficiency.

We are right to be outraged at some of the excesses of government and to demand better. Wasteful or inappropriate spending fritters away not only public resources but also public trust. Nonetheless, our anger—and the extensive media coverage these incidents produce—lead us to exaggerate the extent of the waste. In fact, there’s never enough gravy to fund the cuts. The numbers never add up. Yes, there is waste and significant room for efficiency, but this almost always represents a smaller portion of the total budget than most of us assume or are deliberately led to believe. No organization – private, public or in-between – is perfectly efficient. Studies of the past few years of greater privatization remind us of the dangers of assuming that private delivery is necessarily cheaper or more efficient (not to mention the costs of market failures when government fails to harness the market to public ends).

But the belief that government is inevitably more wasteful and inefficient dies hard. For example, a recent extensive University of Toronto study concluded that Toronto has no spending problem but rather a revenue problem, that Toronto is under-spending on key infrastructure and services and there’s not much waste, not much gravy to be found. But when the media covered the study, readers’ online comments were adamant in their disbelief. It’s inconceivable, they said, that there isn’t huge waste, unthinkable that the city could possibly need more money.

The promise of tax cuts funded through ending the gravy train is what University of Toronto philosopher Joseph Heath has called a magic hat, wishful thinking. Successive parliamentary budget officers have told us precisely this. So we should not be surprised that the governments which for years promised painless – consequence-free – tax relief, now tell us that our most basic programs are unsustainable, that we have no alternative but to cut or privatize services and forego investments. New programs? Unthinkable. Of course tax cuts have consequences: in a word, austerity.

Austerity in Canada is certainly not as deep or brutal as in some parts of Europe. But even our slow motion version brings with it a vicious cycle of erosion and distrust. It leads to what game theorists call a social trap—when we don’t trust one another enough to do what we know is in our interest. Economist Hugh Mackenzie has been quantifying the value of the public services we buy with our taxes and has found that for the vast majority, taxes are one of the last great bargains. Most of us get more back than we put in, and that’s the case at every stage of the life cycle. But austerity undermines our trust in this bargain. Programs and services are increasingly targeted, serving only a few, or are starved of resources and slowly erode, amplifying our perceptions that governments can’t do anything right, further sapping our will to pay taxes. The family that celebrates tax cuts soon finds that the gains are dwarfed by what is lost—for example, in out-of-pocket healthcare expenses, unavailable and more expensive child care, delayed old age security, higher tuitions, endless user fees including higher postage, and the end of home delivery. And then they hate government and taxes even more.

Austerity feeds short-termism. We today reap the benefits of public services built by previous generations more willing to pay taxes. But what will we be passing on to future generations? In the name of austerity we put off investments critical to our future. We also put off the maintenance of our existing infrastructure, our schools and hospitals, roads and bridges, the worst kind of false economy, passing on even more expensive problems to future governments, future generations, jeopardizing our economic performance, and exposing citizens to avoidable health and safety risks.

Austerity also leads to greater inequality, eroding our redistributive institutions and the programs that reduce and help mitigate inequality. The consequences of austerity always fall first and most heavily on the vulnerable—refugees, migrant workers, prisoners, the poor, people with disabilities, and on the young—a kind of trickle-down meanness.

When Margaret Thatcher said that there is no such thing as society, only individuals and families, she captured the moral basis for fighting the unions and gutting labour protections and welfare programs. People, the argument goes, ought to take greater responsibility for themselves and their families and then their neighbours, and to stop looking so much to “society” to explain their troubles or to government for help. A search for root causes – “committing sociology” – is simply a search for excuses in this view, just as welfare supposedly saps people’s ambition and undermines responsibility. People should look to themselves for explanations and solutions. So, at the extreme, criminals are bad people, no excuses, and should be punished. And as for the poor, they ought to pull up their socks, work harder rather than look for handouts.

Some herald this as a victory for individual responsibility and freedom. But in the end this view undermines both by pretending away the role of social circumstances, uneven power and bad luck in shaping life chances and choices, and by discounting the role that our public services play in helping overcome disadvantage and tough times. At its worst this atomizing vision feeds selfishness and narcissism and justifies extreme inequality – and inequality most assuredly grew.

In fact, economic inequality, particularly the gap between the very top and the rest, is growing dangerously fast in Canada. A disproportionate amount of economic growth goes to the already rich while, at the same time, increasing numbers of Canadians are unemployed, underemployed or employed in precarious jobs that offer no benefits and certainly no security.

In The Spirit Level, Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, exhaustively document the costs: more unequal societies have more crime and violence, family disruption, sickness and conflict. Extreme inequality is corrosive, undermining our ability to find common ground and common purpose. It threatens democracy and social trust. Those at the top often come to believe that they deserve everything they have and oughtn’t to pay. And their voice carries great weight. Those at the bottom won’t want to play or pay if they come to think that the game is rigged. And extreme inequality eventually undermines equality of opportunity as the wealthiest pass on their privilege and the poor their disadvantage.

Taxes are not just about revenue; they are also about the fair distribution of economic benefits and about how much inequality we are willing to tolerate. The Canadians I have talked to over the past year are almost always surprised to learn how deeply taxes have been cut. Many say they don’t feel it and just about everybody thinks they pay more than their fair share. That’s in part because, as discussed, for most of us — except for the very rich — the costs of tax cuts obliterate the gains. For example, the monthly costs for childcare can be now as high as $1200 and the lack of regulated spaces means significant lost income for those who cannot find or afford quality care. A small tax cut is far less helpful to a young family than publicly funded childcare.

But beyond this, Canadians are not wrong to wonder who got most of the tax cuts. While taxes over the last decades have come down for everybody, they have come down most for the most wealthy. This is because changes to income taxes have made them less progressive, cuts to corporate taxes benefit shareholders most, and along with various loopholes, make tax avoidance for corporations and the wealthy easier, the beneficial rates on capital gains benefit those with the resources to invest, and we depend more than in the past on regressive taxes like the GST/HST and payroll taxes.

