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Bruce Dowbiggin

What We Had Here Is A Failure To Communicate

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1 Corinthians 13:11, 

“When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.”

Back in our formative days we wrote a stage play that won a book prize at University of Toronto. Flushed with success we hastily dispatched the play to our former prof, the late Urjo Kareda, who was then dramaturge at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. And we waited.

A short time later he returned the play. As I opened the package I could see the pages marked up like some Napoleonic battle plan. My eyes went to the title page where four angry slashes underlined my artful title. “What kind of meaningless glop is this?” he wrote. It went downhill from there.

We quickly penned a hurt note, pleading, “I thought you were my friend.” To which Urjo replied, “I thought you wanted to be a writer.” Game. Set. Match. Two years and about a hundred drafts later the play was produced at the Tarragon Theatre Writers Workshop. Because we had much to learn.

We were reminded of that epiphany while watching video of Charlie Kirk’s Socratic debating (mostly) students over the years. Seeing eager young people in debate was remarkable. After unloading their box cars of prefab hate— racist, sexist, transphobe, Nazi— they were clinically defenestrated by Kirk’s casual “Name me one time I said that”. Or Kirk correcting them on Scripture texts. Or the contradictions of pro-choice politics. That began the humana-humana-humana phase of the encounter.

Our fave was Kirk offering $10,000 to anyone at Oxford Union who could name a U.S. citizen deported by ICE. That was followed by a crestfallen silence. Soon followed by the recognition from the mini-AOCs that their education and the hundreds of thousands they spent were wasted by corrupt professors and radical institutions. This produced either a) resignation or b) in the case of Tyler Robinson, a vengeful wrath and a bullet.

Because they have been indoctrinated into an education cult that equates classic argument with arguing, words with violence and religion with poison they suddenly realize that going through life depending on your feelings— as they’ve been taught since kindergarten— is going to be a disaster for them. They’re lost in a secular hellhole with no moral signposts. Just slogans. Had they been encouraged to discipline their minds to the Socratic model they might have stood a chance.

Socrates described his method as “midwifery”, because it is employed to help his interlocutors develop their understanding in a way analogous to a child developing in the womb. But their heroes told them to be nice. Or to support Hamas. Or both.

Now they were standing outside the Woke bubble with their pants at their knees on social media. “Yes, he was a bit of a jerk,” wrote one of his debaters, “Yes, he held extreme political beliefs. That does not justify violence.”

Modern education has failed them on the exchange of ideas. Marinated in radical chic by their union leaders who told them to read the room, not the books. “If your opinion depends on reliably knowing another person’s inner thoughts,” Scott Adams writes in his book Loserthink, “you might be experiencing loserthink… Keep a few examples of your wrongness fresh in your memory so you can generate the right level of humility about your omniscience in future situations.”

But enough about Jimmy Kimmell. Humility would require self awareness which is verboten for those graduating from contemporary public schooling and colleges. That’s why critics tried mightily to demean Kirk’s signature open-mike format. “Instead of debating experienced left-wing political commentators,” blubbers leftist New University, “these right-wing talking heads intentionally target college students who are often inexperienced in debate, studying subjects other than political science and uninformed in the particular policy area they are being grilled about.” Also because the late-night Edward R. Murrows would never risk it. Ah, the cruelty!

These bunkered beauties think they’ve achieved some enlightenment for reading minds. Wrong. “You can be smart and well informed while at the same time be a flagrant loserthinker,” notes Adams. Once you learn to see the walls of your mental prison, “and you learn how to escape, you will have better tools to help usher in what I call the Golden Age.”

The classic teaching model once was the erudite John Houseman as the Harvard law legend in the Paper Chase movie and TV program in the 1980s. “You teach yourselves the law, but I train your minds. You come in here with a skull full of mush; you leave thinking like a lawyer.” Houseman’s rigourous professor inspired dread in his students, and at the same time a measure of hero worship; he literally wrote the books they study.

He was pitiless in the face of the casual stereotypes that are the meat of Gavin Newsom or Jagmeet Singh. In one famous scene Houseman’s character tells a struggling student, “Call your mother, and tell her you will never be a lawyer.” (Today he’d be arrested for assault.) Moving young minds away from using feelings in argument was his goal. Tender hearts need not apply. Kirk replicated that discipline, demanding that critics bring the receipts. But it bruised the tender sensibilities of those disinclined to match his scholarship and commitment. Best to shoot him, allowed his critics.

