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⋙ Descargar Free Harperland The Politics Of Control edition by Lawrence Martin Politics Social Sciences eBooks

Harperland The Politics Of Control edition by Lawrence Martin Politics Social Sciences eBooks



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After four years in power, Stephen Harper's governance comes under the microscope of prominent Globe and Mail columnist Lawrence Martin. Focusing on the growth of executive power under Harper and drawing on interviews with prominent insiders, Martin probes the smearing of opponents, the silencing of the public and diplomatic service, the secrecy, the prorogations, the unprecedented centralizing of power, and the attempted muzzling of the media. He examines controversies such as the existence of a secret dirty-tricks handbook, the Chuck Cadman affair, campaign financing, the dismissal of nuclear power head Linda Keen, the Afghan detainees cover-up, the turning of access-to-information laws into barricades to information, and more—and lets readers draw their own conclusions. Tough but balanced, Harperland offers a clear picture of a skilled politician at a crucial point in Canadian politics.

Harperland The Politics Of Control edition by Lawrence Martin Politics Social Sciences eBooks

Dynamic change is always annoying, especially to comfortable bureaucrats of limited acumen and maximum comfort, which may explain why Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is so infuriating to the chattering classes.

Instead of due deference to the 'good ol' boy' media, humble respect to the old order which assumed Liberals were the ordained rulers of Canada, plus complete obedience to the incumbent paper pushers of the bureaucracy, Martin deftly shows how Harper has created a powerful new culture of popular politics. This masterful history outlines the ruthless rise of Harper who now rules Canada with an iron fist in a steel glove in a marshmallow town.

It's great newspaper reporting, based on the premise newspapers are the first rough draft of history. Sadly, as a "rough draft" it lacks insight and depth to show if Harper is a conservative ideologue, a crafty pragmatist without ideology or an autocrat imposing a coup d'etat.

Perhaps the lack of ideology analysis is apt; Martin describes Harper as malleable as a chameleon who will likely continue a shape-shifting career. The great weakness of Harper and this book is that Harper didn't "win" a Parliamentary majority on May 2; instead, the Liberals lost. It's similar to the election of Barack Obama in 2008, in which George Bush left his party with a massive election defeat.

Politicians like to think they "win" elections. Few realize that sometimes -- perhaps often -- their opponents lose. Martin cites case after case of Liberal ineptitude without seeming to realize that incompetence of the opposition may be Harper's greatest strength. If so, then the next few years could be traumatic for Canada if Harper assumes he has a "mandate" for change.

Martin points out that until now Harper succeeded by incrementalism. Now, his new majority in Parliament and command-and-control attitude may create major social upheavals in Canada. This book is prologue, a first rough draft of turgid turmoil that may lie ahead for Canada.

Politicians are most dangerous when they think they "won" rather than recognizing their opponents "lost". Martin indicates the Liberals "lost" and Harper got the "None of the Above" vote. If so, instead of incremental change Canada may be face several years of incendiary upheavalism.

Product details

  • File Size 459 KB
  • Print Length 328 pages
  • Publisher Viking (October 5, 2010)
  • Publication Date October 5, 2010
  • Language English
  • ASIN B0045U9U70

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Harperland The Politics Of Control edition by Lawrence Martin Politics Social Sciences eBooks Reviews


This book is a well written overview of Steven Harper's five years in power, and offers a good sense of his personality and the machine that he has built around him. The author perceives Harper as brilliant, but filled with paranoid hatred for anyone who is not in his neo-conservative camp, or could be conceived of as a threat to his compulsive desire for power and control.

Harper's means to power are described as involving a complete disregard for all the traditional checks and balances of the Canadian parliamentary system. Control has been ruthlessly centralized in the hands of the Prime Minister's Office, and the roles of the cabinet, the legislature, parliamentary committees, etc., almost annihilated. Censorship of public information is now so severe that one has the impression that Canada is controlled by a totalitarian regime. On a day to day basis Harper and his sycophantic followers are always on the attack, and their levels of cynicism and paranoia know no bounds. Wedge issues, lies, and personal attacks are the order of the day. These people can only be described as ideological thugs and bullys.