Income taxes are the key component of a progressive tax system. At the federal level and in most provinces, taxes on income are pretty progressive up to about the middle but anything but progressive at the top. With growing inequality it is increasingly unthinkable that someone earning, say $1-million or $10-million or more, should pay at the same rate as someone earning under $140,000. That’s neither fair nor economically sound. As our income rises, its marginal utility declines. Simply, if we were to tax all income at the same rate, as flat tax advocates would have it, we would be asking far greater sacrifice from those living pay cheque to pay cheque than those making millions—and we would also be setting tight limits on how much revenue we could hope to collect. It’s no coincidence that Alberta, the only flat tax jurisdiction in Canada and one of the few in the world, has high levels of inequality and even with its booming economy struggles to balance its budget, having run six consecutive deficits.

This is not to say that there is no place for value-added taxes such as the GST/HST. These are smart in that they do not negatively affect productivity, cannot be off-shored to tax havens, and provide a large base for needed revenue. So long as the consequences for low-income Canadians are offset through the tax credit and to the extent that the revenues are used for progressive purposes, such taxes will be an important part of the mix. (In the future, carbon taxes and financial transaction taxes may provide more socially beneficial approaches.) And tax policy has to take into account the incentive effects of changes in tax rates as well as the political receptivity to any change. But even the IMF has pointed out that Canada does indeed have room for higher income taxes particularly on the rich. And in the end, we all benefit if we restore greater progressivity to our tax system.

Growing evidence demonstrates that fair is smart, that progressive taxes, where those who benefit most pay the greatest share, make good economic sense. For a snapshot of the economic consequences of endless tax cuts and reduced progressivity we need only look at the current controversies surrounding tax reform in Kansas and Ohio. The unlikeliest sources, such as the rating agency, Standard and Poor’s, have cautioned that their deep cuts and especially the shift to “flatter” taxes are jeopardizing these states’ economies, not to mention their quality of life: first, because public revenues are too low; and second, because the poor and middle earners – the real job creators – don’t have enough purchasing power. Progressive taxes ensure that the benefits of the economy are at least somewhat more evenly distributed which, it turns out, is essential for a healthy economy.

Perhaps the most troubling consequence of the neoliberal counter-revolution – the tax cuts, the austerity, the inequality – is that it has stunted the political imagination and undermined our sense of what’s possible. Recent Ekos research found that many Canadians are losing trust in the future, in the idea of progress, in our ability to tackle our big challenges, climate change, inequality, aboriginal justice, eroding democracy. For the first time in living memory we suspect that our kids won’t have it as good as we did. One might say that the paradox of our times is that we have weakened our capacity for collective action just when our collective problems are most threatening. If a country is no more than a bunch of individuals and families born into and living in their “small platoons”, if we deny or underplay the connections that tie citizens and peoples together, how do we hope to find common purpose or to begin to tackle the problems that transcend our local milieux? How can we reassert the importance of the public sphere to our freedom and wellbeing? How do we rediscover our capacity to act together especially across the fault lines that now divide us?

It will no doubt take time and political courage to begin to turn this around. There’s still not much appetite for higher taxes or for bigger government. Preoccupation with tax cutting and the size of government are diversions, a conjurer’s trick that has us looking in the wrong direction as our real problems just get worse and harder to fix.

Still, we are seeing here and there some hopeful signs. Concern about austerity, inequality and their impact on social solidarity, democracy and even the economy is no longer solely coming from the left. The IMF, the OECD, rating agencies and countless others have started to raise questions, often challenging the advice they themselves had been providing.

And there’s movement at the municipal level. One of the ways federal and provincial governments manage tax cuts is to download responsibilities. Municipalities, then, inherit many of the negative consequences but have nowhere to pass them along. At the local level, the consequences are visible, concrete, close to home —homelessness, traffic gridlock, dangerously eroding infrastructure. Perhaps it’s at the local level that social and political trust can most easily be rebuilt. But municipalities have pretty weak tax instruments—largely property taxes and fees – so they need other governments to step up. Ironically flat-tax Alberta may lead the charge. Public Interest Alberta is driving a year-long campaign—“Alberta could…”—to inspire Albertans to think about what they might achieve – together – if they were to shift to a progressive income tax and raise corporate taxes. This could be the start of something.

The longer we wait the higher the human and financial price. With an aging population, which will put increasing pressures on public services, and with a smaller proportion of Canadians earning and paying the taxes to sustain those services, we have no time to lose.

Updated on February 14 2015 to link to the shorter version published by Alberta Views here.

About a year ago, my son Jordan, some friends and colleagues and I put together a book on taxes in Canada, Tax Is Not a Four-Letter Word. We had quite different views about how high taxes should be, what kinds of taxes are best, who ought to be taxed more and who less, but one thing we all agreed on: we in Canada, as elsewhere, were having a dangerously distorted conversation on taxes. Taxes had come to be seen as a burden, even a punishment, and so the less the better. We seemed to welcome every new tax cut promise—and just about every politician was offering us just that: more tax cuts, more change in our pockets. But we embrace these promises, vote for them, without asking ourselves or our political leaders just what we were losing with these cuts – tens of billions of dollars of federal and provincial cuts over the last 15 years. We haven’t asked about the costs to public services and future choices, to our resiliency and well-being, to the shape of our country.

Over the past months, thanks in part to the Metcalf Foundation and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, I had the opportunity to talk taxes with communities across Canada. The intent was to make the case for taxes, but these conversations turned out to be more than I had reckoned on. Tax talk triggers intense reaction and not exactly as I had imagined.

Predictably, conservative pundits described us as tax apologists as though it took some nerve to challenge the benefits of tax cuts. And a minority, the Fraser Institute and a few like it, attack all and any taxes, whatever their level and whatever the benefits, as an unfair burden and a constraint to our freedom. Clearly a discussion of taxes does expose ideological differences in how we understand the role of government, how we define fairness, just how much inequality we are prepared to tolerate. But there’s no simple right/left divide.

Across all ideologies the tax discussion triggers widespread anger with government, almost universal perceptions of rampant waste and inefficiency, and a growing skepticism about the competency and capacity of government to tackle the big issues or even to deliver on its promises. A conversation about taxes, then, is inevitably a conversation about the kind of Canada we want but also about the kind of Canada we think is possible.

I don’t want to suggest that there was ever some golden time when we all just loved paying taxes, though in the past we were perhaps more likely to see taxes as an expression of our shared citizenship and mutual responsibility. Nonetheless, it’s probably safe to say that grumbling about taxes is about as longstanding a tradition as taxes themselves. Writing 500 years ago, Machiavelli advised the Prince to avoid being too generous to the people lest he have to raise taxes, not very popular then or since.

