Columnists

May 082012
 

Weighing the fundamental failure of environmentalism.

by David Suzuki

Environmentalism has failed. Over the past 50 years, environmentalists have succeeded in raising awareness, changing logging practices, stopping mega-dams and offshore drilling, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. But we were so focused on battling opponents and seeking public support that we failed to realize these battles reflect fundamentally different ways of seeing our place in the world. And it is our deep underlying worldview that determines the way we treat our surroundings.

We have not, as a species, come to grips with the explosive events that have changed our relationship with the planet. For most of human existence, we lived as nomadic hunter-gatherers whose impact on nature could be absorbed by the resilience of the biosphere. Even after the Agricultural Revolution 10,000 years ago, farming continued to dominate our lives. We cared for nature. People who live close to the land understand that seasons, climate, weather, pollinating insects, and plants are critical to our well-being.

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May 012012
 

Sometimes UN Presence can make things worse

by Phil Taylor

In 1994, Victoire Ingabire was in Holland when the negotiations and ceasefire broke down in Rwanda.  She returned to Rwanda in 2010 to challenge the President electorally.  Now, she lives under arrest.  Ann Garrison discusses the very different rules that seem to exist in court cases pertaining to Rwanda.

Phil reminds us that the disaster in Rwanda occurred in the context of a UN intervention, and not its absence.  He draws parallels between the UN presence in Rwanda and Syria.  Foreign military forces operating in a trouble spot can overrun their mandate, leading to the notorious "mission creep."  Can the UN buck the trend and put together a balanced corps of observers?
 

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May 012012
 
RichardWagamese

Slashing funds for Aboriginal health undermines expressed concern.

by Richard Wagamese

Dear Prime Minister:
When I heard your words in the House of Commons that were deemed an apology for the debacle of Canada’s residential school system, I was heartened.  At that time, it was nothing short of amazing to hear a prime minister use the word “wrong” in reference to Canada’s treatment of aboriginal people.

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May 012012
 
GeoffreyStevens

Overspending on non-essential signals hubris in high places.

by Geoffrey Stevens

What do these two “investments” – $16 for a glass of orange juice and $30 billion for strike fighter aircraft – have in common?

More than you might think.

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May 012012
 

Environmental rules should be better, not easier.

by David Suzuki

Few people would argue against making environmental review processes and regulations more efficient – as long as they’re effective. But changes announced in the recent federal budget don’t do that. Instead, they make it easier for the federal government and industry to push through projects that could harm the environment and the economy, and limit the ability of ordinary Canadian citizens to have a say in matters of national importance.

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Apr 222012
 

Gulf of St Lawrence is important to Canadian identity.

by David Suzuki

 

We Canadians love the wilderness. Whether we're talking to visitors here or people we meet in our travels, our conversations almost always end up about our great outdoors and pristine natural spaces. Caring about the environment is one of the ways we define ourselves.

But how good are we at protecting what's at the core of our identity?

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Apr 222012
 

Defence Minister ultimately responsible for F-35 lies.

by Geoffrey Stevens

With Parliament in recess, an uneasy calm has settled over the F-35 scandal in Ottawa. Hostilities will not resume in earnest until next Monday when the Commons resumes after its 18-day Easter respite. (You have to hand it to MPs — they really know how to stretch out a one-day stat holiday. But I digress.)

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Apr 222012
 

Domestic killings deserve as much thought as honour killings.

by Jody Dallaire, Dieppe Advisory Committee on Equal Opportunity between Women and Men

We should spend as much time discussing spousal homicides and murder suicides as we do "honour killings." Maybe then we would get a handle on all this violence against women in New Brunswick.

There have been so many women killed by their partners in the last few years in this province that it is a wonder such news still makes headlines. Femicide is so ordinary — especially those spousal murder-suicides that are only in the news for a couple of days. They stop making headlines because the case is solved.

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Apr 222012
 
RichardWagamese

An eager learner grabs at any straw.

by Richard Wagamese

 

I write in the dimness of morning. Outside, the world is a shape shifter. Light eases things back into definition, their boundaries called from shadow, hardening, forming, beginning to hold again and the land shrugs itself into wakefulness, purple moving upward into pearl grey.

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Apr 222012
 

Looking at student strikes in Quebec, and racist legacy in US.

by Phil Taylor the Taylor Report for CIUT

 

Phil speaks with Thomas Martin Sobottke, author of Across that Dark River, a meditation on the American Civil War and the continuing issue of race in America. Sobottke tries to understand the US attempts to come to grips with institutionalized racism following the civil-war.

Then, Montreal grad student Sunci Avlijas returns to the program to report on the progress of the economic disruption strategy in the Quebec student strike.

Finally, Phil reaches Thomas Mountain in the middle of the night in Africa to discuss Western intelligence operations and Etiophia's continuing aid dependence.

Website: http://www.taylor-report.com/

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