King of Kensington
Senior Member
Wasn't Tory a member of the Rosedale Golf Club? Would have been nice if he showed some integrity and said if you're going to exclude Jews you're going to have to exclude me.
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Wasn't Tory a member of the Rosedale Golf Club? Would have been nice if he showed some integrity and said if you're going to exclude Jews you're going to have to exclude me.
I'm pretty sure Tory was a member before 1997.
Sure it does. What kind of person would ever join a club that doesn't let in Jews or blacks in the first place? Tory was a member by the early 1980s wasn't he? When did Lyin' Brian join?Does it really matter though?
Sure it does. What kind of person would ever join a club that doesn't let in Jews or blacks in the first place? Tory was a member by the early 1980s wasn't he? When did Lyin' Brian join?
I think there's a big difference between a golf course that didn't until recently let in blacks or Jews ... and the Girl Guides.Do you mean an organization that excludes when one becomes a member or an organization that formerly excluded? I fully disclose that I am a member of several female-only groups (or was once a member of, such as Guides. Not currently involved, but might return if I ever have a daughter who becomes a Spark/Brownie/Guide). Would that be used against me if I ever run for office?
I'm pretty sure Tory was a member before 1997.
And by the time we get to the 1980s, such covenants (at least in Toronto) tended to endure more through absent-minded inertia than through active exclusion--like many an obsolete "by-law" regarding street horses or cattle or what have you. To the point where once discovered, it was more often than not an instant matter of "oopsie, we gotta fix this pronto"...
If we are going to get exercised about the new mayor's golfing history, I'd recommend we instead focus on this: He has publicly offered advice that one of the best ways to get ahead in business (for women in this instance, but probably applies to anyone) is to take up golf. He has spent his life golfing at one of the most exclusive clubs in the country, with a membership that includes presidents and directors of our most powerful companies. Hasn't he been both admitting and remaining oblivious to his tremendous privilege with these statements? Isn't he acknowleging that success often grows from membership in closed networks? Those of us who can only duff around public courses behind goofballs with a cooler of Bud in the back of the cart might not obtain such advantage from golfing.
I'd love to see some polls on who actually cares what some golf club used to do. Bet the number is staggeringly low.
And he and his father worked to get the rules changed.