Getting the bill is probably never our favourite part of shopping. And taxes are, after all, the way we pay the bill for the things we have decided to do together because we cannot do them as well or at all alone. For my small-business-owning parents, tax grumblers though they were, those things we do together included safe communities and free schools and some old age security and what was to them the miracle of medicare. For much of the time that they were alive, raising a family and building a business, all manner of taxes were going up. And public services were improving. So they grumbled but they knew and liked what they were buying.

How is it that we don’t now ask of these tax cuts upon tax cuts: What will be the consequences for these public goods, goods that most of us continue to value, that demonstrably contribute to the general welfare? In part the answer may be that we devalue public goods because they are not priced and so we underestimate or simply take for granted their value. We surely don’t think very often, if at all, of how much it costs to light our streets, or ensure that clean water pours from the tap or that we can more or less trust the food we eat. But these are all things we buy with our taxes because together is the only way we could ever afford them.

Furthermore, public goods don’t give us any edge over our neighbours. Unlike the bigger house or the fancier car, our access to high quality education or healthcare confers no special status. Perhaps that is one reason that some, usually rich, Canadians insist that they should be able to buy their way to better or faster service even when the evidence is overwhelming that that would make things worse for the many. We ought to be asking whether more money to fuel the consumption race is really what we need, whether a little more change in our pocket is more important than strengthened public goods – better health care, affordable child care, first-rate infrastructure, access to justice…

Of course the rewards from a little more change in our pockets are immediate while the payoffs from some public goods—say, investments in scientific research or environmental protection—are pretty abstract or long-term. As University of Toronto philosopher Joseph Heath has argued, for all these reasons – competitive consumption, a preference for immediate payoffs, the invisible price of public goods – public goods and the taxes to pay for them typically get short-changed. We often go for the cash in hand.

In addition, the last 30 years have given us an almost constant assault on government. Since the 1980s it has become commonplace for politicians to describe government as the problem. In what is sometimes referred to as the neoliberal counter-revolution ushered in by Thatcher and Reagan, the answer to all our woes was less government, more market; less public, more private. For this new brand of conservatism, the way to reduce the role of government, the only sure way, was to cut taxes. While these ideas entered Canada more slowly and subtly – they were a harder sell here – their impact, especially recently, is undeniable. By last year the gap between the size of our central government (relative to the size of the economy)and that of the US had just about disappeared. The libertarian Cato Institute pointed to Canada as a model of limited government and low taxes. The 2014 federal budget figures projected spending and tax as a percentage of the economy to hit lows not seen for seventy years.

No doubt government—like all large institutions—needs reform, needs to be brought into the information age. Governments just about everywhere saw almost uninterrupted growth for about 100 years. And as they grew they became increasingly remote, opaque, authoritarian. Little wonder that people question government’s role and performance. But instead of focusing on reform, the new market rhetoric undermined the very idea of government, equating it with waste and corruption.

This in turn allowed politicians to claim that they could cut taxes deeply without any impact on public services. In the 1980s the claim was that the cuts would generate so much economic activity that they would pay for themselves—though the monstrously high debt loads these policies created soon put the lie to that promise. Now, the claims are typically that taxes can be cut without destroying public goods and services—simply by cleaning government up, ending the “gravy train,” cutting waste and enhancing efficiency.

We are right to be outraged at some of the excesses of government and to demand better. Wasteful or inappropriate spending fritters away not only public resources but also public trust. Nonetheless, our anger—and the extensive media coverage these incidents produce—lead us to exaggerate the extent of the waste. In fact, there’s never enough gravy to fund the cuts. The numbers never add up. Yes, there is waste and significant room for efficiency, but this almost always represents a smaller portion of the total budget than most of us assume or are deliberately led to believe. No organization – private, public or in-between – is perfectly efficient. Studies of the past few years of greater privatization remind us of the dangers of assuming that private delivery is necessarily cheaper or more efficient (not to mention the costs of market failures when government fails to harness the market to public ends).

But the belief that government is inevitably more wasteful and inefficient dies hard. For example, a recent extensive University of Toronto study concluded that Toronto has no spending problem but rather a revenue problem, that Toronto is under-spending on key infrastructure and services and there’s not much waste, not much gravy to be found. But when the media covered the study, readers’ online comments were adamant in their disbelief. It’s inconceivable, they said, that there isn’t huge waste, unthinkable that the city could possibly need more money.

The promise of tax cuts funded through ending the gravy train is what University of Toronto philosopher Joseph Heath has called a magic hat, wishful thinking. Successive parliamentary budget officers have told us precisely this. So we should not be surprised that the governments which for years promised painless – consequence-free – tax relief, now tell us that our most basic programs are unsustainable, that we have no alternative but to cut or privatize services and forego investments. New programs? Unthinkable. Of course tax cuts have consequences: in a word, austerity.

Austerity in Canada is certainly not as deep or brutal as in some parts of Europe. But even our slow motion version brings with it a vicious cycle of erosion and distrust. It leads to what game theorists call a social trap—when we don’t trust one another enough to do what we know is in our interest. Economist Hugh Mackenzie has been quantifying the value of the public services we buy with our taxes and has found that for the vast majority, taxes are one of the last great bargains. Most of us get more back than we put in, and that’s the case at every stage of the life cycle. But austerity undermines our trust in this bargain. Programs and services are increasingly targeted, serving only a few, or are starved of resources and slowly erode, amplifying our perceptions that governments can’t do anything right, further sapping our will to pay taxes. The family that celebrates tax cuts soon finds that the gains are dwarfed by what is lost—for example, in out-of-pocket healthcare expenses, unavailable and more expensive child care, delayed old age security, higher tuitions, endless user fees including higher postage, and the end of home delivery. And then they hate government and taxes even more.

Austerity feeds short-termism. We today reap the benefits of public services built by previous generations more willing to pay taxes. But what will we be passing on to future generations? In the name of austerity we put off investments critical to our future. We also put off the maintenance of our existing infrastructure, our schools and hospitals, roads and bridges, the worst kind of false economy, passing on even more expensive problems to future governments, future generations, jeopardizing our economic performance, and exposing citizens to avoidable health and safety risks.

