I didn’t mean to 
get into an ideological Twitter battle with the National Citizens Coalition, but 
I did.
It all started 
when I wrote a column criticizing the conservative advocacy group for its 
decision to actively support the Sun News Network’s application for a “mandatory 
carriage” license. My point was that such support runs counter to the NCC’s 
stated conservative principles.
To me, it’s 
obvious: forcing citizens to pay for a TV channel they may not want to watch 
violates an individual’s right to free choice. Conservatives are supposed to 
support free choice.
At any rate, a few 
hours after my column appeared, NCC director Stephen Taylor responded to my 
argument with a well-reasoned, thoughtful defence of his group’s 
action.
Ha, just kidding! 
 What Taylor 
That didn’t 
surprise me. After all,  on page  one 
of the Big Book of Cheap Political Tricks 
it says: if you can’t 
attack the message, attack the messenger.
But there was one 
Taylor 
After I suggested 
the NCC was betraying its principles, Taylor 
When I read that, 
my jaw dropped. Here was a senior officer in the NCC basically saying his 
group’s core mandate was a “fruitless idealistic standard.” 
Amazing.
I wonder if NCC 
fundraising letters start something like this:
Dear 
NCC supporter:
Please send us 
your hard-earned money so we can waste it trying to achieve a fruitless, 
idealistic standard.
Anyway, to my 
mind, Taylor 
I happen to know a 
thing or two about the NCC’s original spirit, because I worked for the 
organization for 22 years.
And when I worked 
for the NCC, we were proud to set “idealistic” standards. We fought unabashedly 
for free markets, smaller government and individual 
freedom.
Nor did we think 
fighting for our values was “fruitless”, even though we often faced overwhelming 
odds.
As they say in 
hockey: it’s not how many you win — it’s how many you show up 
for.
But sadly, today’s 
NCC is apparently less about fighting for principle and more about pursuing what 
Taylor calls “reality-based pragmatic” goals.
So I suppose that 
means on one day the NCC will push for less government and on the next it will 
push the government to limit consumer choice.
Come to think of 
it, that’s not reality-based or pragmatic. It’s just 
confused.
The question is, 
does Canada 
We call them 
political parties.
What 
we do need is an organization 
that has the courage to push political parties to do the right thing, even if 
the right thing is unpopular or difficult to 
achieve.
We need what the 
late libertarian academic Benjamin Rogge called “an island of sanity in an 
increasingly insane world.”
Oh well. I suppose 
I shouldn’t be too surprised that the NCC has dramatically changed since my 
time. It’s the nature of any organization to evolve. And the NCC has clearly 
evolved into a kind of organizational zombie.
It still staggers 
along from issue to issue and reacts from time to time, but it no longer has a 
soul.
This article originally appeared in Ipolitics. 
 
 

2 comments:
Actually, I envy people like Taylor. He seems to have found a job where all he has to do all day is lob personal insults at those he considers enemies of conservatism.
He comes across as nothing but a shill and a stooge for Harper and his cronies.
I might not have agreed with the NCC when you were there, but at least you guys offered reasoned arguments for your positions rather than juvenile ad hominem attacks on those who disagreed with you.
You were attacked, avoidig the issue of paying for channels that you don't watch, because he knows that millions and millions of viewers say the same thing as you did.
None of us want most of the channels so don't feel bad about the attack. It's a badge of honor from the millions of us.
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