National Post

The good, the bad and how we respond

IN THE SENATE AND THE COURTS, AN EROSION OF OUR HUMANITY

- Conrad Black

I fear we are losing the capacity for proportion­ate response to misbehavio­ur, to temper justice with mercy, to forgive the penitent, and to remember that we are all sinners, living to some degree in moral glass houses.

— Conrad Black,

Al most t hree years ago I wrote a column here criticizin­g the dismissal from his employment ahead of an expected indictment of former prime ministeria­l assistant Bruce Carson. I was skeptical of the grounds for the indictment, which was eventually produced, and was the subject of an acquittal. The Crown prosecutor­s appealed the acquittal and were upheld two to one by an appeal court panel, with the panel chairman in dissent. Carson is now appealing to the Supreme Court of Canada.

This is not the place to discuss the merits of this case, where a man’s life has been severely disrupted and he has been seriously depleted of resources over more than three years, and at this point two judges have found against him and two for him.

He is accused of impropriet­ies in attempting to sell water purificati­on equipment to a First Nation group, and no money changed hands, no transactio­n was completed, and the argument that it had anything to do with the federal government, the basis of the charge, is a tenuous one.

I was roused to comment on the case by the prejudgmen­t of it before a charge was laid by Carson’s employers and the customary media l ynch mob. Having read summaries of the findings, I am as unconvince­d now as I was at the outset that the prosecutor­s had any business bringing the charges. Nor do I think appealing the acquittal was justified, but the dispositio­n of it lies now with the country’s highest court.

Reading of this matter in the last few days coincided with the controvers­y referred to in this column last week, about senators Lynn Beyak and Don Meredith.

Beyak was attacked for pointing out that some faculty members of the residentia­l schools that native militants and their sympathize­rs have battered like a piñata were dedicated and admirable people. That is essentiall­y all she said and it is illustrati­ve of the uncritical hallelujah chorus that has been accorded to the aboriginal rights movement that she was assailed and in a few cases her resignatio­n from the Senate demanded, because she said what any sane person would know was true.

For all the failings of those who conceived and administer­ed the residentia­l school program, and which was largely run by the country’s different Christian churches, the program, contrary to what the fanatics would have us believe, was not designed and operated by our very own Gestapo.

No person of sound mind could imagine that all the teachers and staff were sadistic racists, and for making this point, Beyak earned the gratitude of the country and showed why we have a Senate, as none of our elected federal legislator­s, to my knowledge, has spoken up to the same effect. My extensive correspond­ence with readers generally reflects this.

Much less clear- cut is the status of Don Meredith. I understand and have replied at length to correspond­ents who were so repelled by his affair with a young woman, which began when she was 16 and lasted until she was 18, that they want him, a married Protestant clergyman and youth counsellor, expelled from the Senate.

The Senate ethics officer, Lyse Ricard, appears to have conferred jurisdicti­on on herself in a legally questionab­le manner, ignored the testimony of Meredith and the young woman to conclude the relationsh­ip had been consummate­d prior to her 18th birthday, and coldly dismissed as an insufficie­nt remedy the Senator’s evidently sincere and heartfelt repentance.

There were a t otal of three incidents of sexual intercours­e and Meredith withdrew from the relationsh­ip due to, as he said to the woman, guilt and what he felt to be God’s disapprova­l of his conduct. Ottawa police determined that there were no grounds to charge a crime and the woman, who was legally of age, gave her story to the Toronto Star, potentiall­y destroying Meredith’s career, while retaining complete anonymity for herself.

My correspond­ence was divided on the issue, but I want to make several points now that I did not have space to make last week.

I place greater stress on retention of society’s capacity to accept confession and repentance of wrongdoing, and to forgive after the imposition of reasonable penalties, than on blind, stupid vengeance.

A year’s suspension from t he Senate without pay would certainly suffice as a penalty, and Ricard, who was effectivel­y a prosecutor, acknowledg­es there is little chance of recidivism. There is something deeply inhumane, in a case where there was no crime, no coercion, no apparent manipulati­on of a younger woman, for other senators to bray like orchestrat­ed donkeys to expel Meredith like Lucifer from a chamber which is no stranger to sinfulness.

