Archives for: July 2009, 22

Don't worry, the Quebec installment of my attempts to make it the 177 riding plan comprehensible will be completed within the next couple of weeks, as soon as university work isn't driving me insane anymore -- though, thanks to UWaterloo, I'm not sure I remember exactly what relaxation is.

Anyways, on to my real subject here ...

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

"Oh, what a tangled web we weave
When first we practise to deceive!"

-- from Marmion, by Walter Scott

*****

Until the efforts of my colleague in the LYPC, Max Naylor, I was totally unaware of the Association of Young Canadian Conservatives' (AYCC's) recent move to position itself as a ready-made youth wing for the Conservative Party of Canada, which apparently doesn't have anything of the sort (unlike the NDP and Liberals, who do have large and integrated youth wings). Getting young people involved in politics is critical to democracy -- hence why I hang in with the CYA -- and if the Conservatives want to form a method through which youth can be involved and have an impact, I'm all for it.

Until I run the thought through my brain one more time and realize: it's the AYCC.

You know, the organization that was once part of the CYA, a breakaway conservative party under the leadership of one Immanuel Giulea. Many of its members either were part of the Conservative Youth Party of Canada (CYPC) and disgusted with its then-leader -- Nate Lewis, who has since progressed while Immanuel has gone downhill -- or they were people who Immanuel recruited out of the blue (no pun intended) who ended up doing nothing productive for the CYA and only joined its forums in order to artificially inflate their member count and promptly disappear again.

You know, the organization headed by a guy (Immanuel) who spread ageist slander in a youth assembly (of all places!) about Max, and who demanded everything of Tyler S. and his administration but gave nothing in return, and who hounded and spammed Nate on the CYA's public forums over being a resident of the Bahamas, and who made the unilateral decision to take the AYCC out of the CYA because he wanted greater prominence, etc., etc.

Well, okay, I will say this about Immanuel: he helped me develop the 177 riding plan and caught a critical error, and he helped rip the old YPC a new one by exposing the shady and manipulative dealings of Tyler Johnson & Co. So, I guess you could say it's not all bad.

But it's damn close.

Immanuel never missed a chance to grandstand and trample over everybody else in his endless quest to achieve his warped idea of what is "right". In fact, I seriously doubt that "doing what's right" is what motivated him; it's likely just attention he seeks. (Yay for Occam's Razor.) He took the AYCC out of the CYA unilaterally, and why? Because "[he couldn't] allow the AYCC to be directly connected to [the] CYA because this has proved detrimental to the future ambitions of [the] AYCC." I'm not making this up.

What future ambitions? Oh, wait, I think we just found out: to become the youth wing of a party that doesn't want a youth wing. Immanuel apparently isn't satisfied with the AYCC being just a forum for conservatives, much the same as how he wasn't satisfied with the CYA being a non-partisan vehicle for debate. No, he wants national prominence, and figured this was a no-miss opportunity: either he gains fame for founding the youth wing of the CPC, or he gains notoriety for being utterly rejected. Either way, the national media have paid at least a modicum of attention to him, which, knowing him, is about the worst possible course of action.

So where am I going with all this:, you ask? If the Conservative Party of Canada wants a youth wing, they can do far, far better than Immanuel and the AYCC. Furthermore, Tyler Sommers and the CYA can do far better than potentially having him as their representative on all things Francophone. Mr. Giulea has forever been nothing but trouble, and to ignore history is to be doomed to let it repeat itself.

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Adam Schneider, EIT, BASc, is an active member and volunteer in the Canadian Youth Assembly. He lives in south-central Ontario and graduated from the University of Waterloo in 2011.

Adam is the acting leader of the CYA's Assembly of New Democratic Youth (ANDY) youth party and is the developer of the reduced "177 riding plan" used by the CYA in their March 2010 pilot election.

Any posts in this weblog are the views and opinions of the author alone and do not represent the positions of the Canadian Youth Assembly (CYA) or its administration either in whole or in part.

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