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Random Thots is brought to you by Graeme MacKay, Editorial Cartoonist at the Hamilton Spectator, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Website: mackaycartoons.net.

"The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter."
Winston Churchill

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Wednesday, August 09, 2006
Measured cartoon

A letter to the editor regarding last Thursday's cartoon:

Re: Editorial cartoon (Aug. 4)

Harper's poll numbers dwindle, seemingly due to his outspokeness on the Middle East conflict. But I wonder — if Canada was attacked by a terrorist group, if some of our soldiers and civilians were killed and/or kidnapped, how we as Canadians would feel if our friends the British or the Americans refused to "take sides" in order to keep "impartial."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper took a principled stand; as far as "neutrality" goes, it has been said that "All that is required for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing." Harper-bashers would prefer that he use the old Liberal tactic of sitting on the fence, never doing or saying anything even remotely controversial, lest it cost him votes. Thankfully, he is above that.

— Garry Barankin, Hamilton

Hey, I'm with the letter writer on this. All I was illustrating in the above cartoon is the news that Conservative fortunes in the polls are taking a dip, and blame is being put on Harper's pretty clear stance that Israel is right to agressively defend itself (in a measured response) by going after Hezbollah terrorists. My July 21 cartoon illustrates his second paragraph:

I'm very much in the camp of the letter writer and very confused about the stance my newspaper is taking on the current situation in the Mideast. Two editorials written less than 2 weeks apart from one another seem to condradict each other.

On July 18, the Spectator wrote an editorial which clearly put the blame on Hezbollah with the headline "This isn't just a border clash":

-----------------

Pity Lebanon and its people. Here is a nation, ravaged and recovering from decades of civil war, now in the centre of the Middle Eastern firestorm and suffering terribly for the sins of others.

Israeli attacks have devastated Beirut, seat of a government struggling towards a true democratic state. Throughout the country, civilians -- including, now, seven Canadians -- have been killed or injured.

The blame for the conflagration has to be laid at the feet of Hezbollah, whose constant provocations (aligned, not coincidentally, with Hamas provocations in Gaza) were meant to force Israel's hand. Hezbollah's goal is the extermination of Israel and, like Hamas, it has no interest in peace.

Hezbollah's killing of eight Israeli soldiers and kidnapping of two others was a last-straw provocation, prompting Israel to act in self-defence against a sworn enemy. Hezbollah effectively controls Lebanon's south, and Beirut doesn't have the capacity, and perhaps the will, to force it out.

Syria and Iran have financed and armed Hezbollah, supplying increasingly long-range missiles that have caused deaths in Haifa, and threaten Tel Aviv. This isn't just a border clash; it is Syria flexing its muscles. It is very clear that, for all the peace efforts over the the past decades, there are still a great many people in the Middle East -- in government and out -- who believe Israel's very existence must end.

Israel has reacted with force in its war on Hezbollah, consistent with its long-standing policies that military efforts must be forceful, even overwhelming, to defeat enemies. It has not been indiscriminate in its attacks, but innocents have died nonetheless. There is never any good excuse for civilian casualties, but Hezbollah must share the blame for sheltering in residential neighbourhoods.

Yesterday, Israel offered a cease-fire in return for Hezbollah moving out of the border area, returning the kidnapped soldiers and ending rocket attacks. That's a strong start to ending this deadly escalation of violence.

The insertion of a UN peacekeeping force is not feasible and would be dangerously premature. But the UN can persuade and mediate -- and bring weight to bear on third-party nations such as Syria and Iran. As long as they use terrorist organizations as their proxies, there will be no peace to keep in the Middle East.

-------------------

So, 11 days later an editorial appears July 29, 2006, crapping on Stephen Harper for simply stating in essence, what the Spectator wrote in a previous editorial:

-------------------

This week has been an eye-opener for Canadians, as Prime Minister Stephen Harper dropped any pretense about moderate conservative values and swept Canada further into the hard right-wing orbit of the Bush administration.