Austerity also leads to greater inequality, eroding our redistributive institutions and the programs that reduce and help mitigate inequality. The consequences of austerity always fall first and most heavily on the vulnerable—refugees, migrant workers, prisoners, the poor, people with disabilities, and on the young—a kind of trickle-down meanness.

When Margaret Thatcher said that there is no such thing as society, only individuals and families, she captured the moral basis for fighting the unions and gutting labour protections and welfare programs. People, the argument goes, ought to take greater responsibility for themselves and their families and then their neighbours, and to stop looking so much to “society” to explain their troubles or to government for help. A search for root causes – “committing sociology” – is simply a search for excuses in this view, just as welfare supposedly saps people’s ambition and undermines responsibility. People should look to themselves for explanations and solutions. So, at the extreme, criminals are bad people, no excuses, and should be punished. And as for the poor, they ought to pull up their socks, work harder rather than look for handouts.

Some herald this as a victory for individual responsibility and freedom. But in the end this view undermines both by pretending away the role of social circumstances, uneven power and bad luck in shaping life chances and choices, and by discounting the role that our public services play in helping overcome disadvantage and tough times. At its worst this atomizing vision feeds selfishness and narcissism and justifies extreme inequality – and inequality most assuredly grew.

In fact, economic inequality, particularly the gap between the very top and the rest, is growing dangerously fast in Canada. A disproportionate amount of economic growth goes to the already rich while, at the same time, increasing numbers of Canadians are unemployed, underemployed or employed in precarious jobs that offer no benefits and certainly no security.

In The Spirit Level, Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, exhaustively document the costs: more unequal societies have more crime and violence, family disruption, sickness and conflict. Extreme inequality is corrosive, undermining our ability to find common ground and common purpose. It threatens democracy and social trust. Those at the top often come to believe that they deserve everything they have and oughtn’t to pay. And their voice carries great weight. Those at the bottom won’t want to play or pay if they come to think that the game is rigged. And extreme inequality eventually undermines equality of opportunity as the wealthiest pass on their privilege and the poor their disadvantage.

Taxes are not just about revenue; they are also about the fair distribution of economic benefits and about how much inequality we are willing to tolerate. The Canadians I have talked to over the past year are almost always surprised to learn how deeply taxes have been cut. Many say they don’t feel it and just about everybody thinks they pay more than their fair share. That’s in part because, as discussed, for most of us — except for the very rich — the costs of tax cuts obliterate the gains. For example, the monthly costs for childcare can be now as high as $1200 and the lack of regulated spaces means significant lost income for those who cannot find or afford quality care. A small tax cut is far less helpful to a young family than publicly funded childcare.

But beyond this, Canadians are not wrong to wonder who got most of the tax cuts. While taxes over the last decades have come down for everybody, they have come down most for the most wealthy. This is because changes to income taxes have made them less progressive, cuts to corporate taxes benefit shareholders most, and along with various loopholes, make tax avoidance for corporations and the wealthy easier, the beneficial rates on capital gains benefit those with the resources to invest, and we depend more than in the past on regressive taxes like the GST/HST and payroll taxes.

Income taxes are the key component of a progressive tax system. At the federal level and in most provinces, taxes on income are pretty progressive up to about the middle but anything but progressive at the top. With growing inequality it is increasingly unthinkable that someone earning, say $1-million or $10-million or more, should pay at the same rate as someone earning under $140,000. That’s neither fair nor economically sound. As our income rises, its marginal utility declines. Simply, if we were to tax all income at the same rate, as flat tax advocates would have it, we would be asking far greater sacrifice from those living pay cheque to pay cheque than those making millions—and we would also be setting tight limits on how much revenue we could hope to collect. It’s no coincidence that Alberta, the only flat tax jurisdiction in Canada and one of the few in the world, has high levels of inequality and even with its booming economy struggles to balance its budget, having run six consecutive deficits.

This is not to say that there is no place for value-added taxes such as the GST/HST. These are smart in that they do not negatively affect productivity, cannot be off-shored to tax havens, and provide a large base for needed revenue. So long as the consequences for low-income Canadians are offset through the tax credit and to the extent that the revenues are used for progressive purposes, such taxes will be an important part of the mix. (In the future, carbon taxes and financial transaction taxes may provide more socially beneficial approaches.) And tax policy has to take into account the incentive effects of changes in tax rates as well as the political receptivity to any change. But even the IMF has pointed out that Canada does indeed have room for higher income taxes particularly on the rich. And in the end, we all benefit if we restore greater progressivity to our tax system.

Growing evidence demonstrates that fair is smart, that progressive taxes, where those who benefit most pay the greatest share, make good economic sense. For a snapshot of the economic consequences of endless tax cuts and reduced progressivity we need only look at the current controversies surrounding tax reform in Kansas and Ohio. The unlikeliest sources, such as the rating agency, Standard and Poor’s, have cautioned that their deep cuts and especially the shift to “flatter” taxes are jeopardizing these states’ economies, not to mention their quality of life: first, because public revenues are too low; and second, because the poor and middle earners – the real job creators – don’t have enough purchasing power. Progressive taxes ensure that the benefits of the economy are at least somewhat more evenly distributed which, it turns out, is essential for a healthy economy.

Perhaps the most troubling consequence of the neoliberal counter-revolution – the tax cuts, the austerity, the inequality – is that it has stunted the political imagination and undermined our sense of what’s possible. Recent Ekos research found that many Canadians are losing trust in the future, in the idea of progress, in our ability to tackle our big challenges, climate change, inequality, aboriginal justice, eroding democracy. For the first time in living memory we suspect that our kids won’t have it as good as we did. One might say that the paradox of our times is that we have weakened our capacity for collective action just when our collective problems are most threatening. If a country is no more than a bunch of individuals and families born into and living in their “small platoons”, if we deny or underplay the connections that tie citizens and peoples together, how do we hope to find common purpose or to begin to tackle the problems that transcend our local milieux? How can we reassert the importance of the public sphere to our freedom and wellbeing? How do we rediscover our capacity to act together especially across the fault lines that now divide us?

It will no doubt take time and political courage to begin to turn this around. There’s still not much appetite for higher taxes or for bigger government. Preoccupation with tax cutting and the size of government are diversions, a conjurer’s trick that has us looking in the wrong direction as our real problems just get worse and harder to fix.

