hrothgar, on 2013-June-06, 03:33, said:
I think that you are both missing the point of the original post.
People who claim that the US in the 1950's was morally superior to (current) decadent times ignore the fact that the US in the 1950s really sucked if you weren't a white male...
although that's likely true and not only in the US, I have to bring in an article I ran across yesterday about a former Canadian politician, now long gone. At present in Canada we are going through a bunch of wailing about patronage appointments, misuse if not fraudulent accounting of funds and other such business-as-usual-but-this-time-you-got-caught shenanigans. Back in the day we had at least one politician who had some sense of morality beyond whats in it for me: (I somehow lost the title, it's about Stanley Knowles.)
I track down Susan Mann and she says, yes, the story I have heard is true.
And yes, it does say something about public service and what that has changed over the years.
"You hate to say it is a generational thing, that Canadian politicians no longer understand public service," says the former vice-rector of the University of Ottawa. "But it's hard not to come to that conclusion.
"I mean, what ARE they thinking?" Now, Susan Mann has had an illustrious career - vice-rector at U of O, President of York University, successful author - but I have contacted her not with an academic question, but one about Stanley Knowles.
The Member of Parliament for Winnipeg North Centre for nearly 40 years. The United Church minister who lost but one election between 1942 and 1984.
I once heard a story about Stanley Knowles and I've been wondering recently if it were true. I contacted Mann to find out.
There are plenty of Stanley Knowles' stories out there. His knowledge of Parliamentary tradition and procedure was legendary. It is said he could bring government business to a halt with one, well-researched question.
"Stanley could ask questions that terrorized the government," remembers Mann. "Questions today, well they're not really questions, are they? It's all partisan chest-thumping." Knowles was first elected to Parliament in 1942, a United Church minister who had been raised in abject poverty after his father lost his machinist's job during the Great Depression.
He was a CCF member, later an NDP, and he famously fought for the introduction of the Canada Pension Plan, speaking of his father while he waged his battle on the Hill.
He was well-respected by all members of the House and when he had a stroke in 1981 Pierre Trudeau created the position of "table officer," so Knowles could continue to sit in the House of Commons.
He cut a daunting figure, sitting at the clerk's table on the floor of the House of Commons, a tall, whippet-thin man with an ill-fitting suit and a church minister's steely, parsimonious stare.
And he was parsimonious. That is also legendary.
Lunch for Stanley Knowles was a sandwich and bowl of Jell-O from the Parliamentary cafeteria. He would read newspapers after others had finished with them.
He brought his family for that first session of Parliament in 1942, but never would again, appalled at the cost to the treasury of keeping two separate residences.
Yes, you read that last part right. Although he was ENTITLED, Knowles never used taxpayer's money to pay down a mortgage on a second house in Ottawa.
Which brings me to the story I once heard and need Susan Mann to confirm. She laughs when I bring it up.
"Yes, it's absolutely true," she says. "Can you imagine ANYONE doing that TODAY?" Then she starts to tell the story. About meeting Stanley Knowles in 1942, the recently elected Member of Parliament coming to her parent's house in response to an advertisement they had placed.
She jumps back and forth while telling the story - Stanley Knowles is making porridge for her before she heads off to school. Stanley Knowles is teasing her dad about getting him a Senate appointment one day, so he won't have to work so hard.
Dinner-table conversations about the Great Pipeline Filibuster of 1956. Afternoon tea and Knowles nibbling away at an Arrowroot biscuit.
Have you figured it out yet? The question I am about to ask?
No? Well, here goes:
"So it's true then Susan? Stanley Knowles boarded with your family?" And Susan Mann answers:
"For more than 40 years." Imagine that. An MP boarding while staying in Ottawa.
Close your eyes and see if you can imagine Mike Duffy, Patrick Brazeau, Mac Harb or Pamela Wallin doing the same thing. BOARDING with a family. Making porridge for the kids on a school day.
(Want more fun? Keep your eyes closed. Now imagine Mike Duffy eating an Arrowroot biscuit.) Anyway, Stanley Knowles passed away in 1997 and Mann says it is a good thing he is not around to see what has happened to Canadian politics, not here to read the news stories coming out of the Senate, Quebec, Ontario, the PMO.
He would be appalled," she says. "Honestly, this would have broken his heart." Public service then and now. Thought you might like to see the difference.