Saturday, November 16, 2013

Andrew Coyne hits the bull's eye once again

The last paragraphs of Andrew Coyne's superb National Post article on the debacle, "Rob Ford mess a monster born of divisive and condescending populism":

And yet — there Mr. Ford sits, immovably: disgraced, largely powerless, but still the mayor. Is that his fault? The city’s? Or is it the fault of those who put him there in the first place, and sustained him through the long train wreck that followed: the staff who failed to report his misdeeds; the commentators who excused them; the partisans who ignored them. Disasters on the Ford scale, we are taught, do not just happen, and while the mayor’s endless supply of lies, manipulativeness and sheer chutzpah have helped to preserve him in office until now, he could not have done it alone.
And of all his enablers, the most culpable are the strategists, the ones who fashioned his image as the defender of the little guy, the suburban strivers, against the downtown elites, with their degrees and their symphonies — the ones who turned a bundle of inchoate resentments into Ford Nation. Sound familiar? It is the same condescending populism, the same aggressively dumb, harshly divisive message that has become the playbook for the right generally in this country, in all its contempt for learning, its disdain for facts, its disrespect of convention and debasing of standards. They can try to run away from him now, but they made this monster, and they will own him for years to come.
Get help? He’s had plenty.

2 comments:

  1. The same columnist who hilariously referred to His Worship as "mountainously incontinent". Malapropism or just the right word? The dear Katherine Barber expands (as it were) on the expression in her blog.
    http://katherinebarber.blogspot.ca/

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