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| Phil Burpee |
Phil Burpee, Columnist, Pincher Creek Voice
In
the early seventies I was in Ottawa at a demonstration in front of
the Parliament Buildings in support of a contingent of Aboriginal
representatives from across Canada who had set up an ‘Embassy’ in
an old, unused limestone building not far from the E.B. Eddy paper
mill across the river in Hull. It was the time of the American Indian
Movement (A.I.M.) and the dust-up at Wounded Knee, South Dakota.
Feelings were running high. As a young white man, born of the culture
of his day, I felt it was my place to stand in solidarity with my
Sisters and Brothers in whose country I had been raised. We were at
the steps leading up to the main entrance and the crowd was pretty
boisterous – lots of signs, lots of shouting, lots of drumming.
Apparently the RCMP determined that there was an imminent threat to
the security of the legislature, and so a phalanx of riot police came
at a quick step and lined up at the top of the stairs, huffing and
pounding their plexi-glass shields in unison with their truncheons,
still jogging on the spot – huhf/whack, huhf/whack, huhf/whack –
impressed the hell out of me.
So, some skinny, little
white guy appeared with a couple of rocks in his hands, ran up and
fired one at the cops – bonk! I suppose he was an
anarchist-in-training or some such, but he was in the wrong place at
the wrong time without a doubt. I ran up and kicked his ass and
dragged him back out of harm’s way before the whole situation went
ballistic. Cooler heads prevailed, riot-readiness was stood down, and
eventually leaders were moved to the front to speak and address the
many concerns of the day. The threshold of civil society’s capacity
to accommodate volatile discourse had been reached and, that day, not
crossed into mayhem and violence. It is not always so. In many
countries, and for many peoples, that threshold is very, very low.
In our liberal democracy
it is expected of us that we will make our displeasures known, at the
very least through the ballot box, but sometimes in a more direct
fashion. Once again my memory brings me to another event – to the
Burrard Street Bridge in Vancouver in 1983, marching amongst a throng
of a hundred thousand fellow citizens to protest the impending
decision to allow the U.S. Air Force to test its new General Dynamics
cruise missile at Cold Lake, Alberta. It was a massively unpopular
move on the part of the Trudeau government of the day, and hundreds
of thousands of Canadians were expressing their deep concern for what
was perceived to be an immoral and inflammatory escalation of an
already super-heated nuclear showdown with the USSR. And I have
likewise been on the street in solidarity with fellow Canadians who
are gay and lesbian, and in outrage over the ill-treatment of, and
disregard for, the poor and the marginalized, and from time to time
in support of municipal concerns for ill-advised industrial
development. Yet I am not a radical person. Civil action is a normal
and healthful indicator of a society in a dynamic state. Five years
ago one of my neighbours, a man from a deeply conservative ranching
tradition, went to Edmonton to deliver on horseback to the steps of
the Legislature a letter penned by hundreds of concerned people from
up and down the Porcupine Hills and Southern Foothills decrying the
arrogant behaviour of certain oil and gas interests and the
ineffectual state of the now-defunct Energy and Utilities Board
(EUB). The venerable Ian Tyson himself rode with that posse. When the
streets (or byways) become empty and silent, then well may we be
concerned.
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| Castle Special Place Phil Burpee photo |
Recently a group of
citizens from the Beaver Mines area felt compelled to undertake a
concerted civil action against what they perceived to be a
poorly-considered and unnecessary proposal to log off a swath of low
grade timber just inside the Castle Special Management Area. The
Castle Special Place was mapped and designated as a protected area by
the Government of Alberta in 1998 as a result of public consultation
during its Special Places 2000 program. It was one of 81
such Special Places determined under this process, yet it remains
today the only one of those still without formal legislative
protection. The Municipal District of Pincher Creek wrote a letter to
the Minister of Sustainable Resource Development (SRD) noting the
Castle Special Management Area "is of particular concern to
our Council, specifically with respect to the environment, Grizzly
Bear population, and watershed management" and expressing
concern that SRD's logging approval "is premature in
allowing cut block logging until this Land-use Framework is in place,
as the two may be contradictory." (Comments
in italics from http://www.castlespecialplace.ca/
). Indeed
the Ministry of Tourism, Parks and Recreation was inclined to agree
with the idea of taking a somewhat more conservative approach to the
whole issue until such time as a full range of economic and
ecological determinants had been properly articulated. It was not to
be, however, despite similar calls for prudence from the Castle Crown
Wilderness Coalition, the Oldman Watershed Council, the City of
Lethbridge, and the Assembly of Treaty Chiefs in Alberta. Ultimately,
orders sought and procured from the Court of Queen’s Bench provided
for the arrest and detention this past week of those not willing to
stand aside, and logging swiftly began.
