Sandra Finley

Feb 292008
 

Lake Mead has a 50/50 chance of drying up by 2021. So what? 

Have you any friggin’ idea of how many people and economic interests are dependent on Lake Mead, the largest man-made reservoir in the United States? 

It is located on the Colorado River, a half hour from Las Vegas, Nevada.   It’s the water impounded by the Hoover Dam. The water in Lake Mead is released via aqueducts to communities in southern California, Nevada and Arizona. The water for cities like Los Angeles and Las Vegas comes from Lake Mead. It’s also the supply of water for irrigation. Which means food, some of which sits on your table and mine.  

The news (below) on the risk for Lake Mead follows a string of pressing water shortages in other parts of the USA, too. 

The plans for diverting water from Canada to the U.S. have been on the drawing boards for decades.   “NAWAPA” is a word we should all be familiar with.   

NAWAPA is “The North American Water and Power Alliance-NAWAPA- “the most comprehensive of a series of plans developed during the 1950s and 1960s to capture and redistribute fresh water in Alaska and Canada. NAWAPA would deliver large quantities of water to water-poor areas of Canada, the lower forty-eight states of the United States of America, and Mexico.  In the mid-1960s, this giant engineering project in water management was seen by leading figures in the U.S. Congress and elsewhere as the next great undertaking to which the United States should commit itself as a nation, comparable in scope and benefits to the NASA space program and the rapid and widespread development of nuclear power. …” 

More info at    http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=879  also  http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=883 

Canadians are pretty well versed on the need to keep water out of the hands of those who want to sell it, thanks to Maud Barlow and the Council of Canadians, the Polaris Institute and others.  Which makes it difficult to accomplish NAWAPA.  The urgency mounts.  Lake Mead dries up?  They only see one remedy.  It lies to the North.

People who have worked in water circles and understand the situation in the U.S. are very concerned that the Troop Exchange Agreement will make it very difficult to continue to protect our water supply.

The only way to fight the Agreement is to let people know about it.  

THE STUDY ON LAKE MEAD (From website “Grist”)

“There’s a 50-50 chance that the Arizona- and Nevada-bordering, human-made Lake Mead could become Dry Ditch Mead by 2021, according to a study to be published in the journal Water Resources Research. Oh, and that’s a conservative estimate, say the study authors, as is this one: By 2017, there’s an equally good chance that water levels in the reservoir could drop so low that the Hoover Dam would be incapable of producing hydroelectric power. Study coauthor Tim Barnett says he was “stunned at the magnitude of the problem and how fast it was coming at us.” The study recommends that officials implement conservation and mitigation policies and technologies.”

Feb 272008
 

 CONTENTS:

(1)  WHAT’S HAPPENING

(2)  LETTER-TO-EDITOR

(3)  MANY THANKS TO HAROLD JOHNSON, A BRIEF HISTORY OF AMERICAN ATTEMPTS ON CANADA

(4)  THE WATER CONNECTION 

====================== 

(1)  WHAT’S HAPPENING 

Canada, U.S. agree to use each other’s troops in civil emergencies  

RE letter-to-editor:  in interests of getting it published, I DIDN’T entitle it: “Agreement with the Devil”! 

NEED: 

–  People to  “START THE BUZZ”, in your family, at work, wherever.  IN SPITE OF the article on front page of Star Phoenix, in conversations NOT ONE of the people I talked to had heard about the Troop Exchange Agreement.  

–  Need People to write letters-to-editors.  See template, or write your own.  As always you are free to cut, copy and paste to save time.  We don’t all have to invent the wheel.   

If each one of us doesn’t make it a topic of conversation, people will not know.  The personal conversations are VERY important.  People I talked with were appreciative of the information.

HAROLD JOHNSON’S BRIEF HISTORY of attempted invasions of Canada (#3 below) is history that was NEVER taught in my schooling.   Most of us are not even in a position to draw upon the lessons of history.   This is valuable information in a nutshell.  Many thanks,  Harold! 

INVASION FORCES LED BY BENEDICT ARNOLD:  Decades ago I read the captivating story told in “Arundel”  by Kenneth Roberts.  American publications describe it as “a memorial of Revolutionary days in Maine“.  In fact, it is “the rousing tale of (American) Colonel Benedict Arnold’s doomed March on Quebec in 1775“.  Roberts tells the story through fictional characters who sign up for the invasion force, along with the actual people from history like Benedict Arnold.  It must be a great novel: it remains imprinted on my brain;  I read it in 1966!

UPDATE ON FACEBOOK PAGE  “No to Troop Exchange Between Canada-U.S.”:

– Note:  Facebook is IN ADDITION to.  It cannot REPLACE email networks, letters-to-editor, phone calls to Members-of-Parliament, and just plain “talking it up”.

UPDATE ON PHONE CALLS TO MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT: 

– after leaving a voice message, I received a phone call from office of Conservative MP Lynne Yelich. 

– it was agreed that I should send

  • the Feb 23rd email 
  • copy of LETTER-TO-EDITOR (see next item #(2)) 

MP’s everywhere need to be challenged on the question of the Troop Exchange Agreement. 

=========================== 

(2)  LETTER-TO-EDITOR  

TROOP EXCHANGE AGREEMENT WITH THE U.S. 

The Harper Government signed an agreement on February 14 with the United States “.. which allows the military from one nation to support the armed forces of the other nation during a civil emergency.”  (Canwest News Service, February 22) 

The Agreement for troop exchange was signed without disclosure and public debate in Canada.  It became known through American newspapers. 

I balk at inviting the American Military into Canada: 

They used false claims of weapons of mass destruction as an excuse for invading Iraq.   They have created hatred that will be passed down through generations. 

The destruction means that billions of dollars from the global community, which should be used for education and health in poor countries, is diverted into an almost-hopeless reconstruction effort.  The burgeoning debt from the war adds to the pressure that threatens to bring down the American economy and other national economies with it. 

The torture of Canadian Maher Arar happened because Canadian security forces worked with the American. 

15 year-old child soldier Omar Khadr was severely brutalized in American Military prisons over a period of five years.  He was imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay with no rights to due process. 

Abu Ghraib is further testament to military run amok. 

To sign an Agreement with the American Military is to align Canadians with a corrupt and destructive force.  The public record is clear:  these are war mongers and profiteers. 

Sincerely, 

Sandra Finley

(contact info)

============================= 

(3)  MANY THANKS TO HAROLD JOHNSON, A BRIEF HISTORY OF AMERICAN ATTEMPTS ON CANADA 

In 1775 the Americans attempted to invade Canada.

In 1812 they tried again. 

They supported the Fenian Invasions of 1866-1871. 

John A MacDonald sent troops to the west in 1870, not entirely because of the Metis in Winnipeg but primarily because of the threat from the US at the time. There was a great deal of agitation in the American West to invade Canada. 

There has all along been those in the US who advocate the forcible annexation of Canada. 

In 1928 the Americans drew up detailed plans for an attack of Canada. They were going to take Halifax to cut us off from British support and they were going to take Winnipeg to cut our rail system dividing the east from the west. Most of the attack was aimed at Ontario and Quebec. These plans became declassified in 1974 and are available at the American Archives Washington. 

Now is a time to be afraid, Be very afraid. The very idea of American troops in Canada sends shivers up my spine. 

What is CIVIL DISASTER? 

====================

(4)  THE WATER CONNECTION 

 (See also Water: Highgate Dam in context of water shortages in the U.S.) 

I am big on fitting bits of information into “context”.  When time permits I will fit the reports on Lake Mead into the context of the other emails we’ve circulated on very serious developments in the U.S. over water.  

Briefly, and isolated from the context of the other developments:  Lake Mead is in danger of drying up.   From Wikipedia:  “Lake Mead is the largest man-made lake and reservoir in the United States.  It is located on the Colorado River about 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Las Vegas, Nevada, in the states of Nevada and Arizona. Formed by water impounded by Hoover Dam, it extends 110 mi (180 km) behind the dam, holding approximately 28.5 million acre feet (35 km³) of water. The water held in Lake Mead is released to communities in southern California, via aqueducts, and Nevada.” 

Now, from the website “Grist”:  

“There’s a 50-50 chance that the Arizona- and Nevada-bordering, human-made Lake Mead could become Dry Ditch Mead by 2021, according to a study to be published in the journal Water Resources Research. Oh, and that’s a conservative estimate, say the study authors, as is this one: By 2017, there’s an equally good chance that water levels in the reservoir could drop so low that the Hoover Dam would be incapable of producing hydroelectric power. Lake Mead provides water to thirsty cities including Los Angeles and Las Vegas, as well as H2O to agricultural areas. Study coauthor Tim Barnett says he was “stunned at the magnitude of the problem and how fast it was coming at us.” The study recommends that officials implement conservation and mitigation policies and technologies.”—–

A few more copies of the maps that show the water diversions from Canada to the U.S. are being copied. 

STRATEGIC: 

I try not to give the proponents of the Dam information they might then hold up to ridicule me.  It is easy to discredit me if the audience is not informed.  The people on the NSRWRC would say they have no intention to divert water to the U.S.  They are being absolutely truthful.   And it would hurt their pride to say: yes, but maybe you are merely a tool.

So in public, about the dam, I use the economic arguments:  Spend four dollars out of the public purse, in order to get one dollar in return.  Sure, it’s nice for the promoters of the dam if they can pull it off.  A small number of people will benefit from the $4 billion expenditure. Individually they’ll make a bundle.  I’m getting tired of being used and stupid.

Should I (we) be wrong about the situation in the United States over water and energy, Should we be wrong about how the U.S. goes about getting what it wants (war on Iraq to secure oil), Should we be wrong that the U.S. routinely uses false information (weapons of mass destruction), Should we be wrong about the manipulations it performs (too numerous to list – the Congo is one example), Should we be wrong about what money can buy (Brian Mulroney on the Board of ADM, etc.), I will dance happily and say so. 

The dangers of being right and not taking swift and decisive action will be “game over”.  So start “the buzz” about the troop exchange agreement.    Thanks!

/Sandra

Feb 172008
 

Cockamamy Schemes of the First Order

1. NAWAPA

A. Proponents of the scheme:

source: http://www.schillerinstitute.org/economy/phys_econ/phys_econ_nawapa_1983.html

SCHILLER INSTITUTE

The Outline of NAWAPA

by Lyndon H. LaRouche,

January 1988

This appeared as an appendix to the book published as Schiller Institute Conference Proceedings “Development is the New Name for Peace.” in January, 1988. Most of the material is taken from a 1983 pamphlet by Mr. LaRouche, called, Won’t You Please Give Your Grandchildren a Drink of Water?

The Outline of NAWAPA

Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.

The North American Water and Power Alliance—NAWAPA—is the most comprehensive of a series of plans developed during the 1950s and 1960s to capture and redistribute fresh water in Alaska and Canada. NAWAPA would deliver large quantities of water to water-poor areas of Canada, the lower forty-eight states of the United States of America, and Mexico.

In the mid-1960s, this giant engineering project in water management was seen by leading figures in the U.S. Congress and elsewhere as the next great undertaking to which the United States should commit itself as a nation, comparable in scope and benefits to the NASA space program and the rapid and widespread development of nuclear power. (In fact, the NAWAPA plan was favorably reviewed in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.)

