Idle No More

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Re: Idle No More

Postby peartreed » Fri Oct 18, 2013 3:15 pm

The Idle No More movement is an outcome of the common betrayal by government and corporations of the indigenous population and their signed treaties and agreements. The New Brunswick events in the news are the most recent outrage in a long series and that is why protests have once again expanded across Canada, from coast to coast to coast, across the Americas and now even overseas in sympathy. This article from the BC Province helps describe the existing bigotry.

http://www.theprovince.com/touch/story.html?id=9036327

The bigotry is the background to understanding the betrayals, and the government complicity and corruption in conquering and confiscating formally legally negotiated and awarded lands, resources and life-sustaining habitats of the aboriginal tribes. Combine bigotry with betrayal and you get rebellion.

In this thread, and throughout establishment media covering and commentating on the conflicts, there will continue to be attempts to rationalize the suppression and demonize the natives as somehow making unrealistic demands on the greater society and endangering the continuing practice of their commercial exploitation.

This is just today’s version of the historical subversion, isolation and disempowering of dissent in the conquering of the original occupants and owners of the resources.

Be wary and watchful of bombastic buffoons bringing yet more bigoted betrayal by belittling the braves at the bastions.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby stillrobertpaulsen » Fri Oct 18, 2013 3:37 pm

peartreed » Fri Oct 18, 2013 2:15 pm wrote:Be wary and watchful of bombastic buffoons bringing yet more bigoted betrayal by belittling the braves at the bastions.


From one fan of alliteration to another, frickin' awesome!
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Re: Idle No More

Postby Perelandra » Fri Oct 18, 2013 3:49 pm

peartreed » Thu Oct 17, 2013 10:00 am wrote:The last thing federal governments in North America want to do is to live up to their own historical, formally negotiated agreements and treaties.

The subjugation of indigenous people continues as the consistent path of history.
Thank you for the ongoing educational posts. I think the above points are sadly the most accurate.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby peartreed » Fri Oct 18, 2013 11:12 pm

Thanks Perelandra. Three of the four generations of my family household are card-carrying Status Indians here on the West Coast of Canada, so I’m viscerally involved in aboriginal rights beyond this board while monitoring the immediate impact of bigoted betrayal.

stillrobertpaulsen: Winsome word-play while writing will work when wry witness to the witless withers one’s wonderment at the world.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby parel » Sat Oct 19, 2013 1:32 am

Image
kowardly kolonial kops



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she is holding fast to the feather


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solidarity from Aotearoa. Canadian Embassy Auckland today.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Oct 19, 2013 10:08 am

Canadian Government-sanctioned Racism
by Yves Engler / October 18th, 2013

In Canada it is illegal to restrict the sale of property to certain ethnic or religious groups but many of our business people and politicians promote an organization that does exactly that in Israel.

Into the 1950s restrictive land covenants in many exclusive neighbourhoods and communities across Canada made it impossible for Jews, Blacks, Chinese, Aboriginals and others deemed to be non-’white’ to buy property. It was not until after World War II that these policies began to be successfully challenged in court.

In 1948 Annie Noble decided to sell a cottage in the exclusive Beach O’ Pines subdivision on Lake Huron to Bernie Wolf, who was Jewish. During the sale Wolf’s lawyer realized that the original deed for the property contained the following clause: “The lands and premises herein described shall never be sold, assigned, transferred, leased, rented or in any manner whatsoever alienated to, and shall never be occupied or used in any manner whatsoever by any person of the Jewish, Negro or coloured race or blood, it being the intention and purpose of the Grantor, to restrict the ownership, use, occupation and enjoyment of the said recreational development, including the lands and premises herein described, to persons of the white or Caucasian race.”

Noble and Wolf tried to get the court to declare the restriction invalid but they were opposed by the Beach O’ Pines Protective Association. Both a Toronto court and the Ontario Court of Appeal refused to invalidate the racist covenant. But, Noble pursued the case – with assistance from the Canadian Jewish Congress – to the Supreme Court of Canada. In a 6-to-1 decision the highest court reversed the lower courts’ ruling and allowed Noble to purchase the property.

The publicity surrounding the case prompted Ontario to pass a law voiding racist land covenants and in 2009 the Conservative government defined the Noble and Wolf v. Alley Supreme Court case “an event of national historic significance” in the battle “for human rights and against discrimination on racial and religious grounds in Canada.”

Six decades after the Supreme Court delivered this blow to racist property covenants, a Canadian charity that discriminates in land use continues to receive significant public support. Ottawa provides financial and political support to the Jewish National Fund, which owns 13 percent of Israel’s land and has significant influence over most of the rest. Established internationally in 1901 and nine years later in Canada, the JNF’s bylaws and lease documents contain a restrictive covenant stating its property will not be leased to non-Jews.

