Is Greenpeace Canada engaged in terrorist activities,
leading to genocide? That seems like a
pretty over-the-top question for any sensible-minded person to ask themselves,
but this week, a group of Northern
Ontario Mayors, including failed provincial Progressive Conservative candidate,
Peter Politis from Cochrane, ramped up its rhetorical attacks against
Greenpeace, referring to the pro-environment organization as engaging in “eco-terrorism”
for its advocacy related to protecting caribou habitat (see: “The threat ofeco-terrorism has no border”, the Cochrane Times-Post, June 3, 2015).
Earlier today on Twitter, Politis went further in response
to a tweet that I made to him asking him if he considered me a terrorist, too,
because I support the protection of threatened caribou habitat. In Politis’ response, he associated environmental
activism as he believes is being practiced by Greenpeace as a form of genocide –
there’s really no other way to interpret a comment which alludes to “wiping out
an entire race of people to enforce ur “belief”? as anything but engaging in
genocide.
Welcome to the post-Bill C-51 world, folks. Even though that legislation hasn’t quite
worked its way through the Conservative-dominated Senate yet, it’s clear that
those who are standing on the frontlines of protecting our environment and
natural resources are coming under increasingly hostile fire from right-wing
paranoids like Politis.
And it’s too bad, really.
Politis and other Northern Ontario Mayors have some real concerns about
the economic health of our part of the Province. However, when they ramp up the rhetoric, and
accuse those with whom they don’t agree as being “radicals” and “terrorists”,
it does nothing but polarize the debate – and make themselves and what
otherwise might be their legitimate issues and grievances look foolish.
Or does it? I used to
believe that. But now with Bill C-51
looming on the horizon, I’m not so sure.
Where once I and others might have been content to write off
these absurd accusations as little more than the simple ravings of an
emotionally disturbed individuals, Bill C-51 has changed things. Greenpeace, an environmental organization
which was founded on the notion of non-violent activism and intervention, has
got to be the furthest thing away from a terrorist organization as one could
contemplate. Or it used to be. Apparently in today’s paranoid political
environment, the non-violent protests of Greenpeace and others seem to
constitute a form of terrorist activity – at least in the minds of some (I’m
sure there’s more than one Peter Politis lurking out there, ready to drop the “eco-terrorist”
label on those engaged in non-violent actions in the name of a sustainable
future).
Legal experts have warned that the provisions now contained
within Bill C-51 which add new measures to the Criminal Code related to terrorism
provide for an overly broad application (see: “Bill C-51, Anti-Terrorism Act,2015” submission from the Canadian Bar Association, and in particular, Section
C of the Executive Summary, “Criminal Code Amendments” – page 4). Throughout the entire Bill C-51 debate, civil
libertarians and others have warned that the Bill could be used to silence
dissent over certain matters – especially those having to do with the
environment.
What it Means to Be A Terrorist in Canada
There are already problems with the existing definition of “terrorism”
in Canada’s Criminal Code. As written,
the current definition of terrorism could be applied to an organization which
one might not believe to be engaged in terrorist activities. The Department of
Justice writes about the “Definition of Terrorism and the Canadian Context” on
its website,
“In Canada, section
83.01 of the Criminal Code defines terrorism as an act committed "in whole
or in part for a political, religious or ideological purpose, objective or
cause" with the intention of intimidating the public "…with regard to
its security, including its economic security, or compelling a person, a
government or a domestic or an international organization to do or to refrain
from doing any act." Activities recognized as criminal within this context
include death and bodily harm with the use of violence; endangering a person’s
life; risks posed to the health and safety of the public; significant property
damage; and interference or disruption of essential services, facilities or
systems.”
Couple the current definition of “terrorism” with an overly-broad
new provision to be added to the Criminal Code around “advocating or promoting
terrorism” and suddenly the activities that Greenpeace has been engaged in are
cast in a new light.
Greenpeace: A Terrorist Organization?
An argument could go like this.
Some members of Greenpeace, and perhaps the entire
organization, has been engaged in terrorist activity. Greenpeace has been
engaged in a campaign against Resolute Forestry Products in an effort to compel
the corporation to alter its current forestry harvest practices (see: “ResoluteForest Products” page on Greenpeace’s website for its take on this long-running
dispute). This campaign has included the spread of misinformation (arguable)
with the intent of economically disrupting Resolute’s profitability (less
arguable – see: “Resolute Feud with Greenpeace Drags on Profit: CorporateCanada”, Bloomberg Business, January 12, 2015).
