Kids from Friedrich Engels Cabin at Camp Solidarity think about ways to seize control of the means of production at the National Post and establish the Information Dictatorship of the Proletariat. Well, they’ll never get the chance, because they never worked for Ted Byfield! The National Post says union kids camps are not just bad, they’re weird! Below: The Post’s illustration of kids at union camp; Prof. Frank Furedi, who confirms the diagnosis union camps are weird; Prof. Troy Glover, apparently in his camping clothes.
Confession time: Years ago I sat on the board of a church camp.
I sent my kids there. One year one of my daughters was a counsellor at the camp.
And at that camp, they taught those kids … and here comes the confession part … Christian doctrine!
Real Christian doctrine, too, stuff right out of the Bible about helping the poor, kindness to the imprisoned and letting he who is without sin cast the first stone.
This is not the sort of thing the raw-meat fundies who support the Wildrose Party and Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s so-called Conservatives think of as being Christian at all. The Bronze Age rigours of the Old Testament are more to their taste.
Anyway, there wasn’t all that much doctrine at that camp, in fact. I think the kids there spent most of their time canoeing, getting sunburns, eating marshmallows until they threw up and making lame crafts they took home and left lying around their houses until their moms quietly tossed them out. Plus, they all got a T-shirt, on which I got a deal for the camp from a unionized shirt supplier.
I have to say, I never saw much difference, good or bad, in my kids’ behaviour when they got home. Just the same, and there’s just no way to get around this, you’d have to call the Christian doctrine that camp taught those children … ideology!
Well, what’s the big deal about that, you wonder? As kids, lots of us had to suffer through summer camps our parents thought would improve us. And lots of us snuck out of evening prayers and necked with some other kid from the church in Burnaby or Aldergrove behind one of the cabins, which for many of us was first time we really gave any serious thought to the doctrine of turning the other cheek.
Well, I only mention this because the National Post has made the discovery that – oh my gosh!!! – some unions have kids’ camps too!
Unions! And you know what that means! Ideology!
“At these summer camps, ideology doesn’t take a holiday,” barked the headline over the story by the appropriately named Kathryn Blaze Carlson.
Holy cow! Ms. Carlson informs us that not only are union members sending their kids to camps where they might watch a movie with Jack Layton in it instead of Jack Nicholson, but there are summer kids’ camps run by environmentalists (which as we should all know by now is tantamount to treason in Mr. Harper’s Canada), and even camps operated by … wait for it … vegans! (Editor’s Note: You’ve used up your quota of exclamation points. Just stop it!)
Now, the mainstream media always strives for balance, so Ms. Carlson was also scrupulous to mention in passing that there are Tea Party camps south of the Medicine Line too. But really, you can sense from the tone of the article that’s basically OK with the Great Friends of Free Speech who run the National Post, because at least there the children would learn something useful – you know, like firing a MAC-10.)
Getting back to the horror, the horror, of union kids’ camps – for gosh sake, the Alberta Federation of Labour has one, and now the Canadian Union of Public Employees has started one too – Ms. Carlson trots out an expert named Troy Glover from something called the Canadian Summer Camp Research Project who explained, “this is how you indoctrinate youth — you get them involved in fun activities and you teach them a message on the side.”
Goodness, the next thing you know, these children might be influenced into becoming the kind of grownups who stand up for their rights in the workplace, make lousy consumers of poorly made foreign-sourced electronic trinkets or, worse, turn into vegans so serious they won’t eat anything that casts a shadow. (Sorry, stolen joke. Cultural artifact.)
Ms. Carlson intones: “Parents who enjoy hockey or the ballet take their children to NHL games or the Nutcracker.* Catholic mothers and fathers take their children to church, Jews to synagogue, Muslims to the mosque. Is sending a child to an ideological camp simply an extension of that sort of natural parental influence, or is it inappropriate?” (Emphasis added.)
Union kids’ camps? Threat or menace? Well, of course it’s inappropriate, and Ms. Carlson has an expert to explain that too. She had to go a long way to find him – which proves the Post is serious about getting to the bottom of this dreadful stuff.
“‘Parents want their children to hang out with kids whose parents think like them — it’s a natural gravitation,’ said Frank Furedi, a sociologist at the University of Kent in Britain. ‘If you take your values seriously, you’ll want to influence your child. This is just an extreme version of that.’” (Emphasis added again.)
Just as we thought … extremists. (Editor’s Note: Oh, go ahead, you can use more exclamation points. This is harder to stop than I thought.)
Thanks! Extremists! Now, where was I? Oh yeah… “Mr. Furedi said not only is there ‘something weird’ about these camps, but they could deepen the societal divisions that already exist. And Mr. Glover said he is simply ‘uncomfortable’ at the idea of camps where children could be ostracized for going against the ideological grain,” Ms. Carlson explains.
Speaking of deepening societal divisions, it must have taken great restraint for Ms. Carlson not to use the term “class war.” So have you got that? It’s not just weird to teach children that working together can be effective, it’s divisive. It leads to class war! Just like that Tom Mulcair guy and his dangerous discourse on Dutch Disease.
