As we know, the British botanical influence imposes a mode of culture favoring the proliferation of political green plants. Mrs. Claire Samson, the transplanted former Quebec deputy, became interested in the phenomenon of the green plant in the National Assembly. Following her invaluable observations, she would have affirmed that this phenomenon is likely to increase in the event of a tidal wave of the CAQ in the next elections.
But what are the factors that are likely to favor the arrival of these political green plants in the parliamentary garden? From the moment they are allowed to proliferate, these uncontrolled shoots spread everywhere, attacking the survival of their congeners already present in the flowerbeds of their respective counties. By taking the place of their adversaries, they impoverish the fertile soil, guarantee of the sustainability of a diversity essential to the smooth running of a democratic balance.
Being thus deprived of the competitive presence of the opposing plants, will not the absence of confrontation of colors have the foreseeable consequence of presenting a parliamentary landscape where arrogance and sufficiency will interfere like weeds in the behavior of the majority group? It would therefore be desirable for certain plants, other than green ones, to be able to bloom during the next election harvest. Less numerous, the latter would have the advantage of standing out and could become important elements in the floral space, to the detriment of the minor green plants which risk vegetating in their plots, being forgotten by their dominant sisters in power. Could this situation not cause a germ of discord within the majority which could experience a certain form of self-destruction? We know that nature abhors a vacuum, but an overflow can sometimes destroy it.
This allegory brings us back to the role of gardener which will be ours on October 3rd. It is up to us to make democracy flourish by multiplying the number of species to ensure the diversity of points of view necessary for a healthy debate on the future of our large community garden. Voting is choosing the floral colors that will be part of it with the pigments that illustrate their values.
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