Canada’s ruling class has become very good at sounding compassionate while making the country less livable.

That is not the same as saying compassion is the problem. It is not. A decent country should care about fairness, dignity, historical wrongs, clean air, decent schools, housing, wages, and whether ordinary people can build a stable life. The problem begins when the language of care becomes a substitute for competence.

The road does not get built, the house does not get approved and mysteriously the paycheque does not stretch.

But the statement was inclusive, the framework was equitable, and the branding was excellent.

This is the Canadian disease in its current form. We have become fluent in the language of public virtue while becoming strangely incompetent at the material tasks that make public virtue affordable. Productivity is weak. Housing is absurdly expensive. Infrastructure is strained. Governments borrow more to deliver less. Businesses hesitate to invest. Young people look at the cost of living and quietly revise their expectations downward.

None of this is caused by slogans alone. Canada’s problems are real and structural: regulatory drag, housing bottlenecks, capital trapped in real estate, public-sector risk aversion, interprovincial barriers, immigration levels that outran housing and infrastructure capacity, and a political class allergic to trade-offs. A land acknowledgement did not create all that. A diversity statement did not single-handedly break productivity.

But symbolic politics gave our institutions a prettier way to avoid the problem.

Once a government, university, corporation, or bureaucracy learns to measure moral posture more eagerly than delivery, failure becomes easier to disguise. The meeting had the right language. The report had the right vocabulary. The procurement process had the right values. The strategy document had the right tone. Meanwhile, the project slipped, the costs climbed, the housing never arrived, and the public was asked to admire the intentions.

Serious societies argue about trade-offs. They ask what a policy costs, who pays, what it produces, and whether the promised benefits are worth the burden. Unserious societies turn every hard question into a morality play. If you ask whether immigration levels are matched to housing, schools, health care, and infrastructure, you are accused of cruelty. If you ask whether a project approval process has become impossible to navigate, you are accused of hating the environment. If you ask whether equity metrics are displacing competence, you are told the question itself is suspicious.

That trick works for a while. It flatters the people using it. It turns arithmetic into moral failure and makes practical objections look ugly. But reality is not impressed by compassionate branding.

A country cannot announce its way out of weak productivity. It cannot consult its way into affordable housing. It cannot regulate its way into abundance while making useful work slow, expensive, and politically hazardous. It cannot keep treating prosperity as an inheritance while sneering at the habits that created it.

Canada does not need to abandon moral language. It needs to demote moral theatre. Justice matters, but so does delivery. Compassion matters, but so does arithmetic. Environmental stewardship matters, but so does affordable energy. Inclusion matters, but so does the basic ability to build homes, roads, businesses, and lives.

The country does not need another sermon about who we are, but rather Canadians need evidence that we can still do useful things.

Prosperity is built, measured, maintained, and defended. A country that forgets this can still sound compassionate while becoming poorer, slower, more indebted, and harder to live in.

There are few modern spectacles more interesting than Richard Dawkins speaking warmly about Christianity.

Not converting. Not recanting The God Delusion. Not wandering into Evensong with a softened heart and a sudden interest in incense. But speaking warmly, nevertheless.

Dawkins has called himself a “cultural Christian.” He remains an atheist, which is what makes the admission interesting. He is not saying Christianity is true. He is noticing that Christianity helped form a civilization in which he could become Richard Dawkins: skeptical, eloquent, publicly irreverent, protected enough to criticize sacred things, and still culturally at home among the ruins and residues of the faith he rejects.

For a long time, many secular Westerners treated Christianity as something they had outgrown. It was old, morally complicated, often hypocritical, and associated with repression, scolding, and bad Sunday mornings. Keep the music, perhaps. Keep the architecture. Keep Christmas, provided no one gets doctrinal about it. The rest could be packed away.

There were reasons for that impatience. Churches persecuted, censored, lied, protected abusers, cozied up to power, and sometimes confused institutional self-interest with the will of God. No honest appreciation of Christian civilization can skip that part. But there is a difference between remembering the failures of an inheritance and forgetting that we inherited anything worth having.