And that’s why union camps are bad. Ditto vegan camps. And especially environmental camps, which are not only dangerous but drain the precious resources of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, because we’ll all have to pay for the CSIS agents’ mosquito repellent, marshmallows and overtime though our taxes, which are already way too high of course.
So just stop it people! Don’t send your kids to union camps! Just say no!
Send them to a church camp, where they’ll never be ostracized for going against the ideological grain.
Well, maybe a bit. And they might get lucky, which would also be bad. But at least they’ll never get leaflets!
*Actually, lots of parents who enjoy hockey and dancing can’t afford NHL games or the ballet. But they don’t teach that at Camp National Post, apparently.
This post also appears on Rabble.ca.



Have the National Posters forgotten what happened just about one year ago, on July 22, 2011, when the right-wing ideologue and white supremacist xenophobe Anders Breivik attacked and killed sixty-nine young people attending a camp run by the youth wing of the ruling Labour Party in Norway? Are they trying to foment another incident like this by getting their foaming-at-the-mouth Rightists more wound up than they already are?
As for the Christian-in-name-but-not-in practice types, I like to think of Ricky Gervais’ Holiday Message entitled “Why I am a Good Christian”.
It’s not that I don’t believe that the teachings of Jesus wouldn’t make this a better world if they were followed. It’s just that they are rarely followed.
Gandhi summed it up really. He said, “I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”
His quick run-through of the Ten Commandments is excellent. Wonder how many of the Con regime could tick so many (or in Gervais’ case, all) of the boxes.
This one’s for you, Jason Kenney.
David, David, David, you simply do not understand how deep this perfidious notion of putting young people in camps goes! It was on Farmers Day in 1959 that the Farmers’ Union of Alberta broke sod on Camp Goldeye west of Rocky Mountain House. “Union” Dave, get it? “Farmers” Dave – what could be weirder?
A.J. Hooke the local Social Credit Member of the Legislature was there and donated money from his personal account for the project. “Social” Dave, get it? Weird eh? Not to mention the Alberta Wheat Pool and numerous other cooperatives contributed.
You need more “evidence”? Okay, a young man by the name of Joe Clark attended that camp and learned about cooperation and how to carry water from a hand pump to the kitchen. He later went on to become the Progressive Conservative Prime Minister of Canada. “Progressive” Dave! What more do you need?
Thank gawd we have the National Post and obscure academics from back water colleges to warn us of the danger of “summer camps.”
Now if I can just get the tongue out of my cheek, I will go back to work.
Questionable research project* name aside it turns out Troy Glover is an actual working academic (I know I was surprised too). He’s in the Dept. of Rec and Leisure Studies at Waterloo.
http://ahs.uwaterloo.ca/rec/research/glover.html
Seems rather ironic he lists healthy communities as one of his research areas and apparently doesn’t like camps (is any camp a non-ideological camp, I hardly think so) -I can only hope the the Great White Post is quoting very selectively.
*Where exactly are they getting their funding? It sure isn’t obvious on their site.
This yarn shows all the signs of a story for which the National Post had decided on the point it was going to make before its reporter did any research. Everything unions do is “ideological,” even basic labour relations, according to the Post. When anyone who is not as far to the right as Harper makes a statement, it’s ideology. When Harper’s neo-liberal nuts makes a statement, it’s just the “facts” – an easier claim to make each day Harper shuts down a research project or fact collecting agency. Everything religious groups do, even threatening fundamentalists, is just parents giving their much-loved children a gentle nudge in the right direction. I wonder if this indicates a thaw between the National Post and the Islamists? I’m sure, as Khandi suggests, Troy Glover is a legitimate academic. His quotes would have been used selectively to drive home the reporter’s point. I’ll bet she interviewed other people too, like someone from the Alberta Federation of Labour, and those quotes were never used because they didn’t help make the story’s propaganda points.
Um, oh dear, we’re about to send our five year old to a hip hop dance camp followed by a pretend you’re a superhero camp. Run by the city. Subsidized for poor kids. Heavens to Murgatroyd! We’re in great big trouble now!
Seriously, if the National Pest wants to make a boogeyman of summer camps the least then can do is a hard hitting investigation of hygiene and food quality. No friendship bracelet for them!
I went to a church camp, two Girl Guide camps, and was a counsellor at a Y camp and I always found the experience more stressful and less enjoyable than I had expected, though there some good moments.
Most kids at the church camp talked and thought about making out and boyfriends/girlfriends much more than they ever did about religion. My biggest grudge about the church camp was that while there, I missed the moon landing.
Holly: I wouldn’t worry too much about having missed the moon landing. It was faked anyway, wasn’t it? Or was that when O.J. Simpson landed on Mars? Whatever…
I remember a girl at that camp telling me she believed Jesus was on Jupiter. I never understood why she would believe that, but she seemed to be sincere about it.