FROLITICKS

Satirical commentary on Canadian and American current political issues

The Rob Ford Case — What You Need to Know About Addiction

O.K. — So the mayor of Toronto, Rob Ford, apparently has finally conceded after months, if not years, that he is an addict. Off he went hastily in a private jet to a “rehab centre”, possibly in the Chicago area. Mayor Ford has taken a leave of absence from his position, announcing that he would withdraw from the current mayoral campaign for at least 30 days in order to get much-needed professional help.

Now let us recap. The mayor has a drinking problem. He is prone to lying and denial, particularly about his alcoholic abuse. When in one of his drunken stupors, he is often out of control and prone to incoherence, profanity and aggression. He admittedly has also smoked crack cocaine, and has done so recently. And through all of this, the addict Rob Ford became an international celebrity, even appearing on talk shows in the U.S. Go figure?

While this so-called political scandal has been greatly sensationalized by the mass media, the story has left out one crucial element. Addiction and substance abuse affects a hell of a lot people in our society. The results from all addictions far too often lead to personal tragedies, including death, and have enormous social consequences for us all. As a society, we have not done very well at treating persons with addictions. Not everyone can afford, like Rob Ford and Hollywood celebrities, to enter a private rehab program. Affordable services for the treatment of addictions, like health services for mental illnesses, are inadequate for most individuals and families. Indeed, addiction and mental health issues often go hand in hand.

Once an addict, always an addict. Whether it is alcohol, prescription pain killers or illicit drugs, an addiction cannot be remedied in 30 days. To be successful in simply controlling one’s addiction, months and years of continuous abstinence and community support are required. There will always be certain stressors that can cause someone to fall off the wagon. Addiction is certainly no joking matter. Treating Rob Ford’s condition as some kind of a joke does a disservice to understanding the severity of the problem in our society. Too many people, not only his drug pushers and family, have contributed to his failure to recognize and deal with his addiction. Now that he has taken the first important step — that of acknowledging his medical condition for what it is — let’s stop the circus train. Give him his privacy during the next several months, and let his family and friends provide him with the essential support that he will desperately need.

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Why Rob Ford Can’t Handle the News Media as a Reflection of Today’s Politics.

Toronto Councillor Doug Ford, the brother of the city’s controversial Mayor Rob Ford, has accused the media as practising [Soviet] Stalin-era Pravda journalism and has blamed a left-wing “media conspiracy” for the Mayor’s continuing problems. What does this say about the relationship between the media and today’s politicians? It’s no surprise that certain political leaders, such as Prime Minister Stephen Harper, try to stay clear of media scrums. In Harper’s case, any regular media events are strictly controlled and orchestrated to publicize the ruling party’s objectives. Let’s face it, the media can make or break political careers. Like his career, Rob Ford’s recent handling of the media has been a mess.

One must remember that reporters or journalists are put in place to represent the public. They’re trained and obligated to ask the questions that people would ask if they could speak to the leaders directly. After all, when the Fords and Harpers refuse to answer reporters’ questions, they’re refusing to answer the people’s questions. Some politicians even attempt to bypass the media either through their own talk shows as in the case of the Fords or through the practice of holding press conferences without taking questions. Such efforts to bypass the media speak to an alarming trend of addressing voters without the checks and balances that journalists are meant to provide. One important reason why we have freedom of the press is because we want politicians’ statements to be subjected to intense scrutiny. So what is lost (when politicians speak directly) is that needed scrutiny of those statements. Good journalists do their homework, and are usually better prepared to ask those tough questions.

In Canada and the U.S., there is little doubt that many people have become suspicious of the press in recent years, labelling some media representatives as either too “leftist” or “right wing”. For this reason, the “blame the media” strategy has worked to an extent. In some cases, such as in the Rob Ford situation, supporters of a particular viewpoint can easily lump the media in with the so-called “elites” — who supposedly don’t care about the average person. What people fail to realize is that the media is simply reporting the news, normally with as many facts and careful objective scrutiny as is required.

Of course, the media itself can be manipulated by politicians themselves. Indeed, Rob Ford has offered photo availabilities with his family in the past for his own political reasons. When things began to turn bad in the media (claiming an expectation of privacy) he immediately lambasted the press for approaching or indirectly referring to his family. Sorry Mayor Ford, you can’t have it both ways! If he were, at any point, to ask the media to refrain from taking photos of his children or his wife, the media would very likely have respected that and stopped. However, he never did.

Then there are those crazy off-the-cuff scrums before the media. Mayor Ford could have and should have made himself available for more real press conferences, with one question and follow up at a time. You see President Obama doing these all the time. Or he could have done more longer sit down interviews with one reputable media outlet which could ask follow up questions and broadcast or show the entire video of the interview. Either way, the public would have been able to see and judge his answers to every question still unanswered. From this example, one can only conclude that he and numerous other politicians should relearn all about media relations and stop blaming the messenger for each of their faux pas. After all, the free press thankfully isn’t going away any time soon.

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