In 1964, the Ralph M. Parsons Company, the West Coast- based international engineering firm which had helped to design and build the water management system which turned California into the richest agricultural producing area in the nation, presented a developed plan for NAWAPA to a special subcommittee of the United States Senate chaired by Senator Frank Moss of Utah. As entered in the Congressional Record, the original NAWAPA plan called for no less than 369 separate projects.

NAWAPA begins with construction of a series of dams in Alaska and the Canadian Yukon, trapping the water of the various rivers running through this largely undeveloped wilderness area. The drainage area to be tapped is approximately 1.3 million square miles, with a mean annual precipitation of 40 inches.

A large portion of the water thus collected would then be channeled into a man-modified reservoir 500 miles long, 10 miles wide, and 300 feet deep, constructed out of the southern end of the natural gorge known as the Rocky Mountain Trench in the Canadian province of British Columbia. This would be accomplished through a series of connecting tunnels, canals, lakes, dams, and, because the trench itself exists at an elevation of 3,000 feet, even lifts. The network of projects provides plentiful opportunities for hydroelectric power development.

To the east, a thirty-foot deep canal would be cut from the Trench to Lake Superior, to maintain a constant water level and clean out pollution in the entire Great Lakes system from Duluth to Buffalo. Not only would this provide more water for hydroelectric power and agricultural irrigation of the Great Plains region of Canada and the U.S.A., the canal could ultimately be made navigable for lake- and ocean-going vessels from the Great Lakes into the heart of Alberta, and eventually, extended westward into Howe Sound, British Columbia. The dream of a Northwest Passage would at last become a fact, from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to Vancouver.

South from the Trench reservoir, water would be lifted through a giant dump lift to the Sawtooth Reservoir in southwestern Montana, from which point it would flow by gravity through the western part of the system, passing through a tunnel in the Sawtooth Mountain eighty feet in diameter and fifty miles in length, to the western and southern U.S. states.

South of the Rocky Mountain Trench, in central Idaho and southeastern Washington, a series of hydroelectric plants would develop the Clearwater and Clearwater North Fork Rivers and the lower reaches of the Salmon and Snake Rivers. Flow of the Columbia River would be supplemented as needed from other rivers as well as regulated at its direct connection to the Rocky Mountain Trench Reservoir to prevent flooding. NAWAPA aqueducts and reservoirs would dot the slopes of the Rocky Mountains, providing water to the Staked Plains and lower Rio Grande River basin and serving New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Mexico via existing rivers.

Flows from the Rocky Mountain Trench and Clearwater subsystem would also supply Idaho, Oregon, Utah, Nevada, California, and Arizona in the United States; and Baja California, Chihuahua, and Sonora in Mexico. A diversion aqueduct at Trout Creek, Utah would send high-quality, low- mineral water to southern California and Baja California. Here it would arrest soil damage caused by high-mineral Colorado River irrigation water.

The 1964 Parsons Company study estimated that NAWAPA could assure adequate water supply to the continent for the next 100 years. The conserved water would be sufficient to irrigate 86,300 square miles, equal to a 35-mile-wide strip extending 500 miles into the Canadian agricultural belt, traversing the length of the United States, and extending 200 miles into Mexico for a total length of 2,500 miles. In delivering 20 million acre-feet of water to Mexico, the plan allows that country alone to develop eight times as much new irrigated land as the Aswan High Dam provides Egypt. In this original proposal, Canada would receive 22 million acre-feet of usable fresh water, and the United States 78 million acre-feet.

For political reasons, the NAWAPA proposal was not acted on by Congress when originally presented. But no one has reasonably challenged estimates of the plan‘s feasibility.

The Benefits of NAWAPA

For the United States, the benefits of the upgraded NAWAPA proposal are virtually unlimited. The full-scale project now promises 150 million acre-feet of water per year—a 50 percent increase in the present consumption of 300 million acre-feet yearly. Some 55,000 megawatts per year of surplus electric power would be provided, nearly doubling present U. S. hydroelectric capacity of 70,000 megawatts. Nearly 50 million more acres of irrigable land will become available, almost doubling irrigated acreage west of the Mississippi.

It doesn‘t end there. Stabilization and control of the Great Lakes is one dramatic example of the decrease in pollution levels attainable by such methods of water management. NAWAPA would also help to stabilize water levels throughout the West, providing, among its notable benefits, the opportunity to reverse the depletion of the Ogalala Aquifer, the principal water supply for 11 million acres of prime farmland in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, and other High Plains states. NAWAPA would provide the mechanism for reversing the current salinity problem of irrigated lands by flooding selected areas to wash out the accumulated salts, and by maintaining a regime of “wasteful“ irrigation to prevent such build-ups in the future. Thus ground water supplies would be recharged. In addition, increased facilities for water transport would also prove cost-saving.

NAWAPA would also create substantial numbers of productive jobs, for example, in the construction and steel industries. Unlike the make-work employment projects proposed by some as a depression measure, the NAWAPA project would employ American manpower to actually increase the national wealth.

In addition, NAWAPA would increase the power of the U.S. A. to develop other nations in the Third World, providing new markets for American agriculture and industry.

It is more difficult to give a “dollars and cents“ estimate of NAWAPA‘s annual benefit to American industry, agriculture, workers and consumers; but one respected congressional supporter of the original NAWAPA plan reported it would increase the annual national income from agriculture, livestock, mining, and manufacturing by approximately $30 billion.

The benefits for Mexico and Canada would be of a similar spectacular order. Canada would enjoy 58 million acre-feet of water and 38,000 additional megawatts of hydroelectric power, and the same kind of irrigation, transport, and clean water benefits accruing to the United States. In particular, the Northwest Passage route would be a vital aid in realizing the vast, untapped development potential of that largely wilderness nation.

As for Mexico, a nation whose rapid agricultural and industrial development is essential to advance the living standards of its 60 million citizens and for whom increased food production ranks as a critical national priority, NAWAPA would produce an additional 40 million acre-feet of water a year, at least tripling its irrigable land, and 4,000 additional megawatts of electric power. The Parsons Company‘s original estimate of the economic benefit to Mexico was an annual $30 billion increase in national income from agricultural, livestock, mining and manufacturing—the same figure as projected for the United States.

The Costs of NAWAPA

At first glance, the costs of NAWAPA appear immense. The Parsons Company‘s original 1964 estimate was $80 billion. The upgraded plan was estimated to cost $130 billion in 1979, excluding the costs of environmental studies and other bu reaucratic requirements apart from the detailed engineering plans necessary for the project itself. A partial breakdown in 1979 dollars includes $13 billion for construction equipment, $65 billion in construction labor, and 100,000 tons of copper and aluminum, 30 million tons of steel, and 200 million sacks of cement.

Excluded from the $130 billion figure is the cost of needed local distribution systems such as the connection of the Panamint Reservoir to the Los Angeles water supply. Such connections would be required throughout the continent.

To realize the potential of the 50 million acres of new irrigable farmland would require additional capital investment of perhaps $10 billion. (The costs of center-pivot irrigation, for example, are $200 per acre.)

Finally, local transportation systems will need to be upgraded to move the increased produce; better rail transport is especially vital.

Suppose one assumed a $200 billion figure for implementation of the upgraded plan, with a sizable chunk of the local water management, agricultural, and transport expenses included. Averaged out over the ten- to twenty-year lifespan presently projected for completion of the project, that represents a capital expenditure well within the magnitude of the conceivable. If one merely adopts the Parsons Company estimate of $30 billion annual benefit to the national income, it is apparent that NAWAPA would pay for itself many times over by the time our grandchildren have grown up.

Suppose, for the sake of argument, we were to reject the NAWAPA approach as “too ambitious and expensive,“ decided to “go it alone“ without Canada and Mexico, and attempted to develop water resources piecemeal and at a slower pace. We would quickly find that less ambitious is not necessarily cheaper!

Consider the average cost of Bureau of Reclamation water projects from 1975 to 1979. The Bureau spent $700 million on developing an additional 2 million acre-feet of water annually over this period, for an average cost of $350 per acre- foot. Projecting that to the development of 130 million acre- feet required for the western states, produces a total cost of over $45 billion, without any provision for long-distance transfer to the drought areas.

Consider also the average costs of developing additional electric power—at current rates, an additional 40 gigawatts otherwise provided by the western United States NAWAPA would cost $40 billion to replace.

Thus, at the best possible cost estimates, attempting to replace by local projects the U.S. section of NAWAPA alone, excluding the benefits to (and the contributions from) Mexico and Canada, would cost $85 billion, two-thirds as much as the entire project!

In reality, such piecemeal development would be impossible. That only 2 million acre-feet of water per year were developed in the four years preceding 1979, when previous projects were being completed, points to the fallacy of that belief at that rate our “local,“ piecemeal approach would take sixty-five years. Only a national commitment to water devel opment can produce benefits on the scale of NAWAPA. Besides, the greatest sources of available water are not in the continental U.S.A., but in Alaska and Canada!

Suppose we decide not to proceed with NAWAPA. That, too, has its costs, and the ultimate cost would be disastrous:

The collapse of the agricultural system which has made the U.S.A. the recognized world leader in food production. Take, for example, the problem of the Ogalala Aquifer in the High Plains states, that we mentioned earlier. It is currently estimated that at present rates, this vital source of supply for 11 million acres of farmland will run dry by the year 2020. In creasing sums are being spent on water conservation systems and labor-intensive farming methods to save a few gallons per acre. Not only does this waste capital and human effort, it is leading to an ever-increasing build-up of salts in the soil, salts which will eventually poison the crops and the groundwater if they are not flushed out by “wasting water.“

As farmers are forced into dryland farming, the practice being followed in the less arid areas, the effects will be equally disastrous. Dryland farming is necessarily much less productive than irrigated agriculture overall, but it is also much less predictable. Therefore, farmers will not be able to invest in crop improvements because they will have much less assurance of a certain level of productivity.

The Great Plains are a major source of food for the world at present, and subjecting this supply to the vagaries of the weather is playing “Russian roulette“ with large sections of the world‘s population. Preliminary studies have shown that the development of irrigation in the once-dry Dust Bowl areas added significantly to the average natural rainfall over these areas. If irrigation is now discontinued, it is highly possible that the rainfall will again decline, leaving only dessicated monuments to the greatness of American agriculture.

The only realistic question, then, is, “How shall we proceed with NAWAPA?“

“The management, engineering, and construction of NAWAPA will require the skills of a plethora of organizations,“ noted N.W. Snyder of the Parsons Company in 1980. He suggested that “some continent-wide agency, representing all three North American countries be formed to finance, build, and operate NAWAPA.“ Whether this or another approach is taken, one thing remains certain—if the citizens of the United States do not take the lead in discussing and promoting development of NAWAPA, among ourselves and with our neighbors in Mexico and Canada, it will not be built.

schiller@schillerinstitute.org
The Schiller Institute
PO BOX 20244 Washington, DC 20041-0244
703-771-8390 or 888-347-3258
Projects for North America Water and Power Management
added as Appendix to 1988 Schiller Institute Conference Proceedings in Andover, New Hampshire

This map of the 1960s “North American Water and Power Alliance” (NAWAPA) shows the continental scale of the needed water supply improvements in North America, and also makes the point on how behind and backward the economies of the United States, Canada, and Mexico have needlessly become under 30 years of anti-development “free market” policies. For three decades, while the amount of money poured into mergers, speculation, and the “markets” rose, investment in infrastructure, industry, and agriculture slowed down to nothing.