Still, we are seeing here and there some hopeful signs. Concern about austerity, inequality and their impact on social solidarity, democracy and even the economy is no longer solely coming from the left. The IMF, the OECD, rating agencies and countless others have started to raise questions, often challenging the advice they themselves had been providing.

And there’s movement at the municipal level. One of the ways federal and provincial governments manage tax cuts is to download responsibilities. Municipalities, then, inherit many of the negative consequences but have nowhere to pass them along. At the local level, the consequences are visible, concrete, close to home —homelessness, traffic gridlock, dangerously eroding infrastructure. Perhaps it’s at the local level that social and political trust can most easily be rebuilt. But municipalities have pretty weak tax instruments—largely property taxes and fees – so they need other governments to step up. Ironically flat-tax Alberta may lead the charge. Public Interest Alberta is driving a year-long campaign—“Alberta could…”—to inspire Albertans to think about what they might achieve – together – if they were to shift to a progressive income tax and raise corporate taxes. This could be the start of something.

The longer we wait the higher the human and financial price. With an aging population, which will put increasing pressures on public services, and with a smaller proportion of Canadians earning and paying the taxes to sustain those services, we have no time to lose.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Don't Americanize the Canadian Football League


“Everyone who supports this league was blindsided by these substantial rule changes without any consultation with the fans or the players,” 

- Patrick Land, the moderator of a Facebook group against the upcoming CFL rule changes


Today is Grey Cup Day and the Canadian Football League is at a critical juncture in its storied history. The planned new rule changes will only hinder the league.  The CFL is special because of its uniqueness and its quirkiness.  It is special because that uniqueness makes it quintessentially Canadian.   It's ours, and ours alone.  It is not a second-rate, paler version of the NFL.  Why should fans watch a pale imitation of the NFL when they can just watch the real thing?  The attraction of the CFL is that it is not the NFL, and it should not try to be.  It has its own identity.  CFL players are not multi-millionaires.  They are not Tom Brady.  One doesn't read about them in gossip columns.

The changes for the 2026 and 2027 CFL seasons include reducing the length of the field, moving the goalposts to the back of the end zone, and other tweaks.

The change to which I am most opposed is the reduction of the field from 110 yards to 100 yards, the same as the NFL.  Two-thirds of avid fans disagree with the field changes set for 2027.  What next?  Four downs?

Sadly, the CFL is bleeding fans. It can't afford to lose any more.  Only 16% of Canadians closely follow the CFL, down from 21% in 2014 and 2018.  It is unlikely that the rule changes will attract many more fans.  What I fear is that the league will alienate some of its most ardent supporters.  Wake up, CFL!  Why don't you listen to your tried and true fans?  Why didn't you ask them before you made these decisions?  Do you have a death wish?

As I write this, the 112th Grey Cup is underway in Winnipeg, between the Montreal Alouettes and the Saskatchewan Roughriders.  It is not as glitzy and commercial as the Super Bowl.  It is more down-home.  I hope there are many more of this great Canadian tradition to come.


- Joanne

Friday, November 7, 2025

Reflections on the 2025 World Series

For the weeks that spanned the Toronto Blue Jays' miraculous postseason run, it felt like all of Canada was holding its breath. The team did the impossible: It had us believing, with one comeback after another, each more cinematic than the last.

Streets were painted in blue, sports bars overflowed, and even those who once could not tell you the difference between a cutter and a slider were suddenly glued to their TVs. Then came Game 7, and the heartbreak that followed: a loss that felt like a national gut punch, as the Jays fell to the Los Angeles Dodgers, who repeated as World Series champs.

- Sadaf Ahsan, Yahoo Canada News, November 7, 2025

A week has passed since the Toronto Blue Jays' heartbreaking loss to the L.A. Dodgers in the seventh game of the 2025 World Series.  Now that it's over, I've had time to reflect on this triumphant season and its disappointing finish.  The Dodgers won the World Series, but the Blue Jays won our hearts.  I live in Toronto, so I am biased, but I truly believe the Jays were the more likeable team.  The World Series could have gone either way, but the Jays didn't get the breaks, and they fell short.  In fact, they came within two outs of winning all the marbles.  Victory was within their grasp.  They were so tantalizingly close!

Not too many fans in Toronto, including myself, thought the Jays were going to accomplish very much this year.  To be honest, I expected them them to finish fourth or fifth in the American League East division.  Their dream season was a very pleasant surprise for fans in this city and the rest of Canada.  At a very difficult time for our country, the Jays gave us some joy, something to cheer about. They were a unifying force and they brought Canadians together from coast to coast.

I still have mixed feelings, though.  Yes, I am thankful for a thrilling World Series, but I am also disappointed.  We had to eat the cake without the icing, the chocolate sundae without the cherry on top.  However, I can always dream about next season.  The key will be signing Bo Bichette.  The 27-year-old played with an injury in the World Series, yet he still managed a batting average of .348 with eight hits in 23 at-bats.

Bo Bichette

I really hope Bo stays in Toronto.  Bichette and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. are a dynamic duo.  They have played side by side throughout their careers.  It's only fitting that they should win a World Series together.  So, it's wait 'til next year, Blue Jay fans.  Maybe they'll be able to finish the job.  How sweet it would be!

- Joanne

Thursday, October 30, 2025

An accident caused by texting while driving

Although there are campaigns against distracted driving, I don't think the campaigns are strong enough.  Distracted driving is just as bad as impaired driving.  It should not be tolerated.  Last weekend I had a first-hand experience with a distracted driver, and it wasn't pleasant.  It shook me up.

My husband and I were on our way to a family dinner celebration at a restaurant.  I was sitting in the front passenger seat.  Suddenly, I felt a jolt.  Our car was hit from behind, but we were not seriously injured.  There was some slight damage to our vehicle, which has to be repaired.  The driver of the car that hit us was a young man, probably in his late teens.  He was very polite and apologized profusely.  He was also very accommodating and provided us with all the necessary information.  Then, to my surprise, he admitted to me that he should have been more careful and that he had been texting while driving.

That revelation upset me greatly.  I was angry at his negligence.  I told him that I hoped he had learned his lesson and would not put anyone's life, including his own, at risk like that again.  He assured me that he had learned his lesson.  I sincerely hope so, but one can never be sure.  The fact remains that he shouldn't have had to learn a lesson.  He should have been aware of the dangers of distracted driving.  He should have known that it is wrong to drive while texting.  What he did was bad enough, but what if someone had been seriously injured or killed?  It would have been too late for this young man to learn his lesson.


