All entries by this author
Jun 5th, 2017 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
[UPDATED JUNE 9]. We were just watching TV on a Saturday night, Â north of the North American Great Lakes. And then CNN, MSNBC, CBC News, CTV News Channel, and most immediately and crucially BBC News only had eyes for : “6 people dead plus 3 attackers killed in London ‘terrorist incidents’ … ‘Evil, evil people’: […]
Tags: Adrian Addison, Andrew O'Hagan, Christine Archibald, Daily Mail, John Lanchester, Kate Hoey, London Bridge attacks, Ricky Gervais, terrorism in the UK, Vauxhall riding Posted in In Brief |
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May 28th, 2017 |
By Randall White |
Category: Heritage Now
The late 19th century Canadian liberal nationalist light that failed was Edward Blake — founder of the early 21st century business law firm Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (aka “Blakes”), with offices in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Montreal, New York City, London (England), Beijing, and Manama (Bahrain). Blake came from a well-off progressive family of […]
Tags: Canada-US reciprocity agreement 1911, Canadian election 1891, Canadian election 1911, Canadian Navy, Edward Blake, Last Best West, Laurier Liberal government in Canada, Wilfrid Laurier Posted in Heritage Now |
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May 17th, 2017 |
By Randall White |
Category: Canadian Republic
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 2017. Toronto, Ontario.  This coming Monday we will celebrate locally what is known here in Ontario (and other Canadian provinces) as Victoria Day.  (In Quebec the same holiday is now more sensibly called  Journée nationale des patriotes.) The holiday is nowadays defined as “the last Monday preceding May 25.” And this entrenches […]
Tags: British monarchy in Canada, Canadian republic, Commonwealth realms, Monique Scotti, Opinion polls on monarchy in Canada, Victoria Day in Canada Posted in Canadian Republic |
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Mar 23rd, 2017 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
Last week the irrepressible Preston Manning had an article in the Globe and Mail on how “Canada’s elites could use a crash course in populism.” He cited  Tom Flanagan’s Waiting for the Wave and W. L. Morton’s The Progressive Party in Canada as useful reading for any elites actually wanting to take the course he […]
Tags: C.B. Macpherson, Charter of Rights, Chief Pontiac, Justin Trudeau, Louis Riel, populism in Canada, Preston Manning, rebellions in Canada, S.M. Lipset, Tom Flanagan, W.L. Morton, William Lyon Mackenzie Posted in In Brief |
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Mar 8th, 2017 |
By Randall White |
Category: Heritage Now
The Dominion of Canada might have evolved in a somewhat less British imperial direction over the last three decades of the 19th century, if French Canada had discovered some worthy successor to George-Étienne Cartier. The closest approximation was probably Hector-Louis Langevin, after whom the Ottawa building (“Block”) that houses the 21st century Prime Minister’s Office […]
Tags: Alexander Mackenzie, Canada and Great Barbecue in USA, Censuses of Canada 1871-1901, end of age of John A. Macdonald, Hector-Louis Langevin, National Policy†of tariff protection in Canada, Northwest Rebellion and death of Louis Riel 1885, P.B. Waite, Revolt of the Provinces and the JCPC in Canada, The Canadian Pacific Railway Posted in Heritage Now |
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Feb 22nd, 2017 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA ETC, Mid-to-late February 2017. RE : Steinmeier in Germany, Rosenbaum on Trump, Carlos Fraenkel on a mosque in Quebec City, and a footnote on changing the name of the Langevin Block in Ottawa to the Pontiac (or Louis Riel) Block. I first started pondering this quartet of obscure but deep political thoughts […]
Tags: Canadian republic, Carlos Fraenkel, Chantal Hebert, Charles Taylor, Chief Pontiac, Governor General of Canada, Hector-Louis Langevin, Langevin Block, Louis Riel Block, President of Germany, Quebec mosque shooting, Robert-Falcon Ouellette, Ron Rosenbaum, Trump and Hitler Posted in In Brief |
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Jan 14th, 2017 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
Up here in the northern woods the imminent departure of Barack Obama and accession of Donald Trump in Washington has focused attention on our own Prime Minister Justin Trudeau – summarized by Mark Bonokoski of the Postmedia Network several days ago as the “eldest son of Canada’s Philosopher King.” This time last year Justin Trudeau’s […]
Tags: Alberta oil sands, Buckhorn ON, Don Cherry and Justin Trudeau, John Diefenbaker on polls, Justin Trudeau 2017, Kathy Katula, Kelly McParland, Maison Ernest-Cormier Posted in In Brief |
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Dec 7th, 2016 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
The text for my holiday season night thoughts here is Stephen Marche, “The Obama Years,” Los Angeles Review of Books, November 30, 2016. Mr. Marche reports early on that “I was 32 when Obama danced over the green sea of raised phones at his first inaugural ball. I will be 40 by the time he […]
Tags: growing diversity in North America, Obama best president since 1945, Obama years, Stephen Marche on Obama years Posted in In Brief |
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Nov 22nd, 2016 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
The usually agreeable X keeps telling me that he is working on some major tone poem called “Toronto notes : Donald Trump as Rob Ford, Part Deux .. and that really did end tragically.” He wants to take the time to get it right. It will be ready soon …etc. Meanwhile the managing editor says […]
Tags: Brexit and US election 2016, Bruno Latour on Donald Trump, future of globalization, Los Angeles Review of Books, new nationalism, two utopias in 2016 Posted in In Brief |
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Nov 9th, 2016 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
[UPDATED NOVEMBER 10, 12]. What happened on November 8, 2016 in the United States of America? A few personal impressions from the accumulating vast collection out there, based mostly on US TV, various online resources in the miraculous Age of the Internet, and a few intermittent conversations with actual voters in various parts of the […]
Tags: explaining Trump victory, US election 2016 Posted in In Brief |
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