“Soft infrastructure” has likewise been shorted, and ratios are dropping of per-household numbers of hospital beds, diagnostic equipment, etc.

The NAWAPA Project shown here, was drawn up by the Pasadena, Calif.-based firm of Ralph M. Parsons Co., and favorably reviewed by Congress in the 1960s for completion by the 1990s, but it was never begun. The idea is to divert southward some 15% of the MacKenzie River (northern Canada) runoff now going towards the Arctic, channelling it through the 500-mile Rocky Mountain trench, then along various routes, eventually reaching even Mexico. The broken lines show new, navigable canals.

The principle–on a grander scale–is the same as that of the Tennessee Valley Authority of the 1930s, and the 1950s St. Lawrence Seaway, both shown on the map. NAWAPA could supply an additional 135 billion gallons of fresh water to the United States, Canada, and Mexico, plus power, and vast new areas of cultivation. It would involve thousands of skilled jobs to construct and operate.

When you visualize overlays on this NAWAPA map, of expanded rail links, magnetically levitated routes, upgraded levees, and new power, water, and mass transit for cities, plus refurbished farm regions, you begin to see the vast overdue projects and potential at home in North America.

 B. Opponents:

Source: http://www.canspiracy.8m.com/article5.htm

first

CANSPIRACY

Exposing the Continentalist Agenda

Interbasin Water Transfers after NAFTA: IS WATER A COMMODITY OR ECOLOGICAL RESOURCE?I. IntroductionAs demand for fresh water escalates in the southwestern United States and Mexico, Canada’s water resources may be drained, if proponents of interbasin water transfers have their way. Continent-wide water transfer proposals, initiated by engineers in the 1960’s, are being revisited as possible solutions to water scarcity in the desert southwest. Continuing development in the region, coupled with the drought of the 1980’s, tax the existing supply beyond sustainable levels. As a result, Canada’s abundant fresh water resources may regrettably provide a quick fix, while the harder tasks of improved water-management and better land-use planning are ignored.Fueling the renewed interest in international water transfer projects is the pending North American Free Trade Agreement [NAFTA]. NAFTA and the US-Canada Free Trade Agreement of 1988 [FTA] essentially prevent Canada or any of her provinces from placing restrictions on the export of water. The trade agreements thus provide new hope for developers, agribusiness and policy makers anxious to build a continental water system.

This brief memorandum underlines the need for the wise management and conservation of North America’s fresh water resources. Moreover, it seeks to unite concerned groups in a continent-wide network aimed at monitoring and preventing efforts to divert Canada’s water resources to the southwestern United States and Mexico. Recent trends indicate that commercial interests, which view water not as a dwindling ecological resource but merely as a commodity, are successfully lobbying policy makers to resurrect the interbasin water schemes at the expense of the continent’s hydrological integrity. Should Canada, the U.S. and Mexico enact NAFTA, environmentalists fear that water’s essential ecological role will be sacrificed for the sake of unsustainable growth in arid regions of the continent.

The next section of this memorandum briefly describes the primary continent-wide water transfer projects still under consideration, such as the North American Water and Power Alliance [NAWAPA]. The third section discusses relevant trade law provisions, including FPA, NAFTA and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade [GATT]. The fourth section discusses other trends making the construction of large-scale transfer projects more likely. The final section offers recommendations for future activities to move us from the current myopic policy patchwork to an ecologically-sounder, conservation-oriented water policy.

II. Major Interbasin Water Transfer Proposals

During the 1960s, engineers drafted several proposals for massive water projects to transfer large quantities of fresh water from Canada to the southwestern U.S. Canada has twice as much surface and underground fresh water as the U.S., whilee comprised of one-tenth of the U.S.,’s population and industry. Because water is needed in the southwestern U.S. in quantities greater than traditional modes of transportation, such as trucks or tankers, could feasibly handle, hydrological engineers have dreamed of shipping water via massive dams, canals and pipelines.

Despite gaining widespread initial support, the proposals succumbed to economic and political realities and were dropped. *They have never been completely shelved, however.* Many observers believe that some recent water development projects – for example, the Oldman River dam in Alberta – are part of an attempt to construct these larger schemes piece-by- piece.

The three most ambitious as well as environmentally damaging projects that have been proposed – the North American Water and Power Alliance [NAWAPA], the Great Replenishment and Northern Development Canal [GRAND Canal], and the Alaska-California Subsea pipeline project – are discussed briefly below. [footnote in original: There are several other schemes, including the North Thompson or “Clancey Diversion” project to divert water from British Columbia to California, the “Eco-Vision” project in Nevada, the diversion of the Columbia River to California, and a major interbasin transfer project in Kansas. These are not adddressed in detail because they can be considered as simply down-sized versions, or components, of the larger schemes discussed in this paper]

1. The North American Water and Power Alliance [NAWAPA]

NAWAPA was first proposed in 1964 by the Ralph Parsons Engineering Company from Pasadena, California. The project contemplates damming virtually every major river in Alaska and British Columbia, including the Yukon, Susitna, Tanana, Skeena, Peace, Churchill, MacKenzie and Fraser rivers. The “excess” water would be diverted into the five-hundred mile, natural depression known as the Rocky Mountain Trench that runs the length of British Columbia. The depression would store up to 400 million acre feet of water. [footnote in original: An acre-foot of water is the quantity of water necessary to cover one acre with one foot of water. One acre-foot equals 325,851 gallons, enough to sustain two average U.S. households for one year]

Water would move down several different paths from the reservoir. From the northern end, a canal would run southeast, linking with the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River. Water level in the Great Lakes would rise; hydroelectric output at Niagara Falls could increase and ocean-going vessels would move up the Mississippi to St. Louis. Some water would be shunted off toward the Columbia Basin to produce additional electricity near the southern end of the reservoir.

Most of the water, however, would make the long journey southward and travel along both sides of the Rockies towards the Great Plains and to the southwestern deserts. Idaho would receive 2.3 million acre-feet; Texas, 11.7 million; California, 13.9 million; and Mexico 20 million.

The plan, monumental and breathtaking in its scope, would be the largest engineering project in the world. Although initially NAWAPA picked up some influential supporters, it eventually stalled because of social, environmental, economic and political opposition. The estimated cost of the project was between $100 billion and $200 dollars, and could not be considered cost- effective under any reasonable estimate. [footnote in original: Closer scrutiny of the economic arguments is now warranted, especially in light of more realistic water-pricing policies, increased water scarcity and the elimination of political obstacles to the water transfers. As the marginal costs of supplying the Southwest with water from other sources increase, the relative economic merit of the transfer schemes improves] The plan also emerged just before the first major upwelling of environmental concern in the 1970’s. Its environmental consequences would be virtually unimaginable, flooding thousands of miles of wilderness, and displacing hundreds of indigenous peoples.

One of the important reasons for NAWAP’s inability to gain support initially was that the requisite level of international cooperation seemed impossible. NAFTA, however, has changed all that. As discussed in greater detail below in Part III below, if NAFTA is implemented, it will remove virtually all of the international political obstacles to large-scale water-transfers – and make it very difficult to prevent commencement of projects like NAWAPA through national or provincial regulations.

2. The Great Replenishment and Northern Development Canal [GRAND Canal]

The GRAND Canal is eastern Canada’s version of NAPAWA. Indeed, the two projects could be interconnected in time. The GRAND Canal scheme was first conceived in the 1950s by Thomas Kierans, founder and president of the GRAND Canal Co. Ltd. *The project is still very much alive*, and has been backed at times by many of Canada’s leading engineering firms, including Bechtel of Canada and Lavalin; the massive utility, Hydro- Quebec; Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa; and Prime Minister Mulroney.

The GRAND Canal scheme contemplates construction of a huge dike across the northern end of James Bay, an arm of Hudson Bay. The many rivers feeding into the bay would fill a reservoir the size of Lake Ontario. The water would then be channeled into the Great Lakes, where it could be pumped into Saskatchewan’s Lake Diefenbaker and other points in western North America. The total estimated cost in 1985 was $100 billion.

The GRAND Canal can be seen as an extension of Quebec’s efforts to become a major supplier and exporter of hydro-electricity. The controversial LaGrande River hydroelectric projects, and the other James Bay projects under construction by Hydro-Quebec, are significant steps toward realization of a GRAND Canal project. Although built primarily for hydro-electric power generation, the $20 billion LaGrande complex is integral to any scheme for sending James Bay water south. The next stages of Hydro-Quebec’s plans, which it is currently implementing, involve damming or diverting all the remaining major rivers flowing into James Bay by the year 2001, at a cost of $44 billion. After completion of that phase, all that will be necessary to complete the plan will be the canals to the Great Lakes, a relatively inexpensive addition [footnote in original: For more on the James Bay projects, see Sean McCutcheon, ELECTRIC RIVERS: THE STORY OF THE JAMES BAY PROJECT {1991}] Moreover, the high energy needs for pumping water west and south will provide a welcome demand and justification for the hydroelectric facilities.

3. The Alaska-California Subsea Pipeline Project

Alaska’s governor Walter Hickel has recently been promoting an undersea pipeline 1400-2100 miles long to transport over four million acre-feet of Alaskan water to Lake Shasta in northern California.[footnote in original: The Alaska-California subsea pipeline is not directly affected by NAFTA. As discussed below, NAFTA has essentially streamlined the diplomatic channels for transferring water, making a Canada-to- California pipeline more likely. This could dramatically reduce the estimated cost of a pipeline project, making it far more economically feasible] The federal Office of Technology Assessment [OTA] was sufficiently interested to organize a workshop and conduct an investigation into the economic feasibility of the project [U.S. Office of Technology Assessment, ALASKAN WATER FOR CALIFORNIA? THE SUBSEA PIPELINE OPTION – Background Paper, 1992] The OTA study concluded that at $110 billion, the pipeline could not compete economically with other options available to California. The delivered water would cost between $3000 to $4000 per acre foot [$2.40-$3.25 per cubic metre]

The pipeline option attracts some supporters in part because it may present less environmental damage than other water transfer schemes. As contemplated, the pipeline would take water from the mouth of the Copper or Stikine rivers. Thus, it would probably require smaller storage reservoirs to regulate the flow of the rivers. Moreover, the riperian zones and the river flows would be affected less than if water were diverted from the headwaters. Nonetheless, the pipeline could change coastal salinity and temperature, thus endangering critical salmon and marine mammal habitats.

Although the report concluded that the pipeline was not economically competitive with other options currently available to California and that “California does not currently need the large volumes of imported water that could justify a major inter-basin transfer,” the report leaves the reader with the uneasy feeling that it is only a matter of time before large-scale transfers become necessary. After emphasizing the role global warming could play, the report analyses the fifty-year outlook in the following way:

“Although the current trend is away from interregional water transfers, at some point, then, such schemes could again receive serious attention. A subsea pipeline to transport water from Alaska, diverting some water from the Columbia River or various proposals for diverting water from western Canada’s rivers, as well as other expensive options such as tankering water, might then be considered. Moreover, although the Eel and Klamath Rivers in northern California are now part of the National Wild ans Scenic River System, they too could be tapped if current law is changed in response to concerns over global climate change.” [p.11]

This conclusion for the longer term [fifty years] should alarm environmentalists. None of the long- term options the report emphasizes offers an environmentally benign future. That a federal report could so easily contemplate withdrawing two rivers from the protection of the wild and scenic designations is remarkable, and illustrates once again the single-minded view of water developers.