As the world cringed at the slaughter of innocents in Lebanon and Israel, people in this country expected to see Ottawa play its traditional collaborative role of supporting international calls to stop the bloodshed first, then trying to facilitate more substantial solutions.

What they saw instead was Harper undoing 50 years of Canadian reputation in the Middle East by abandoning all sense of neutrality on this latest flaring of a deep-rooted conflict. In doing so, he seriously harmed Canada's credibility to interact with Arab nations as a distinctly independent peace broker.

The uneasy history of Israel and its hostile neighbours has enough complexities to fill a library. While it is obvious that the current violence was provoked by the terrorist organization Hezbollah, this week's urgent issue is not one of taking sides, but of achieving a ceasefire as quickly as possible, and stopping the destruction and killing.

In recharting Canada's foreign policy for this particular theatre, the PM has been sternly intransigent. He refused to revisit his early controversial assessment about Israel's "measured response" to Hezbollah -- even as voices in Canada and around the world howled at the spiralling intensity of death. And Harper's grudging response to Israel's bombing of a UN peacekeeping post -- presumably taking the life of a Canadian soldier -- left him looking like a man caught between loyalties.

But it was Canada's position at the Rome conference on Wednesday that stunned many. While 15 European and Arab countries called for an immediate ceasefire and a UN-mandated stabilization force to intervene, Canada lined up behind the U.S. and Britain in refusing to agree. Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay, parroting Condoleezza Rice, said a quick-fix ceasefire is not a good idea because it can't guarantee permanent peace. There's more politics than logic in that reasoning.

Stephen Harper, minder of a minority government, is not fazed by years of opinion polls showing most Canadians oppose the policies of Washington. This week he took Canada in a direction Lester Pearson couldn't have imagined when he won the Nobel Peace Prize 50 years ago for resolving the Suez Crisis through the United Nations.

Mr. Harper is wrong.

--------------------------

Mr Harper is wrong? I guess the Spectator was wrong, too? I'm very confused, but what I do know is that the letter writer ought to lash out at the editorial writer, not the cartoonist.

Posted at 10:52 am by Graeme_MacKay
Comments (2)  

Floyd Landris' Package

Floyd Landris shows the world his package...only to face humiliation after winning the yellow jersey:

Posted at 12:02 am by Graeme_MacKay
Comment (1)  

Tuesday, August 08, 2006
Advanced drawing

The cartoon in today's Spectator was drawn last Friday -- 4 days ago. I had to consider the August holiday Monday and the fact that no Spectator would be printed on that day and think way ahead for something to serve up for readers. Added to this was the request I was given of sending something in to the Toronto Star for the Sunday paper. So today's Spectator cartoon already ran in TheStar on Sunday. The challenge was to come up with something way in advance on a summer holiday weekend at typically, the slowest time for news. I've talked about drawing in the summer doldrums in a previous blog posting, but this occasion was one of those self doubting I-don't-know-what-to-draw where I sit for hours not knowing what to draw. This summer has been unlike previous summers in that there are many very newsworthy events happening in the world right now... events that change by the hour. It's risky enough to comment on something regarding the conflict between Israel and Hezbolla in Lebanon, the Cuban political situation considering Castro's ill health, and the on going wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. To draw something days in advance on the above subjects takes on greater risk. So, my comment was on the business of commenting...

Posted at 10:27 am by Graeme_MacKay
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Monday, August 07, 2006
The August Long Weekend Monday

In my capacity as a fill-in editorial cartoonist for the Toronto Star I thought I'd do the above cartoon as a local treat.

They don't call today Simcoe day around these parts of the Golden Horseshoe. In Hamilton it's just known as Civic Day. They might as well just do what they do in the U.K. and call a day like this one a Bank holiday Monday. Actually, two provinces and one territory do not recognize it at all, and five other provinces do not oblige employers to offer holiday pay on this day, thus making it a civic holiday in the legal sense.

