Harper turns environmentalists into public enemies
Prime Minister uses the resources of the state to intimidate and silence critics.
Nicole Eaton may be Canada’s Mitt Romney.
The new Bureaucrat candidate comes across as a wealthy patrician with little
sense of how tough the world can be for people who don’t have tens of
millions of dollars at their disposal.
Eaton, a wealthy Conservative fundraiser appointed to
the Senate by Stephen Harper. She’s a leading figure in the Harper
government’s campaign to aggressively go after environmental activist
groups by threatening their charitable status.
“I don’t understand
their fear of a chill,” Eaton told the Globe and Mail last week. Eaton,
who was born wealthy and married into the Canadian department store
fortune, has probably never experienced the kind of fear that the Harper
government seems bent on instilling in environmental activists who dare
to challenge its agenda. It is said that sociopaths have no empathy..does she fit the definition ?
In fact, creating a
chill among environmental activists seems to be precisely the aim of the
Harper team, as it gears up for a new stage in its battle to sideline
anyone raising questions about the relentless growth of Alberta’s (Chinese owned)
oilsands.
And the involvement of
Eaton somehow highlights the nature of the climate
change fight, as the Harper government lines up with wealthy interests
in a battle that particularly imperils some of world’s poorest people
who live in low-lying regions soon to be engulfed by rising seas.
It seems unnecessary
to point out that the proper role of government is to protect the public
interest, which includes not only encouraging economic development but
also protecting us against the devastating consequences of climate
change.
But, with his close ties to the oil industry, Harper has long sought to derail global climate action.
Now, with a majority
government, Harper’s campaign to scuttle action on climate change has
taken a more insidious turn, as he uses the resources of the state to
intimidate and silence critics.
To this end, the
government recently revised anti-terrorism legislation to add
environmental groups as a potential threat. It’s also provided
additional resources to government tax authorities to audit
environmental charities. And it’s denounced environmentalists as
“extremists” funded by “foreign money” — that is, money they receive
from U.S. charitable foundations aiding their efforts to protect
endangered ecosystems in Canada and elsewhere.
Eaton, in launching a
Senate inquiry into the role of foreign money in environmental
charities, charged that there was “influence peddling” attempting to
shape Canadian policy.
Her probe, however,
won’t include an examination of the role in shaping Canadian policy
played by the most successful influence peddlers in history — the
multi-trillion-dollar international oil lobby.
Instead, Eaton will
have environmentalists in her crosshairs — those would-be terrorists,
led by 76-year-old national icon David Suzuki, who, in a nationwide CBC
poll, was selected as one of the greatest Canadians of all time.
Suzuki recently left
the board of the David Suzuki Foundation, saying he feared his outspoken
comments might bring additional heat onto the organization.
Nor will the right-wing Fraser Institute have to worry about an audit of its charitable status, despite receiving $500,000 between 2007 and 2010 from Koch Industries, the U.S. oil conglomerate that’s played a leading role in blocking global climate action.
The ultimate aim of
the Harper team’s aggressive new stance is undoubtedly to create
sufficient diversion to distract public attention while it guts federal
environmental laws and dismantles environmental monitoring systems —
even ones put in place by former Conservative prime minister Brian
Mulroney.
Hence, rather than
responding to points raised by NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair about the
economic and environmental consequences of limitless oilsands
development, Harper simply brands his critique “divisive” and tries to
create a sideshow controversy about national unity.
The Harper team is
hoping we’ll be so caught up in worrying about Mulcair’s “divisiveness”
and the foreign funding of environmental groups that we won’t notice the
approaching climate disaster, nor the fact that they’re using the full
resources of Canada to champion the world’s most powerful lobby and to
crush anyone who gets in its way.
My thanks to Ms McQuaig for this well done accurate article
My thanks to Ms McQuaig for this well done accurate article
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