III. NAFTA and Large Scale Water Exports From Canada

*Some of the political and economic obstacles that have effectively blocked NAWAPA and the other massive inter-basin transfer schemes no longer exist in the current climate that has spawned NAFTA*. The goal of NAFTA and the 1988 FTA is to create a North American free trade bloc, so that goods and services can flow freely through the continent. *Among the goods and services covered by the agreements are natural resources such as water. As a result, local, provincial or even national attempts to prevent or restrict Canadian water exports to the U.S. or Mexico would be subject to the review of an international panal. As currently contemplated, that panel would not be bound by any environmental standards and its proceedings and final rulings may both be kept secret*. Efforts to protect instream values will likely be subordinated to international economic views *of water as a commodity*. Moreover, international agencies have historically been more difficult for environmentalists to influence than national or local authorities. In any event, understanding how the free trade agreements affect water exports will now be a necessary first step in mounting any effective campaign.

1. The U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement [FTA]
*The water export issue arose initially in the late 1980’s during the debate over the FTA, which appears to preempt Canada from taking any unilateral actions to restrict large-scale water exports*. FTA, like NAFTA discussed below, prohibits any party from placing export restrictions [including, for example, export taxes or quotas] on any goods subject to its provisions. Water implicitly qualifies as a “good” under the FTA, because it was not specifically excluded as were other natural resources. The conclusion that water is includedunder FTA’s general provisions is also supported by the inclusion of natural waters in the tariff provisions [tariff item 22.01.9].

*Although the Canadian government disputes that it has lost control of its water exports due to the FTA, Canada passed an amendment to its FTA implementing legislation that specifically states nothing in the legislation or the FTA applies to water. The implementing legislation, however, would not be considered by an FTA dispute panel if the U.S. were to complain that Canada was violating the FTA by withholding water exports. The FTA dispute panel would have good cause to rule in the favour of the U.S. if Canada places an export restriction on water. Canada need not automatically submit to such a ruling, but it might be subjected to trade retaliation by the U.S. if it chose not to comply. Such retaliation, or the threat of such retaliation, may be enough to force the Canadian government to allow large scale water exports*.

2. The North American Free Trade Agreement [NAFTA]

NAFTA is in many ways just an extension of the FTA. It, too, opens the possibility that Canada would be legally bound to make water available to the U.S. under the same conditions as water is available inside Canada. Despite the controversy that arose over the FTA, Canadian negotiators did not seek a specific exemption in NAFTA for water. According to a government spokesman, they reasoned that Canada’s Federal Water Policy of 1987, likely NAFTA implementing legislation, and other solely Canadian statements rejecting these exports insulate Canada’s water resources from the NAFTA regime. Moreover, all of the parties to NAFTA supposedly understood that large-scale water exports were not included in the negotiations, according to the spokesman. Additionally, asking for a specific water exemption might have provoked counter-offers from the U.S. and Mexican negotiators for their own additional exemptions. *As a result, the actual text of NAFTA supports the claim that large-scale transfers of Canadian water to the U.S. and Mexico cannot be prevented on the national or local level*. First, consistent with the FTA’s tariff treatment of water, *NAFTA considers water as it wood any other good by including it in its tariff schedules*. The other relevant NAFTA provisions and explanations are discussed below.

A] The Principle of National Treatment

One of the basic principles of free trade is that similar goods and services should be treated similarly whether they are being traded domestically or internationally. This principle of national treatment is embodied in Articles 102 and 301 of NAFTA. Each states that each party, province or state must accord no less favourable treatment to goods and services of other parties than the most favourable treatment accorded to any similar, directly competitive or substitutable goods and services. Article 102 makes national treatment one of the underlying objectives of NAFTA. Article 301 specifically accords this national treatment “to the goods of another Party in accordance with national treatment provisions of Article III of the [GATT].” As GATT tariff schedules typically include all types of water, *including large-scale exports*, and because both NAFTA and the FTA *specifically include water in their tariff provisions*, NAFTA’s national treatment principle appears to apply to large-scale water exports. [footnote in original: That NAFTA’s national treatment principle applies to water exports is buttressed by Canada’s chosen exceptions to national treatment in NAFTA, Annex 301.3, which apply to exports]

B] The Prohibitions of Import and Export Restrictions

Another major goal of the trade agreements is to eliminate import and export restrictions between the parties. Under Article 309, except as provided in NAFTA, *”no Party shall adopt or maintain any prohibition or restriction…on the exportation or sale for export of any good destined for the territory of another party”*. *This provision prevents Canada from restricting exports of its water, whether large-scale or otherwise, regardless of the intent of the parties that negotiated the agreement or the unilateral proclamations of an individual government.*

The Grand Canal Corporation, the Cree, and James Bay

The VANCOUVER PROVINCE ran an article on Shelley Ann Clark’s warnings with regard to the Free Trade Agreement, the Quebec Referendum, Canadian water exports and the Grand Canal Corporation which appeared in or around the second week of March, 1994 – the *only* article I’m aware of as having ever appeared in the Canadian press on this astonishing story!
Charlie Greenwell, of CJOH-TV in Ottawa interviewed Shelly Ann over a year ago, in the presence of John Bowlby [of Citizens Against Bad Law], and was shown proof of certain of her assertions concerning the “doctored” Free Trade Agreement briefing books which were shown to the Provincial Premiers to ensure that they supported the final Agreement. Water, Energy, Subsidies, Agriculture, Minerals, Harmonization of Social Policies…the “doctored” books said one thing, the actual Agreement said another. The secession of Quebec, water exports via Grand Canal, and Continental Union by 2005 were all chronologically detailed in an accompanying but unreleased Letter of Implementation.

As an aside, check out CONSTITUTIONAL CRACK-UP: CANADA AND THE COMING SHOWDOWN WITH QUEBEC, by William Gairdner [your library may have a copy of the review of it featured in the TORONTO SUN, 2 May 1994, headlined CIVIL WAR IN QUEBEC?]. He’s righter than he thinks! And you’ll also find it profitable to quickly scan BREAKUP, by Lansing Lamont, Canadian correspondent for TIME magazine. Note his personal and affiliative data. Note also his apparently accurate assertions that Quebec will leave, that the Cree will attempt to destroy the James Bay hydro-generating facilities, and that the 10th Mountain Division from New York’s massive Fort Drum would intervene as “peacekeepers” [the 10th Mountain is a 10,000-man shock assault Division: Fort Drum lies just across Lake Ontario from Kingston]. He writes as one who’s seen the script, although he’s less detailed than he could have been: the 10th Mountain Division is currently being tutored in French!
The following quotes and exerpts ought to provide you with a good springboard for further research into the topic of GRAND CANAL. Good hunting!

(the following Southam News piece is taken from the March 1991 issue of “World Press Review” and is by Mr. Ken MacQueen)
Is Canada quietly preparing the plumbing for a $100 billion plan to sell northern fresh water to the Canadian Prairie Provinces, the US, and Mexico? Proponents of the proposed second phase of the James Bay hydroelectric project in Quebec, and of the Rafferty-Alameda dams under construction in the province of Saskatchewan, say that they are separate provincial mega-projects. Others note that they could also be vital components of the biggest pipe dream of them all: the Great Recycling and North Development (GRAND) Canal water-transfer project.The proposed GRAND Canal project, backed by some of Canada’s top engineering firms, would fill James Bay with fresh water, pump this water into the Great Lakes, and transfer some of it across the Prairies to the Lake Diefenbaker reservoir in Saskatchewan. From there, the water would head south through the Rafferty-Alameda dams into a network of US rivers.”

“To believe that it’s coincidence just stretches credibility,” says Wendy Holm, a Vancouver resource economist and editor of the book “Water and Free Trade.” [required reading] “There has to be a connection between the GRAND Canal, the James Bay hydroelectric project, and the Rafferty-Alameda dams.”

The GRAND Canal proposal has been evolving since the late 1950s, when it was conceived by mining engineer Tom Kierans, founder and president of Canada’s Grand Canal Co. Ltd. Both provincial projects, Kierans says, “could be integral components of the jigsaw puzzle… They are being put in the right place, except those that are putting them there don’t really know that they’re part of a much bigger picture.” Unfortunately, he says, there is no political agenda to complete his project. “I don’t think that there is anybody who is that Machiavellian… I don’t think that there is anybody that smart.”

Kierans says that his project would “recycle” the fresh water now lost when rivers flow into the salt water of James and Hudson bays. “James Bay’s recycled run-off can relieve the water-supply crisis and enrich environments for 160 million people in both nations. It can add 10 % to Canada’s fresh water,” Kierans claimed in a 1989 presentation to American water regulators in Boston. Global warming, droughts and depleted water reserves in the prairies, California and the US Midwest make the GRAND project inevitable, he says. Now, Kierans says, individual pieces of the project are coming together. Lake Diefenbaker became operational in 1968, and the controversial Rafferty-Alameda dams in southern Saskatchewan – which are being constructed with substantial American financing – would help to regulate the release of water into the Souris and Missouri river systems, Kierans says.

The completed first phase of the James Bay project in northern Quebec and the proposed second phase “are essential to our project,” he says, because they would generate the massive amounts of power needed to pump the river down south. As important, the dams and river diversions, which would flood an area the size of Lake Erie, are necessary to regulate fresh-water flows into James Bay. The second stage of the James Bay project has yet to receive final approval.
Kierans’ plan has financing or endorsements from such giant engineering firms as Bechtel of Canada Ltd. [subsidiary of a massive US firm], the SNC Group, and Lavalin Inc. In 1985, it also won backing from Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa and Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Simon Reisman, a consultant and lobbyist who served as Canada’s negotiator for the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement, has also backed it but has said repeatedly that water was never on the table during the later free-trade negotiations.

Donald Gamble, executive director of the independent Rawson Academy of Aquatic Science in Ottawa, has met frequently with Kierans to discuss and debate his proposal. Gamble says that the project has a surface, almost visceral, appeal to engineers, but on “pure, hard economic analysis… the project is nuts. It just doesn’t make sense.”
Gamble says that although the Saskatchewan and Quebec projects do link together, the project “is not on” politically because of its massive scope and huge environmental impact. But he warns that the political posture against water export could change. “If global warming turns out to be what we think it is by the beginning of the next century,” he says, “no price will be too high for water.”

Some Quick Quotes on American Interest in Canada’s Water

Jim Wright, Democratic congressman from Texas, in his 1966 book “The Coming Water Famine”: “There is to the north of us a stupendous supply of water…enough to satisfy our predictable wants for years to come. We need the water. We need to develop a means of getting that water.”

Rep. Fred Grandy (R., IA) during a CNN interview on June 28, 1988: “I think one of the reasons the United States wants to negotiate a free trade agreement with Canada is became Canada has the water resources that this country is eventually going to need.”

