Coyne’s cover story acknowledged that anyone living in the United States would have “good reason to be ticked” because of the wide range of serious problems in that country, but then, talking about Canada, he cited dozens of often odd statistics to attempt to show that, except for the poorest-of-the poor, things are hunky-dory here.
Coyne sets up a straw man, falsely saying that the justification for the Occupy movement is based largely on the claim that the top 1 per cent is exploiting the other 99 percent. Using more stats, he claimed that, while the top 1 per cent in the U.S. in 2007 (not counting capital gains) included anyone making about $400,000, the equivalent income figure for Canadians was about $170,000.
So the headline of the article contends that the Occupy movement in Canada is “A phony class war” because we don’t have a huge number of people who earn millions of dollars every year.
He is right on this point, but it hardly makes the Occupy movement “A phony class war” – as claimed in the title.
The real point of the Occupy movement and missed by Coyne is that the powerful and wealthy ruling class in Canada – perhaps 10 or 15 per cent, not 1 per cent, of the population – have been appropriating the resources belonging to the rest of us for more than 30 years.
Nowhere in the article does Coyne address many of the key issues Canadian Occupy supporters are angry about, such as the cost of student education, a lack of employment for young people, a real unemployment rate of some 13 per cent, high household debt, a lack of savings, and the undermining of our pension system.
Moreover, both Canadians and Americans are protesting the handling of the world economy by the neo-liberal elites that Coyne admires and cosies up to. The powerful, the banks, and subordinate governments across the west continue to lurch from crisis to crisis. They are obviously incapable of stabilizing the economy let alone satisfying the needs of everyday citizens.
Coyne suggests that Canadians should be content because we have more consumer goods than ever before. “Since 1980, the percentage of Canadian homes with a dishwasher, for example, has more than doubled, from less than 30 per cent to 60 per cent. Fewer than one in 10 homes had a microwave oven in 1980; today it is upwards of 90 per cent.”
While the article is pretty much a sham, it deserves our attention because it is featured on the cover of once-trustworthy Maclean's, which is read most weeks by more than 300,000 Canadians – many of whom, unfortunately, are overly trusting.
The article reveals more about Coyne and Maclean's then about the Occupy movement.
Coyne was born into an elite Canadian family. He is the son of former Bank of Canada Governor James Coyne, most likely a member of our country’s top 1 percent. He is a charter member of a group of Canadian journalists who support the neo-liberal ideology of big business and the Harper Conservatives.
National Editor of Maclean's, he has been with the magazine for four years. His highest profile gig is appearing on CBC-TV’s The National weekly segment At Issue.
A profile in the Ryerson Review of Journalism a few years ago labelled him Mighty Mouth for his outspoken, often critical behaviour. A man who espouses a strange mix of liberal and neo-liberal views, Coyne has liked to make a strong impact with his journalism over the years.
He does believe that it’s okay that a very small percentage of Canadians are stinking wealthy. “What exactly is the harm to others if a few people get obscenely rich?”, he writes in the article.
Coyne is not in favour of hiking taxes on the super rich – (here comes a right-wing myth) – because higher taxes would have a negative effect on a multi-millionaire’s desire to make more money. He adds higher taxes would also mean wealthy people would not declare all of their income - i.e. break the law.
Another problem with Coyne’s article is that, even when he tries to show a little compassion for the multitude by expressing concern for the poor, he shows no real empathy. His writing is cold and calculating.
Coyne’s poorly conceived attack on the only fresh progressive movement western countries have seen in many years does not reflect well on Maclean's, but the magazine has published more than its share of shoddy articles in recent years.
Under the direction of Publisher Kenneth Whyte, Maclean's has faced a number of charges of bad journalism and sensationalism. Three examples:
Occupy Canada movement unscathed by Maclean's attack
Posted: Nov 3rd, 2011
Occupy protesters photo by David P. Ball
The right-wing Canadian media establishment unleashed one of its loudest barking dogs this week as Maclean's Andrew Coyne tried to tear a strip off the Occupy Wall Street movement in Canada.
- In December 2007, the Canadian Islamic Congress filed complaints with three Canadian human rights bodies thatMaclean's published 18 Islamophobic articles between 2005 and 2007.
- In March 2010, the magazine was reprimanded by the Quebec Press Council for a controversial cover in 2009 that called Quebec the most corrupt province in Canada. Besides the headline, the publication triggered widespread outrage in the province by running a front-page photo of the beloved Bonhomme Carnaval snowman clutching a briefcase stuffed with cash.
- In November, 2010, a feature story about worries that too many Asians were attending Canadian universities brought charges of racism, as well as nearly close to 1,900 mostly angry on-line comments. The article was entitled: “Too Asian?”
