-----Original Message-----
From: Portside Moderator [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2012 5:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [SPAM] Quebec Students Send a Message Against Austerity


Quebec students send a message against austerity 

By Linda McQuaig
The Toronto Star
May 07, 2012

http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorialopinion/article/1174591--quebec-stud
ents-send-a-message-against-austerity

No wonder those Quebec student protestors have been spooking the English
Canadian establishment. If they get their way, the same ideas could catch on
here, leaving the best-laid plans for austerity in tatters.

What seems to particularly gall some English Canadian commentators is the
fact that the Quebec students - who reached a tentative deal with the
province on the weekend after a three-month strike - have been protesting
tuition hikes that would still leave them with the lowest tuition in the
country. Why can’t these spoiled brats be grateful, and go back to
watching video games and keeping up with the Kardashians like normal,
well-adjusted North American youth?

It’s that old problem about Quebec. Somehow people there manage to shake a
bit loose from the rigid corporate-imposed mindset that has gripped North
America in recent decades, convincing us that we as a society must cut back
on things - like university education and old age pensions - that were
somehow affordable in days when our society was a lot less rich.

The Quebec students, more attuned to the outside world, have figured out
that this self-denial has more to do with dogma than with some new reality
allegedly necessitated by the global economy.

How else to explain the fact that many northern European nations manage to
keep university education easily affordable
- even free in Scandinavia - while managing to compete very effectively in
the global economy?

The Norwegian embassy in Ottawa confirmed yesterday that, in addition to
free tuition, Norway provides a stipend to cover much of a student’s
living expenses. (Of course, Norway is blessed with ample oil reserves -
almost as blessed as
Canada.)

The Scandinavians - and the Quebec students - consider higher education a
public good, essential to democracy.

Many Scandinavian countries demonstrate their commitment to this concept -
and to genuine global community - by even offering free university tuition
to foreigners, including North Americans. We reciprocate by treating foreign
students like cash cows to be milked relentlessly, charging them tuition
fees roughly three times the Canadian rate.

Now there’s the spirit of global co-operation!

This lack of generosity toward others isn’t surprising since we even throw
our own young under the bus. Student debt here, which falls
disproportionately on low-income households, now totals $14.4 billion and
growing by the second, as demonstrated by the ticking debt clock on the
Canadian Federation of Students website.

Of course, high tuition also enables our establishment to
keep students on a tight leash, focused on getting into professional and
business schools (where they’ll have some hope of repaying their debts)
and keeping clear of courses that might teach them to question prevailing
orthodoxies and mindsets.

Some mistakenly see a generational war going on here. But the austerity
fetishists also have their sights set on the older crowd, with plans to take
away two years of their retirement.

Under the more sensible Scandinavian approach - banned under the business
dogma that dominates here - the tax and transfer system helps citizens move
through the stages of their lives.

Education is paid for by those in the workforce whose retirement will later
be paid for by the students whose education they paid for. Over the life
cycle, it all works out. Everybody contributes when they’re working, and
gets a hand at the beginning and end of their lives.

Everyone also has a chance to develop to the best of their abilities,
maximizing their own potential and raising national productivity.

Rex Murphy, writing in the National Post, dismissed the
student protests as "the future elite of Quebec having a self-indulgent
fit."

It’s an odd form of self-indulgence. Tens of thousands of students have
marched hundreds of hours in the cold, potentially jeopardizing their
academic (and financial) futures, in order to champion accessible education
for all as the cornerstone of a democratic society.

If only they could be less self indulgent, and stick to drinking, partying
and finding themselves a comfortable niche in the corporate world.

[Linda McQuaig’s column appears monthly. [email protected]]

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