
Downtown visionaries promise to transform London’s core by banishing vehicles from Dundas Street and creating pedestrian paradises. Yet these schemes reveal not liberation but another layer of control imposed upon those who actually own and operate businesses there. Task forces and associations funded by compulsory levies dictate visions while property owners foot the bill and lose autonomy. The pattern of superseding private plans with collective mandates repeats across issues. Forced business associations extract extra taxes from owners already burdened by high rates, all while claiming to speak for the community they conscript.
The same coercion surfaces in Quebec’s language laws that criminalize unilingual signs and force bilingual packaging, perpetuating division under the guise of equity. Official bilingualism in theory grants equal status; in practice it imposes penalties on those who choose otherwise. Politicians and planners assume superior wisdom over voluntary exchange, whether reshaping streets or dictating words on private property. Even political parties blur into indistinguishable tax-and-spend options, abandoning any clear ideological anchor.
In every case, individual rights and voluntary association yield to elite direction. When the powerful elite replace personal plans with their own, freedom erodes one gradual step at a time. It all comes down to Just Right.
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