Silencing Kirk’s voice— or replacing it with faux victim Jimmy Kimmel— is supposed help the Rachel Maddow scholars reach total consciousness. Here’s a Canadian feminist in the Globe and Mail dancing on his grave. “Charlie Kirk’s videos thrived on controversy as he used the manosphere playbook to reshape politics”. It’s all so tired, so trope, so predictable.

But it’s worked on a generation of typically well-off kids who entered schools with open minds and left as bitter, angry antifa foot soldiers. In between came the purveyors of white capalist guilt. As Voltaire is reported to have said, “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” Welcome to 2025 M. Voltaire.

Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster  A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, his new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via brucedowbigginbooks.ca.

BRUCE DOWBIGGIN Award-winning Author and Broadcaster Bruce Dowbiggin's career is unmatched in Canada for its diversity and breadth of experience . He is currently the editor and publisher of Not The Public Broadcaster website and is also a contributor to SiriusXM Canada Talks. His new book Cap In Hand was released in the fall of 2018. Bruce's career has included successful stints in television, radio and print. A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada's top television sports broadcaster for his work with CBC-TV, Mr. Dowbiggin is also the best-selling author of "Money Players" (finalist for the 2004 National Business Book Award) and two new books-- Ice Storm: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Vancouver Canucks Team Ever for Greystone Press and Grant Fuhr: Portrait of a Champion for Random House. His ground-breaking investigations into the life and times of Alan Eagleson led to his selection as the winner of the Gemini for Canada's top sportscaster in 1993 and again in 1996. This work earned him the reputation as one of Canada's top investigative journalists in any field. He was a featured columnist for the Calgary Herald (1998-2009) and the Globe & Mail (2009-2013) where his incisive style and wit on sports media and business won him many readers.

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Bruce Dowbiggin

Choking The Night Away: Can Blue Jays/ Tigers Recover?

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Roy Hobbs: I coulda’ been better. I coulda’ broke every record in the book. And then when I walked down the street people would’ve looked, and they would’ve said, there goes Roy Hobbs, the best there ever was in this game.” Robert Redford in The Natural

The death last week of Robert Redford, the star of The Natural, at 89 coincided with the frantic finish of this year’s MLB pennant races. And there fans of some celebrated baseball teams who are wondering what happened to the WonderBoy the past month.

Somehow the Toronto Blue Jays have survived to make the postseason after staggering through September. The Jays hung on to beat the Kansas City Royals and avoid a sweep at Royals Stadium. The game featured Vladimir Guierrero’s first extra base hit since Sept. 7. Normally that would have been compensated by other Jays.

But they are playing without, arguably, their best player Bo Bichette. Their pitching staff is in tatters with Chris Bassitt gone to the injured list, José Berrios banned to the bullpen, Max Scherzer strafed for seven runs on Friday, Jeff Hoffman blowing leads like he blows his nose. All Star catcher Alejandro Kirk, OFs Addison Barger and Daulton Varsho went cold at the same time.

So Vladdy AWOL could have been fatal. But the Jays pieced together an offence centred on George Springer and spare parts to keep the wheels on. Starter Shane Bieber, the former Cy Young winner, has been a life saver. Now they must face Boston and Tampa to hold onto the top spot in the AL and win a first-round bye. Where they’ll battle the Detroit Tigers for the pennant.

Just kidding. As bad as the Blue Jays struggles have been, the Tigers have authored what may be there worst collapse in the history of MLB. Once leaders by 15.5 in the AL Central, powered by five All Stars and stocked with young studs, the Tigers now find themselves a single game up on red-hot Cleveland in the Central and precariously perched on the edge of missing the postseason.

They have company among the famous folds in the past. On August 11, 1951, the Brooklyn Dodgers held a 13-game lead in the National League. By the end of the season, the Dodgers had relinquished the entire lead, and were locked in a tie atop the standings with the New York Giants, with a three-game playoff to determine the pennant winner. They were tied a game apiece. Dodgers pitcher Don Newcombe took a 4-1 Dodgers lead into the ninth inning. He gave way to reliever Ralph Branca. Up came Bobby Thompson. Down went the Dodgers.