- Joanne





Blue Jays one win away from capturing their first World Series since 1993

 
I am elated.  The Toronto Blue Jays are one win away from capturing their third World Series crown.  Best of all, they could win it right here in Toronto. They are on the cusp of victory., a victory that would be celebrated throughout Canada, from sea to sea.  During these difficult times, Canadians could sure use a boost.

I have memories of 1992 and 1993, but many Blue Jay fans are too young to remember those unforgettable glory days.  Younger Canadians are enjoying the ride and I hope they will also be able to enjoy the sweet taste of a World Series victory.

This team is likeable and resilient.  They've been underestimated, but they've always come through when it counted.  They appear to be a team of destiny.  Let them body shame Alejandro Kirk and Vladdy.  I would rather have them playing on my team than Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani.

I also can't say enough about Addison Barger. George Springer, Ernie Clement, Bo Bichette and the others.  As for Trey Yesavage, he's been unbelievable.  His meteoric rise from the minors to World Series stardom is unprecedented.  He's a very cool and composed 22-year-od sensation.

Having said all that, I remain cautiously optimistic.  The Jays still have to win one more game, and anything can happen in sports.  It will be a Halloween to remember or we will have to play a seventh and deciding game on All Saints Day.

Go Jays go!  Bring it home!


- Joanne





- Joanne









Friday, October 24, 2025

Why George Springer is the leader of the pack

The Toronto Blue Jays are going to the World Series for the first time in over 30 years.  I am ecstatic!  I never expected the Jays to earn a berth in the October Classic in 2025.  This has been a magical season.  It should culminate in a fairytale ending with a victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.  I really hope that happens.  I think that the Blue Jays are capable of winning it all.  However, life and sports are unpredictable.  The L.A. Dodgers have the best team money can buy, but the Jays have the most heart.  They shown it time and time again with their comeback wins.  We will have see if that's enough to defeat the Dodgers and their superstar, Shohei Ohtani.

The Dodgers are highly favoured to win, and that's okay with me.  I prefer that the Jays are underestimated rather than overestimated.  I prefer that they are the underdogs.  It will make a World Series victory even sweeter.

Foe me, George Springer exemplifies everything a good team leader should be.  He is a major reason why the Blue Jays are headed for their first World Series since 1993.  George was born on September 19, 1989.  The future Jay was was just three years old when the Jays won their first World Series in 1992.  He was a mere four years old when they celebrated a repeat victory in 1993.  George didn't grow up in Canada and he has no memories of the euphoria that swept Toronto and Canada back then.  He is an American who was born and raised in Connecticut.

The 2025 season has been a sweet one for George. He played in 140 games and recorded a batting average of .309, 154 hits, 32 home runs, 84 RBIs and 106 runs scored.  His 2025 stats are very impressive, but George brings much more to the team than his results on the field.  He has veteran leadership experience.  He sets an example for his teammates.  He is the first to encourage them when they achieve something.  He cheers them on, and he pats them on the back when they don the home run jacket.

It was only fitting that George hit the unforgettable home run that won the American League title for the Toronto Blue Jays.  That Springer Dinger ranks right up there with Joe Carter's homer in 1993 and Jose Bautista's bat flip home in 2015.  George's longball in the seventh and deciding game in the ALCS has earned a place in the pantheon of players who have provided the Blue Jays with their most treasured moments.

I'm very disappointed in the Seattle fans for booing George when he was injured.  It's certainly all right for fans to boo players.  That's part of the game,  What is not acceptable is to boo a player when he is injured.  It's cruel and classless.

Here's what I think would be a fitting ending to a World Series victory for the Toronto Blue Jays.  Wouldn't it be great if Bo Bichette came off the bench to pinch hit in the 9th inning of Game 7 and hit a walk-off home run to win the game?  Go Jays go!


- Joanne

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

My visit to Drew House in Elora, Ontario


I've just returned from Elora, Ontario. where I attended a wedding with family members.  We stayed at Drew House, within walking distance from the beautiful, historic village of Elora.  The charming Drew House is a converted 19th century coach house, built before Confederation.  It was designed for the family of George Alexander Drew (1826-1891), a lawyer, politician and judge, who served two terms as the Member of Parliament for Wellington North.  He represented the riding as the Liberal-Conservative member of the Canadian House of Commons from 1867 to 1872 and from 1878 to 1882,            

George A. Drew (1826-1891)

Drew's grandson, also named George Alexander Drew (1894-1973), became the youngest mayor ever of Guelph, Ontario in 1925 at the age of 30.  He went on to serve as 14th Premier of Ontario from 1943 to 1948.

George A. Drew (1894-1973)

The original structure of the Drew House, located on East Mill Street, was built in 1857.  Since then, it has been greatly expanded.  It was originally a one-and-a-half-storey home. Since the 1870s, it has been an impressive two-storey stone structure.  There haven't been many owners since the George Alexander Drew first lived there.  It is now an inn for travellers to Elora.

During our two-night stay at Drew House, we were shown much hospitality by our hosts, Kathleen Stanley and her husband, Roger Dufau.  The couple have been operating Drew House as a bed and breakfast since 1999.  They made us feel comfortable and they served us hearty breakfasts.  I wish to thank them for making our stay a pleasant one.  If you happen to be visiting Elora, I highly recommend the Drew House.  Thanks Kathleen and Roger!

Innkeepers Kathleen Stanley and Roger Dufau

For those interested in the heritage of Elora, a book about the history of Drew House has been written by Elysia DeLaurentis.  It is titled A Grand and Storied Home: The Drew House of Elora, Ontario.  It is available for purchase at Magic Pebble Books in Elora. and at Drew House.


- Joanne

Friday, October 17, 2025

World Series Quiz 2025

  BASEBALL AND WORLD SERIES QUIZ 




The 2025 Major League Baseball post-season is in full swing.  As we approach the October Classic, Number 16 is pleased to present a challenging baseball quiz for your enjoyment.  How well do you know trivia about the Grand Old Game?  Find out by completing the 11-question quiz below.