A 1998 United Nations Human Rights Council report found that the JNF systematically discriminates against Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up about 20 percent of the country’s population. According to the UN report, JNF lands are “chartered to benefit Jews exclusively,” which has led to an “institutionalized form of discrimination.” Similarly, after an Arab Israeli couple was blocked from leasing a house in the mid-1990s they took their case all the way to Israel’s High Court and in 2005 the court found that the JNF systematically excluded Palestinian citizens of Israel from leasing its property.

More recently, the US State Department’s 2012 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices detailed “institutional and societal discrimination” in Israel. The report noted, “Approximately 93 percent of land was in the public domain, including approximately 12.5 percent owned by the NGO Jewish National Fund (JNF), whose statutes prohibit sale or lease of land to non-Jews.”

For their part, JNF Canada officials are relatively open about the discriminatory character of the organization. In May 2002, JNF Canada’s executive director for eastern Canada, Mark Mendelson, explained: “We are trustees between world Jewry and the land of Israel.” JNF Canada’s head Frank A. Wilson echoed this statement in July 2009: “JNF are the caretakers of the Land of Israel on behalf of its owners, who are the Jewish people everywhere around the world.”

The JNF’s bylaws and operations clearly violate Canadian law. Yet JNF Canada, which raises about $7 million annually, is a registered charity in this country. As such, it can provide tax credits for donations, meaning that up to 40% of their budget effectively comes from public coffers.

On top of its charitable status, JNF Canada has received various other forms of official support. Alberta and Manitoba, for instance, have signed multimillion dollar accords with the JNF while Harper’s Conservatives are strong supporters of the organization. Over the past year ministers Jason Kenney and John Baird have spoken at JNF galas while Peter Kent toured southern Israel with officials from the organization. On December 1 Prime Minister Stephen Harper is set to be honored at the JNF Negev Dinner in Toronto, which will be the first time a sitting Canadian prime minister has spoken to a JNF gala in the organization’s 100-year history.

Does Harper support the JNF’s racist land use policies?

Independent Jewish Voices has launched a campaign to revoke the JNF Canada’s charitable status for its racist land use policies and role in dispossessing Palestinians. On December 1 Harper will be greeted by protesters in Toronto while a protest is also planned for the JNF gala in Ottawa on October 29.

In 2011, Stop the JNF in England pushed Prime Minister, David Cameron, to withdraw his patron status from the JNF. Additionally, at least 68 members of the UK parliament have endorsed a call to revoke the organization’s charitable status because “the JNF’s constitution is explicitly discriminatory by stating that land and property will never be rented, leased or sold to non-Jews.”

Here in Canada it would be nice to see progressive politicians such as NDP MP Libby Davies or Green Party leader Elizabeth May circulate a similar call to their colleagues in the House of Commons. At least some federal politicians must oppose Canada subsidizing racist property restrictions.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby LolaB » Mon Oct 21, 2013 11:39 pm

Interesting how this happened right at the eclipse last week. Full Moon = it's easy to get carried away, and it's easy for people to get together as well.

http://www.nativenewsnetwork.com/after-police-assault-on-unarmed-crowd-34-tribal-chiefs-meet-in-new-brunswick.html

FREDERICTON, NEW BRUNSWICK – On Friday evening the 34 Elsipogtog and Wolastoqiyik First Nations tribal chiefs met in Fredericton, in order to discuss the current crisis situation.

Police Assault on Unarmed Protesters – photo Tazz Coupage

This meeting was held in reaction to the police assault that happened on this past Thursday when Royal Canadian Mounted Police shot rubber bullets and sprayed tear gas and pepper spray into the unarmed crowd.

“The Chiefs fully endorse Elsipogtog Chief Aaron Sock’s call for peace, and agree emphatically that a cooling off period is required. This means an end to violent protests, an end to the blockades, and an end to violence by all parties in all its forms,”
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Re: Idle No More

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Oct 22, 2013 11:15 am

OCTOBER 22, 2013
Big Green, Sun Media and Elpisogtog
Fracking Indigenous Countryby MACDONALD STAINSBY
If anyone doubted that it’s a good thing that Sun News in Canada has been both going broke and also denied the ability to force their way onto Canada’s basic cable system (vastly expanding their audience and getting themselves included in most homes with television subscriptions by default), the racist rantings of Ezra Levant in response to the recent RCMP attack on the Mi’kmaq community of Elpisogtog ought to clear it up.

On October 17th in the Canadian province of New Brunswick, an indigenous Mi’kmaq community named Elpisogtog came under RCMP militant attack. This community learned many months ago that there were corporations preparing to explore for gas trapped by shale that industry would “frack” to release. When land defenders from their community learned of the multiple places around the continent that have seen everything from polluted aquifers to tap water that could be lit on fire as an outcome of fracking– concerned families took action to defend their water.

