Learning Stories
by
Mario deSantis
mariodesantis@hotmail.com
“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear,
free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to
oppose what I believe wrong, and free to choose those who shall govern my
country.” - -The Rt. Hon. John Diefenbaker, Canadian Bill of Rights,
1960
“The whole judicial system is at issue, it's
worth more than one person.”--Serge Kujawa, Saskatchewan Crown
Prosecutor, 1991
“The system is not more worth than one person's
rights.”--Mario deSantis, 2002
Ensign Stories © Mario deSantis and Ensign
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Starphoenix |
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letter |
Oct 21, 2004 |
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Sask.’s conservatism big turn off for youth |
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By Aylwin Lo |
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The following is the personal viewpoint of the writer, a former Saskatchewan resident
now living in Ontario. |
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Randy Burton’s column, Federal NDP’s fortunes fading (SP, Sept. 18), identifies a
few reasons for the party’s poor Saskatchewan showing in this year’s election: the
electoral system, an unpopular provincial NDP government and the party’s clash with
rural social conservatism. |
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Burton suggests the NDP’s views are shifting toward those of “eastern urbanites”
or “young urban people” and away from the views of rural Saskatchewanians |
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Forgive me if my evidence is anecdotal, but I feel obliged to argue Burton’s argument
is upside-down. |
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I’m a young (under-30) expatriate Saskatchewanian. I was forced to attend university
outside of my home province because of backward, inflexible policies at the University
of Saskatchewan. I spent two years of high school overseas, so it demanded that I
take the Test of English as a Foreign Language. |
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I was shocked and offended as a Chinese-Canadian – and you know we’re rare
in Saskatchewan – who had grown up trying to shake that stereotype my entire
life. The university offered no flexibility, despite my elementary school record
and the 90s in Grades 11 and 12 English. |
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I accepted an offer at the University of Waterloo instead. Now that I’ve completed
my post-secondary education, I still feel a strong affinity for my home province.
Yet I am also strongly resistant to returning. |
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Why? One reason is that my family no longer resides in Saskatchewan, but my affinity
for the Prairies runs deeper than that. |
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To be flatly honest, it’s because I fear Saskatchewan. The news from home is never
good: police officers are dumping homeless Natives on the edge of town; Regina’s
mayor is approving a Heterosexual Pride Day that insinuates homosexuality causes
sexually transmitted diseases and “broken hearts”; The Globe and Mail is reporting
about “Harlem on the Prairies.” |
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Every federal riding in Saskatchewan, except for one, now is represented by a Conservative. |
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My reading on these events is not that Saskatchewan has been deserted by the NDP
for more urban climes. Rather, it is that Saskatchewan appears to be becoming a less
and less welcoming place for people of diverse backgrounds. |
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Blame that on mainstream media bias toward covering negative news, blame it on deserters
like me. |
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But the fact is, until Saskatchewan manages to shake its image and identity as a
conservative province, it isn’t going to retain its youth. We’re going to keep moving
away to urban centres, where we feel welcome and where we feel we can grow. And we’re
going to become the kind of young urban dwellers whose support the NDP seeks. |
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