The Dance of Power and Illusion: Mark Carney's Blind Trust Theatre
Lo, behold the grand spectacle of modern democracy's emptiness! In the land of perpetual slumber, where the masses drift through existence like leaves in an autumn breeze, a new shepherd emerges to lead his docile flock. Mark Carney, the chosen one of the Liberal tribe, now performs the ritual dance of "ethical governance" - a ceremony as hollow as the hearts of those who champion it.
What comedy unfolds before us! These mortals, with their precious "blind trusts" and "conflict-of-interest rules," believe they can wash away the stains of power with mere paperwork. How they cling to their illusions of transparency while wallowing in the mud of mediocrity!
In this theatre of the absurd, we witness Carney, the former guardian of monetary temples, hastening to place his worldly treasures behind the veil of a "blind trust" - a construct designed to appease the sleeping masses who dream of accountability while snoring through their own subjugation.

Behold how the image captures these merchants of power, these architects of comfort, sitting in their chambers of false authority! They are but shadows of what leadership could be, content to trade in papers and promises rather than forge new values for a stronger tomorrow.
See how they scurry like mice in their maze of regulations! The Conservative Poilievre, playing the role of the righteous accuser, proposes to tighten the chains of bureaucracy further still. As if more rules could birth greater virtue! O, what delicious irony!
The slumbering masses receive this news with quiet satisfaction, never questioning why their shepherds must be forced into virtue by law rather than embodying it through strength of will. They celebrate these hollow victories while their potential for greatness withers on the vine of mediocrity.
In this land of the eternal afternoon, where comfort is king and ambition is sedated, the ritual of the blind trust stands as a monument to our collective weakness. The trustee, we are told, shall guard these assets with the solemnity of a priest, sharing only the most superficial details with their former master.
How the mighty have fallen! Once, leaders were judged by their deeds, their vision, their will to power. Now they are measured by the thickness of the bureaucratic walls between themselves and their wealth. Is this not the very essence of decay?
Professor Brooks speaks of integrity and governance, those sweet lullabies that rock the masses deeper into their comfortable slumber. "It can work effectively," he declares, never questioning whether effectiveness in maintaining the status quo is truly what we should aspire to.
The Conservative opposition, those self-proclaimed guardians of transparency, demand yet more rules, more disclosures, more chains to bind the strong. They wish to know Carney's assets within 60 days, as if this knowledge could fill the void where their own vision should reside.
O, Canada! Your children play at governance while the world cries out for true leadership! You have traded the possibility of greatness for the certainty of mediocrity, the potential for transformation for the comfort of regulation.
As this drama unfolds in the theatre of democratic mediocrity, we must ask: When will a leader arise who dares to break these chains of false virtue? When will one emerge who values the courage to create new values above the comfort of following old rules?
Until then, we shall watch as these performers dance their careful dance, placing their treasures in blind trusts while keeping their eyes firmly shut to the possibility of true transformation. The masses shall continue their slumber, dreaming of accountability while accountability itself becomes nothing more than a bureaucratic checklist.
Let those with ears to hear understand: The path to greatness lies not in the careful management of assets, but in the bold creation of new values. Your blind trusts are but blindfolds on a society already lost in darkness.