Among the means by which people took action included blocking access to the site of exploration and all the seismic testing equipment to be used by SWN Resources on the site. The community began mobilizing months ago; a blockade had been up for over three weeks. It changed last Thursday.

The RCMP swooped in a community that has never ceded their land via treaty to either Canada or the British Crown, with multiple dozen armed officers coordinating an attack on an encampment of shocked and terrorized Mi’Kmaq people and their supporters. RCMP had stated against just such an act only the night before.

After breaking the blockade up and arresting over 40 people– and then holding the obligatory press conference to smear those they had attacked– the RCMP discovered that as of Monday, October 21, 2013 the injunction demanding the road to be evacuated was overturned and tossed out.

In between the initial attack on Mi’kmaq defenders and their supporters and this throwing out of a legal case for attacking people, a rhetorical case for white supremacy dribbled into the microphones of Sun News. Ezra Levant, perhaps the best known name and certainly loudest advocate for forcing you to watch the Sun News Network, held his own version of reality forward on his show, fortunately mostly only seen online.

After assuring people watching that “no lethal force was used” (thus making state violence against families with children and elders apparently more acceptable), he also asserts the community (never named as such) are “terrorists.” He explains that the fracking process is “quite normal” and makes some other real humdingers as far as assertions about just that.

Sun News Network has been compared to a hypothetical “Fox News North,” and you can see this would-be Bill O’Reilly ranting, screaming and slandering people in much that same “tradition.” It comes from the ideological far-right– the environment hating, white supremacist mish-mash of people who think all industrial development and profit is good, any person of color is a likely criminal, and that any regulation of industry is tantamount to Stalin’s Five Year Plan for Canada.

After stating that there has never been any problems with fracking…:

“In the more than one million times that wells have been fracked before, never– not even once—has there even been a report about environmental problems effecting groundwater caused by fracking.”

…the next thing, of course, is to call Mi’Kmaq terrorists, and use the racist dehumanization he often carries out against Palestinian men, women and children to help with the dehumanization of Mi’kmaq men, women and children (Hey, it wouldn’t be Ezra if he could not find a way to bash at least one Muslim population, somewhere).

Certainly lost on him would be the bigger link between the two communities, attacked as backward while settlers from across the planet take their land and homes. Both Palestinians and indigenous peoples in Canada have human rights law and even UN resolutions on their sides. This, of course, is irrelevant to Levant and is ignored by mainstream media as a matter of course.

Then, from vile and racist, Levantine logic jumps to the ridiculous.

Mi’kmaq struggles against fracking have taken place completely outside of the framework of large environmental NGO’s; many have stated their belief this is a huge reason for the cohesive, community outlook of the struggles. Most of the larger ENGO’s have an internal policy against opposition to fracking. The reason? Big Capital control through foundations has determined that such a campaign is not a likely “win,” and Big Capital is also involved in labelling Natural Gas– including that from “fracking”– as a “transition fuel.”

Further to that point? All of the major foundation funded ENGO’s in British Columbia, Canada have not opposed the construction of the Pacific Trails Pipeline proposal, now owned by Chevron. This particular pipeline would be the first major exporting pipeline of fracked natural gas of the many planned, running from “Canada’s Bakken” in the Horn River Basin of Northeastern British Columbia and southwestern North West Territories. This is an area with a breakneck pace of development that has flattened large tracts of land and yet has only just begun so far as industry would decide.

That fracked gas could also be fed into the energy grid of Alberta province, lowering the price for tar sands producers to refine, upgrade and ship their tar sands climate killing crude oil. The proposed pipeline route of Pacific Trails would be, so industry likes to think, the means for laying down major new tar sands pipelines as well. The end of the Pacific Trails would be a major, highly dangerous Liquified Natural Gas terminal on the Pacific Coast where currently super tanker traffic is neither allowed nor would ever be safe.

The BC government and industry have not hidden that this pipeline is one step towards an overall gas agenda for the Pacific Coast. At the beginning of this month, Premier Clark made that point by seeking New Brunswick Premier David Alward as a co-chair in opposition to a Federal government “jobs plan” that both premiers believe would not benefit their respective provinces in the case of rapid growth and the resulting shortage in skilled labour to work in– Fracked Natural Gas Fields. On the BC government website, LNG from fracking is described by Clark:

Our long history of safe, responsible natural gas development makes us a reliable place to invest and conduct business. In addition, a strong relationship with B.C.’s First Nations continues to facilitate mutually beneficial partnerships.1

Nowhere in the “strong relationship” is there mention of the Unist’ot’en Camp, built up by members of the Wet’suwet’en Nation in opposition to all pipeline construction, tar sands, fracking, or otherwise, as well as other industrial incursions into their lands. Here, the resistance to fracking on the Pacific Ocean has a home base because of indigenous resistance, and despite being ignored as “the cost of doing business” by the crowd of people in the secret North American Tar Sands Coalition and now, the “Tar Sands Solutions Network.”

