Friday, May 23, 2025

It’s Time to Let Go: Why Canadians Would Be Better Off Privatizing Canada Post

Why Canada Should Privatize Canada Post: A Case for Urgent Reform

Once a cornerstone of national communication, Canada Post is now a financial black hole. The Crown corporation has lost over $3 billion since 2017, including $748 million in 2023 alone. Its model, designed for a world of handwritten letters and in-person bill payments, is no longer viable in the digital age. Canadians need to ask themselves an urgent, practical question: Should taxpayers continue bankrolling a failing 20th-century operation in the 21st century? 

The answer is no. Canada would be better off selling or privatizing Canada Post.

1. A Business Built for a Bygone Era

Canada Post was designed to deliver 5.5 billion letters annually. Today, it delivers fewer than 2.2 billion, and that number is still declining. This collapse of letter mail is not a temporary trend — it’s structural. Digitally native generations have moved on, and this legacy infrastructure no longer serves its original purpose.

Yet, taxpayers are still subsidizing a model built for a time when email didn’t exist.

2. Losses Piling Up — With No End in Sight

According to its audited reports:

  • 2023: $748 million lost

  • 2022: $548 million lost

  • No profit since 2017

This pattern is not cyclical. It’s systemic. The organization is underpricing its services and offering them at unsustainable levels. As Lee bluntly states, “Canada Post is underpricing every service it offers because it’s losing billions.”

3. Labour Costs and Strike Culture

With over 55,000 unionized employees, Canada Post faces perpetual labour unrest. The Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) has threatened another strike, upset over weekend delivery changes, pay, benefits, and pensions. The last strike lasted 32 days and caused widespread disruption, especially for small businesses.

Instead of modernizing, CUPW is doubling down on a broken model. Strikes won’t solve a business crisis-reform will.

4. Inefficiency by Design

Canada Post’s current delivery model is not just outdated — it’s inefficient. Letter carriers go to 17 million addresses five days a week, whether there’s mail or not. In contrast, parcel delivery companies operate on a demand-driven model — they only deliver when there’s something to deliver.

No private sector company could survive this level of redundancy, and taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to foot the bill.

5. Pivot to Parcels: Too Little, Too Late?

While parcel delivery is growing, Canada Post isn’t competitive in that space either. Private-sector players like FedEx, UPS, and Amazon Logistics dominate in speed, tracking technology, and customer service. The public postal service remains sluggish and technologically dated.

Lee notes that private parcel companies operate efficiently with 5,000 to 10,000 employees — a fraction of Canada Post’s workforce.

6. Let the Market Lead

Privatization is not a radical idea. It’s a logical step. By removing political interference and entrenched union controls, a privatized Canada Post could:

  • Operate with market-driven accountability

  • Invest in innovation and logistics

  • Adjust prices to reflect true delivery costs

  • Expand parcel competitiveness

  • Franchise or partner with retail outlets for post office access

7. The European Model: Proof Privatization Works

Canada would not be alone in reforming its postal system. In fact, it’s behind the curve.

Since 2013, the European Union has mandated the elimination of postal monopolies across all member states, opening the door for full competition. While the EU did not require privatization, several countries took the next logical step — and have reaped the benefits.

  • Germany privatized Deutsche Post beginning in the late 1990s. It is now a global logistics leader under the DHL brand — efficient, profitable, and internationally competitive.

  • Austria and the Netherlands followed suit, transitioning to privatized models that preserved universal service while drastically improving innovation and cost-efficiency.

  • These countries maintained postal access in rural areas by leveraging franchise models and flexible service options, rather than relying on outdated, taxpayer-funded infrastructure.

The result? Better service, leaner costs, no ongoing public bailouts, and postal companies that are now global competitors, not public liabilities.

If the EU’s most bureaucratically cautious governments can modernize their systems, why can’t Canada?

Conclusion: A Future Beyond the Mailbox

Canada Post was once an essential public utility. But times have changed. The service has not kept pace with digital disruption, labour realities, or technological innovation. Instead of clinging to nostalgia, Canada should follow the example of countries that have successfully modernized through privatization and liberalization.

The cost of inaction is clear: more losses, more bailouts, more disruption.

It’s time to deliver real reform — and finally put the red-and-white mailbox back in the hands of the people it was meant to serve.


Monday, May 19, 2025

Backdoor Authoritarianism: How Democratic Systems Are Eroding Themselves from Within


 The Quiet Shift in Democratic Governance

In an age where democracy is heralded as the gold standard of governance, many Western nations find themselves sliding—almost imperceptibly—into forms of authoritarian control. Not through coups or revolutions, but through the very democratic structures designed to protect liberty.

Governments are increasingly using emergency powers, misinformation laws, judicial decrees, and administrative expansions to centralize control. The paradox? These steps are often taken in the name of protecting democracy itself.

But what if the threat to democracy isn’t coming from outside forces—or even from political extremists—but from the system itself? What if democratic institutions are unintentionally becoming vehicles of authoritarian drift?

This article explores the subtle, systemic ways in which Western democracies are adopting undemocratic practices through the back door—and what must be done to preserve the foundational principles of freedom, accountability, and individualism.

