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Why do leaders treat us like saps?

BOB HEPBURN BOB HEPBURN IS A STAR POLITICS COLUMNIST AND BASED IN TORONTO. FOLLOW HIM ON TWITTER: @BOBHEPBURN

Do you ever feel you are being treated like a sap by our political and business leaders?

Or do you get the feeling that the powers to be think of you as an idiot who doesn’t deserve to know the truth or is too dumb to judge right from wrong.

If you do, then you are not alone because in Canada there’s increasingly a sad lack of accountability, honesty and transparency among politicians in Ottawa and at Queen’s Park and by top business executives. It’s as if they actively hold us in contempt.

What does it mean when someone is seen as a sap? Well, according to the Cambridge English Dictionary, a sap is “a stupid person who can easily be tricked or persuaded to do something.”

Look at these current examples of how we are being treated as saps:

First, after weeks of downplaying the issue of possible Chinese interference in our elections, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau finally appoints a “special rapporteur” who won’t even have the powers of a commission of inquiry. Meanwhile, the RCMP is investigating leaks about foreign interference. So, our own spy masters and cops are taking the Chinese issue more seriously than Trudeau. No inquiry into interference, but there’s a police investigation into leaks. Are we being taken for saps?

Second, Supreme Court Justice Russell Brown goes on leave, but the court says it can’t disclose the reason why “to respect confidentiality.” The justice system often names ordinary people suspected of malfeasance, but it won’t do it when it comes to one of their own. It takes a Vancouver Sun reporter to reveal that Brown was involved in a physical altercation at an Arizona resort.

Third, Loblaw’s CEO Galen Weston and other grocery store bosses say they won’t show us the numbers, but believe them when they say their record profits aren’t coming from the skyrocketing prices that you are paying now for food at their stores. “You can trust what we say,” Weston told Canadians during a recent parliamentary hearing.

Fourth, Ontario Premier Doug Ford says there was nothing wrong with developers and lobbyists paying to attend a stag-and-doe prewedding party that he hosted for his daughter. Some of the attendees stand to benefit from Ford’s move to open up parts of the Greenbelt to build housing. Everything was above board, he insists. Nothing to see here, folks. Keep moving!

Fifth, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre wants us to believe now that he only supported “peaceful and law-abiding” trucker convoy protesters. Sure did look different to most Canadians who watched him marching proudly with the protesters and bringing coffee and doughnuts to “peaceful and lawabiding” protesters who were later arrested or fined.

Sixth, the Ontario and federal governments likely have promised tens of millions of dollars — and maybe more — in subsidies and tax breaks to lure Volkswagen to construct a huge EV battery plant in St. Thomas, near London. Surprise, though, they won’t tell us how much it will cost us, claiming it’s confidential.

Seventh, Air Canada executives promote their airline as one of the best in the world. They should be ashamed of themselves because few people believe that anymore. Michael Rousseau, the airline president, should try flying steerage like most of us do, waiting hours for our luggage and having to deal with demoralized crew members, many of whom no longer care about good service. Airline bosses say “failures” of execution aren’t their fault.

This lack of honesty, accountability and transparency from our political and business leaders will continue as long as they refuse to trust us to able to assess and properly deal with critical information that affects our lives and our livelihoods.

The message to all our leaders should be clear: Do the right thing and stop treating us like saps.

OPINION

en-ca

2023-03-23T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-03-23T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://torontostar.pressreader.com/article/281792813273705

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