The same dynamic exists in the community near Rexton, NB. While fracking is being resisted by land defenders who want water for their families, well-funded and connected environmentalists have had almost zero to do with putting the situation on the political map. The community didn’t need outsiders from gas and energy to tell them they needed good water, and they didn’t need that from “environmentalists,” either. What they have needed is no-compromising support, and in the moments since the RCMP attacks they have received such– from other indigenous nations across the entire territory colonized by Canada.

Foundation Funded environmentalists and their “we don’t oppose fracking” organizations? We have Tzeporah Berman’s outfit over at the “Tar Sands Solutions Network”. In the four days as of this writing since the RCMP attack on the community in New Brunswick, only one story that was even somewhat related to the struggle on Mi’kmaq Territory is listed– the recent cancellation of the NEB hearings on a possible Line 9 Reversal to accommodate tar sands oil exports to the Atlantic Ocean. That happened after a flurry of opposition to Line 9 was expected to jump dramatically– in the wake of furious organizing for just that, and that had taken place in the day following the assault on Elpisogtog.

The article and the entire website makes no mention whatever of the attack on Mi’kmaq peoples. Instead, we have this advertisement, addressing Christy Clark:

Image

The reasoning behind the ad? In recent BC provincial politics, more than 4 out of 5 people have stated opposition to the Enbridge Gateway Pipeline, and majorities has been opposed to tar sands-sourced oil coming into BC in general. To avoid taking a pro-industry position that would cost her votes, prior to the May election in BC, Clark’s Liberal Party endorsed “conditions” that “must be met first” for the pipeline. After winning the election, Clark repeated some of those conditions and stated at least temporary opposition to the project.

The provincial government has no final say in the Joint Review Panel; the pipeline in Canadian law is a federal matter. The BC government is “just” another “intervening party.” Stating opposition is free, intelligent public relations for the re-elected Liberal Party, especially while “conditions” exist to be met and a “rethinking” can about face later.

Meanwhile, the BC government was promoting about two dozen disastrous environmental policies– not least of which included the construction of a natural gas corridor that would facilitate larger tar sands developments– instead of being called to account on this, Big Capital approved Big Funding for Big Green for a Big Ad that lauded her with a thank you and a postcard image of a Big Whale. This sent the subtle message that the “Tar Sands Solutions Network is ready to play ball, Premier. Are you listening?”

In the same time frame elsewhere, with another indigenous community struggle against another fracking proposal carried out by another advocating Premier, Big Green has done little or nothing to support the struggles that have now taken on a larger scale impact. And how does the Sun News Network’s great white hope describe this? Again, in Levantine fashion, the description is of indigenous peoples being marched by Big Green, at the behest of Big Capital, to disrupt the Canadian economy. Why big capital would be anti-capitalist is not explained.

The notion that everything was fine months ago, and that conflict is fabricated by shady, American money is casting a white supremacist conspiracy theory. That only white, rich “Americans” would try and prevent fracking in traditional Mi’kmaq Territory of course, is just silly. That this struggle against fracking has developed outside of foundations and Big Green directing struggles in a breath of welcome, fresh air would make Levant’s head explode.

As a result of Big Green ignoring such struggles against fracking, it has taken means such as land defense from Mi’kmaq community members to make fracking a known issue in Canada. It has been, on both coasts, the impacted communities that dared to organize to defend their land and water when there was little to no help coming from Big Green. If such struggles continue, watch for Big Green to take up exactly this issue, after the fact.

Perhaps the only part that is correct about this twist of logic is that movements in environmental circles are often trying to borrow the legitimacy of indigenous land defense. Certainly it is the case that indigenous imagery gets used as a means to lessen the whiteness of environmentalism in the public mind. However, who struggles first and who shows up later to use that for their own purposes is the same as always. Community leads the way, organized institutional groupings– whether “progressive politicians” or “progressive environmental groups”– will attempt to hitch their cart to a running horse.

Big Capital has invested huge sums to try and corner the public perception of what constitutes environmentalism. When struggles break out into open confrontation, it is a community that did not take a deal, cut and run to private boardrooms and the like that is almost always the catalyst. If the struggle built by community has staying power, soon capital through foundations will try to stake their claim within said struggle. The near total silence on fracking from Big Money’s Big Green illustrates this perfectly well in Canada’s indigenous land defender communities.