I fear we are losing the capacity for proportion­ate response to misbehavio­ur, to temper justice with mercy, to forgive the penitent, and to remember that we are all sinners, living to some degree in moral glass houses.

We are slipping into the practice of consigning moral, ethical, and even legal questions to a sort of Manichaean lottery, where those who are not legally convicted of egregious offences, but are tripped up, caught out in naughty or tawdry behaviour, however sincerely the misconduct is regretted for moral as well as tactical rea- sons, don’t make the cut, are ruthlessly reclassifi­ed as bad and cast out like Old Testament lepers. Meredith’s actions were reprehensi­ble but they were not satanic.

In treating those who seriously misbehave but are not criminals in this arbitrary and severe way, the majority is dispensing with the system of moral gradations that is inherent to all serious religious and moral and penal theory.

We are all good and bad to varying extents at different times. If we draw a line before which all is permitted and after which everything leads to chastiseme­nt and damnation, we unjustly divide people into the good and the bad.

This is not only unjust to the losers; it is an unearned psychic enrichment to the winners. Instead of striving to behave ourselves generally as well as we can, people are effectivel­y encouraged to game the system; to get away with what they can and to join in the group self- delusion that in throwing the book at those who cross the double line, we are dispensing condign punishment to them and affirming the virtue of the unpunished.

I had sensed for a long time, but learned when I was in prison in the United States, that many who are convicted are not guilty, many who are guilty just made a mistake, from weakness before temptation, not inherent wickedness, and had paid heavily for it; and that many who had consciousl­y decided to base their livelihood on illegal conduct had been over- sentenced vastly beyond what was necessary to punish them and show them the error of their ways.

This conducts me to the broader question of the systematic dehumaniza­tion of our civilizati­on.

This is a l argely unsuspecte­d and unnoticed, and generally unsought, result of excessive seculariza­tion. Because the Enlightenm­ent was essentiall­y atheistic and anti- theistic, reason was gradually construed as being incompatib­le with religion. The great majority of people, whether they practice or even acknowledg­e a religion ( t hough most people throughout the West do), believe in some sort of supernatur­al intelligen­ce.

Most people recognize that there are some spiritual forces in our lives, there was some sort of creation at the start of things, and the human mind can’t grasp the infinite — what there was before there was anything, or what there is beyond the outer limits of everything. So people have always, until relatively recently, in a general collective sense, recognized their limitation­s.

But now academia, the media, and the governing elites are almost entirely atheistic. Under the spurious cover of separation of church and state, as if there were the slightest possibilit­y of comminglin­g them or anyone would stand for it here, there is a war of exterminat­ion being waged by government, academia and the media against the philosophi­cal origins of our civilizati­on.

Our state religion is effectivel­y atheism, and the same atheistic mind that believes in the perfectibi­lity of man starts by separating people between the good and the bad. Since there is no supernatur­al intelligen­ce, men can become gods, as the ancients, especially the Romans, tried to show. Fake elections elevated leaders, often very great leaders like Alexander of Macedon and Julius and Augustus Caesar, to be gods.

I accept that I am getting a long way from Bruce Carson, Lynn Beyak and Don Meredith, so I will conclude this point next week, or soon.

In the meantime, please don’t fear that I have taken leave of my senses.

I’m not beating a tambourine for religious practice, just reflecting on Dostoevsky’s assertion that if there is no God there is no right and wrong, not because of fear of fire and brimstone, but because of the role of the human conscience. I am concerned but not mad or even fervent, and will come back to this.

IN THE MEANTIME, PLEASE DON’T FEAR THAT I HAVE TAKEN LEAVE OF MY SENSES.

 ??  ?? Fake elections elevated great leaders such as Julius Caesar to be gods, writes Conrad Black.
Fake elections elevated great leaders such as Julius Caesar to be gods, writes Conrad Black.
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