When
I first heard about Stephen Harper’s “nomination” for the Nobel Peace Prize I
laughed. Actually I did a quick Google
search about it. Other than the B’nai
Brith announcement, there was only one other hit. A RWNJ blog about how the Lefties’ heads were
going to collectively explode over this.
“Yeah,”
I thought’ “explode with laughter.”
Well
it looks like he was partly right. A
bunch of people really do have their knickers in a knot over this. There are petitions and blogs and Twitter
Wars and all sorts of ranting and raving about this.
What
I’m going to do is to ask you to step back a bit and look at this without
kneejerk reactions and vehemence.
What
does this “nomination” mean?
Nothing
much, really.
Other
than the fact that some guy (Frank Dimant) is putting up Stephen Harper for the
award. There isn’t a lot here to talk
about.
When
I checked the Nobel site, there are a record 278 nominations this year. 47 of these are organizations and the rest,
I assume, are people. What this says to
me is that there are going to be a lot of losers. If you are interested in the list of 2014
nominations, the Peace
Research Institute of Oslo (PRIO) has a partial list.
This
year’s short list, according to PRIO, includes Pope Francis, Malala Yousafzai, the Afghan girl shot by the Taliban for going to
school, and others.
Another nominee for the 2014
award is Vladimir Putin. But he’s not on
the short list, at least not according to PRIO anyway.
A
Nobel nomination is usually for disarmament, or for peacemaking but can also
include things like multicultural understanding or food security.
Being
a cheerleader for Israel’s retaliation on Palestine or shouting at 2014 Nobel
Prize nominee Putin doesn’t really seem to make the cut. Even if Steve wore a short skirt and
ferociously waved his blue pompoms, I don’t think he’s going to be a Nobel Laureate.
I’m
sure that Harper sees it much differently than I do, but a Nobel nomination is
not a huge deal. There have been a few
people besides Harper and Putin that most people wouldn’t want to have over for
dinner. Past nominees include Hitler,
Mussolini who was nominated twice and Stalin who was likewise nominated twice.
So
how do you nominate someone? The Nobel
Prize Organization’s website
gives the rules. Basically, if you or
your group want to submit a name, there is a list there of who you need to
submit it for you. Your MP is one, a
judge or a University Professor (like Frank Dimant) would be another.
So
if you want to nominate me for the $1 Million paycheque… kidding, just give it
some real thought and don’t go rushing trying to nominate anyone simply because
they aren’t Harper. Deal?
Laters!
BC
On
second thought, if you want to sign a petition or send an angry email then fire
away. Someone needs to take Steve down a
peg or two.
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