Inevitably, if one begins to tackle the problems of foundation funding behind the environmental NGO structures in North America, and begins to illustrate it, two related accusations will be levied at your investigation:

1: You are carrying out conspiracy theory—a mirror image of the Ezra Levant types who have been filling up airtime and newspaper columns with tales of the American environmentalist using money to bring down Canada’s economy, despite large public support for the “oil sands.”

2: More specifically, your arguments have much in common with Canada’s would-be Rush Limbaugh or Vivian Krause, ranters and researchers beloved by the growing authoritarian right in Canada who regularly assert a “green conspiracy” that equates environmentalism with something akin to Black Helicopters from the UN turning cows inside out in Kansas, but at the behest of a reinvigorated Kremlin helping the Saudis and Iran.

Despite the fact that for decades Big Green all but ignored the tar sands developments until they became an international issue after the alarm was raised by effected communities in Alberta who tied it to climate justice, Levant posits that people do not actually oppose tar sands developments, but that media have been brainwashed into believing such through the largesse of Obama-loving liberals in the US.

This basic premise by Levant, Krause or any of the other people attacking right wing Big Green groups from even further to the right, always puts the cart before the horse about how big money got involved. The reality is that Big Green came when climate called, that is a campaign with international appeal and therefore the possibility to play a “deciding” role presented itself. But it was community organizing that built up international concern from decades of being overlooked.

Big money liberals have moved to steer what cannot be stopped; Big Green has shaped policy that beckons for solutions in tune with a nascent green bourgeoisie. Of course ‘paranoia’ over such an analysis may be invoked by those who would defend Big Green, actual facts be damned.

That large money crosses the border is about the only point Levant and co. get right; The Tea Party-inspired thought fails to see that this liberal strategy defends capital more effectively than their hardline opposition, just as similar thinking fails to see the bailout as boon for capital and industry. Those who call the Obama regime ‘extreme left’ are incapable of embracing this fundamentally soft right wing, carrot instead of the stick approach. They refuse to join them– and cannot recognize that by instead attempting to beat them they are beating themselves.

The false binary– “The left and the right have similar criticisms of environmentalism. The truth must be somewhere in the middle!”–has been used as a mantra for the liberal Big Green elite to dismiss a discussion of the subversion of real grassroots environmentalism and the choking of community level democracy that gave birth to environmental activism (and many of the Big Green groups) in the first place.

This right-wing ideological contempt for malleable, corporate friendly eNGO’s is the same sort of mentality that attempts to diminish the role of the United Nations, to use government “shutdown” blackmail to prevent modest re-regulation of the private-for profit health insurance sector in the United States, that cheers Canada’s “number one friend” relationship with Israel while eliminating all diplomatic ties with Iran. All of it is more ideologically based than it is rational policy.

The primary critique from the Levant and Krause camps have surface colour, but the thesis– That American environmental money is trying to destroy the Canadian economy– has zero depth. Large capital acts in its best interests, and always has. There is no “American takeover” through a hostile, anti-Canada campaign of US philanthropy; There is a continent wide takeover by capital through the dismantling of an accountable public process.

The problem of free trade deals is the considered increase in deregulation and lack of accountability that results from them. The same is true of taking environmental planning processes out of the public sphere. It matters not whether it is Canadian or American corporations decimating the atmosphere; it matters not whether it is Canadian or American capital that squashes democracy inside a secret negotiation process around tar sands.

There is no Saudi-orchestrated attempt to knock “ethical oil” off the market to the advantage of the monarchs who run the Gulf-Cooperation Council states, either. Nor is the Foundation-led leadership contemptuous of the environment itself, working with personal intent to decimate the biosphere. They are capitalists, some of whom love green spaces and desperately want a false green capitalism to “give it a go.” The problem is not that they insufficiently care about the environment. It is that they love their class privilege too much.

For the most part, while the “invisible to the outside” coalition will not allow for transparency, inside them are vast structural realities in terms of class, race and a complete lack of agency inside the now essentially authoritarian Big Green movement; This causes the policies, direction, media talking points and vital strategies to be so overwhelmingly pro-industry and 100% pro-capital.

Sometimes the capital slant would show in which groups get the largest funding or the most media push; Lawsuits that attempt to “fix” regulatory issues, or ENGO-driven ad campaigns in large newspapers can garner huge chunks of the budget and direction of any such coalition. Organizations that represent indigenous and/or frontline communities or that reject any and all false solutions– such as carbon credits– may get enough money to become reliant and dependent, but not enough to change the over-all trajectory of anti-tar sands “mainstream” policy direction.

And whether it is fracking, tar sands, privatization of river systems or mining on ancestral lands, the actual concerns and sovereign rights of nations in the way of environmental schemes are given the same level of respect as indigenous land is by industry. It is only accommodated when it does not disrupt the agenda, and that agenda is already pre-determined to be within the confines of what the current economic structures abide. A democratic and anti-colonial environmental movement is the only answer; the answers needed immediately cannot come from within structures built by capital and structured for market-based incentive solutions.