US Ambassador Clayton Yeutter (yait-ter) during a May 1, 1988 interview on CTV’s “Question Period”: “In either case it will have to be negotiated between the two countries and so I don’t think anybody in Canada should be concerned that ‘our water is now going to be committed to the Americans.’ Obviously that will not happen except by deliberate decisions of the government of Canada.” [but has it already happened? read on!]

“Environment Canada was lobbying hard, within caucus, to get an exemption for bulk water under the free trade agreement. Other sections in this book [“Water and Free Trade”] note the remarks by Frank Quinn, senior civil servant with Environment Canada that “in the eleventh hour, we didn’t get all the changes we wanted.” This is commonly interpreted to mean that water was initially exempt, but in the final stages this exemption was withdrawn.

This is consistent with information obtained through my involvement in the BCSSBG [British Columbia “Small” Small Business Group, which tried to protect Canada’s water rights during the negotiation of the Free Trade Agreement] lobby. In December, one day after the final text was released, I phoned Chris Thomas, who had been Carney’s [Patricia Carney, Tory MP involved in FTA negotiation] international trade advisor during the negotiations. When I queried him concerning the legal status of bulk water under the free trade agreement, Mr. Thomas responded, in a somewhat exasperated tone, “It’s exempt. It’s right there in black and white. Water is exempt from the FTA.”

When asked to find the exemption, Mr. Thomas could not, of course,do so. After searching the text, Mr. Thomas replied “I don’t know what happened. We discussed it; it should be there. I thought it was there.”

The fact that there would seem to have been an explicit exemption for water in the deal until the eleventh hour is further confirmed by remarks initially made by Pat Carney when first queried by myself on this matter during the course of a Neighborhood Night held at the False Creek Community Center in Vancouver on 17 February 1988. “Water is exempt from the deal- it’s right in the agreement,” said Carney. When asked to produce a reference to the exemption in the text Carney consulted with an aid [sic] and then replied “It was there.”

–excerpt from Wendy R. Holm’s “Incompetence or Agenda?” piece in “Water and Free Trade” published in 1988 by James Lorimer & Company and edited by Wendy Holm

Journalists and radio talk-show hosts who wish to interview Shelley Ann Clark or Glen Kealey on the astonishing agenda concealed behind the Quebec Separation Referendum on October 30th – a story of greed, deceit, corruption, astronomical profits, purchased politicians and the destruction of a country, all wrapped up in the GRAND CANAL PROJECT and Rockefeller’s plans for Continental Union by 2005, should call them at
THE INSTITUTE FOR POLITICAL INTEGRITY, Ottawa, [819] 778 1705, or fax them at [613] 747 1644.

Politician’s links to the GRAND Canal Project�
From: Financial Opportunities <financial.opportunities@canrem.com>
It may re-pay the reader to spend a few minutes tracing the connections of Paul Desmarais and Power Corp. to the leading politicians, etc. of Canada:

JOHN RAE: leading strategist for Prime Minister Chretien’s election campaign. Was Executive Vice- President of Power Corp. and Paul Desmarais’ right- hand man. His brother is….

BOB RAE: Rhodes Scholar and ex-NDP [Socialist] Premier of Ontario, who appointed….

MAURICE STRONG to the chairmanship of Ontario Hydro, which he proceded to dramatically cut in both skilled human resources and generating capacity {to provide a future *need* for power from James Bay/Grand Canal?}

PAUL MARTIN: current federal Finance Minister. Rose through the ranks at Power Corp., mentored by Paul Desmarais. Bought Canada Steamship Lines from him. Ran against Chretien for Liberal Party leadership.

JEAN CHRETIEN: Prime Minister. Daughter, France, is married to Andre Desmarais, son of Paul Desmarais, chairman of Power Corporation. Chretien’s “advisor, counsellor and strategist” for the past 30 years has been MITCHELL SHARP, who brought Chretien into politics when *he* was Finance Minister. Sharp has been, since 1981, Vice-Chairman for North America of David Rockefeller’s TRILATERAL COMMISSION.

DANIEL JOHNSON: present Liberal [and Opposition] leader in Quebec. Rose through the ranks of Power Corp.

BRIAN MULRONEY: ex-Conservative Prime Minister. Now a lawyer and lobbyist for Power Corporation which, together with Ontario Hydro and Hydro Quebec, has just formed the Hong Kong-based ASIA POWER CORP., to help China to develop its energy potential. Power Corp.’s legal interests in Asia will be handled by a Hong Kong branch of Mulroney’s Montreal law firm, Olgilvy, Renault.

So…we have the CONSERVATIVE party [via Mulroney], the LIBERAL party [via Chretien], and the NDP [via Rae] all tightly connected to….Paul Desmarais and Power Corp.

And we have the Prime Minister, the Finance Minister, and the Prime Minister’s key aide all tightly connected to….Paul Desmarais and Power Corp.

Mel Hurtig wrote, in THE BETRAYAL OF CANADA: “since Brian Mulroney became Prime Minister, Big Business has had effective control of the political and economic agenda, and hence the social and cultural agenda as well. Paul Desmarais provided much of the money for Pierre Trudeau’s campaign, Brian Mulroney’s campaign, and Jean Chretien’s campaign.” {p.188}
Maurice Strong has now joined Brian Mulroney and Paul Desmarais in investing the Asia Power Group’s $100 million venture capital in “small coal-fired power plants being built in the south of China”. They are also looking at “larger projects in northern China, as well as in Malaysia, the Philippines and India.” The Asian economies are expected to spend $1 trillion [US] on essential infrastructure, of which an estimated $400 billion [US] will be on power generation. Chinese and Asian labour costs are low – as low, in China, as $45 per month – and potential profits are high.

The Nov/Dec. 1993 issue of David Rockefeller’s Council on Foreign Relations’ publication FOREIGN RELATIONS contains an article, THE RISE OF CHINA, in which we are warned that China will begin to use *more energy than the United States* within a few decades, massively straining the world’s energy supplies.*Most of China’s energy comes from the burning of soft, high-sulphur, highly- polluting coal*. In 1991 alone, *11 trillion cubic meters of waste gases and sixteen million tons of soot were emitted into the atmosphere over China* – and it has only just *begun* its long process of increased energy generation!
The suphur in this coal causes acid rain. The burning of the coal releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the most efficient “greenhouse gas” in the global warming process.

The *warmer* the climate becomes, the *greater* the need for fresh water in Mexico and the southern United States – and the more *urgent* the need for a GRAND Canal project to get it there. An astute businessman could, if he were so inclined, potentially make *astronomical* profits off *both* ends of this process!
Oh, and Paul Desmarais?

In September, 1993, he joined David Rockefeller’s Trilateral Commission.
He won’t feel out-of-place there, though. Other prominent Canadian members include Gerald Bouey [former Governor of the Bank of Canada]; Conrad Black, newspaper magnate and chairman of Argus; John Allen, CEO of Stelco; Raymond Cyr, President of Bell Canada Enterprises; Peter Dobell, of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, in Ottawa; Marie-Jose Druin, Hudson Institute of Canada; Claude Edwards, Public Staff Relations Board in Ottawa; Allan Gottlieb, former Canadian Ambassador to the U.S.; David Henniger, Regional Director of Burns, Fry; Senator Duff Roblin; Ron Sutherland, CEO of ATCO Ltd., William Turner, of Montreal’s PCC Industrial Corporation; and J.H. Warren, former Canadian Ambassador to the U.S.
[And, of course, Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau was also in the habit of frequently briefing meetings of David Rockefeller’s Council on Foreign Relations in Washington; and Lucien Bouchard, separatist PQ leader, was brought into politics by Brian Mulroney, whose last act in Ottawa was to host a black-tie dinner for 200 members of Rockefeller’s Council of the Americas, who flew up on Rockefeller’s private jet to celebrate the successful negotiation of NAFTA – another Rockefeller innovation]

SERIOUS QUESTIONS

Water is not just another resource. It is the basis for all life. There is no substitute. It has a special place in the human psyche. Society, particularly Canadian society, quite rightly places water in a category quite different from anything else. Water is an all-encompassing symbol of value and life that transcends comprehension as market worth and even intrinsic worth. When threatened, that value naturally prompts great emotion.

To deride this trait in Canadians only cheapens the values that are a vital part of our identity. If this stretches conventional reason for some, then perhaps the strong public reaction to ideas like the GRAND Canal is more understandable in the contexxt of opinion polls that consistently place environmental issues, and water issues in particular, at the top of the list. This public concern is shared internationally, as the recent report of the World Commission on Environment and Development points out so well.

The dedication of waters from Canada to the United States on the scale envisaged by the GRAND Canal does raise serious continental questions. For example, such a scheme, if it were feasible, would create a permanent and direct American interest in one of our most basic resources. The waters of the Great Lakes are already shared, but that arrangement would be extended north and south. If the scheme actually does what its proponents claim, it would create a lifeline from the U.S. Midwest and Sothwest up through the Great Lakes into Canada’s North. Americans wuld be dependent on that supply of water, water they will increasingly see as their own, their right, and vital to their continued well-being. But there are real possibilities for tension and serious misunderstandings that cannot be overlooked. The implications of establishing the GRAND Canal scheme with its origins in Canada and criss-crossing the nation’s heart -land are at the core of the decision-making process. These decisions cannot be made lightly. They are not in the purview of engineers. Problems, where they do exist, can always be addressed in more than one way. The choices must not be artificially defined nor should they be restricted by short-term, vested interests. And fear whipped up to suit a cause should be understood to be the emotional blackmail that it is.

Water shortages exist now, and they may get worse in some regions, but it is important to remember that these shortages are defined by human use and abuse of water resources. Resource specialists and users worldwide see augmented supply as only one aspect of the solution to shortages. Using very expensive and massive water transfers is increasingly suspect. More often the real issue is seen to be in the laws, regulations, economies, and management techniques that drive our manipulation of water. Within that, demand management through efficiency of use, conservation, and realistic pricing offer immediate means to address shortages. If history can teach us anything, it will show that few water shortages are solved in the long run by throwing more water at the problem. More elegant solutions are worth pursuing as the avenue of first recourse.

Perhaps, in the end, the GRAND Canal scheme, or some variation of it, may be necessary, even desirable. If so, we must accept that it is fraught with issues that can be ignored only at our peril. Today, the scheme is more symbolic of the potentially fatal water mismanagement we are quietly perpetuating than it is of any solution that will provide a sustainable future. In all the talk and promotion, hopefully, we will be wise enough to see that sustainable future as the real issue to be addressed. If nothing else, Kierans could be just one more “agent provocateur” that compels us to do so.

Source: David Hunter, Interbasin Water Transfers After NAFTA: Is Water a Commodity or Ecological Resource? (Washington, D.C.: Center for International Environmental Law, 1992), p. 13.

Opponents:

second

Source: http://aquadoc.typepad.com/waterwired/2008/01/kennedy-to-cana.html

January 25, 2008

Canadian Water Exports:  Will NAWAPA Return?

Robert Kennedy, Jr., recently urged Canadians not to sell or share water with the USA. Nick Lees wrote this (Link no longer valid)  article  for the 18 January 2008 edition of the Edmonton Journal.

Kennedy and Hollywood gliterati were in Banff to raise funds for theWaterkeeper Alliance. Along with Kennedy were such luminaries as Alec Baldwin, Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins, Jason Priestly, Christie Brinkley, Daryl Hannah, and Kelsey Grammer.

