What do you think?
Rate this book


288 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2013
"The danger is that this process creates its own spiral. As societies become more fearful, governments focus - and lead public discourse to focus - on the threats in the world, especially terrorism. As one result, the disproportion is enormous between the money and attention that Western governments spend on defence and "homeland" security compared to the capacity to achieve co-operation, understanding and tangible improvements in the conditions that often give rise to upheaval, crime and terrorism. Violence and extreme behaviour have several sources, but there is no doubt that desperation, poverty and prejudice are fertile breeding grounds, and addressing those conditions is precisely where the constructive non-state actor, with their roots int he ground, already make a huge difference. Non-state actors could be even more effective is the issues they address, and the forward-looking perspectives they acquire, were treated as seriously as military and terrorist issues." (p. 60-61)
"In office, ["these Conservatives"] have given as much attention to stopping or reversing the initiatives of former governments as to taking legislative initiatives of their own... The "curtail government" view is different from a positive belief in, for example, fiscal responsibility... It reflects instead a substantially negative view of government, which contrasts sharply with Canada's historic and bipartisan creation of public institutions as essential partners and leaders in building a strong country, economy and society." (p. 103)
"Canada needs national conversation that reach across interests that might divide us, or regions that might confine us, or silos that are inevitable in a vast and diverse country. That separateness can become reinforced by the ease with which we can burrow into communications with "people like us" beyond our national boundaries - our business networks, our Facebook friends, our allies in interest groups we fervently support. Ironically, the easy access to a wider world can narrow our own sights, rather than broaden them and, in that process erode our sense of connection to our actual neighbours and environment." (p. 200)