Does the North need more drunken parties?

AuthorRobinson, David (American basketball player)
PositionEconomically Speaking

If there are any leaders in the North they might want to think about the Scottish enlightenment.

In 1700 Scotland was the poorest and most backward country in Europe. By the end of the century it was the intellectual centre of Europe. Sometime around 1700 the monster flashbulb called the Scottish enlightenment began. Scotland became a fountain of inventions, ideas and talent. Enlightenment Scots can be blamed for everything from modern economics through bank architecture to country music.

Canada as we know it is a product of the Scottish enlightenment. The Northwest Company that explored so much of Canada was founded by a Scot. Alexander Mackenzie first mapped the passage to the Pacific Ocean. Sir John A. Macdonald was the first prime Minister. Look for Macdonald's name in the Canadian Encyclopedia and you find pages and pages of Macs and Mcs. We have an economic system based on the ideas of Adam Smith and a political system rooted in the thoughts of David Hume and John Stuart Mill.

But let's not praise the Scots-let's copy them. How do we start a new Northern Enlightenment up here in mosquito country? Can you imagine the brightest young people in the world coming to Thunder Bay to study? Can you imagine meeting some of the world's most important philosophers at a dinner party in Sudbury? Can you imagine inventions and literature pouring out of the young people of Timmins and Wawa?

Historian Arthur Herman claims that Scots Enlightenment created the modern world. His bestselling book-called "How the Scots Invented the Modern World" is subtitled "The True Story of how Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created our World and Everything in It."

Like us, those Scots lived in an economically depressed region with a hostile climate. They had low average levels of education, poor average health and high alcohol consumption. Like Northern Ontario, Scotland was governed from a great city hundreds of miles to the south. Unlike us, the Scots were famous for violence and barbaric clan warfare. Libertarian David Baoz claims that Scotland then was like Afghanistan now.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

So how did they do it? Education and drinking were important ingredients. The best mass education system in the world let the Scots use the talents of a larger fraction of the small population than any other European country. The miracle of Robert Burns was that the son of a poor farmer got the education that his genius needed. England...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT