Down with windows

Random thoughts? Well I hope not as that would imply my mind can't decide on the direction it should go in. On second thought most the time it can't. Looking for AIESEC updates this is the place, or anything else I happen to be up to at the time.

Friday, December 15, 2006

It seems I get bloggy once in awhile, then it fades away for months before I even remember I have this thing.  While I'm posting today I might as well keep going with some updates!

AIESEC Windsor,
Transition is starting soon.  We have elected our new president who's term will start on March 1st 2007.  I have to admit this is just now becoming difficult to accept.  I've been spending my nights thinking about all of the work that still needs to be done before our local committee is secure.  Much is left unfinished and now I leave it in someone elses hands while trying to accomplish as much as possible before its time to hand in the keys to the office.

And then what happens?

I have to start considering what my next steps are.  Two paths in front of me.  I can stay in AIESEC, either locally or apply for a national team or I can head for the future.  Lots of thinking to do very soon.  Any suggestions?

Our Invisible Nation Builders

This post (the first in too long) is actually a response to another blog written by an old aquaintance of mine. Reading her post left me wondering a great deal about what a nation builder to a Canadian is. In the end, after reading comments to her post I found myself being more concerned with what a nation builder IS NOT. To see the original post please click below:

Tara Janzen

To credit Harper with unifying the public and getting them more involved in politics I think would be jumping the gun, or atleast not giving credit where credit is due. To use an example given earlier,

Mr. Bush unified Canadians againsts the United States...while I do not agree with that statement he did win the award. (puzzled)

The last person to unite the political will of this country was not Harper, or even Martin (although he was the victim of that will). The last time I remember seeing a unified Canadian will was when we ousted the Liberals. We would have to give credit to Justice John Gomery for that miracle. (or even the liberals who started the whole mess if looking for the macro elements responsible)

Any political interest that Harper has generated in Canadians is certainly overshadowed by the carelessness exhibited when declaring, without the consent or even debate by parliment that Quebec was a nation within a nation. Purely political purpose, meant to steam liberal momentum (it worked) but destroying in one single sentence the work of hundreds of people, and millions of dollars that were spent over decades in an attept at unifiying this nations english and french factions.

Just when I was starting to like him too.

While political interest across this country as risen, I would credit that to a public that was
rudely awaken by the sins of the former Liberal party. People have realized that a political system only works when the people are actively involved. Harper is not the cause of this new involvment. He is more the product.