BASEBALL AND WORLD SERIES QUIZ

1.  Who is the youngest player to hit a home run in a World Series game?

A.  Mickey Mantle

B.  Miguel Cabrera

C.  Andruw Jones

D.  Juan Soto

E.  Tony Kubek



2.  When was the first night game in World Series history played?

A.  1971

B.  1970

C.  1969

D.  1973

E.  1972



3.  What is the longest game by innings in World Series history

A.   15 innings

B.   19 innings

C.  17 innings

D.  18 innings

E.   16 innings



4.  Who is the youngest player to appear in a World Series game.

A.  Mickey Mantle

B.   Leslie Ambrose "Bullet Joe" Bush

C.  Julio Urias

D Evan Carter

E.  Bret Saberhagen



5.  When was the first modern World Series that featured two teams from the same city?

A.  1911

B.  1933

C.  1923

D.  1906

E.  1908



6.  The New York Mets have won the World Series twice.  In which years did they win?

A.  1968 and 1985

B.  1967 and 1984

C.  1969 and 1985

D.  1968 and 1986

E.  1969 and 1986



7.  The Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the New York Yankees in the 2024 World Series.  How many times have the L.A. Dodgers and the Yankees played against each other in the Fall Classic?


A.  Ten times

B.  13 times

C.  12 times

D.  9 times

E.  11 times



8.  In 1992, a World Series game was played outside of the United States for the first time.  The Toronto Blue Jays won the Series against the Atlanta Braves,  becoming the first franchise based outside of the U.S. to win a World Series.  The championship returned to Canada in 1993.  Which National League teams did the Blue Jays defeat in 1993?

A.  The Oakland Athletics

B.  The New York Mets

C.  The Chicago Cubs

D.  The Philadelphia Phillies

E.  The St. Louis Cardinals



9.  The New York Yankees were the last team to win back-to-back World Series until the Toronto Blue Jays accomplished the feat.  In which two years were the Yankees repeat World Series winners before the Jays did it.

A.  1971-72

B.  1977-78

C.  1970-71

D.  1976-77

E.  None of the above



10.  In Game 6 of the 1993 World Series, with the Blue Jays trailing Philadelphia by a score of 6-5, Joe Carter hit a game-winning three-run homer in the bottom of the nineth inning, to clinch Toronto's second consecutive championship.  This was only the second Series ended by such a home run since Bill Mazeroski's homer in the bottom of the nineth in the seventh game of the 1960 World Series.  For what team did Mazeroski play?

A.  The New York Yankees

B.  The Cincinnati Reds

C.  The St. Louis Cardinals

D.  The Detroit Tigers

E.  The Pittsburgh Pirates



11.  The American League has won the most World Series titles, with a total of 68 championships.  The National League has won 52 titles.  The New York Yankees of the American League have the most victories with 27 wins.  Which team holds the record for the National League?

A.  The St. Louis Cardinals

B.  The Chicago Cubs

C.  The Oakland Athletics

D.  The Pittsburgh Pirates

E.  The Los Angeles Dodgers



ANSWERS

1.  C  

Andruw Jones

Andruw Jones

Andruw Jones is the youngest player to hit a home run in a World Series games.  He was only 19 years old and 180 days when he hit two home runs for the Atlanta Braves against the New York Yankees on October 20, 1996.


2.  A

1971

The first night game in Major League Baseball history took place on October 13, 1971 at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  The Pittsburg Pirates defeated the Baltimore Oriole by a score of 4-3 in game 4 of the 1971 World Series.  The Pirates went on to win the championship four games to three.


3.  D

18 innings

The Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the Boston Red Sox by a score of 3-2 in Game 3 of the 2018 World Series.  The game was decided in 18 innings, the longest in World Series history.  However, the Red Sox went on to win the Series in five games.


4.  B

 Leslie Ambrose "Bullet Joe" Bush

 
Bullet Joe Bush

In 1913, right-hander Bullet Joe Bush took the mound for the Philadelphia Athletics at the Polo Ground Game 3 of the World Series.  At 20 years old, 316 days he is the youngest player to date to appear in a World Series Game.  With the Series tied 1-1, Bush allowed just one earned run in a complete game victory over the New York Giants.  The next day, a newspaper headline read , "Giants slain by mere boy."  The A's went on to win the next two games and the championship.

In 1984, Bret Saberhagen became the youngest player to appear in a postseason game at 20 years. 175  days.  In Game 2 of the American League Championship Series (ALCS), he allowed three runs (two earned) in eight innings for his Kansas City Royals against the Detroit Tigers.  However, the Tigers beat reliever Dan Quisenberry, and went on to sweep the Series.


5.  D

The 1906 World Series between the Chicago Cubs and the Chicago White Sox was the first modern championship  contested by two teams from the same city.  The White Sox defeated the Cubs 4 games to 2.  It was the White Sox's first World Series victory in franchise history.


The first time two New York teams played in the World Series was in 1941, when the New York Yankees defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers in five games.


6.  E  

1969 and 1986

The New York Mets of the National League were founded in 1962 to replace New York's departed teams, the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants.  In their first season, the Mets posted a record of 40 wins and 120 losses.  During the 1960s, they never finished better than second-to-last until their magical season of 1969.  The "Miracle Mets" won 100 games that season and went on to win the World Series over the Baltimore Orioles.




In 1986, the Mets won their second World Series.  They defeated the Boston Red Sox in seven games.




7.  C

12 times

The New York Yankees of the American League and the Los Angeles Dodgers of the National League have faced each other in the World Series a total of 12 times.  The Yankees have won eight of those match-ups.


8.  D

The Toronto Blue Jays won the 1993 World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies.  The Blue Jays defeated the Phillies in six games, becoming the seventh franchise in Major League Baseball history to win back-to-back victories.  


9.   B.  

1977 and 1978

The New York Yankees were the last team to win back-to-back World Series in 1977 and 1978.



10.  E

Pittsburgh Pirates

Mazeroski


In the 1960 World Series, Bill Mazeroski led the Pittsburgh Pirates to victory over the New York Yankees four games to three.



11.   A

The St. Louis Cardinals hold the National League record for most World Series victories with 11 titles.