The West was not built from one source. It is a quarrelsome inheritance: Greek reason, Roman law, Jewish moral seriousness, Christian theology, Germanic custom, common law, Reformation fracture, Enlightenment skepticism, scientific inquiry, and the long institutional habit of limiting power. Christianity did not invent every virtue from nothing, but it became one of the great furnaces in which those virtues were universalized, moralized, preached, contradicted, betrayed, and recovered.

Modern liberalism did not merely inherit Christian assumptions and put them in nicer clothes. It built institutions Christianity often resisted: robust free speech, religious disestablishment, broader suffrage, empirical science protected from clerical authority, and legal equality that went well beyond what most Christian societies were willing to grant. Some of the freedoms Dawkins enjoys were made possible by Christian moral inheritance. Others required sharp breaks from dominant Christian practice.

That tension is the point. The West is the product of argument, correction, rebellion, restraint, and institutional memory.

This is what modern secular people often miss. We imagine ourselves as freestanding moral adults. We believe in human dignity, equality before the law, freedom of conscience, care for the vulnerable, suspicion of tyranny, and the right to criticize authority. Fine. Keep all of that. But those commitments have a history. They were not produced by vibes, nor assembled last Tuesday by a committee with a land acknowledgement and a catering budget.

They came through centuries of conflict, doctrine, reform, law, blood, repentance, philosophy, institutional restraint, and exhaustion after too many people had killed each other over ultimate things.

To appreciate that inheritance is not to baptize every part of it. Christendom was not gentle. Christianity often had to be forced into better conduct by dissidents, reformers, scientists, heretics, abolitionists, and Christians reading their own scriptures more honestly than their institutions did. The West’s moral inheritance was not a clean gift. It was an argument, often conducted under pressure.

“The West is the product of argument, correction, rebellion, restraint, and institutional memory.”

But the argument happened inside a civilization shaped deeply by Christianity.

The freedom to doubt, mock religion, publish irreverent books, leave a faith, criticize clerics, and live without being ruled by priests was not inevitable. Nor was the expectation that women may walk unveiled, educated, employed, politically equal, and legally protected. These are achievements produced by particular histories, institutions, and moral restraints.

That is where Dawkins’ comparison with Islam enters the discussion, though it needs care.

The issue is not Muslim neighbours. Millions of Muslims live peacefully, work hard, raise families, keep faith privately, and want the ordinary goods everyone else wants: safety, dignity, friendship, decent schools, and a stable life. A serious argument begins by refusing collective suspicion.

The harder question is what happens when Islamic doctrine becomes politically confident and expects the wider society to accommodate its rules around blasphemy, apostasy, religious offence, sex roles, homosexuality, and public criticism. Outcomes differ by interpretation, education, migration patterns, and host-society confidence, but liberal societies still cannot survive by pretending every moral and legal order is equally compatible with liberal freedom.

Dawkins seems to understand that cultural Christianity has learned to live with disbelief in a way many religious systems have not. The Anglican church may annoy you. It may bore you. It may produce beige sermons, awkward committees, and hymns sung by twelve people spread across a nave built for three hundred. But it is unlikely to demand the state punish you for mocking it, which is not a small thing.

 

“But criticism without gratitude curdles into contempt, and contempt is a poor steward of anything worth preserving.”

 

The Sunday lesson, then, is not “become Christian or die,” nor “atheists secretly know God is real,” nor “all Muslims are enemies.” It is more modest and more useful: know where you are standing.

If you live in the West, you live inside an inheritance. You may criticize it. You should criticize it. The tradition itself contains the tools for doing so. But criticism without gratitude curdles into contempt, and contempt is a poor steward of anything worth preserving.

Secular liberalism has been living partly off inherited moral capital for a long time, even while adding real achievements of its own. Compassion, rights, conscience, equality, dissent, human dignity, forgiveness, reform, and care for the weak remained available, but the story of how they arrived became unfashionable.

