
This is a Serious Politics hat. SHE'S SERIOUS ABOUT POLITICS, LIKE US.
WELCOME BACK, POLITICS! We missed you! Our Olympic break was fun, though, we got to post all sorts of silly things as the OFFICIAL CANADIAN™ POLITICS BLOG OF THE VANCOUVER™ 2010™ OLYMPICS™, writing about sexy curlers and acid flashbacks and Nickelback, but now we have to put our Serious Hat back on to make Serious Posts about the adult matter of Politics, which apparently just returned to Ottawa!
Also, Roll Up The Rim started again, in terms of national breaking news we have to report. So go forth and suck back a cup of warm, cream-diluted, African-inventin’ burnt patriotism and half-heartedly slip the slimy lid up until you see “RÉESSAYEZ S.V.P.” before continuing with one smooth motion into the trashbin toss.
Hey, remember Canadian Against Proroguing Parliament? Of course you do, you’re probably a damn member of the thing. If you’re still too old to be using Facebook (an age barrier which creeps upward by the day – it currently sits around 38), then you’ve at least heard about this group, since it’s been filling column spaces, creating blog buzz and was probably even mentioned on CTV Newsnet, to the delight of all 17 people who watch that channel. (Edit: I actually checked Wikipedia, and apparently the channel’s now called CTV News Network, and has been called that for like half a year – what the Lisa LaFuck?) This Canadians Against Proroguing Parliament Facebook group was a big deal, see, because it was supposed to usher in some new era of grassroots political involvement across the country. Political involvement, social media, today’s youth, grassroots, new media, web 2.0, et-fucking-cetera.