- Joanne

Friday, October 3, 2025

In Praise of Immigrants

Enough is enough!  I am posting this because I am sick and tired of the vilification of immigrants, migrants and refugees by right-wing conservatives.  It's sad that many Americans believe Donald Trump's lies.  It's sad that they believe Fox News.  It's tragic that they they buy the myth that caravans of  "illegal alien" criminals are invading the United States.  Have Americans forgotten the message inscribed at the base of the Statue of Liberty, which has welcomed scores of newcomers to the New World.  As a reminder, here is that message.  It needs to be heard now more than ever because if Trump and MAGA had its way, America would be a nation of Archie Bunkers.

The New Colossus

By Emma Lazarus

"Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
'Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!' cries she
With silent lips. 'Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore,
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!'"

My grandparents were immigrants from Sicily.  They eventually settled in Toronto, Canada, but in those days, newcomers from Southern Italy had to go to Ellis Island.  My grandparents were some of the many who have contributed to the building Canada.

Here is a post from Caroline Codsi, a Canadian businesswoman, founder of Women in Governance & Party Certification, a non-profit  organization, created in 2010 to assist women in accessing decision-making roles.  Codsi writes about the value of immigration.  It is worth reading.

For decades, from Eisenhower to Biden, U.S. presidents — both Republican and Democrat — have spoken with pride about what truly makes America strong: its immigrants.

They reminded us that diversity is not a threat but a foundation, that people come to the US not for handouts but for opportunity, that America’s greatness has always been built by those who came with nothing but determination.

From JFK to Reagan, from Bush to Obama to Biden, they all echoed the same truth: the United States is a nation of immigrants. That is its power.
And then came Trump…

Dear American friends, remember who you are. Don't let fear, ignorance, and cruelty rewrite the soul of your nation. Refuse to be dragged backward by those who thrive on division.

Dear Canadian friends, let’s stand firm in who we are. Let’s not allow the current U.S. administration to poison our values, our compassion, or the inclusive society we’ve fought so hard to build. Our identity is not up fo
r negotiation.


Here is a quote from American-born Elizabeth May, leader of Canada's federal Green Party.  After a vacation on Cape Breton Island, her family was inspired to make Canada their home.

Canada wasn't perfect, but it was -- and continues to be -- quite profoundly, a work in progress.  I have always loved the Canadian narrative.  The U.S. has the notion of a melting pot.  Sure they'll put up with immigrants, but they're expected to emerge from that pot homogenized.. 


The building of the railroad from the Atlantic to the Pacific was instrumental in bringing about Canadian Confederation.  "The National Dream", as historian Pierre Berton called it, was completed in 1885.  When British Columbia joined Confederation in 1871, the decision was based upon the promise of a railway to the Pacific coast.  Canada would be a country from sea to sea.  So, who was instrumental in building the national dream of a Canada from coast to coast.  Foreign workers, that's who.  Here are the facts according to the website government of British Columbia in an article entitled "Building the Railway."

* Over 17,000 Chinese men came to Canada to work on the Canadian Pacific Railway, with more than 70% of the Railway Workers being of Chinese origin.

* Difficult working conditions: Chinese workers were paid less than white workers and were often given the most dangerous tasks, such as handling explosive materials.

* Harsh living conditions: The work was dangerous and living conditions were poor, leading to the deaths of hundreds of Chinese workers.

Many of the Chinese workers were unprepared for B.C.’s harsh winters, especially at Port Moody where ice prevented supply ships from docking and, thus, providing the workers with some relief. It is estimated that more than 600 Chinese workers died during the building of the CPR—more than four for every mile of track. In 1891, a Chinese community association collected over 300 unidentified bodies to be flown back to China for proper burial.

- Asian Heritage Society website, "Chinese Labour on the Canadian Pacific Railway"

Note: According to some estimates, between 600 and 2,200 Chinese workers died during the construction of the Canadian National Railway between 1880 and 1885.

 Canadian Pacific Railway workers

By the way, Chinese immigrants built the American Transcontinental railroad, which Abraham Lincoln described as the United States' most important goal.

"As a once Illinois railroad lawyer, Abraham Lincoln was convinced that railroads were essential to America’s future – drawing the nation together by trade, by travel, and by the defusing of yeomen farmers and immigrants, across the United States."

"Abraham Lincoln and the Transcontinental Railroad," from the official website of the Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement

This is not an argument for unrestricted or unfettered immigration.  However, immigrants are no more responsible for crime than native-born Americans and Canadians.  In addition, immigrants and migrants do work that most native Americans refuse to do.  

"A lot of Canadians don't want to do the jobs that are so called low-skill of low-pay, which are things like processing your chicken, slaughtering your beef, or getting fish."

- Economist Armine Yalnizyan

Unfortunately, right-wing conservatives stoke fears that immigrants are taking jobs away from native-born Canadians.  At the same time, immigrants are condemned if they are unemployed.  They are accused of living off of Canada's social programs.  It can't be both ways.  The real threat to jobs is Artificial Intelligence (AI), not immigrants.

In a September 23, 2025 column for the Toronto Star, David Olive points out that according to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, immigrants comprise about 26% of the Canadian workforce and they account for 35 per cent of commuter programmers, 43 per cent of engineers and 57 per cent of chemists.

I despise the term "illegal aliens."  The correct term is "undocumented immigrants."  They are human beings, many trying to escape persecution in their countries of origin. Others simply want to earn some money to help out relatives,  They are not creatures from another planet.  

Anti-immigrant sentiment is caused by ignorance.  It is a fear what we do not know or understand, including people of different cultures and religions.  The truth is that we all share a common humanity and we all want the best for our families.


- Joanne 

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Wise Advice for Parents

Although I am not a parent, I believe the following words are some of the I wisest I have ever read about parenting.  That is why I would like to share this advice it with you.  

You're raising future adults, not eternal children.  Every problem you solve for them is a strength they don't develop.  Every consequence you prevent is a lesson they don't learn.  Every struggle you remove is resilience they don't build.  Through resistance, not rescue.

- Scott Clary


It isn't easy buying a parent these day.  Children have to develop independence.  They have to be allowed to make their own mistakes and learn from them.  It is impossible to protect your children from everything.  They have to face the world on their own terms.  They can't be what their parents want them to be.  That is why they should be accepted for who they are.  Too many parents try to live vicariously through their children.  Assist them but don't control them, or they will end up resenting you.  When they falter, be there for them, but don't rescue them.  As difficult as it sometimes may be, allow them choose their own path.  They will appreciate you for that.


- Joanne