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4 Reviews
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Powerful and full of humour,
By KavéhA (Montreal, QC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Years as Prime Minister (Ron Graham Books) (Hardcover)
As he always seemed to be, this is an honest and humorous account of his years as the prime minister. He is probably one the best Canada has seen in recent history. And the book is not only his memoirs, but also is full of lessons for those interested in politics, policy makings, and respect. Every Canadian should read this book, whether you like him or now (I know of very few people who don't praise his work and leadership abilities).
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very interesting,
By Canadian in Exile "Canadian in Exile" (St. Louis, MO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Years as Prime Minister (Ron Graham Books) (Hardcover)
Sheds a lot of light on the accomplishments of the Chretien government and the media-driven scandals that ultimately caused the downfall in 2003 under Paul Martin. Great book for readers from Canada as it shows the true side of Chretien, something that was often muddled in the press. Readers from other countries will see the impact Canada had on world affairs under this leader, and come to understand how the Canadian political scene and "state of mind" differs very much from other countries, especially the United States.
0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Do We Get the Government We Deserve?!,
By karl b. (Fraser Valley, BC, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Years as Prime Minister (Paperback)
I received this book as a gift, but didn't crack it for 18 months. I've had a private debate with myself about who was the worst Prime Minister Canada ever had. I narrowed it to Brian Mulroney or Jean Chretien.
I based the evaluation on who had most squandered Canada's great wealth of natural and human resources to the mania of economic liberalism and the other fads of post national and post structural culture. Both administrations had the taint of corruption, but I came to the conclusion that Chretien even outdid Mulroney in the sell out of our national potential and identity, only in part by lying to us about his intention to reject NAFTA. Free Trade, Monetarism, Deregulation and Privatization profoundly contravened the National economic policies which had built Canada from Confederation. Here we are 17 years after Chretien's first election. The revolutionary paradigm set in place by him and his predecessor is still in effect. The country is increasingly de-industrialized, its scientific and technological infrastructure being dismantled. We have the first generation in perhaps its history that is substantially poorer than that of their parents. Single income families, lifetime employment, pensions and benefits have become things of the past (MP's excepted!). The empty aphorisms of the 'knowledge economy' have replaced that of the integrated industrial economy. The latter's high wages and high expectations have been replaced with transient, dead end, low paying service jobs for all except a small segment of highly trained specialists in abstract disciplines.. perhaps 20% of the workforce, leaving millions in the dustbin of the New Economy. Our 'progress' now means our children must compete with the most desperate Maquilladora Free Trade Zones, the other half of the Free Trade profit equation, for productive wages, the real legacy of his 'Team Canada' trade junkets. Canada is left in the tidal wash of a chaotic international financial order where greed infused derivative instruments of no productive value can devastate the lives of millions.We have been laid bare to the fangs of the wolves of international finance by their running dogs in government. We have seen a vast polarization of wealth. A steady drumbeat of repeals of social guarantees so hard won to ensure an equitable sharing of the nation's wealth. The taxation system has become regressive and consumption based (another forgotten campaign promise of Chretien's).. slanted toward an ever narrowing, parasitic and grotesquely rich oligarchy that is picking from the spoils of an unravelling society. The country sees its primary institution of marriage reduced to an absurdity, its respect for life undone by the elevation of the prime directives of radical individualism and moral relativism, as the basis for a 'freedom', beyond any commensurate responsibility to the most vulnerable and voiceless of our society. All of this formalized and orchestrated under Chretien, levered into place by an unelected and unfettered judiciary of immense intellectual mediocrity, like their sponsor (none more so than Bev McLaughlin, the radical 60's era feminist Chretien appointed as Chief Justice). Chretien supported the divisiveness of the Charlottetown Accord with its 'distinct status' which proved he had none of the backbone of Trudeau in constituting the indivisibility of the country, while portraying himself as an undiluted Federalist.. hypocrisy disguised as pragmatism. So here you have Chretien's response to these charges. It is not surprising that it is shallow, ego centric, chauvinistic to party politics, bitter towards opponents and shows no trace of vision or understanding of deeper moral currents.. which he freely admits to having little interest in, in the first place. Having none of these, he drifted, blown by the surface breezes of an amorphous, sentiment saturated sophistry without structure or integrity. What we are left with here is a gloating pride in his ability to discern the direction of the trade winds of the time and turn that into political success, free of the anchor of principle. The poblem we have now is the stays of our economy and society have been knocked out from under us. And there is no political impulse at the present time to reverse the disintegration of our country. Does a country get the leadership it deserves. If so this era is a sad reflection of our current state in comparison to promise framed by the founders and builders of our nation. This folksy populist has proved himself little more than a petty Free Market and New Age ideologue, without the imagination or wherewithal of character to discern the deep harm and pain his policies have inflicted on the country. He is a legend in, and only in, his own mind.
1 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
9/11,
By Erika Miller (Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Years as Prime Minister (Ron Graham Books) (Hardcover)
I read this book primarily to find out whether Jean Chretien knew that 9/11 was an inside job and if he knew why Canada went along placidly in support of the war on terrorism . Although he does not answer the questions directly, he deals with them. He writes Putin told him that he believed the US military and the corporations involved in profiting from war were behind 9/11. They needed a new playground for testing their new war toys. In a totally different context in the book Jean Chretien writes that Canada could be invaded by the US at any time. Putting the two statements together I had my answers. He knew but he had no choice.
Well written book, easy to read and packed with insightful information. |
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My Years as Prime Minister (Ron Graham Books) by Jean Chrétien (Hardcover - October 16, 2007)
$32.95 $25.04
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