Defining Backdoor Authoritarianism

Unlike classical authoritarianism—marked by military takeovers or dictatorial regimes—backdoor authoritarianism is subtle, legalistic, and procedural. It hides behind the façade of normalcy. It doesn’t crush opposition overtly; it constrains dissent gradually.

It operates when:

  • Emergency powers are renewed indefinitely.

  • Executive actions replace legislative consensus.

  • Public health or security narratives are used to silence criticism.

  • Information control is justified as a “defence of truth.”

  • Judicial independence erodes under political pressure.

  • Opposition parties are delegitimized or criminalized.

So far, the system has not brokenit bends, and has quietly reshaped civil liberties, public discourse, and institutional checks into tools for control. And all too often, the public cheers it on, believing they are being protected.

Mechanisms of Erosion: Emergency Powers, Legal Overreach & Surveillance

What begins as a temporary measure during crises has become a structural tool of control.

🔹 Emergency Powers That Don’t Expire

Canada’s 2022 invocation of the Emergencies Act allowed unprecedented financial targeting of protestors. It marked a watershed moment where peaceful dissent was equated with a national threat.

In France and other EU states, terrorism-related emergency laws were later codified into permanent law, bypassing the normal democratic process.

🔹 Executive Rule and Decree-Law Expansion

Across democracies, the rise of governing by executive order is accelerating. In the U.S., Australia, and Italy, governments increasingly rule by fiat—legally within constitutional limits, but politically toxic to pluralistic debate.

Mass Surveillance Normalized

Under pandemic control or cybersecurity, governments expanded data collection, facial recognition, and location tracking. What once required a warrant can now happen by algorithm.

The long-term effect is clear: citizens become objects of suspicion, and the space for private, individual autonomy shrinks.

Political Parties: Gatekeepers of Power, Not Guardians of Democracy

Today’s dominant parties often function less as representatives of public will and more as instruments of centralized control.

🔹 Closed and Controlled Candidate Selection

In Canada and the UK, party leaders can veto candidates, silencing those outside the ideological mainstream.

In the U.S., ballot access and campaign finance structures exclude insurgent or independent voices unless they align with dominant corporate or political interests.

🔹 Punishing Independent Thought

Party discipline has turned into party censorship. MPs, Congress members, or Senators who challenge party policy risk removal, media blackouts, or funding cuts. The result: political parties become brands, not debates.

This fuels polarization, not because of too much division, but because of too little independent thinking.

The Party Trap – Manufactured Consent through Political Cartels

In theory, political parties exist to organize voter choice and represent citizens' interests. In practice, however, they have evolved into cartels of powerentities that serve themselves more than the public. This is particularly evident in Western democracies like Canada, where political parties claim to represent the will of the people, yet less than 1% of eligible voters are actually members of any of the major parties.

Take Ontario as a stark example:

  • Liberal Party: fewer than 20,000 members

  • NDP: estimated at fewer than 15,000

  • Progressive Conservatives: roughly 30,000

With over 11 plus million eligible voters in Ontario alone, these numbers reveal a jarring truth: the political parties that form governments and pass legislation do so with a mandate from a fraction of a fraction of the population. And yet, these parties assert their right to decide what is best for the entire electorate, setting policy not through grassroots democratic participation, but via internal party leadership contests and elite-dominated backroom deals.

This elite ownership of party structures is a mechanism of soft authoritarianism, whereby party operatives and lobbyists dictate policy agendas, candidate selections, and even public narratives. In turn, citizens are reduced to passive spectators, offered the illusion of choice between competing factions of a ruling class, each representing internal power networks rather than the people.

What’s more alarming is that political parties often operate outside the scope of democratic transparency:

  • No public access to party membership lists, which are used to solicit funds and secure nominations.

  • No legal requirement for internal democratic practices at the federal level.

  • No inclusion under provincial or federal privacy legislation, except in British Columbia.

These realities expose a deeper structural flaw: modern political parties are not instruments of democracy, but gatekeepers of concentrated power. They create a closed loop, where decisions are made by the few, for the benefit of the few, while the rest are called upon only to legitimize the process through ritualized voting.

The result is a legitimacy crisis cloaked in constitutional decorum. While elections continue, true democratic participation is throttled. Voter apathy is often blamed on ignorance or laziness, but perhaps it reflects something more profound: an intuitive awareness that the system is rigged, not in some conspiratorial sense, but through institutional design.

Thus, the modern party system, far from being the lifeblood of democracy, is increasingly the vehicle of its erosion. When only 1% of voters actively shape party platforms and leadership, it is not democracy we are practicing, but a managed consent to backdoor authoritarianism.

Media, Misinformation Laws, and Controlled Narratives

A democratic society demands a press free from both state and corporate manipulation. Yet today, governments fund, regulate, and algorithmically manage what the public can see and say.

🔹 State-Dependent Journalism

Legacy media increasingly depend on government grants, subsidies, or platform legislation. This distorts editorial independence and limits the critique of governing parties.