As a result of this action, Resolute’s profitability has been jeopardized,
which then imperils the economic health and vitality of small, single-resource
Northern communities, like the Towns of Cochrane and Hearst.
In other words, Greenpeace has engaged in an act, motivated
by ideology, with the intention of intimidating consumers and compelling Resolute
Forest Products to undertake sustainable forestry management practices, which
has led to the public’s health being harmed.
That’s why some have been calling Greenpeace a “terrorist
organization” for a while now. But again,
I stress that usually those who have done so have been marginalized as crack
pots and cranks. By any right-thinking
person’s point of view, whether one agrees with Greenpeace’s actions or not, it
is a complete stretch of the imagination to actually believe that Greenpeace
has engaged in terrorist actions. Even
Resolute, which is currently embroiled in a defamation lawsuit with Greenpeace,
hasn’t sought to have Criminal Code charges brought against the environmental
organization on the grounds of terrorism.
So why now are decidedly non-crackpots like Town of Cochrane
Mayor Peter Politis and other Northern Mayors crawling out of the woodwork and levelling
accusations of terrorism at Greenpeace and other environmentalists and
organizations that wish to protect caribou habitat? (I note that from what I’ve read, I would go
so far as to suggest that these Mayors are asserting that Ontario’s Liberal
government may also be a terrorist organization, for placing modest
restrictions on harvesting wood in the critical habitat of a threatened species
– although I’ve not heard that anyone with any credibility has yet accused
Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne of being a terrorist – at least not over her
desire to protect caribou habitat). Can
it be that they are feeling empowered by Bill C-51 to ramp up the rhetoric?
Only it isn’t really “rhetoric”, is it? When someone calls you a terrorist or
suggests that an organization that you belong to is engaged in terrorist
activity, what they’re really saying is that you are breaking the law (the
Criminal Code), and in one of the vilest ways imaginable. While it is true that the term “terrorist” is
bandied about far too often and with little thought to the damage it may do (I
recall the famous People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals – PETA-pie-throwing
incident from a few years back, in which a Minister got pied in the face, sparking Conservative MP
Gerry Byrne to call for the investigation of PETA for terrorist activities –
see: “Canadian Politician Says PETA Throwing a Pie is Terrorism”, Will Potter,
Green Is The New Red, January 28, 2010).
And when language and terminology is politicized, even if it has a
specific definition under a criminal or other statute, confusion often ensues.
Sometimes the whole purpose of using terms like “terrorist”
is for the sake of sowing confusion. But
with Bill C-51 about to become law, I for one am no longer willing to write off
those like Politis who use this term as simply doing so for the purpose of making
a partisan political point. I think that
there is something more sinister going on here – something which is ultimately
much more dark for free speech and democracy in Canada. It’s hard not believe that when one reads the
various provisions of Bill C-51 – from those that establish a new regime for
sharing information, including personal information, amongst law enforcement
organizations and CSIS, about those who may be participating in activities which
“interfere with the economic or financial stability of Canada” – to the new use
of judicial warrants to allow CSIS agents to break the law, rather than to
operate within legal limits.
When arguing the Law, lawyers like to be able to do so with
some certainty. They’re typically not
fond of statutes which provide opportunities for broad interpretation. In its response to , the Law Society of British Columbia
included this little tidbit as one of its last comments, in support of its
earlier position about the overly broad and undefined terminology to be
inserted into legal statutes.
“In his book The Rule of Law, Tom Bingham (a former Lord
Chief Justice of England and Wales) identified several principles that underlie
the rule of law. The first amongst these
was that ‘the law must be accessible and so far as possible intelligible, clear
and predictable.’ He said: ‘…if you or I are liable to be prosecuted, fined and
perhaps imprisoned for doing or failing to do something, we ought to be able,
without undue difficulty, to find out what it is we must do or must not do on
pain of criminal penalty.’ “ (see: “Bill C-51, Anti-Terrorism Act, 2015 –Submissions to Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security”, the
Law Society of British Columbia, March 2015).