Only when community resistance speaks truth to power, as has been witnessed in Elsipogtog for the last several days, can the voice of democracy be heard– and when it is heard, it speaks with more clarity and simple truth than capital can handle.

Macdonald Stainsby is an anti-tar sands and social justice activist, freelance writer and professional hitchhiker looking for a ride to the better world, currently based in Vancouver, Canada. He can be reached at mstainsby@resist.ca

Notes:

1 http://engage.gov.bc.ca/lnginbc/http:// ... rk-graphic
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They could still get him out of office.
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Don’t forget that.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby Belligerent Savant » Thu Oct 24, 2013 3:04 pm

.

No, no. Y'all got it all wrong. "...radical elements of the 'environmentalist' movement decided to mount a well-funded, focused disinformation campaign to turn 'Fracking' into a pejorative, a virtual cussword in the collective minds of the American public."

Says this guy.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/davidblackm ... nications/

Shale, Fracking Require Smarter - Not Harder - Industry Communications

Several items that have come up in the last week or so deserve attention and comment.

The first one that caught our eye was the release of new polling data from the University of Texas that contained the following interesting findings:

More than 80 percent of Americans say the federal government should focus on developing more natural gas;
Clear majorities of Americans see benefits of domestic natural gas production. Those include creating jobs (which 68 percent see as a benefit of development), lowering costs (68 percent), energy security (64 percent), increasing energy efficiency (64 percent), boosting manufacturing (61 percent), and lowering carbon emissions (57 percent);
61 percent say they’d be more likely to vote for a candidate who supported natural gas development, which is tied for the highest among all the categories listed;
More respondents said we should promote hydraulic fracturing on public lands than said we should ban it; and yet
When asked if they support hydraulic fracturing, or “Fracking”, only 38% of the respondents had a favorable view.
So how does one explain the seeming contradiction of respondents showing heavy support for natural gas development, but corresponding low support for hydraulic fracturing, the technological process that makes development of shale natural gas resources possible?

The answer is actually pretty simple: About five years ago, radical elements of the “environmentalist” movement decided to mount a well-funded, focused disinformation campaign to turn “Fracking” into a pejorative, a virtual cussword in the collective minds of the American public. And, to be honest, they’ve been pretty successful in that effort, thanks in part to the willing or unwitting cooperation by many in the news media and entertainment industries.

Loren Steffy, writing Tuesday at Forbes.com, makes the point that these seeming inconsistent findings also point out to the reality that the oil and gas industry has done a poor job of telling its own story, and that’s hard to argue with. The truth is that this industry has historically done an awful job in the realm of public education and simple communication. There are many reasons for that historically, going all the way back to muckraking reporter Ida Tarbell’s dealings with John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil.

I personally got myself into trouble about ten years ago when I told an audience at an industry conference in Washington that the oil industry wasn’t just “bad” at communications, it was worse than any other industry in America, including such stalwarts as the coal, tobacco and nuclear industries. Not a great way to win friends and influence people, but hey, it was true at the time.

It isn’t true anymore, though. While the industry still has vast room for improvement, as Mr. Steffy points out, it has greatly improved its efforts in the last 8 years or so, as more and more of the industry’s leaders have realized that they now live in a world in which communicating and public education about their business are critical elements to success. They also increasingly realize that, if they don’t tell their own story, no one else is going to do it for them.

To be fair, as bad as the industry has been at communicating, it would be difficult for any industry to effectively counter when TV series like CSI and Longmire (two of my favorite programs, by the way) air episodes that are nothing more than absurdly-plotted propaganda pieces against Fracking. Let’s face it: neither CBS nor TNT are going to be giving the industry equal time to respond.

Hollywood is willing to fork over $15 million for Matt Damon to film “Promised Land”, another thinly-veiled, absurdly plotted anti-Fracking vehicle that failed miserably at the box office, but hell will freeze over before the mainstream film industry ever airs a movie that offers a favorable view of Fracking or oil and gas development in general. That has never happened, and never will.

HBO was willing to come up with $750,000 to finance Josh Fox’s “Gasland II”, even though HBO’s executives were fully aware of the myriad inaccuracies and outright falsehoods contained in the first “Gasland” fake documentary. But Phelim McAleer and Anne McIlhenny had to mount a Kickstarter-based campaign to raise a couple hundred thousand to fund “FrackNation”, a film that offers a more favorable view of shale development, and which no one at HBO would ever consider giving air time. Meanwhile, Mr. Fox continues to receive softball interviews at news outlets like Politico, in which he is never asked a difficult question.Now, many would say, well, the oil and gas companies are rich – they should spend more money on countering this stuff. Yes, perhaps they should, but I would challenge you to go to Google news and do a search on the word “Fracking” any day of the week. Your search will turn up article after article in mainstream media outlets that report even the most absurd and outrageous claims about hydraulic fracturing without any effort to determine whether such claims have any basis in fact at all. No amount of money invested by “rich” oil and gas companies is going to counter that reality.