🔹 Censorship as Virtue

Disinformation laws” now allow governments and tech companies to remove content deemed harmful, even when it’s factual but politically inconvenient.

The EU’s Digital Services Act enables sweeping platform control.

In the U.S., whistleblowers exposed coordination between federal agencies and platforms like Twitter and Facebook to suppress dissenting views.

Canada’s Bill C-18 and proposed online harms legislation allow regulatory capture of digital media under the banner of "public safety."

Such mechanisms rarely silence lies—they silence inconvenience.

Judicial Capture and Administrative State Expansion

The rise of the administrative state—a web of unelected regulators and boards—has diluted the authority of legislatures and courts.

In the U.S., the Fourth Branch of unelected bureaucracies now writes more rules than Congress.

Courts, increasingly politicized, face pressure to align with national narratives or lose relevance.

Citizens find themselves judged not by peers or laws, but by regulatory interpretations and algorithmic risk scores.

This is governance without representation, and power without accountability.

Case Studies: Canada, U.S., EU, and Australia

Canada

  • Emergency powers in 2022 were used to freeze assets.

  • Bills C-11, C-18, and the proposed online harms legislation centralize content regulation.

  • Parliamentary accountability is weakened by party line control.

United States

  • Politicized intelligence and justice agencies.

  • Big Tech and government coordination to suppress pandemic and election speech.

  • Presidential rule through executive orders bypasses gridlocked Congress.

European Union

  • Digital Services Act opens the door for Europe-wide content surveillance.

  • COVID-era mandates exposed fault lines in personal freedom and compliance enforcement.

Australia

  • Harsh pandemic lockdowns were enforced with military and drones.

  • Media regulation increasingly favours state-sponsored narratives.

Each of these examples reveals a global trend: freedom is not being taken, it’s being traded for comfort, compliance, and illusion.

The Role of Collectivism and the Crisis of Individualism

Behind these structural shifts lies a deeper philosophical erosion: the decline of individualism and the rise of collectivist dependence.

Collectivist ideologies, often cloaked in progressive or safety-first language, prioritize uniformity over personal judgment.

Individual rights are increasingly seen as selfish or dangerous if they contradict state priorities.

Citizens are taught to defer, not to decide. Obey, not question.

The erosion of internal sovereigntythe sense of moral agency and judgment within the individual—is the true casualty of backdoor authoritarianism. Without a rebirth of individual conscience and responsibility, democratic systems will collapse into managed technocracies—efficient, clean, and lifeless.

Why Citizens Are Losing Trust in Democracy

Surveys show collapsing faith in legislatures, media, and political parties across the West. But it’s not democracy people reject—it’s the managed illusion of it.

They sense the game is rigged:

  • A narrowing range of “acceptable” thoughts.

  • Little accountability for elites.

  • Citizens are punished for asking uncomfortable questions.

In this environment, disengagement becomes rebellion. Or worse, compliance becomes survival.

What we face is not democratic failure but democratic hollowinga loss of authenticity in systems that still use democratic language while eroding democratic spirit.

Restoring Democratic Integrity: A Framework of Individualist Renewal

We must rebuild not through revolution, but through renewal, grounded in individualism, the rule of law, and civic responsibility.

🔹 Limit Emergency Powers

Strict sunset clauses, parliamentary approval, and independent oversight must be required.

🔹 Decentralized Power

Break up monopolies of bureaucracy, party control, and state-funded media.

🔹 Revive Individual Autonomy

Civic education rooted in ethics, liberty, and personal responsibility must be revived.

🔹 Unchain the Press

End government media subsidies. Let free markets and ethics determine news, not regulation.

🔹 Reclaim Democratic Representation

Reform parties and ballot access rules to empower independent voices, not just incumbents.

Democracy must once again be about governance with the governed, not merely governance over them.

Conclusion: It's Not Just Who Governs—It's How

Backdoor authoritarianism does not march in with boots. It creeps in behind credentials, algorithms, legal codes, and soothing speeches. It’s not a man in uniform, but a committee with funding and a memo marked For Your Safety.”

The remedy is not despair, but vigilance.

It is time to rediscover democracy not as a system, but as a personal duty. To think, to speak, and to act with courage—not because the system guarantees freedom, but because we do.

Western democracies were built on the courage of individual responsibility. They can only survive by that same courage now.

Hope and thoughtfulness are essential virtues—but they are not sufficient to preserve freedom. They must be paired with vigilance, principled action, and individual responsibility

Epilogue: Hope Alone Is Not a Shield

Staying hopeful, thoughtful, unfortunately, shall not keep us free.

Freedom is not a feeling. It is a practice—a habit of resistance against encroachment, even when that encroachment wears a friendly face.

To remain free, a citizen must be more than well-meaning. They must be watchful, skeptical, and prepared to dissent, even when it is uncomfortable or unpopular.

Apathy is not peace. It is permission.

Let me be clear: freedom is not lost in one dramatic moment. It is bartered away, silently, by those who confuse comfort with liberty, consensus with truth, and good intentions with good governance.

Democracy demands more than participation—it demands courage.

And without courage, the structures of democracy will serve only to decorate the machinery of quiet control.