Operating in the Dark
You know who the proponents of Kafka-esque secret
governmental and legal operations are, right?
Here’s a hint: they’re not democrats, and they’ve little interest in the
rights of people like you and me. As
humans, we have rights – and we rely on the law for the protection of those rights. When the law can be subverted and interpreted
and acted on in secret, our rights are put at risk.
Those with secret agendas who like to operate in the dark clearly
be the ones who benefit from the so-called “Anti-Terrorism Act”. And they know it. They feel empowered and emboldened by it. We can expect to see even more accusations
about terrorist activities leveled against citizens and not-for-profit
organizations engaged in activism to make our communities healthier places, and
our economy more sustainable. Those on
the front lines in places like Elsipogtog and Burnaby Mountain will be the
first to feel the effects of this new police regime – but others who speak out
in favour of social and climate justice may very well find themselves on the
receiving end of the most vile sort of accusation possible – that they are
terrorists working against the interests of their community and nation.
I note that in today’s Twitter exchange that Mayor Politis
didn’t actually say whether or not he believed I was a terrorist because I
support the protection of threatened habitat for species at risk – and specifically
the woodland caribou. Politis just kind
of left that one hanging there – essentially suggesting that if I stood with
Greenpeace, well, maybe…reminiscent to me at least of former Justice Minister
Vic Toews infamous uttering about standing with us or the child pornographers.
From Northern Ontario to Augusta, Georgia
Politis and at least one other Northern Mayor, Roger Sigouin
of Hearst, were in Augusta, Georgia recently, attending Resolute Forest Product’s
annual shareholders meeting. With Jaques
Jean, a representatives from the Kapuskasing Local of the United Steelworkers,
Politis and Sigouin spoke out about Greenpeace and other environmental
extremists. I’m sure that their message
went over very well with rich Resolute shareholders. (see: “Northern mayors push back againstGreenpeace”, the Kapuskasing Times, June 3, 2015).
Of course, Politis, Sigouin and Jean glossed over the fact
that Resolute, unlike many of their forestry products competitors, has been
delisted by the Forestry Stewardship Council, due to non-conforming practices
found going on in Resolute’s Ontario and Quebec operations. Politis, Sigouin
and Jean also seemed content to confuse their largely American audience about
the reality of Ontario’s woodland caribou – which is listed as “threatened” on
the Species at Risk in Ontario list (SARO), and subject to the Endangered
Species Act. Rather than talk about
these facts, the Mayors and the Union Rep seemed quite content to spread
misinformation of their own, including throwing out the hand-grenade suggestion
- reminiscent of a class climate change denial tactic - that the science around
caribou being an at-risk species was unresolved.
Of course, toadies to corporate agendas are used to dragging
people’s names through the mud (although as a Sudburian, I can’t help but
wonder what on earth a Steelworker was doing in Georgia, cozying up to the
corporate elite). They accuse others of
spreading misinformation because they hate the facts which don’t support their
own made-up view of the world. They
claim to be in favour of transparency, insinuating that their opponents are
hiding behind their own agenda (which has always perplexed me, because I don’t
see anybody getting rich from taking on big corporations like Resolute). Yet they themselves refuse to answer direct
questions and operate in the dark.
As part of my Twitter exchange today, I asked Mayor Politis
who paid for his trip to Augusta. I
believe that the public should know if he paid for this out of his own pocket,
or accepted a corporate or union ticket to travel to a foreign nation to bash a
Canadian environmental organization. Or
was the ticket perhaps paid for by another source of funding available to the
Mayor of Cochrane? I think that the
public has a right to know. The Town of
Cochrane has failed to adopt a municipal lobbyist registry, so citizens there
really have no idea what conversations between elected officials and
corporations are taking place behind closed doors, out of sight of public
oversight.
I don’t know what Mayor Politis thinks about the public’s
right to know about who paid for his trip to sunny Georgia. He didn’t reply to my tweet.
(opinions expressed in this blog are my own and should not be interpreted as being consistent with the views and/or policies of the Green Parties of Ontario and Canada)
1 comment:
This is pure madness, Steve. This sort of thing, if it takes hold, is often a precursor to some type of uprising or revolt.
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