A culture can run on inherited habits for a while. Maybe longer than its critics expect. But inheritance is not self-renewing, and gratitude alone is not repayment. If people are taught only to sneer at what formed them, they will not know what to keep, what to reform, what to defend, or what to pass on. If they merely admire the ruins, they become tourists in their own civilization.

Dawkins has not found God. He has noticed a debt.

The harder question is whether a civilization can repay that debt without pretending to believe what many of its citizens no longer believe.

“Human beings are very good at noticing the stupidity of outsiders and very bad at noticing when our own side has started laundering emotion through principle.”

It is easy to pick apart other people’s bad arguments. Too easy, sometimes. When the subject is gender ideology, the temptation is worse because so much of the public argument really does arrive as slogans, emotional coercion, category confusion, and moral theatre wearing institutional shoes.

But ease is a warning sign.

If an opponent’s weakest argument is the only one I can bear to examine, then I am not truth-seeking. I am harvesting reassurance. That may feel satisfying in the moment, especially when the home team applauds, but it is not the same thing as thinking.

The discipline I keep returning to is simple and unpleasant: prosecute your own argument in the harshest light you can tolerate. Ask what would weaken it. Ask which evidence you are avoiding. Ask whether your conclusion has become part of your identity, because once that happens, correction starts to feel like humiliation.

That is not easy. It cuts against our tribal wiring. Human beings are very good at noticing the stupidity of outsiders and very bad at noticing when our own side has started laundering emotion through principle. The people who agree with us can become dangerous in exactly this way. They reward the sharp line, the fast dunk, the satisfying contempt. They rarely reward the moment when you say, “This part of my own argument may need work.”

I have had to revise some of my own instincts here. It is too easy to treat the whole phenomenon as ideology, cowardice, and social contagion. Those are real forces, but they do not explain every person caught inside the debate. Some people experience severe and persistent distress around sexed embodiment, and social recognition may reduce suffering in ways that are not trivial. That does not settle women’s spaces, children’s medicine, sports, prisons, or compelled speech. It does mean I have to resist the temptation to collapse every person into the worst activist slogan spoken on their behalf.

The trans debate remains a useful stress test because the public claims are so unstable. If strong evidence showed that cross-sex identification reflected a stable, measurable condition that reliably benefited from social or medical transition under careful safeguards, I would have to revise parts of my view. At present, I do not think that case has been made strongly enough, especially where children, safeguarding, and sex-based boundaries are concerned. Much of what is offered instead is moral pressure: affirmation presented as care, skepticism presented as harm, boundaries presented as hatred.

Still, that cannot become an excuse to write off every person on the other side. The strongest version of their argument is not that slogans are true because activists shout them. It is that some people experience suffering serious enough to deserve humane attention, even if the metaphysics built around that suffering are confused or overstated.

This is where charity matters. Not sentimental charity. Not the kind that asks you to pretend bad arguments are good. Real charity means refusing to make your opponent smaller than they are so you can defeat them more easily.

I do not want to become the mirror image of what I criticize: someone who begins with moral certainty, chooses the facts that flatter it, and treats disagreement as evidence of corruption. If reality matters, then it has to matter when it inconveniences me too.

That is the standard. Not perfection, because nobody gets that. But a willingness to remain revisable. To notice when contempt is doing the work of argument. To ask whether a cherished belief has survived scrutiny or merely avoided it.

A truth-first posture is only worth having if it still applies when the correction costs you something.

This week’s choral interlude stays close to the world of Evensong: quiet, formal, and inward, but with an intensity that gathers slowly until the room seems to tighten around the music. If Rheinberger’s Abendlied is the golden evening window of the choral tradition, Purcell’s Hear My Prayer, O Lord is the same room after the light has almost gone. It has that Evensong-adjacent stillness, but with more pressure in the harmony and less comfort in the air.

Henry Purcell’s Hear My Prayer, O Lord is a short sacred anthem, probably composed around 1682, near the beginning of his time as organist at Westminster Abbey. It sets a single line from Psalm 102 in the language of the Book of Common Prayer: “Hear my prayer, O Lord, and let my crying come unto thee.” The surviving piece is only 34 measures long and is written for eight vocal parts, but it feels much larger than its size. It may even have been intended as the beginning of a longer work, which would explain why it has the strange force of something both complete and unfinished.

