Taken together, the far-left’s political agenda is an attempt to remake Western democracies from the top down, writes Jamil Jivani in the National Post. Below is an excerpt from the article, which can be read in full here.
By Jamil Jivani, December 14, 2020
I wouldn’t blame you for assuming I’m a liberal. Just take a look at my background: raised by a single mom, grew up in the largely-immigrant suburbs of Toronto, attended an Ivy League law school, spent most of my career in the non-profit sector. I resemble many who the political left claims to represent. At one point in my life, I did consider myself a liberal. For a couple of years after law school, I was a card-carrying member of the Liberal Party of Canada. And, while in law school, I interned with the administration of former Democratic presidential candidate Cory Booker, then-mayor of Newark, N.J., and current U.S. Senator.
As I’ve gotten older, and hopefully wiser, I’ve grown away from liberal politics. Not liberal people, of course. Many of my closest friends self-identify as progressives. But liberal politics has become increasingly unappealing to me, in large part because I don’t believe liberal politics is capable of responding to the most important challenge facing Western democracies today: We must fight for a more just, fairer society; and, in the process, we must also defend the fundamental values that are key to the progress we’ve made so far.