It's an uneasy struggle... Federal politics is mostly governed by economic forces related to a global economy. They can't deny that or escape from it. Provincial politics is more related to what the urban centers want and how they vote... with little concern or thought for "little people". Municipal politics is petty, pure and simple.
We live on a small piece of land with a single dwelling and a shed out back. It's owned 2/3rd's by my wife and I and 1/3rd by a bank. We are in our seventies, so there's little likely hood of 100% ownership. But it's "our home", at least for now. But, in the end that all depends upon God's will and the world's economy.
We need governments, and we need people in government with integrity and compassion, not those who "look out for" themselves first and then their "friends". Otherwise we have war between landowners and others. Everyone becomes their own "government" unless we have Federal, Provincial and Municipal governments to control and regulate certain essential matters for the common good. We also must have laws and officers of the law. We all know these things, and as Canadians with more affluence and freedom than 2/3rds of the rest of humankind, we still complain. If we didn't have governments and laws and those to enforce them, it would be constant war and everyone out for themselves first and last. We know that too, but we still complain.
I know a bit whereof I speak: A close friend is a retired Conservation Officer, but during the time he was an officer of the law he was also the owner of 100 acres (an old farm with a woodlot) just outside of town. A few years ago he was "caught" in defending the law (conservation law) along with some provincial police officers, standing between land owners (farmers) and other citizens who were trying to stop farmers from destroying a certain thorn bush on their properties that the Northern Shrike ("threatened species") used to impale it's food (bugs) on for "survival". It was a very SERIOUS situation, but thankfully no blood was spilled!
My wife, being a bird lover, and having raised hundreds of exotic canaries, got me into watching birds with her, and the best place to go was to the Conservancy where all this "hot" action was taking place between land owners and the Provincial Government. After matters had "cooled", I asked my friend how he felt having to uphold the law (even if it was stupid) as an officer and his feelings as a landowner. His answer was that his feelings were very mixed: On the one hand he was obligated to uphold the law and on the other he felt that landowners should have the right to use their land according to their own judgment as long as their "judgment" did not mean the unnecessary destruction of resources essential for the survival of wildlife and their habitat.
He was in a difficult position, as is any officer of the law at times, as well as land owners, conservationists and all citizens of a democratic society... which is far far better than a military dictatorship!
We need to be thankful that we live in Canada with it's, at times, uneasy politics rather than facing starvation in a refugee camp!
And I'm a hunter who hunts on one of those landowner's properties -- with his gracious permission.
Bob
www.bigbores.ca