I understand that many people boycott Maclean's because of its misadventures in journalism. Coyne’s article is another reason to stay away from this Rogers’ product. Personally, I haven’t read the magazine for years.
Published with permission from Nick Fillmore's website, A Different Point of View.





it's not a myth that if taxes are raised on the ultra-wealthy - including corporations - they will find ways to shift their income so that they don't pay as much tax. what's more, some of these ways are perfectly legal (and those that are not are difficult and costly to enforce).
a prominent and recent example of this is the greek economy, where tax evasion was widespread because of a system that severely punished honesty. a government can promise all it wants in terms of income redistribution policies but eventually it will run out of willing pockets from which to pinch.
Andrew Coyne openly endorsed the Liberal Party in the last federal election, so trying to set him up as being wrapped around Harper's pinky finger is a straw man itself.
Whether they like it or not we occupy this planet, and there's only so much they can do to change that. We are here.
There's another great critique of the article, written by an OWS member, (me), at the top of the contacts. Let's hope people listen to us instead of what they say about us.
"Well Jeff, let me swoop in here and mock it tastefully after reading it. I find his dishwasher metaphor telling. Let's take an average dishwasher purchased in Canada. Kenmore shall we say? Kenmore is actually a distribution name, so the product is made by Whirlpool. According to this link, (http://www.stillmadeinusa.com/ ) Whirlpool an American company, still manufactures dishwashers in several states, except, lo and behold, some of the factories are tagged as closing, or having been closed now for several years. We know dishwashers are still getting sold, therefore production was probably outsourced off continent.
So, we Canadians have more dishwashers. Dishwashers that come to us from an American country who outsourced production to maximize profits all the while destroying domestic jobs and handing out unprecedented executive bonuses like everyone else in every other industry.
The problems with the system are so pervasive that even the humble dishwasher is a metaphor for our frustration; outsourced, under-appreciated and destined to a life of cleaning up crumbs. Yes it is comparably better in Canada, and as a matter of fact, I am successful in comparison to my peers. In the same way our dollar is tied to the American's. When their dollar takes a quick plunge, our currency is valued higher against theirs, until it settles back into it's normal trade equilibrium just below. If our dollar is high, then technically they are steadily sinking.
Occupy Canada is an important solidarity movement as we're all affected by sloppy decision making on both sides of the border. In a way, it's like voting in someone else's election that directly effects you. In A way? In EVERY way. Try being the child of anyone below two incomes in the 25th percentile, and tell me getting ahead is probable, the most likely outcome. The real numbers in the states are worse now than they were in the first great depression.
I agree with the final conclusion of the article, that the focus should be on the poor, not the rich, but I balk at the initial question. The Occupy Movement hasn't got it wrong. Mobilizing at all is right. Being unfocused is the primary criticism, but how does one focus on five things at once, much less a hundred? If the author had spent more time speaking with average occupiers, he'd find it's not about wanting to take, it's a call for accountability, fair practice, health care in the states, (which is and has been a travesty, how lucky we are[RBGH]), a chance to get educated and contribute to society in a meaningful way. It's not a Robin Hood scenario, we want a chance to give, really. Radical taking has never even been suggested by our side, and would be wrong I believe, especially in Canada. What was wrong was letting the world get to this state, where obesity is as threatening as hunger.
We currently have a government who was found in contempt of parliament essentially for a major financial indiscretion, and then re-elected with a majority. Harper IS a corporate stooge and they killed Jack Layton. #notintendedtobeafactualstatement (reference Jon Kyl via Stephen Colbert, same episode interview with Ray Kurzweil who is literally a genius)
These are our closest allies essentially being subjugated en masse, so really this solidarity movement means more than the SPP or NAFTA ever could.
OCCUPY THE INTERNET
evolve
I used to be a Macleans subscriber but haven't been for years.
In their defence, they DO do investigative stories and not just in Toronto either - back in the late 90s it was Macleans that revealed that our local school district had diverted roughly $250,000 in provincial special education funds to general revenue - and not in fact offered any programs for this particular special need at all.
The Vancouver media completely missed the story.
So while you may not like Macleans or Mr. Coyne they do do the work of journalists and crack stories others miss. I'm not picking on an old story randomly - it's one that affected all three of my children and affected their educations considerably.
Napoleon said: "History is a set of lies, agreed upon." And here we see Andrew Coyne hard a work fabricating history as agreed upon by the Eastern Establishment of Canada, including of course the media. And so it goes; always has been, and always will be. These people never give up, and actually believe they are fooling us just because we're not out demonstrating all the time to prove we know better. Let them take notice from the current demonstrations that the end of their foolish games is nigh. We all better start telling the truth; a culture based on lies is not sustainable.