Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Is Ken Dryden the Next Face?

We like Ken Dryden. He is a proven champion with a big heart. While at times verbose he never appears disingenuous. Could he unite the Liberals with his determination to do the 'right thing'? Could his love for the country translate into support across Canada?

From the Toronto Star.
Posted on January 20, 2006 in Queen's Park | Permalink
January 19, 2006

Ken Dryden Speaks...

With disarming candour, the legendary goalie and now Social Services Minister has sent out a note to his constituents at this late hour in the election campaign, acknowledging that things don't look all that great for his party, but wondering why that is. With sadness, he laments the potential Tory scrapping of the child-care program he negotiated...

Some excerpts...
"It's just a few days before the election. I'm anxious; on edge. Polls aren't votes. On Monday, we can all still vote any way we want, but somehow it doesn't seem that way. For days, I've been trying to think of what else to say, how else to put it, to all those people who I know still don't feel all that comfortable themselves.

It's time for a change. It's on election signs, in ads, in the media. It's in people's conversations. Said so easily, as if what more could one say.

But that's too easy.

Why is it time for a change? All the noise and nastiness, charge and countercharge, in this 20-month campaign, it can seem as if everything is wrong. Everything is bad. It isn't. Our employment growth, our increase in living standards, our productivity growth - all at or near the top of the G7. Our unemployment the lowest it's been in 30 years.

This isn't opinion. This just is. Two years of a good economy and it seems like a blessing. Eight, and it's inevitability. It's not.

Why? And most fundamentally to all of us, it's time for a change - to what?"

"Our country was built on great national endeavours - the joining of two great languages and cultures, the railroad, Medicare, the education system, the Charter of Rights. It's what Macdonald, Pearson, Trudeau - what our greatest leaders - understood."

"I don't think Mr. Harper thinks in terms of "great national endeavours." I don't think that's part of his understanding of Canada. I don't think that's what's in his bones.

The railroad, Medicare, the education system, the Charter of Rights - Canada is a great national endeavour. We're a country whose greatest national endeavours are still ahead. I want big things for Canada. I don't want anything less.

It's time for a change. Why? To what?

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dryden: Forever overrated, just like Poor ol Bucky Dithers. The Habs would have won 4 straight cups with a freekin monkey in net. How many cups did he bring to TO when he was blowing all their dough? oh ya 0! Now he is just some old white socialist who figures he knows how to raise my kids better than i do. whatever.

Red Tory said...

Ty has issues. I think he needs to seek medication.

Anonymous said...

Ken Dryden stood on his head for Montreal and won 6 Stanley Cups in 9 years. Overrated? Please.

With respect to our beloved Leafs, their problems were (and are) much bigger than Ken Dryden's brief tenure as President.

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Anonymous said...

Where did you find it? Interesting read » » »