Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

WATCH: Justin Trudeau Uses NYU Graduation Speech To Criticize Growth In Identity Politics

Darpan News Desk, 16 May, 2018 11:45 AM
    NEW YORK — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's first order of business after descending on Donald Trump's hometown Wednesday was to enlist thousands of newly minted American university graduates in the fight against a rising tide of intolerance and nationalism around the world.
     
     
    Officials had billed Trudeau's three-day trip to New York and Boston as focused on trade and the economic relationship between Canada and the U.S., with looming NAFTA deadlines as a backdrop.
     
     
    But inside the towering stone, gilt-lettered facade of Yankee Stadium, Trudeau kicked off his latest U.S. visit with an earnest commencement speech to more than 10,000 enthusiastic, cheering New York University grads, urging them to break out of their comfort zones.
     
     
    Respect people who don't look or think like you do, Trudeau said. Engage those with whom you may not agree. And take up a leadership role against the aggressive nationalism and identity politics that are making the world a far more complex place to live.
     
     
    "The leadership we need most today, and in the years to come, is leadership that brings people together," he said, clad in a graduation gown of his own after receiving an honorary degree — the first world leader to get one from NYU while in office.
     
     
    "That brings diversity to a common cause. This is the antithesis of the polarization, the aggressive nationalism, the identity politics that have grown so common of late."
     
     
    Trudeau did not mention the U.S. president or any other leaders by name in a speech that appeared to be targeting the kind of populist politics Trump represents, and was received warmly by the audience who roared loudly every time Trudeau appeared on the screen.
     
     
    Huddled under a sea of colourful umbrellas against a relentless rain, the audience saved its biggest cheers for any time Trudeau made mention of Canada's refugee program, his government's emphasis on human rights and the legitimacy of climate change.
     
     
    Seeking out people with different viewpoints and respecting those who hold different political opinions does not mean those perspectives all have merit, he noted.
     
     
    He mentioned advocates of female genital mutilation in the same breath as deniers of climate change — people who hold viewpoints that will never be valid, no matter how long they have been expressing those views or how loudly they do so.
     
     
    He urged graduates to do more than just tolerate other points of view, but to respect and hear what others say in service of a better understanding the world, rather than simply striving to win an argument.
     
     
    "Think about it: Saying 'I tolerate you' actually means something like, 'OK, I grudgingly admit that you have a right to exist, but just don't get up in my face about it. Or date my sister.'"
     
     
    "There's not a religion in the world that asks you to 'tolerate thy neighbour.'"
     
     
    Later Wednesday, Trudeau was scheduled to meet with several executives from major American companies, including the heads of PepsiCo., and Honeywell. On Thursday, he's scheduled to speak to the Economic Club of New York before decamping for Boston.
     
     
    Trudeau spoke by phone with Trump earlier this week about the North American Free Trade Agreement, a conversation in which he told the president that a deal is possible, but only if some U.S. demands are withdrawn.
     
     
    For more than a year, Trudeau has gone to great lengths to speak out against things Trump stands for without directly criticizing him, perhaps most notably when he tweeted about Canada welcoming refugees even as Trump was cracking down on immigration from Muslim-majority nations.
     
     
    Thus far, Trump has appeared to show both respect and warmth for his Canadian counterpart, referring to him at times as smart and as a friend.
     
     
    It will be against that backdrop next month that Trudeau hosts Trump in Canada for the first time at the G7 summit in Quebec, where the U.S. president joins six other leaders whose world views support multilateralism, immigration and environmental protection.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Opting Out: Canadians To Get Emergency Alerts On Their Phones Soon

    No Opting Out: Canadians To Get Emergency Alerts On Their Phones Soon
    Canada's wireless providers are preparing for a looming update to the National Public Alerting System that will force smartphones to sound an ominous alarm when an emergency alert is triggered.

    No Opting Out: Canadians To Get Emergency Alerts On Their Phones Soon

    Canadian NASA Astronaut Andrew 'Drew' Feustel Heading To The International Space Station

    Canadian NASA Astronaut Andrew 'Drew' Feustel Heading To The International Space Station
    A NASA astronaut with ties to Canada heads to the International Space Station today on a visit that will last nearly six months

    Canadian NASA Astronaut Andrew 'Drew' Feustel Heading To The International Space Station

    Surrey's RONJOT SINGH DHAMI Identified As A Suspect In Mississauga Attack On Man With Autism

    Surrey's RONJOT SINGH DHAMI Identified As A Suspect In Mississauga Attack On Man With Autism
    A video of the attack released by police on March 13 shows the man sitting at the bottom of a stairwell putting on roller blades when three young men approached from behind and began to punch and kick him.

    Surrey's RONJOT SINGH DHAMI Identified As A Suspect In Mississauga Attack On Man With Autism

    University Teachers Group Launches Inquiry Into Case Of Outspoken Acadia Prof Rick Mehta

    The Canadian Association of University Teachers is launching an inquiry into the case of an outspoken East Coast professor under investigation following complaints over his polarizing views.

    University Teachers Group Launches Inquiry Into Case Of Outspoken Acadia Prof Rick Mehta

    Police Officers Injured While Arresting Demonstrators Opposed To Pipeline

    Police Officers Injured While Arresting Demonstrators Opposed To Pipeline
    The RCMP say three officers suffered minor injuries while making arrests Monday evening at demonstrations against the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline in Burnaby, B.C.

    Police Officers Injured While Arresting Demonstrators Opposed To Pipeline

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Says Private Sector Investment Necessary To Help Mali Rebuild

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Says Private Sector Investment Necessary To Help Mali Rebuild
    He says that's because broader economic development is needed to help war-torn countries, because the military can't do it on its own.

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Says Private Sector Investment Necessary To Help Mali Rebuild