Here are some excerpts from Lees’ article:

“The U.S. southwest is already experiencing a water crisis, with lots of people moving there and development increasing exponentially,” said Kennedy. “They have already run out of water.

“If you talk to government officials, everybody says they are looking for Canada to bail them out.”

Water from the Colorado River is being routed for development to such places as Las Vegas and Los Angeles.

“This is in the short-term interest of a few developers,” said Kennedy, who has a master’s degree in environmental law.

“It’s not a sustainable practice. The Colorado now dies in the Sonoran Desert. It was once a river that fed a great estuary full of fish and migratory birds.”

The Waterkeeper model began in New York in the 1960s when commercial and recreational fishermen, concerned about depleted fish stocks and industrial pollution, decided to organize and restore the health of the Hudson River. A major water contamination issue in the Hudson is the PCB contamination by the General Electric Co.

Later, Kennedy was among those who rejuvenated laws that protected environmental rights and helped clean up the Hudson. He and others formed the Waterkeeper Alliance in 1999, the year the first chapter appeared in Canada. There are now 171 Waterkeeper chapters on six continents.

Kennedy is the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of the late President John F. Kennedy.

I understand that at meetings such as this hyperbole is often the order of the day; after all, Kennedy was trying to raise money. I question whether the development in the Southwest is “exponential” and I am unsure “everyone” wants Canada to bail the USA out. But he is right – some people are casting their eyes north of the border.

But Kennedy’s vent does raise the interesting issue of Canada, which has huge amounts of fresh water. I wasn’t going to elaborate on this but I might as well.

I remember Marc Reisner recounting (in the ‘Epilogue’ of Cadillac Desert) a 21 April 1981 visit to San Francisco by British Columbia premier Bill Bennett to address the Commonwealth Club. He castigated those who wanted to stop building dams. But when asked by a questioner if BC would consider selling some of its water to the USA, he firmly replied “No”. Then he added: “But come and see me in twenty years.” Looks like we are overdue.

That brings us to the North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA), a plan conceived in the early 1950s by Donald Baker, an engineer with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. The plan would divert water from Canada to the USA (see map below). He took his plan to Ralph M. Parsons, head of the Pasadena engineering firm bearing his name, who instantly fell in love with it.

Parsons started the nonprofit NAWAPA Foundation to “spread the Gospel” about NAWAPA.

NAWAPA attracted the interest of some folks in Congress, especially Sen. Frank Moss (D-UT) and Sen. Hiram Fong (R-HI). Even Gov. Tom McCall, Republican governor of Oregon, and Stewart Udall (initially, when he was Secretary of the Interior) were supporters, but the plan eventually fell into disfavor by the late 1970s. However, I have heard talk about “bringing NAWAPA back”, just as I have heard people suggest reviving a plan to study the diversion of Columbia River water to the Southwest USA.

Here is an article about NAWAPA by Lyndon H. LaRouche, so you might consider the source as you read it. There is even aCanadian site proclaiming “Why NAWAPA is Necessary”. Reisner also has a good discussion of NAWAPA in the ‘Epilogue’ of Cadillac Desert (the source of much of my NAWAPA information).

As a graduate student at the University of Arrizona in the early 1970s I remember some of my professors discussing NAWAPA and the Columbia River scheme, and plans to tap Alaskan water (a component of NAWAPA). In those days it was common for people to say that fresh water flowing into the sea was “wasted”; some people still say that.

Not all Canadians think selling water to the USA is a bad idea. When I was at the University of New Mexico I received a call in the late 1990s from a staffer of Canadian MP Alan Mills, a Conservative who represented Toronto suburbs. She wanted to know if the Southwest USA could use Great Lakes water. “Do fish swim?” I said. She said MP Mills was supportive of such exports and was trying to get the Great Lakes region to agree to them. Dream on, Mr. Mills. It sure is an interesting time to be in the water business in the western USA – and western Canada.

“Water flows uphill to power and money.” — Unknown

________________________________________________________

Opponents   third

Source: http://sisis.nativeweb.org/sov/oh11dam.html

AS LONG AS THE RIVERS FLOW…

…They’ll try to dam them!

– Lonefighters National Communication Network

– reprinted from Oh-Toh-Kin, Vol. 1 No. 1, Winter/Spring 1992

The Real Watergate

During the late fifties and early sixties, a group of business and government officials had a pipe-dream that Canada being the last haven of clean fresh water, it would be quite feasible to divert the clean, fresh water south to the United States. The initial outcry from the general public was enough to put the project on hold. It is only recently that the US, from exploiting and misusing their water supply and water tables, is now experiencing a crisis within their own country.

In 1964, the North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA), was drawn up by the Ralph M. Parsons Company — an engineering firm in Los Angeles — to divert massive amounts of Canadian water to the US. In 1965, a letter from the Department of Northern Affairs and Natural Resources, to Louis Hamill — assistant professor of Geography at the University of Alberta — proves that the federal government was well aware of the NAWAPA plan and its costs and effects on the environment, but it provided a tone that this plan was far from being considered. One only has to look at the various dams and hydro projects and compare them to the “proposed” NAWAPA plan.

To facilitate the diversion of these massive amounts of water would require an international treaty or agreement. This was done by Canada entering into the Free Trade agreement in 1987. In a brief presented to Environment Canada’s Rafferty-Alameda Initial Environmental Evaluation in Regina, Saskatchewan on June 22/89, by the Citizens Concerned About Free Trade, it was pointed out that Simon Reisman, Canada’s Free Trade negotiator, had said quite candidly that for the US to enter into the Agreement would require elements which would make the deal hard to refuse. And that element would be water. When Prime Minister Mulroney was asked by Fortune magazine about the idea of water exports to the US, he said “Why not?”.

The NAWAPA plan has been put back on the table, or perhaps it should be said “under the table”. Various hydroelectric and dam projects have raised serious questions about the necessity of these projects. James Bay 2, Rafferty-Alameda, the Oldman River dam, eerily resemble the original outline of NAWAPA plan of the sixties. Each of the provincial governments say that these mega-projects are separate provincial ventures and nothing more.

It’s been stated that the three projects could be vital components to the GRAND (Great Recycling and Northern Development) Canal Transfer. The sale of fresh Canadian water to the US is backed by some of the country’s top engineering firms. In an article in the Edmonton Journal, Dec. 22/90, Tom Kierans, president and founder of the Grand Canal Co. Ltd., was interviewed where he stated explicitly that the three dam projects “could be integral parts of the jigsaw puzzle”. He was the one who conceived the idea of interbasin water transfers back in the 1950s. Kierans points out that the existing projects, such as the Lake Diefenbaker dam built in 1968, and James Bay 1, could all work nicely into a plan of diverting the water south, it’s only a matter of turning on the taps. Both of these projects were his creations. To effectively complete the interbasin transfer of water, James Bay 2 and Rafferty-Alameda are essential. He further stated that the diversion of our water southward is inevitable due to global warming, droughts and depleted water reserves in the prairies, California, and the US mid-west.

In the mid-1960s, a scheme was developed of interbasin water transfers from northern Alberta to southern Alberta, or simply water from the north being diverted to south. The plan became known as Prairie River Improvement Management Evaluation, or PRIME. In 1971, the Progressive Conservatives, then in opposition, used the key phrase; “PRIME IS A CRIME”. They alluded that the real reason for PRIME was to export water to the US. Though this plan was developed in the early `70s, much of its interbasin transfers, diversions and dam sites are now in place. PRIME became part of the Saskatchewan Nelson Basin Study which was concluded in 1972. It became known in 1981 that the water resource engineers for the Alberta government were happily developing interbasin water transfers. PRIME had become the policy for water management in the province and that the Progressive Conservative government of Alberta had dropped two elements from PRIME, first being the name, and secondly the emphasis on interbasin water transfer. The intent was the same: to divert water from north to south.

Whether the plan is called NAWAPA or the Grand Canal Scheme or PRIME, it’s the same plan to take our water and send it south to the US. The players may change but the game remains the same. While this plan was being developed it was quite obvious and recognized from the beginning that there would be opposition from various segments of Canada, but it was felt that would be easily overcome with the enticement of profit and material gain. What was not considered was the original people of the land. During the `50s and `60s our people were still confined to reserves, not allowed off without a pass. For many the issue was survival. In the 1990s, the pressing issue for the original people is the protection of the earth. All First Nations share a common but fundamental belief that the earth is sacred and has been desecrated. She must be protected. It is our responsibility, our duty, that we cannot shrug off. The Real Watergate is an example of blatant act of genocide against the First People. We are on the frontlines. A plan this big will require massive resistance. The few that will benefit from this have at their disposal all the machinery of the state and, with a price tag of $150 billion, they will use all of that machinery. What they have not counted on is that when the First Peoples’ very existence and life and all that they hold sacred is threatened, the response will equal that threat.

THE ISSUES:

[SISIS note: most of this information is outdated and should be read as historical record, not a current update of the ongoing struggles of the James Bay Cree, Mohawks, etc. Where possible we have added links to sites with current information on the struggles discussed here.]

James Bay 2

In April 1971, Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa announced the “key to economic progress in Quebec” was a multibillion dollar plan to harness the 20 rivers flowing into James Bay and make it one of the largest hydroelectric projects in the world. James Bay 1 built 15 dams, 331 dykes, at a cost of $16-billion. James Bay 2 is slated for completion by 1998. The damage to the environment done by the first phase of the project has left 13,000 square kilometres of Cree territory flooded. Several communities have been uprooted, and in 1984 ten thousand caribou drowned when water was released from one of the reservoirs. The reservoirs have submerged large tracts of land and released mercury from the bedrock, causing contamination of fish and fish-eating wildlife, upon which the Cree and Inuit depend for food and income.

James Bay 2 will flood over an additional 10,000 square kilometres. Water level changes will destroy natural habitats for migratory birds, and flood waters will cover many caribou summer calving grounds with unknown and unspecified effects. River diversions would lead to a concentration of fresh water flowing into Hudson Bay, altering the salinity and water temperatures which will impact the marine life. The phenomenon that produced mercury contamination in the first phase will be repeated, and this time the mercury will make its way into the Hudson Bay and will effect the beluga whales and seals that live there.

Kanesatake

The Mohawk territory of Kanesatake came to epitomize the anger and frustration of all original people of this land. From the Innu of Labrador to the Haida of the west coast, the situation wasn’t difficult to relate to. The Sulpician priests at one time held the deed which was given to them from the king of France. The object was to establish a Catholic mission for the Mohawks and Algonquins. The fight for recognition of their land base started then and would continue for the next two and a half centuries. It would eventually ignite a controversy over a proposed golf course to be built by the town of Oka in 1990. The town of Oka insisted that the golf course be built in spite of the fact that the area, called the Pines, was the burial grounds for the Mohawks.

The response from the federal and provincial governments was heavy handed and left people wondering what made a golf course important enough to call out the army. The last Warriors left on Sept. 27/90, and the army left shortly after. The government had promised to purchase the land, but ended up buying the wrong area. If one looks at the James Bay 2 map of power lines it would be obvious that the Pines is a necessary component to James Bay 2. The government insists that it made an honest mistake in purchasing the wrong land??