There's not much information about the August holiday Monday on the Internet. I woke up Saturday morning to CBC radio chit chat and it seems all of the trivia about the holiday came from Craig Martlatt's very informative website. In other parts of the province there are different names for today's holiday:

1869 - Toronto City Council originated a midsummer holiday for a "day of recreation".

1871 - A Bank Holiday was established by the House of Commons in England. Sir John Lubbock declared that Toronto in Canada had found an August holiday "advisable and satisfactory."

1875 - Perhaps after the precedent set by Sir John Lubbock, Toronto City Council fixed the first Monday in August as a Civic Holiday.

1968 - Toronto City Council officially called the civic holiday "Simcoe Day" after Major-General John Graves Simcoe, who was appointed the first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada on September 12th, 1791. He convened the first Legislative Assembly and established York (now Toronto) as the capital of the province. One of his crowning achievements was to begin the phasing out of slavery in Upper Canada, which officially ended in 1810 – 23 years before it was abolished in the British Empire and 55 years before the Emancipation Proclamation in the United States.

1980 - Burlington celebrates the holiday as "Joseph Brant Day." Joseph Brant was a Mohawk Chief who became known for his treaty negotiations and loyalty to the British.

1982 - The City of Brantford adopted a policy that stated that the civic holiday be named "Founders' Day". Each year, the Brantford Heritage Committee submits a report to City Council with the name or organization that is to be recognized on that day.

1983 - Oshawa City Council passed a resolution to recognize the holiday as "McLaughlin Day" in honour of the late Colonel R.S. McLaughlin, who brought General Motors to Oshawa. See Parkwood Estate and Oshawa - still motoring after 75 years.

1996 - The City of Ottawa passed a by-law proclaiming the Civic Holiday as "Colonel By Day". John By (1779-1836) was a British Lieutenant-Colonel and military engineer. His most noteworthy achievement was the building of the Rideau Canal and Bytown (now Ottawa) was named after him.

1998 - Sarnia City Council passed a resolution declaring the holiday "Alexander Mackenzie Day". The Honourable Alexander Mackenzie was Canada's second Prime Minister from 1873-1878.

1999 - The Town of Cobourg proclaimed the holiday as "James Cockburn Day". James Cockburn was a father of Confederation and represented the riding of Northumberland West in the Legislative Assembly of Canada, 1861-67.

I'm surprised Hamilton hasn't renamed this day. In time I'll bet there'll be a number of potential candidates: Lincoln Alexander, Sheila Copps, Bob Morrow...Boris Brott Day... Elizabeth Bagshaw day... uggh. Been down this road before.

Posted at 12:35 am by Graeme_MacKay
Comments (2)  

Wednesday, August 02, 2006
MacKay's Atlas of the world

I've always been fascinated by maps. When I was a kid I declared to anyone who would listen that when I grew up I was going to work as a "mapmaker". To train myself I would copy maps out of atlases and try to squeeze as many place names and geographic features as possible. Then I later found out that the correct name for "map making" was "cartography" and that in order to become a cartographer you had to be a whiz in mathematics. Knowing myself to be one of world's worst math students on record I knew my dream of drawings maps for a living would never pan out.

Cartoonists have followed in the steps of previous generations who have found amusement in combining satire with maps. So I can only admire them as an observer. Some examples of maps be found of Great Britain, France, Italy, Ireland, Germany, Spain and Portugal, and Denmark. The latter 6 are the inspiration of William Harvey, an English satirist working in the 1860's. Upon their first publication, the artist described these maps as "humorous outlines of various countries, with an introduction and descriptive lines," intended to make geography enjoyable and accessible to children. By today's standards, some of these pictures might appear stereotypical, and even slightly offensive. However, at the time, they were quite popular, and they reflect the contemporary conceptions (or misconceptions) of these countries. (source). Here are my maps drawn in the past 6 or so years, inspired by the works of artists like William Harvey:

 

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Posted at 09:27 am by Graeme_MacKay
Comments (3)  

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