Older fans will remember the 1964 Pholding Phillies of Gene Mach blowing a 6.5 game lead with just 12 to play. It was their chance  to win their first World Series ever. the team began printing World Series tickets. Then Mauch began starting his two best starters on two days rest. Sorry. Dust in the wind. The Bob Gibson Cardinals went on to win the WS.

Then there were the 1969 Chicago Cubs under Leo Durocher. The Cubs led by as many as 7 games till the fated black cat ran in front of their dugout in a Sept. 9 game against the Mets. For most that signalled the end for Chicago. The Amazin’ Mets passed the exhausted Cubs and went on to win the huge upset in the WS, beating powerful Baltimore. Durocher played his starters into the dirt while stealing out of a game to see his stepson.

The 1978 Red Sox led the Yankees by as much as 11 games midseason then melted in the summer sun. Having won six in a row to force a playoff with the Yanks, the Carmine Hose had a chance at redemption. Two words describe what happened. Bucky Dent.

The 1987 Blue Jays prefigured their current cousins. With just seven games to go in the regular season, the Blue Jays had amassed 96 wins and a healthy 3.5 game lead over the Detroit Tigers. When the 1987 season came to a close, Toronto still had 96 wins, but no playoff games. Detroit swept them and the image of hapless Jays manager Jimy Williams standing with his hands tucked in his pants became the image of a lost season.

The 1995 California Angels built up an 11-game lead in early August over mediocre AL West competition. With two weeks to play they still had a six-game advantage. That’s when they embarked on a nine-game losing streak—their second such snap within a month. In a one-game playoff Randy Johnson threw 150 pitches for Seattle and that was all she wrote.

The 2007 Mets not only looked to have the NL East sewn up with a seven-game lead over the Phillies, they held the upper hand on home-field advantage for the NL playoffs. In the final week New York came home for seven final games, with a make-up against St. Louis thrown in. They lost all but one, and the season came down to the last day with the Mets and Phillies tied for first. HOF Starter Tom Glavine retired just one Florida batter while allowing seven others to reach; all seven scored. Not only did the Mets lose out on the division by a single game, but the wild card as well by the same margin.

The 2009 Tigers know how their current club feels. Heading into the final weekend of the regular season, up three games over the Minnesota Twins with four games to go, they seemed a lock to make the postseason and win the American League Central division. Four games later, the Tigers were faced with the Twins in a one-game playoff to get to the postseason. Jim Leyland’s Tigers choked that one away as well, losing in extra innings, 6-5.

But nothing compares to the story the 2025 Tigers are authoring. Manager A.J. Hinch has seen all his well-constructed plans disintegrate. He has one great pitcher, Tarek Skull, and a whole lot of five-inning pitchers and hittable bullpen arms. His young core of hitters are gagging (12 LOB Sunday), and the Cleveland Guardinos are on an insane wining streak.

Even though they control their destiny it all feels doomed. And the dream of a Jays/ Tigers AL Final will never be.

Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster  A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, his new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via brucedowbigginbooks.ca.

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Bruce Dowbiggin

Carney’s Housing Meltdown: Building A Mystery

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Imagine there’s a motorist going 110 K on a dark highway. The posted signs say Slow. Then Construction. Then Road Closed. But the driver keeps his pedal to the metal. “Those rules are for other people, not us.” The car goes off the road like Thelma and Louise.

This metaphor sums up the Liberal government since Mark Carney took over. There are warning signs all over. But he and the Justin Trudeau cabinet he inherited say the rules aren’t for us— even as their wheels leave the ground. They’re too busy announcing expensive housing plans and construction projects that won’t be built for four years, if at all.

What are the road signs? On the macro level, the government is printing money furiously to buy off the inevitable collapse even as it begs the central bank to lower interest rates. On the micro, a Toronto man who purchased a condo at the peak of the Toronto market for $880 K in 2022 has had to walk away from the five-year mortgage because the debt is worth more than the property. Which sells in a bankruptcy auction for $550 K.

In 2027, all such mortgages from that year will be coming due. What do you think will happen? This doesn’t include people who walk away before occupying. In Toronto, there is now roughly a 30 percent failure rate for condo closings, meaning many buyers are simply walking away from their pre-construction deposits. Even as tens of thousands of units are brought on stream.