Current information on Mohawk struggles:

(Link no longer valid:   Mohawk Nation site)
(Link no longer valid:   SISIS Mohawk site)

Treaty Commissioner and Treaty Land Entitlement in Saskatchewan

The issue of outstanding Treaty land entitlement has gone unaddressed not only in Saskatchewan but in other provinces as well. This issue dates back to the 1800s when the government was unable to do a survey of the various band populations which in turn short-changed the bands on land quantum.

The Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations, the provincial political body that lobbies on behalf of the bands of Saskatchewan, agreed in principal to a report on Land Entitlement that was released by the Office of the Treaty Commissioner. Within the report there was a series of recommendations on how to settle the outstanding entitlements. As well, on the table for discussion was mineral and water rights. The formula that appeared equitable to all parties allowed cash for land value and thus allow bands to purchase lands. It is the hope of Indian Affairs that a national formula would be established by this process.

It’s obvious that the motive behind the provincial government’s willingness to settle not just one land claim but 27 in total is more than “it’s the right thing to do”. Land, money and minerals are all secondary. The main reason that the government is pushing through the deal is because the issue of water rights could hold up the filling of the controversial Rafferty-Alameda project. The various dams and diversions will have to run through the majority of entitlement lands. It will at the same time address the issue of water rights (are they part of Aboriginal title) — on a national level. Saskatchewan has 6 of the 10 Treaties signed between the various Indian Nations and the Crown. The Treaties transcend provincial boundaries and run into the Northwest Territories, British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario. One only needs to look at the NAWAPA map and see how strategic Saskatchewan is.

Peigan Lonefighters

On August 3/90 the Lonefighters made camp near the Oldman River, which has sustained the cultural and spiritual life of the Peigan people. In 1976 the province of Alberta had announced plans to build a dam on the Oldman. The idea was shelved due to public outcry. In 1984 it was announced that the dam would be built. The dam will flood 5800 acres, the habitat of deer and prairie falcon. Herons and some large cliff swallow will disappear. Over 300 archaeological sites and 46 historic sites will also disappear. To the Peigan, the river is more than a source of food and water, it is Napi, the Oldman, the creator.

The background of the Oldman river dam has been seen as an integral part of the plan to divert water south. The government insists that the dam is necessary for irrigation purposes, which would only benefit some 200 farmers. Even the farmers feel the dam is unnecessary with new water conservation methods.

After several years of litigation, the federal court of Canada ruled in March 1990 that the project had not received a proper environmental assessment because of the possible impact it would have on Indians, but did not halt the construction of the dam.

Leaked government memos indicate the province’s intention is to build all dams so they fit within the eventual concept of interbasin water transfers. There is no economic logic that makes the Oldman river dam feasible, other than for diverting water to the US.

After all the legal avenues had been exhausted, the only option left for the Lonefighters to protect their territory was direct action. The Lonefighters attempted to restore a former channel of the Oldman river on the Peigan reserve. The diversion by the Lonefighters would have rendered the Oldman dam useless.

Lil’wat People’s Movement / Mount Currie

The Lillooet and Mount Currie communities are approximately 3 hours northeast of Vancouver located in the interior of BC. The two communities are located amongst some of the breath-taking beauty seen anywhere in North America. But it’s slated for logging. The struggle of the Lil’wat is to prevent the destruction of their forest. The logging companies need to build roads to gain access to the forest, these roads threaten the Lil’wat peoples burial grounds. If the logging companies succeed in their objectives, the clear-cutting of the forests surrounding Mount Currie and Lillooet will not be without a heavy cost on the environment. When logging occurs, it always leaves its impact on the water systems, which in turn will affect the marine life and thus the people who depend on the fish for food and livelihood.

Information on current Lil’Wat struggles

Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en

The Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en people’s territory spans 57,000 square kilometres of mountains, forests, fast-flowing rivers, and abundant wildlife and game. Archaeologists have found evidence that the area has been inhabited for at least 9,000 years. This has been their homeland since the retreat of the last glacial ice age. The Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en have never signed or entered into any treaty or agreement that would cede or surrender their title to the land. Nor is there any legislation provincially or federally that would expressly extinguish their title to the land. since 1977, the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en people wanted a court decision that would force the government to negotiate an agreement that would allow both societies to co-exist peacefully.

The decision that Justice McEachern handed down stated that Aboriginal title did not exist for the Aboriginal people in BC. By stating this he has effectively handed over fiduciary jurisdiction to the province and that section 35 of the Canada Act does not apply to the First People of BC.

The decision will have an impact on all other Aboriginal people in Canada. It essentially states that the hidden government policy of termination is out in the open and that genocide of a peoples is accepted within dominant society.

The Political Process

This country is in the midst of a constitutional crisis. When the Meech Lake Accord was not ratified, it was a well known fact that there would be many issues left up in the air. The attitude before Meech Lake was that the governments and general public were not concerned with the impact the Accord would have on the First People. What took the country by surprise was the fact that their indifference would carry such a price. When the Accord failed ratification, an underlying issue would be a power struggle between the provinces and the federal government. This has become more and more evident over environmental issues. The federal government has responsibility for the environment and Indians, the two issues that stand in the way of diverting water south. These two issues are at the centre of the tug of war between the federal and provincial governments.

The federal government is holding to the position that its priority is to the provincial governments, but its fiduciary responsibility was and is to the First Peoples. If the provinces gain control it would have to eliminate that responsibility so that they can obtain legal control over provincial territory. History is fit testament to the fact that if the provinces gain control over the First People, it would be a sentence of death for the original people and the environment.

The Force of Resistance

The state has proven that it will use any means possible to enforce its will on the people and the land. That they care little for the earth, and do not have respect for anything that will promote harmony and balance in the world. The machinery of the state has used all available artillery to execute its plan of water diversion. It has used its legal and judicial system the subtle and insidious violence that is perpetuated by racism, it has used its propaganda to hide the truth and discredit anyone or any groups who speak the truth, and it has used the physical force of its police and army when all else failed.

(…) The justice system has been used in the belief that justice will be served. Instead, it has been proven over and over to serve the interests of the governments and corporations. The Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en have been fighting an ongoing battle with the provincial government only to be told you as a people do not matter and all that defines you is insignificant. Justice McEachern could come to such a conclusion even after taking part in the communities’ celebrations and ceremonies. He had the opportunity to witness first hand and observe the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en peoples belief that it is better to show the proper reverence for life than it is to gain from it. The court decision has effectively legitimized Indian Affairs’ termination policy of its First People. The modern termination policy does not differ from when the governments used tactics such as starvation and the distribution of small pox infected blankets. The court sees no reason that the Aboriginal People should have a unique place in Canada’s future.

Within the same system, a known leader of the Aryan Nations [Carney Nerland-SISIS] can be told that when he murdered an Indian man [Leo Lachance-SISIS], that his beliefs had nothing to do with his act of violence. It is the same system that thought it proper not to take into account his statement that “he should be given a medal for killing that Indian”. This self-proclaimed racist received a sentence for four years and he is allowed to serve his sentence in a provincial correctional centre, near his home. This pales in comparison when one Warrior from Kanesatake receives 2 years less a day, and he never fired a shot let alone killed anyone.

When looking at the justice system further, it’s evident that the system is there to protect private property and the property holders first. Milton Born With A Tooth, the Peigan Lonefighter’s leader, was sentenced to 18 months for firing two shots into the air. While he was in remand he was under the constant threat of solitary confinement. After he was sentenced he was going to be sent to a special handling unit, the closest being in northern Alberta — far from his home, family and friends. The government saw it necessary to spend $10-million in prosecuting him. The system has no regard or respect for another language or culture. One young Mohawk woman was denied bail until she came up with a “real name”, what the court meant was an anglo-Saxon name, regardless of the fact that she had a Mohawk name. This same disrespect was shown to 15 Lil’wat people when they were denied bail for a month until they used a Christian name.

What is even more of a disillusionment is that when the provincial governments receive a decision from the federal court or a higher court they can blatantly ignore it. How can one respect a system that can disregard so casually its own laws.

This has been repeatedly done by the various provincial governments, especially when it pertains to the building of dams. The court of Appeal, in March 1990, revoked the license for construction of the Oldman river dam. The province continued in spite of the court’s decision. In Saskatchewan, the federal court ruled that construction on the Rafferty-Alameda would have to stop until there was a full environmental assessment done. The province continues to ignore that ruling as the project nears completion.

As well, the various provinces have passed legislation that would limit information being released to the public. In Quebec, there has been a recent decision by the Superior court that made it illegal for a reporter to release information he had on the provincial government’s secret contracts with 13 multinational corporations. In Saskatchewan, a group concerned over the building of the Rafferty-Alameda has continually applied to gain access to information and has even gone as far as petitioning the court. It’s ironic that, while this case is being heard in court, the legislative assembly is debating the province’s new Freedom of Information act.

The general public is being told the dams are being built for various reasons such as “flood control”, “irrigation purposes”, or “very much needed power, without it there will be no heating or electricity”. The general public follows the belief that the government would not lie. When groups or individuals stand up or speak out, they’re labelled as radicals and terrorists. This is the tactic used against the Mohawk Warriors, that they were using violence to protect their interests of gambling and cigarettes which they had smuggled into the country. The same tactic was used against Milton Born With A Tooth. They stated that he was a menace to society, militant, violent and lawless, that he had no respect for the “rule of law”. yet upstream the provincial government along with the environment minister were committing a far greater crime by building a dam without a license and did not show any respect to the burial grounds that they had desecrated.

When all else fails the state uses its police force, which can legally assault, harass and even kill someone. This past summer is a testament to that fact. When the police lose control of a situation the army is called out without any public accountability. What kind of society can we live in when the army can be used to ensure the oppression of a people, and where it can be witnessed daily by the country and public opinion is limited. It isn’t hard to fathom that we are living in a police state, that there are puppets and then there are puppeteers. As long as the Canadian society continues to live in a system that uses energy at such a high level the government will only become more and more repressive.

The frontlines of the struggle to preserve and protect the Earth have been the original people of the land. This resistance comes not from wanting to protect a vested interest, but a responsibility and a duty to respond when the Earth is in distress. The First People of this land know and understand their place in creation and one does not need a degree in environmental science to know the consequences of diverting and changing the natural flow of water. This insane plan of sending water south will only be prevented by all the Earth’s protectors responding. The first call has been sent out. Can you afford to wait for the second call?

The end… for now

compiled by Maggie Paquet

Feb 172008
 

Banksters: Index

Maggie Paquet received my email   (2008-02-13)   Water: Urgent Update,  Proposed Highgate Dam, North Saskatchewan River.

She writes:  “It’s a subject I’ve helped fight, on and off, for decades. I believe this Highgate Dam plan is part of it… Anyway, without yarding on any more about it, I put together a brief bit of research just by Googling “NAWAPA.” I am sending you the file for a bit of background on the whole subject. I think it puts this proposal into context. I’m sorry there are so many pages, but I couldn’t edit it without running the risk of missing an important item.”

See  2008-02-17   Water:  NAWAPA Cockamamy schemes of the First Order, compiled by Maggie Paquet.