The music works by accumulation. One voice begins with the plea, almost bare. Other voices enter, not as decoration, but as if more people are being drawn into the same act of asking. The text does not develop narratively because there is only one sentence. Instead, the drama is harmonic. Purcell stretches the word “crying” through suspensions and dissonances, delaying resolution until the prayer itself feels physically burdened.

That is why the rolling score is worth watching. In a piece like this, the emotion is not carried by big gestures or theatrical effects. It is in the entries, the held notes, the collisions, and the slow tightening of the harmony. You can see the music gathering pressure before you fully understand why you are feeling it.

Purcell does something remarkable here: he makes restraint feel almost unbearable. The anthem does not console quickly. It asks, waits, leans harder, and only then releases. For a piece built from one line of text, Hear My Prayer, O Lord leaves an unusually large silence behind it.

  The double-slit experiment is one of those scientific ideas people love to borrow badly. It is strange, genuinely humbling, and easy to misuse. That makes it perfect material for people who want reality to be less stubborn than it is.

The basic version is simple enough. Fire particles through two slits without measuring which slit they pass through, and over time they produce an interference pattern, the kind of pattern we associate with waves. Try to measure which slit they go through, and that pattern changes. The system no longer behaves the same way.

That is the part people remember. Unfortunately, they often remember it badly.

The experiment does not show that human consciousness creates reality. It does not show that the universe waits around for a person to notice it before deciding what it is. “Observation” in this context does not mean vibes, attention, social agreement, or someone staring meaningfully at an electron. It means measurement. It means physical interaction with the system. The apparatus matters because the apparatus is part of the situation being tested.

That is weird enough. We do not need to add incense.

There are still serious debates in the foundations of quantum mechanics about how best to interpret what is happening. That is worth admitting. But those debates do not rescue the popular abuse of the experiment. Consciousness is not required, politics does not select the result, and social approval does not decide whether the interference pattern appears.

The real lesson is more disciplined and more interesting. Reality is not always available to common sense. How we investigate can affect what we are able to detect. At quantum scales, measurement is not a passive act, like glancing at a chair from across the room. It changes the conditions under which the result appears.

That should make people humble about truth-finding. It should not make them casual about reality.

This is where social constructivist thinking often slips in through the side door. It does not usually announce itself by saying, “Nothing is real.” That would be too crude, and too easy to reject. Instead, it emphasizes language, framing, power, interpretation, categories, and social meaning until the reader quietly stops treating reality as a constraint and starts treating it as a negotiation.

Reality is real, but not always simple. Because it is not simple, we need better methods, not ideological shortcuts.

Some things really are socially constructed. Money depends on shared agreement. Borders depend on law, force, recognition, and maps. Job titles, academic credentials, citizenship categories, and institutional rituals all rely on human systems to maintain them. That is not a trivial point. Human beings create layers of social meaning that shape how we live, distribute status, enforce rules, and decide what counts inside institutions.

But the fact that some realities are socially maintained does not mean all realities are socially produced. The category “doctor” is socially regulated. The body on the operating table is not. A passport is a legal object. A kidney is not. A government can change language around inflation, housing, crime, or sex, but the material world does not become more cooperative because the terminology became more fashionable.

This is the tell to watch for. A valid insight about interpretation gets stretched until it weakens contact with reality. “Categories have social meaning” becomes “categories are merely imposed.” “Observation matters” becomes “truth depends on standpoint.” “Language shapes perception” becomes “language can rearrange the world.” Each step sounds sophisticated enough in isolation. Put them together, and ordinary reality gets escorted out of the room by people who insist they are only asking questions.

The double-slit experiment does not support that move. If anything, it rebukes it. The experiment is repeatable. The results are disciplined. The mathematics is unforgiving. You do not get a different interference pattern because your politics require one. You do not get to vote on the apparatus. The whole point of the experiment is that reality answers back, though not always in the form our intuitions expected.