So what’s the answer – whining about the unfairness of it all? No, not at all. Look, I used to work for a boss whose favorite advice to his employees was to “work smarter, not harder”. Basically, this just meant he was a skinflint who wasn’t going to adequately staff his department, but the advice was still sound, and can be applied here.

Industry doesn’t necessarily need to spend tons more money in its public education and communications efforts, it just needs to spend the money smarter. That means less money spent on big, national advertising efforts that yield diminishing returns and more spent on state and locally-based grassroots efforts that have in recent years produced great results.

It means companies engaging in more multi-stakeholder efforts, like this year’s Center for Sustainable Shale Development, and scientific efforts like the ongoing University of Texas/EDF study on methane emissions. It means spending more time getting out into the local communities to educate citizens on what oil and gas operations really look like, what the benefits and impacts are, and to answer every question anyone wants to raise. And it means spending more time interfacing one-on-one with reporters who focus on energy and environmental issues.

These are the kinds of things that work, they are the kinds of activities that help inspire public confidence in what the industry does, they are the kind of activities that can result in more balanced media reporting, and they are the activities that, if deployed in a broad enough manner, will help balance out the findings of future public opinion polls.

It’s hard work, and it can be expensive, but the opposition is tireless, and their sources of funding just keep growing. But they’re not smarter, as their increasing radicalization and hyperbolic rhetoric prove. If armed with accurate information, the average guy on the street will figure it all out.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Feb 28, 2014 7:18 pm

Omushkegowuk Walkers Reach Ottawa, Call For Treaty Awareness
CBC | Posted: 02/24/2014 7:37 am EST | Updated: 02/25/2014 7:59 am EST


After almost two months of walking, a group of Cree people from Northern Ontario will hold a rally on Parliament Hill today to continue raising awareness about First Nations treaty rights.

The Omushkegowuk Walkers left Attawapiskat on Jan. 4 to walk more than 1,700 kilometres. They arrived in Ottawa on Sunday.

The group, organized in part by Danny Metatawabin, grew to 18 people during the walk.

“The elders are the ones who have delegated us, directed us to send a strong message to Canada and all provinces that we need to have a dialogue, we need to engage all First Nations communities,” he said on Sunday.

“We need to engage the grassroots of people to talk about treaties, because they're not being honoured, and that's why there's a sense of frustration.”

'Lifted my spirit'

Walkers said issues such as poverty, poor housing and high suicide rates in many First Nations have led to their push for federal and provincial governments to uphold treaties and increase investments.

Gordon Hookimaw said they’ve been overwhelmed by the support they’ve received.

“I didn't realize how important it was for other people across Canada, and the words I got really lifted my spirit more,” he said.

“I'm sad about it. I'm happy about it. I'm happy I get to go home. But at the same, now knowing it's close, I feel like I want to go further.”

“It's coming towards closure now,” said walker Jean Sutherland.

“We're going our own ways, and it's kind of difficult in a way because you've grown closer to people.”

A similar walk from Wapmagoostui, Que., to Ottawa started with seven people in January 2013 and ended with almost 400 walkers when it reached Parliament Hill at the end of March.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby Luther Blissett » Sun Mar 09, 2014 1:58 am

The Rich and the Corporate remain in their hundred-year fever visions of Bolsheviks taking their stuff - JackRiddler
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Re: Idle No More

Postby Luther Blissett » Fri Apr 10, 2015 2:21 pm

Interactive infographic at the link: http://www.cbc.ca/missingandmurdered/

Missing & Murdered
UNSOLVED CASES OF INDIGENOUS WOMEN & GIRLS

CBC News has investigated the unsolved cases of missing and murdered indigenous women across Canada over the last six decades. Here are the stories of about 230 women, including comments from more than 100 family members. We need your help to expand this database and add more information, and we will update it regularly.

The Rich and the Corporate remain in their hundred-year fever visions of Bolsheviks taking their stuff - JackRiddler
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Re: Idle No More

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon May 14, 2018 9:28 am

Canada sued over years of alleged experimentation on indigenous people

Class-action suit filed on behalf of thousands of people allegedly subjected to medical tests without consent in the mid-20th century

Ashifa KassamLast modified on Fri 11 May 2018 11.01 EDT

A class action lawsuit has been filed in a Canadian court on behalf of the thousands of indigenous people alleged to have been unwittingly subjected to medical experiments without their consent.