It
is informative to observe that civil resistance is not a direct
function of what might be called an objective determination of ‘right
and wrong’ – often no such objectivity is possible. Rather it is
an exercise in moral clarity. Certainly logging is a difficult child
in our modern world, often castigated and reviled - sometimes rightly
and sometimes wrongly. But it is most emphatically an activity that
falls well within the purview of regional determination. For truly,
the best place to log is around where people live, so that we can all
understand, observe and monitor its impact and dimensions.
Dispatching it to some distant ‘elsewhere’ only encourages
industrial excess. And, as far as Nature is concerned, there is no
such place as elsewhere – it is all part of the biota. But all of
our small sawmills are gone – driven out of business by
agglomerating monstrosities, just like the slaughter and butchering
of stock animals. And our Regional Advisory Council (RAC) as
designated under the Land Use Framework (Bill 36 – Alberta Land
Stewardship Act - ALSA) continues to be mute and ineffectual, ignored
by Ministers of the Crown. Further, it is also not difficult to see
that certain areas are indeed no longer appropriate as targets of
extractive industries, such as, undoubtedly, the aforementioned
Castle Special Place. Bill 36 is, of course, currently under attack
by landowners and libertarians for its various excesses, and the
government continues to claim that regional sensitivities will be
brought to bear once it is up and running. Some of the upcoming
provincial election will be fought over this. Meanwhile, the very
best spirit of this piece of legislation continues to be insulted by
high-handed Ministers who are given free rein to make centralized
decisions as to our regional wellbeing without recourse to any
creditable analysis of actual contingencies ‘on the ground’ –
other than those of powerful industry lobbies. It is this very
centralizing disregard for the voices of the people of this province
that so undermines our sense of inhabiting a functioning
representational democracy. This is what we hear from Edmonton –
“Yeah, sure. OK. Whatever. Yahdyahdyah. Now move
your butt so we can get some business done here.”
A
sorry state of affairs.
I
had the privilege of going out to photograph the protest camp for the
Voice early on in this determined and resolute action. Let me tell
you – it was pretty much all grandmas and grandpas out there
challenging the power and intransigence of the Province of Alberta.
Not a youthful anarchist was to be seen reaching for a rock. Standing
before the machines was an array of folks who, under normal
circumstances, ought to be enjoying the fruits of their many lifelong
works and the pleasures of family. There was, and continued to be, an
air of deep civility and respect about the whole affair. No
invectives were hurled at Forestry officials sent to hand out and/or
pin up their proclamations – nobody flipped the bird at the
courteous RCMP officers likewise dispatched to enforce the law. And,
in fact, so astonishingly decent was the whole atmosphere, that at
one point Voice reporter Chris Davis was asked to capture the image
of the protesters, Forestry officers, and sober-looking members of
the Queen’s Cowboys all chumming together for a big summer-camp
grinfest. “Curiouser and curiouser”
said Alice, as she worked her way through Wonderland.
All
very fine and cozy. But the RCMP does not come to cart disputatious
loggers or roughnecks or seismic operators or catskinners off to the
slammer. When it finally comes to it, the police must enforce the law
– even when, as somebody once quipped – ‘the law is an ass’.
The larger the industrial apparatus, the more likely it is that it
will take refuge in the strong arm of the law. If an oil company has
sub-surface rights (bequeathed by the Crown) to resources beneath
your property, and you demonstrate a sufficient degree of
obstreperousness, you will in due course be visited by the Horsemen
and advised to comply, on penalty of appropriate penalty. Likewise
the people and their trees. It’s a stacked deck.
The
C5 Forest Management Plan is a flawed document. But the Empress
apparently has new clothes (very chic ones too, Madam Premier), and
will not brook dissenting opinion. Indeed. And so we must be ever
watchful of the extent to which powerful interests catch the ear of
government. For, as the recently-deceased free thinker and s.o.b.
contrarian Christopher Hitchens would have had it: -
“The essence of
tyranny is not iron law. It is capricious law.”
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| Wounded Knee Jon Lurie photo |
Phil
Burpee
February
4, 2012



Very nice piece Phil. Well laid out. I think I'll use in our Social 30-2 course in liberal ideology. You touch on important, universal issues, yet ground it in local affairs. Love it!
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