That distinction matters far beyond physics. Bad theories of reality do not stay in seminar rooms. They eventually show up in schools, medicine, law, media, and public policy, often wearing the language of compassion or sophistication. If institutions lose the ability to distinguish between social meaning and material constraint, they do not become more humane. They become easier to fool.

Quantum weirdness should not become a permission slip for intellectual fog. It should remind us that careful methods are necessary precisely because reality can be subtle. The world is not always obvious, but it is also not waiting for our preferred theory to grant it permission to exist.

The better response to mystery is not social construction all the way down. It is patience, precision, and less eagerness to turn every difficulty in knowing into an excuse for pretending the thing known has disappeared.

Short Glossary

Double-slit experiment
A famous quantum physics experiment in which particles are sent toward a barrier with two slits. When not measured for their path, they produce an interference pattern associated with waves. When their path is measured, the pattern changes.

Quantum mechanics
The branch of physics that studies matter and energy at very small scales, where particles often behave in ways that do not match ordinary common sense.

Observation / measurement
In this context, “observation” does not mean a human mind looking at something. It means a physical interaction with a system, usually through a measuring device or apparatus.

Interference pattern
A wave-like pattern produced when waves overlap and combine. In the double-slit experiment, this pattern is part of what makes the result so strange.

Social constructivism
The view that many parts of human life are shaped by language, culture, institutions, and social agreement. The problem comes when this insight is stretched into the claim that material reality itself is socially negotiable.

Material reality
The parts of the world that do not depend on social agreement to exist: bodies, disease, gravity, hunger, injury, chromosomes, kidneys, scarcity, and other stubborn facts.

Social meaning
The meaning humans attach to things through culture, law, institutions, or shared agreement. Money, borders, credentials, titles, and legal categories all depend heavily on social meaning.

Category error
A mistake where something true in one kind of case is wrongly applied to a different kind of case. For example, treating biological facts as if they were the same kind of thing as job titles or legal documents.

Truth-finding
The process of testing claims against evidence, definitions, logic, and reality before turning them into moral or political conclusions.

Good intentions are not enough. That should be obvious, but much of our public life now behaves as if noble language can rescue bad thinking.

Before people declare what is compassionate, just, inclusive, hateful, dangerous, or necessary, they need some reliable way of knowing whether their factual claims are true. That order matters. If the tools used to find truth are broken, captured, or designed to protect a preferred belief from contradiction, then the moral conclusions built on top of those tools will inherit the damage.

This is not a left-wing or right-wing problem, though each side prefers noticing it in the other. The progressive version often begins with moral urgency. A policy is called compassionate, inclusive, or protective, and once that moral label is attached, factual objections start to look suspicious. Questions about consequences become “harm.” Questions about definitions become “erasure.” Questions about evidence become proof that the questioner is unsafe.

The conservative version has its own habits. A bad social trend gets folded too quickly into civilizational decline. One ugly example becomes proof of total collapse. A complicated institutional failure becomes evidence that the enemy planned the whole thing. The moral conclusion may contain some truth, but it arrives too early and then starts recruiting facts to serve it.

That is the trap. Once moral certainty arrives first, the mind stops investigating and starts defending.

You can see the pattern wherever institutions are rewarded for sounding virtuous before they are required to be accurate. A school board adopts fashionable language before asking whether the policy helps children. A medical system treats hesitation as cruelty before the long-term evidence is settled. A government describes economic pain in careful managerial terms while households are trying to make rent, groceries, debt, and wages fit inside the same month. The details differ, but the sequence is familiar: the moral frame arrives first, and the facts are invited in later as supporting cast.

A healthier public culture would ask plainer questions before the slogans begin. What is the claim? What evidence would show it is true? What evidence would weaken it? Who pays the cost if we are wrong? Are we counting those costs honestly, including the costs to people we do not like? Are we applying the same standard when the facts embarrass our own side?

Those questions are not glamorous. They do not fit neatly on a protest sign or a campaign graphic. They also do not offer the emotional satisfaction of instant righteousness. But they are the difference between thinking and performing.

