The Dance of Mediocrity: Canada's Healthcare Promises Waltz Upon the Stage of Comfort

Lo, behold the grand spectacle of modern democracy, where the masses dance to the tired tune of promised comforts! In the frozen reaches of the North, where the spirit of man has grown soft with the warmth of social guarantees, a peculiar drama unfolds.

.

Minister Holland, that shepherd of the slumbering flock, stands before his mirror of promises, whispering sweet nothings of dental care and medicinal abundance. Yet what doth he offer but mere crumbs to satisfy the hunger of those who have forgotten how to hunt?

Behold how they scramble for guarantees of comfort! These last men who blink and say, "We have invented happiness - and healthcare." They know not that true strength lies in the struggle, not in the cushioned embrace of government promises.

In this land of the sleepers, where six million souls await their turn at the trough of dental care, none dare ask why they must depend upon the state for that which nature hath given them - their very teeth! The masses slumber peacefully, dreaming of a future where every discomfort shall be banished by decree.

The political theater grows ever more absurd as the NDP, those self-proclaimed champions of the common man, dance their careful minuet with the Liberals. Julian, their voice in this comedy, demands immediate action, yet fails to see how his very demands perpetuate the weakness of those he claims to serve.

Dr. Brandon Doucet wears scrubs and sits infront of a tooth x-ray at a dental office in Amherst, Nova Scotia.
See how they fear the loss of what they have not yet received! These are the same who would rather extract their own teeth with pliers than rise above their condition. They mistake comfort for progress, security for strength.

Dr. Doucet, that well-meaning healer, speaks of cruelty in the absence of care, yet what greater cruelty exists than to render a people so dependent upon the state that they forget the very meaning of self-reliance? His tales of self-extraction speak more to the death of human resilience than to the necessity of government intervention.

The provinces stand as sleeping giants, each awaiting their share of federal largesse, their sovereignty traded for the promise of pills and powders. British Columbia alone has stirred from its slumber, yet even its awakening is but a moment of somnambulism, a walking dream of dependency.

What jest is this, that a nation should measure its greatness not by the strength of its people but by the breadth of its programs? The true measure of a people lies not in what is given to them, but in what they dare to seize for themselves!

As the election looms like a storm upon the horizon, the masses clutch their promises close, fearing the Conservative spectre that might snatch away their comfort. Yet none dare ask: What strength can be found in a people who tremble at the thought of standing upon their own feet?

The program architects speak of permanence, comparing their creation to the great mechanisms of state that came before. Dr. QuiƱonez pontificates from his academic tower about the difficulty of taking away that which has been given, yet fails to see how each gift weakens the recipient.

Let them all hear this truth: A society that measures its progress by the expansion of its safety nets has already begun its descent. The true mark of greatness lies not in how many teeth we save, but in how many souls we awaken!

And so the dance continues, in this land of the sleepers, where nine million souls await their turn to be cradled in the arms of state care. The last men blink their tired eyes and speak of progress, while the spirit of greatness weeps at the sight of such celebrated mediocrity.

Verily, I say unto you: When the history of this age is written, let it be known that we did not fail for lack of care, but for an abundance of comfort that smothered the very will to power that might have made us truly great.