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The Spider
My transformation into a spider was rather sudden. There I was one day, walking along on
two legs and (mostly) minding my own business, and - all of a sudden - whammo! CCRAP leader
Stockwell Day transformed me into an arachnid.
I am not making this up. It is there for all the world to observe. Check out CCRAP’s nifty
web site, at www.canadianalliance.ca, and you will easily locate an entire section devoted
to Yours Truly, Spiderman. The Leader of Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition had decreed that
his taxpayer-subsidized underlings should render me spider-like, and they did. “Spinning
Warren’s Web,” the proto-Reformers call it. There is even a little graphic of my smiling
head, superimposed upon a six-legged spider, scooting across a web. (Yes, six legs.)
Under the graphic, there can be found assorted trenchant essays, penned by a young man I
once declined to hire for a political job. A co-contributor to these memorable
missives - rife with errors of fact and grammar - is another young fellow, who once
got angry at me on the phone for having the effrontery to object to Holocaust
denial.
While all of this spider stuff delighted my four-year-old, who rather liked the idea that
Daddy’s head can now be found on an insect’s body, I must confess that I was puzzled.
Had Mr. Day’s much-touted “freedom train” perhaps gone off the rails? Had he lost
his proverbial caboose? Was his beloved “agenda of respect” now something else
entirely?
First. a little background. I am, I confess, a Liberal. Before Stockwell Day turned me
into a spider, I had worked for Jean Chretien, and also here and there in government.
On one occasion, simultaneously revealing my penchant for self-delusion and metaphysical
suicide, I ran for a seat in Parliament, and was soundly drubbed by an opponent the
Canadian Press referred to as “elfin.” This result delighted my wife, but earned me no
seat in the Senate, the World Bank, or even a temporary posting to the Canada-Norway
Sealing Commission.
I did, however, attract the attention of the ink-stained wretches and wretchesses who put
together the newspaper you now hold in ink-stained hands. They are kindly to me, and
sometimes invite me to some of their parties, as one would a doddering uncle for whom one
feels sorry. They also occasionally publish my vigorous defences of Everything Liberal,
which is rather nice of them, although I confess I do not understand how a journal that
houses David Warren and John Robson and Just About Every Other Neo-Con can also
publish me.
Because my pro-Liberal musings are published in the Citizen, other media folks sometimes
call me up to heap opprobrium on poor Mr. Day. So I point out that Mr. Day is “Archie
Bunker on rollerblades.” Or I remind their listeners that Alberta Report’s Lorne
Gunter published the following on February 3, 1992: “Red Deer MLA Stockwell Day, a
former pastor, for example, has argued that homosexuality is a mental disorder that can
be cured through counselling.” That sort of thing.
Some media folks are irritated with me that I return reporters’ phone calls, or that I poke
fun at Mr. Day. One mustachioed columnist at the Sun tabloids - who has recently decided
to become a candidate for the Canadian Alliance, after shamelessly promoting them for
months - has said I am a “mudslinger,” or something like that. Another fellow, at the
Globe - perhaps upset that I write for a better newspaper - sniffed that I was a
“self-appointed Liberal tough guy.” (“Hello, self? Today, I appoint me Liberal
Tough Guy.”)
The one who I appear to irritate the most, however, seems to be Mr. Day. That, I fear,
is the reason that he is spending your tax dollars to obtain transcripts of every
word that I utter, or write. It is also why, I surmise, he calls me a “loser,”
“character assassin,” “sleazy,” “scaremonger,” “chief drive-by smear artist” and
(my personal favourite) “creepy.” For a few days, he also declared that I was
“obsessed” with homosexual sex, and I had lawyers lined up across to the country
offering to represent me for free in a big, fat defamation action. Those words quickly
slipped into Internet ether, however, when Mr. Day’s acolytes perhaps realized that he can
ill-afford yet another libel lawsuit.
Personally (as you have no doubt surmised), I am rather enjoying all of this attention. My
book about organized racism, Web of Hate, is coming out in a third edition in the Fall, so
this incessant web talk is good for sales. My daughter thinks it is swell that her father
is a spider. And, in partisan terms, I am also pleased to note that Mr. Day believes that I
am his principal opponent, and not Jean Chretien - the most popular Prime Minister
ever.
But, as a proud Grit arachnid, I remain bewildered about one thing: would you vote for a
dummy who doesn’t even know that spiders have eight legs, not six?
All contents copyright 2006 warrenkinsella.com.
No reproduction whatsoever, in any form, without permission.
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