Harper's ends to power are to dismantle the traditional progressive values of Canada, by initiating policy platforms revolving around tax cuts, economic deregulation, tougher measures on crime, the support of traditional social values, etc. These are the same reactionary policies that have been used by the neo-cons of the United States, over the last 30 years, to drive that great country into the ground. They are based on mind-sets that deny the future rather than prepare for it.

Harper is known as the outsider's outsider, and one has a sense that this is what drives his hatred and paranoia. He despises the values of the majority of Canadians, and in spite of his brilliance and discipline, he is unable to control his extremism.

I must admit that reading this book was one of the most distasteful things that I have ever done. We are all aware of different elements of Harper's manipulation of our democratic values and institutions, but to have them laid out like this, one after the other, filled me with outrage and disgust. I have never been active politically before, but I will be for the coming election. Thanks Harper for the civics lesson.
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This book is about the politics of control. Harper, the Prime Minister of Canada (at least in August 2010, when this book was written), paved his political path as a force to be reckoned with. His authoritarian methods were under much scrutiny by the press, but that isn't what this book is about. This book is to look at the four-year period in an honest, and seemingly academic, nature. This book, while covering controversial material, is more a story of 2006 to 2010.

Puttonen's narration is astounding. There were literal moments in his hart where he sighed as one could imagine a speaker doing at that point. His inflection superb, the only downside would be the dreariness to his voice, which isn't so much a fault of the narrator but an intended outcome. Speaking at a medium pace, this audiobook seems more like a recorded commentary or author rendition than it does third-party work. Love politics? You'll love the title. Love audiobooks? This one is right up your alley, then...

Disclosure I was contracted to write an honest review in exchange for a reviewer copy of the product. The opinions stated in this review are solely my own.
Lawrence Martin gives a clear and often behind-the-scenes perspective on Harper and where his policies and ideology are coming from. Every Canadian should read this. It is our duty as citizens to be informed about what is happening in our country, even (or perhaps especially) when the governement is intentionally trying to control all the messages that go to the public.
Dynamic change is always annoying, especially to comfortable bureaucrats of limited acumen and maximum comfort, which may explain why Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is so infuriating to the chattering classes.

Instead of due deference to the 'good ol' boy' media, humble respect to the old order which assumed Liberals were the ordained rulers of Canada, plus complete obedience to the incumbent paper pushers of the bureaucracy, Martin deftly shows how Harper has created a powerful new culture of popular politics. This masterful history outlines the ruthless rise of Harper who now rules Canada with an iron fist in a steel glove in a marshmallow town.

It's great newspaper reporting, based on the premise newspapers are the first rough draft of history. Sadly, as a "rough draft" it lacks insight and depth to show if Harper is a conservative ideologue, a crafty pragmatist without ideology or an autocrat imposing a coup d'etat.

Perhaps the lack of ideology analysis is apt; Martin describes Harper as malleable as a chameleon who will likely continue a shape-shifting career. The great weakness of Harper and this book is that Harper didn't "win" a Parliamentary majority on May 2; instead, the Liberals lost. It's similar to the election of Barack Obama in 2008, in which George Bush left his party with a massive election defeat.

Politicians like to think they "win" elections. Few realize that sometimes -- perhaps often -- their opponents lose. Martin cites case after case of Liberal ineptitude without seeming to realize that incompetence of the opposition may be Harper's greatest strength. If so, then the next few years could be traumatic for Canada if Harper assumes he has a "mandate" for change.

Martin points out that until now Harper succeeded by incrementalism. Now, his new majority in Parliament and command-and-control attitude may create major social upheavals in Canada. This book is prologue, a first rough draft of turgid turmoil that may lie ahead for Canada.

Politicians are most dangerous when they think they "won" rather than recognizing their opponents "lost". Martin indicates the Liberals "lost" and Harper got the "None of the Above" vote. If so, instead of incremental change Canada may be face several years of incendiary upheavalism.
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