Filed this month in a courtroom in the province of Saskatchewan, the lawsuit holds the federal government responsible for experiments allegedly carried out on reserves and in residential schools between the 1930s and 1950s.

The suit also accuses the Canadian government of a long history of “discriminatory and inadequate medical care” at Indian hospitals and sanatoriums – key components of a segregated healthcare system that operated across the country from 1945 into the early 1980s.

“This strikes me as so atrocious that there ought to be punitive and exemplary damages awarded, in addition to compensation,” said Tony Merchant, whose Merchant Law Group filed the class action.

The lawsuit, which has not yet been tested in court, alleges that residential schools – where more than 150,000 aboriginal children were carted off in an attempt to forcibly assimilate them into Canadian society – were used as sites for nutritional experiments, where researchers tested out their theories about vitamins and certain foods.

“The wrong here is that nobody knew it was happening. Their families didn’t know it was happening,” Merchant said.

As the diet at the schools was known to be nutritionally deficient, the children were considered “ideal experimental subjects”, according to court documents. It cites six schools, stretching from Nova Scotia to British Columbia, and links them to experiments carried out from 1948 to 1953.

At times, researchers would carry out what Merchant described as trials aimed at depriving the children of nutrients that researchers suspected were beneficial.

“So what they did on a systemic basis … they would identify a group of indigenous children in schools where they were being compulsorily held and they would not give them the same treatment,” said Merchant. “They used them as a control against experiments that they were doing in other places and they also used them to test certain kinds of foods and drugs.”

Court documents describe the lengths researchers at times went to protect their results: after a principal in Kenora, Ontario, asked that all the residential school’s children be given iron and vitamin tablets, the researcher asked him to refrain from doing so, as it would interfere with the experiment.

In other instances, researchers withheld dental treatment from children, worried that healthier teeth and gums would skew their results.

The school in Kenora was also used to test an experimental drug on children with ear problems, leaving nine children with significant hearing loss, according to court documents.

The lawsuit notes that those who did not cooperate were subject to physical abuse.

The experiments also extended to reserves, court documents note. At times children were used to study the effectiveness of drugs and given varying dosages of treatments in order to compare their effectiveness on illnesses ranging from amoebic dysentery to tuberculosis. In Saskatchewan, children living on reserves were used to test the effectiveness of a new tuberculosis vaccine.

At a reserve in northern Manitoba, researchers visiting in the 1940s suspected malnutrition was behind several cases of blindness as well as an outbreak of tuberculosis. In order to test their theory, they gave nutritional supplements to 125 people. The others on the 300-person reserve were used as a control group, left to fend off malnutrition amid a collapsing fur trade and sharp limits on government aid.

Years later, researchers noted they had seen an improvement in health among those given the supplements.

Merchant believed that the number of those affected by the experiments could run into the thousands. “Some people don’t even know that they were the subject of experiments,” he said. “In some instances we can prove that principals of the schools said, ‘Well, we need consent,’ and they said, ‘We’re not going to ask for consent.’”

The lawsuit is directed at the federal government, as it was Canada that established, funded and oversaw residential schools, Indian hospitals and sanatoriums.

The plaintiff in the case is John Pambrun, 77, a First Nations man who spent nearly six years of his childhood in Indian hospitals and sanatoriums. In 1955 – long after antibiotics had become the standard treatment for tuberculosis – doctors removed part of his right lung, according to court documents.

“We can’t find anything in the medical records that indicates that he even had tuberculosis,” said Merchant. “We’re just mystified.”

The years of treatment took him away from his family and his education, while the partial loss of a lung left him suffering shortness of breath and limited his employment options. “It has just been gnawing him all these years that he was mistreated by a nation that took him into their care and had a special responsibility for his care,” said Merchant.

Many of the allegations contained in the lawsuit stem from investigations done by Ian Mosby at the University of Guelph. In research published in 2013, he documented more than a decade of nutritional experiments on indigenous peoples.

In a statement to the Guardian, a spokesperson for Canada’s indigenous and northern affairs department described news of the allegations as “very troubling”. Noting that the federal government had yet to review the statement of claim, the ministry declined to comment further.

While Merchant acknowledged that the lawsuit was aimed at the government of the day, rather than the many governments who allegedly allowed these experiments to happen under their watch, he described it as part of Canada’s fledgling efforts to confront its historical mistreatment of the country’s indigenous population.

“We’re in a time of patching our relationship with indigenous people,” he said. “So to go back and recognise that there was wrong and pay compensation, I think, is important.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... ts-lawsuit
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Idle No More

Postby Grizzly » Mon May 14, 2018 6:20 pm

^^^ Jesus.... Will this horror ever end?
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

― Joseph mengele
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