These people met on Facebook, and then met up in the real world without supervision? Did they learn nothing about internet safety from Bert & Gert?
Back in February the Facebook group actually did stage something of a coup, when their 200,000+ members managed to actually translate into something happening in the real world! 15,000-odd people showed up for rallies/parades across the country to protest the proroguing. As we all know by now, Stephen Harper listened, and decided not to prorogue parliament Yeah, not much happened, but from the sounds of the media coverage, this was just the tip of the iceberg as this Facebook group was supposedly brewing a political revolution across the country – like the American Tea Baggers, except without the fat, racist, pill-addled Walmart-greeter wingnuts in Confederate flag-Snuggies.
All this media coverage got to the heads of the organizers of the Facebook group. You see, people start shitty Facebook groups all the time – I just performed a quick search, and there are no less than 1,600 Facebook groups with the sole purpose of calling Justin Bieber gay – but when your group takes off virally, you can get an inflated sense of self-worth. When 225,000 people join your group, you get the idea that this wasn’t just thousands of people mindlessly clicking “Accept” when their uncle sent them an invite – this is 225,000 followers of my movement! I’m a leader of a grassroots revolution of a quarter-million Canadians!
Of course, you’re not. You’re a guy who made a Facebook group. The Facebook fan page “Running downstairs on Christmas morning and realizing you’re Jewish” has over 200,000 fans, too. “Back in my day vampires sucked blood, not cocks” has in the ballpark of 200,000 fans. “The Norwegian Olympic Curling Team’s Pants” boasts over 600,000, while “Realizing you borrowed the pen you’re sticking in your mouth” dwarfs the CAPP group with over 800,000 fans. “Flipping the pillow over to get to the cold side” has a whopping 3.5 million fans. That doesn’t make any of these into mobilized, sweeping political movements. It makes them Facebook groups. What the media hasn’t realized is that having 225,000 people in a Facebook group doesn’t mean that 225,000 active members are working towards any kind of end goal, just like there isn’t a massive 3.5-million-strong political party based on the principles of pillow-flipping sweeping the world. It just means that a bunch of people vaguely felt something, so they clicked “Accept” when they got a group invite, and then probably never checked the group page but hoped that their membership would make some sort of intangible difference in the world.
Long story short – as the Globe&Fail reports, the CAPP Facebook group, which has apparently begun taking itself way too seriously and has somehow raised ten-grand (yes, in real dollars, we’ve left the realm of Facebook make-believe) is trying to turn itself into some sort of legitimate political movement.
HOLD ON, it gets funnier I promise.
They’ve kept their CAPP acronym by changing their name from Canadian Against Proroguing Parliament to the more stilted-sounding Canadians Advocating Political Participation. (A completely unrelated aside: my alma mater did that too! It was called Waterloo Lutheran University, and they were all, hey, our school’s not Lutheran anymore, but we wanna keep the WLU initials, so, uhhh… thinkin’…. how bout… fucking GOT IT. Wilfrid, Laurier, University. Nailed it. True story, I swear!) Anyways they’ve put together a website at canadaparticipates.ca. Honestly, look at the site, and think about how the Globe wrote a whole article about this thing, and about how it started as a Facebook group, and there’s ten-thousand dollars floating around somewhere to pay for this stuff. Ok, that’s a little funny already, but in a sad-funny way, like watching a fat figure skater falling.
The first event ever put together by the new CAPP? Some comical silliness they called the Not So Secret Democracy Mission. Alright, I’m just gonna post their mission statement, it’s too funny on its own. Read this in the voice of a little kid who’s dressed up in a suit and making his voice all low to sound super-duper-serious:
“On January 23, 2010, we showed up in tens of thousands in over 60 communities in Canada.
This time, we’ll show up with even more.
On March 2, 2010, the last day of prorogation, Mr. Harper will be under the impression that we’ve all forgotten about his evildoing. Care to show him that not only do we still remember…that not only are we still ANGRY…but that WE WILL NEVER FORGET!
[...] THIS IS A MISSION THAT WILL GO DOWN IN CANADIAN HISTORY.”
They helpfully also mention that they “do NOT condone violence”. Oh, thank God! I thought for a second your top-secret campaign to single-handedly change the course of Canadian democracy was going to involve just kneecappin’ suckers with crowbars at Tim Hortons. Turns out, it just involves them making a budget Youtube video, and you watching that Youtube video, and, if you wouldn’t mind, making a video response so the original video gets more popular, pretty please? Seriously. This was their event that they thought would go down in Canadian history.
Alright, fuck, here’s the dumb video in question, shot with some Ryerson film studies major’s Handicam, set to the dulcet tones of “Default Windows Movie Maker Sound Files > Emotional Piano.mp3″, which features people saying stuff for a minute while somehow also saying nothing:
So what was the point of the top-secret-mission if this whole “event” was just the launch of a bland Youtube video with a cast of nameless, multiethnic people saying bumper-sticker slogans across Toronto? Back to the mission description:
On that day, we encourage EVERY SINGLE PERSON WHO SEES IT TO POST A VIDEO RESPONSE. In that fashion we hope that we can “hijack” YouTube and become the most discussed/watched video for that day. You can even post video responses TO video responses!
So when’s that day coming up? It was Tuesday. As in, yesterday. How’d that Youtube hijacking go for them? Did they bring the Internet to a crawl with their medium-shattering anarchist takeover of Youtube?
The Facebook group advertising the event had over 700 people saying they’d attend. When the big day came, they got four video responses.
Four.
To summarize: One of many Facebook groups pop up to protest proroguing parliament. One of them gets more popular than the others. People in the media, specifically dumb people, somehow interpret this as a call-to-arms of a political revolution. The Globe writes about how they’re the next generation of political involvement. The organizers, believing all the hype, become a foundation fighting against political apathy, and on their big launch date, with the backing of media attention, they attempt to hijack Youtube by flooding the system with video responses. They get four.
MapleRag is official launching the campaign to fight the growing trend of apathy towards groups that fight apathy.

Contact us! mail[at]maplerag.com

March 3rd, 2010 - 8:44 am
Had some Cynical Flakes and milk, did we?
March 3rd, 2010 - 8:47 am
HAH, yes, I’m so tired of all these loonies talking about how this facebook group will revolutionize politics, just look at the comments on the globe article, it’s all:
“This grassroots tool will change democracy forever”
3938 thumbs up, 4 thumbs down
and then a few token wingnuts always shouting “MORE TYPICAL LIEBERAL TORONTO PROPAGANDA FROM LIECHAEL IG-NOTACANADIAN-IEFF, GO SIP YOUR LATTES AND RAISE TAXES” but I tend to filter those comments out
March 4th, 2010 - 7:36 am
Has anyone ever wondered how someone would react if you plucked them out of the 1800s and showed them technology of today?
Old people (i.e. parents, grandparents, Globe and Fail columnists) react to Facebook kind of like you’d picture in the above scenario, albeit to a lesser degree. I think Facebook confuses them. I can’t even imagine my Mom on Facebook… Even after almost a decade the fact that we can play against real people in online games confounds her.
January 5th, 2012 - 7:26 am
People deserve wealthy life time and home loans or financial loan would make it better. Because freedom bases on money.