This matters because moral language is powerful. It can move people to protect the vulnerable, correct injustice, and resist cruelty. But the same language can also be used to smuggle weak claims past scrutiny. Institutions have incentives to do this. Activists gain status from certainty. Bureaucracies protect themselves with approved vocabulary. Media outlets reward emotional clarity over careful qualification. Ordinary people learn, quickly enough, which questions are safe to ask in public and which ones are better saved for the parking lot.

So they accept the conclusion first and hope the facts will catch up later.

They often do not.

Reality has a way of collecting unpaid debts. Bad premises eventually produce visible damage: failed policies, institutional distrust, medical scandals, economic denial, public cowardice, and citizens who no longer believe official language because they have watched it bend too many times.

The answer is not cynicism. Cynicism is often just laziness wearing a smarter jacket. The answer is better truth-finding: slower claims, clearer definitions, stronger evidence, real costs counted on both sides, and a willingness to notice when our preferred story stops matching the world.

That includes me. That includes you. That includes the people whose politics we find irritating, fashionable, smug, or deranged. Nobody gets a permanent exemption from reality because their intentions are good or their enemies are worse.

A decent society needs moral seriousness, but moral seriousness cannot mean protecting our favourite conclusions from examination. It has to mean caring enough about justice to ask whether our account of the world is actually true.

I do not especially care whether someone voted Liberal, Conservative, NDP, or something stranger from the pamphlet table. A democratic country still needs citizens who can look at reality without first asking whether the facts are useful to their team.

Canada is not in a healthy place. The economy has posted two straight quarters of contraction on an annualized basis, which is why the phrase “technical recession” has entered the conversation, even if analysts can argue over how much weight to give that label. Statistics Canada reported unemployment at 6.9% in April 2026, with youth unemployment at 14.3%. Food insecurity is harder to soften: PROOF reported that in 2024, 25.5% of people in the ten provinces lived in food-insecure households, about 10 million people, including 2.5 million children. These are not fringe complaints or partisan vibes. They are indicators of stress in the lives of ordinary people.

The point is not that every bad number belongs neatly to one party. Serious people should avoid that reflex. Some problems are inherited. Some are global. Some are structural. Some are provincial. Some are made worse by federal policy, and some are made worse by years of institutional delay, denial, or misplaced priorities. Canada’s productivity weakness, housing shortage, debt burden, immigration pressures, and affordability crisis did not arrive in one tidy partisan package. That is precisely why citizens need better habits of attention, not better excuses.

This is where media hygiene matters.

A lot of political coverage trains people to process public life through narrative before evidence. The right leader appears calm, credentialed, and respectable, so economic stress becomes “headwinds.” Stagnation becomes “uncertainty.” Failure becomes “transition.” Aggregate growth gets reported without enough attention to per-person decline. A press conference sounds adult and measured, while the household math keeps getting worse.

This problem is not confined to one side. Liberal-friendly media can soften failure when the right institutional language is being used. Conservative-friendly media can turn every bad number into proof that the apocalypse has already been scheduled. Social media rewards panic, resentment, and team loyalty. Legacy media rewards access, tone, and respectable framing. The result is a public conversation where facts often arrive already dressed for the argument someone wanted to make.

Voters participate in this too. Partisans learn to defend their side before checking the claim. Comfortable people mistake their own insulation for national health. Professionals who live inside institutional language can forget that ordinary Canadians live inside rent, groceries, wages, taxes, debt, and renewal notices, none of which become easier because the country’s managerial class found a more reassuring adjective.

A country needs some measure of optimism to function, so the answer is not theatrical despair. But optimism that cannot survive contact with the facts is closer to mood management than civic seriousness. Canadians should be able to say two things at once: yes, a leader may seem more competent than the alternative, and yes, the material indicators are still ugly. One does not cancel the other.

Political maturity begins when people stop treating bad news as betrayal. Reality does not care which party benefits from noticing it, which is precisely why noticing it remains one of the basic duties of citizenship.

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