The city of Toronto has $458 M in unpaid taxes on its books from 2024. (How will they paint rainbow crosswalks if this continues?) This shortfall is being experienced across the country. St. Catharines, Ont, had a 34 percent shortfall of taxed paid. Brampton has $150 M of unpaid taxes on its 2024 books. Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary and Edmonton face similar shortfalls. Meanwhile unemployment in these areas is reaching the 10 percent mark.

But the public seems unconcerned. They continue to elect radical city councils that address the shortfalls by jacking up their taxes even more—  while services are cut back or non-existent. In 2024 municipalities from Ontario to British Columbia announced proposed property tax increases of between 2 and 15 percent.

These economic road signs emerge from a Liberal party that used low interest rates to create Trudeau’s faux real estate boom economy in urban zones. In 2021 it deceived the purchased medias with a $71 B “boldest housing plan ever”. The housing market collapsed immediately after this stunt. No wonder Donald Trump snorts at Canada as a viable entity.

This week’s detour from reality is a $13 B plan for new modular housing (@$3.25 M per shack). To season the Real Estate Turkey the government imported 3.4 million people in four years to clog the market for homes. Asked about the failure of their venture into real estate (at the expense of Canada’s traditional products like energy, canola and soft goods) the government points to the booming TSX stock market as approval for their plans.

The polls seem to indicate that the Elbows Up crowd, who don’t recognize the water lapping at their front door, are still enthusiastic for Carney’s ongoing feud with Trump, Canada’s largest trading partner. Their media sources, protected by government grants that censor contrary news, instead distract them with tales of far-right vigilantes, wine boycotts and climate catastrophe.

The revolution in communications that has emerged in the U.S. has so far not drifted north of the border. In the U.S. old-line broadcasters are still giving out Emmys to now-cancelled Steven Colbert, who has lost much of his audience, millions in advertising and the patience of ownership. They staged an awards ceremony that frequently mentioned Hamas and Palestine but not a word about a major media presence, Charlie Kirk,  being murdered before live cameras.

No wonder they’re so shocked about the FCC cancelling Jimmy Kimmel for refusing to apologize for saying MAGA was behind the Kirk murder. The emergence of new outlets that reflect the complete spectrum has put the U.S. Media Party into fight-or-flight. For instance, startups like TBPN, a bare-bones daily talk show that riffs on Silicon Valley, has become a huge off-the-grid star outlet. It now commands appearances from Mark Zuckerberg. While the mainstream defends Kimmel.

The power of this emerging social media was shown in the pushback from the Kirk murder in which the unhinged comments of the trans and far-left communities were quickly exposed, with many in the teaching, public service and government professions (much to their surprise) summarily fired for their callous rants. Their shock reflects a portion of society that thought itself protected in their Bluesky bubble of affirmation.

In Canada the Kirk vitriol was no less nasty from outlets that see themselves as protected. @Cultmtl “Charlie Kirk died as he lived: propagating hateful myths about marginalized groups in our society. He was a profiteer and architect of America’s increasingly violent culture war. You reap what you sow.” (This from an outlet funded by the Canadian government.) CultMtl had lots of company in the self-protection circle.

“Discord, the communications platform now under scrutiny as U.S. investigators examine chat room messages involving the alleged assassin of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, is also being used by left-wing Antifa-aligned networks in Canada to organize and share dossiers on political targets”, Toronto independent journalist Caryma Sa’d.

So it was mostly American social media that outed odious Canadian comments online, forcing employers to take action against loons they’ve harboured up till now. The reaction to this culling was predictable in the mainstream media. “TorontoStar After Charlie Kirk’s death, workers learn the limits of free speech in and out of their jobs”  https://trib.al/h1wAmek The hysteria over Kimmel dwarfed even that.

But at least only half of America is in the BlueSky bubble where liberal Jew Hannah Einbinder mocked Israel which saves her tribe from extinction. Canada’s bubble is almost total, thanks to federal communications policies that smother free expression in the public sphere. So far it has resisted criticism by blunt-force object. Its aged loquitors speak with authority while ignoring the under 50s hate them for what they’re doing to the dream of home ownership.

Whether through fear or negligence, Canada’s Liberals are determined to shape their housing message for the bubble, distract from reality and pray they make it to the next election. Before the car goes over the cliff marked Do Not Enter.

Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster  A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, his new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed Hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via brucedowbigginbooks.ca.

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