 

==================

RESPONSE TO MAGGIE:

. . .   Yes I think you are right – the Highgate Dam is part of the NAWAPA plan.   Locally we have distributed the detailed map (1972) that shows how the water diversions to the U.S. would be accomplished through the Northwest Territories-Alberta-Saskatchewan-Manitoba, and the function of the Highgate Dam in the larger scheme.

Red Williams is President of the Liberal Party of Saskatchewan and President of Agrivision (proponents of “water development” in Saskatchewan).  Ralph Goodale (Saskatchewan Member-of-Parliament, a cabinet minister under Chretien, became Canada’s Minister of Finance under Paul Martin) is a best buddy of Williams.

Earlier in this email network I have detailed Agrivision’s Conference on “Drought-Proofing the Economy”.  Paul Martin was Prime Minister at the time. The Prime Minister and the Minister of Finance (Goodale) individually took time to video-tape themselves in a congratulatory message of appreciation to Red and Agrivision for their work on water and the Conference.  The messages were displayed on the “big screen”, bigger than life, for the attendees of the Conference.

At earlier water conferences put on by Agrivision, Wayne Clifton (Clifton and Assoc Engineering Co. – a major partner of Red’s in Agrivision) told how there are vast quantities of water in underground aquifers in Saskatchewan, just waiting to be “developed”.  I mention this because of reference to underground as well as surface water in the attached water diversion information compiled by Maggie.

Agrivision is behind the proposed Highgate Dam, as detailed below.

WHAT ARE THE DAMS IN CANADA ABOUT?

There are quotes from “Cadillac Desert” in the attached information.  Back when we were fighting the proposed Meridian Dam on the South Saskatchewan River some of us read it.  Also Sandra Postel’s “Pillar of Sand” with its research on the history and consequences of large dam constructions around the world.

Governments should be making informed decisions.  I am confounded that we even have to fight these dams – they are so obviously bad ideas, given what is known; given current problems in the U.S. which have led to the de-commissioning of dams, and also to the infusion of hundreds of millions of dollars to transition OUT of irrigation farming (Nebraska, Idaho for example).  The exact opposite of building dams.  So why – why do we continue to fight dam construction here? … Is it because they have nothing to do with “drought-proofing the (local) economy”?

Closely related to the NAFTA information in Maggie’s compendium:

There’s another book, “To the Last Drop”, published in 1986, author Michael Keating. Simon Reisman was Canada’s chief negotiator for NAFTA under then-Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.  In a speech to an old boys’ club in Central Canada, a club of influential business interests, Reisman said that the balance of power on the North American continent would shift because Canada has the water resources that the U.S. needs.  All we have to do is to put a meter on a tap at the 49th parallel and collect the royalties (and dividends if you are an investor) as the water flows south.  The infrastructure costs seem insurmountable, but the Americans need the water so badly that they’ll cover those costs.

Eight years ago part of me was reluctant to relay Reisman’s words because I would be seen to be disconnected from reality.  These ideas are surely not serious and therefore not worth talking about.  But the meeting Reisman addressed and his speech are part of the public record.  The author of “To the Last Drop” was a journalist with the Globe & Mail.  Still, the whole thing can seem like the paranoia of a conspiracy theory.  Having the map in hand, and now Maggie’s compendium is helpful to maintaining contact with “their” reality.

Also, a couple of years ago my Mother happened to watch a supposed-documentary on television.  It was a one-sided promotion of the “Grand Canal” to divert water from James Bay to the U.S., the preposterous idea I first read about in “To the Last Drop” and which I thought had died in the decades since Reisman talked about it.

The attached compendium addresses the question of whether water is exempt under NAFTA, the question being posed to Senator Patricia Carney in the aftermath of Canada signing the Free Trade Agreement.  (Carney went from the House of Commons as a Conservative member for B.C. to the Senate.  She (trained as an economist) was involved in the FTA negotiations.

Coincidentally, I knew Pat when she had the company “Gemini North” in Yellowknife.  The Company did contract work for the oil and gas companies in the Arctic in the early 1970’s.  Tom Berger’s indigenous-community-to-community consultations on the proposed Mackenzie Valley Pipeline followed not long after.)

According to the sources, Carney and others believed that water WAS exempt from the terms of the Free Trade Agreements.  It was in the text during the negotiations, last they knew.  But when the finalized text of the Agreement became available, when asked to provide the reference for where the exemption appears, they were not able to provide the reference. In the final negotiations, in “the 11th hour” to reach an agreement, the clause on water disappeared, as I understand .. I am sure that the recent books on water (sitting in an unread stack on my table, alas!) address this question in more detail.

At the time of reading “To the Last Drop” we were fighting the Meridian Dam on the South Sask River.  I only came to learn of the Grand Canal and the Rocky Mountain Trench (proposals to divert water from the northern regions of Canada to the U.S.) as a consequence.  Even then I did not appreciate the geographical significance of Saskatchewan.  The Trench is far west in B.C.; the Canal would be way off in Central Canada.

But yes – Maggie’s compendium shows the significance of the Highgate Dam.   The Meridian Dam is also on the water diversion map.   We stopped both those dams from proceeding.

The attached compendium puts the detail map of the planned water diversions into verbal form.  This is a first time for me to READ Saskatchewan’s role in the larger context.

As mentioned in the Highgate Update email circulated on February 13th, through a Federal Government funding program (The Canada Saskatchewan Water Supply Expansion Program), responsibility for process and decisions about the water in the River were passed out of Government hands to other interests.

Ralph Goodale was Minister of Finance.  His good buddy Red Williams was President of Agrivision.  But the money for the feasibility study (between $340,000 and $370,000) didn’t go directly to Agrivision.  Agrivision put on the promotional meeting in North Battleford to attract local supporters who would then carry the ball, through an organization they created – the North Sask River Water Resource Committee (NSRWRC).

In the early stages of the fight over the Highgate Dam we went to the Government for answers about lack of due-process.  And were told that the Government WASN’T responsible.  The North Sask River Water Resources Committee was responsible.  Questions should be directed to them.

I am reminded of the words of Red at the Drought-Proofing Conference.  He said that decisions around the control of water would be moved into “institutions“.  Simultaneously he announced the creation of the Saskatchewan Water Council; his friend Wayne Clifton (also a member of Agrivision) would be the President of the SWC.

I interpret the words and actions as a response to the fact that the intentions to build dams, for example, are thwarted by citizen participation in the democratic process. You have to find a way to by-pass this obstacle if you want to make money from the resource.

They almost did. (“The Government is not responsible for the study of a dam on the North Saskatchewan River.”)  They would have been successful, had it not been for a group of dedicated local people, supported by others from across Canada who came down heavily on the Government of Saskatchewan over the Highgate Dam.

The meeting in Maidstone on Febrary 27th is a next critical step, especially with the change in Government.  (But not really a change because the motivation to make money from the water resource is just as great and the dedication to protection of the public interest just as absent in Government.)

Agrivision has a history of working with public money through joint Federal-Provincial cost-sharing programmes.  That’s how responsibility for “water development” is moved out from under the control of democratic functioning.  On February 06-07 I wrote: “The “Canada-Saskatchewan Water Supply Expansion Program (CSWSEP)” is a vehicle through which responsibility for water is transferred to people who have a self and financial interest in water. Their interest: to make money from the “development” of water, the blue gold.  CSWSEP is illegimate and must be shut down.”

A year later.  I haven’t found the time to initiate action to challenge CSWSEP.  It is a priority.  We are dupes if we sit by while our money is used to enable the water diversion schemes.  And again in the words of Red Williams, to create “equity” (investor) interests in the water behind the dam.

It is essential to be strategic.  People who profit through access to the powers that make the decisions on public resources, have been able to do so through the existing political system.  The advent of widely-available electronic communications has changed that.  Citizens have the ability to successfully challenge abuses.  We are doing that with ever-greater confidence and success.

Those who have enjoyed privileged and beneficial access won’t just sit back and watch their position be eroded.  If you were them, you’d do exactly what Red said.  You’d move the decisions around the resources OUTSIDE AND BEYOND the reach of democratic functioning.  Into “institutions”.  Like Agrivision and the Saskatchewan Water Council.  Or into the hands of the North Sask River Water Resource Committee (NSRWRC), who become tools to accomplish the agenda of water diversion.  It’s easy to sell the boondoggle to well-intentioned but poorly-informed people on the premise of “progressive economic development” to “drought-proof the economy”.  Doing a good deed.

As we have seen, cost-benefit analyses, properly done, show the dams for what they are.  The pay-backs aren’t there.  Increasingly, there is credibility for the view that the dams are about something else.

Please – pass the attached compendium on ( 2008-02-17   Water:  NAWAPA Cockamamy schemes of the First Order, compiled by Maggie Paquet.).  We have the power;  we are many more in numbers than they are.  But the only way our power can be exercised is if a critical mass of people have the information.

I am honored to be working with people like Maggie and you.

Thank-you and

Cheers!

Sandra

Feb 142008
 

Neither the Canadian government nor the Canadian Forces announced the new agreement, which was signed Feb. 14 in Texas.”

The official name for the Canada – U.S. Troop Exchange Agreement is the “Civil Assistance Plan“. The Government of Canada can call in the American troops in the event of “civil emergency”.

Some CONTEXT for the Agreement is appended.

 

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Canada, U.S. agree to use each other’s troops in civil emergencies

David Pugliese , Canwest News Service

Published: Friday, February 22, 2008

Canada and the U.S. have signed an agreement that paves the way for the militaries from either nation to send troops across each other’s borders during an emergency, but some are questioning why the Harper government has kept silent on the deal.

Neither the Canadian government nor the Canadian Forces announced the new agreement, which was signed Feb. 14 in Texas.

The U.S. military’s Northern Command, however, publicized the agreement with a statement outlining how its top officer, Gen. Gene Renuart, and Canadian Lt.-Gen. Marc Dumais, head of Canada Command, signed the plan, which allows the military from one nation to support the armed forces of the other nation during a civil emergency.

[Photo]

American soldiers arrive on board the HMCS TORONTO as part of a training exercise in carrying out a NATO presence patrol in the Indian Ocean near Somalia. A new agreement between the U.S. and Canadian militaries has been greeted with suspicion by the left wing in Canada and the right wing in the U.S.

The new agreement has been greeted with suspicion by the left wing in Canada and the right wing in the U.S.

The left-leaning Council of Canadians, which is campaigning against what it calls the increasing integration of the U.S. and Canadian militaries, is raising concerns about the deal.

“It’s kind of a trend when it comes to issues of Canada-U.S. relations and contentious issues like military integration. We see that this government is reluctant to disclose information to Canadians that is readily available on American and Mexican websites,” said Stuart Trew, a researcher with the Council of Canadians.

Trew said there is potential for the agreement to militarize civilian responses to emergency incidents. He noted that work is also underway for the two nations to put in place a joint plan to protect common infrastructure such as roadways and oil pipelines.

“Are we going to see (U.S.) troops on our soil for minor potential threats to a pipeline or a road?” he asked.

Trew also noted the U.S. military does not allow its soldiers to operate under foreign command so there are questions about who controls American forces if they are requested for service in Canada. “We don’t know the answers because the government doesn’t want to even announce the plan,” he said.

But Canada Command spokesman Commander David Scanlon said it will be up to civilian authorities in both countries on whether military assistance is requested or even used.

He said the agreement is “benign” and simply sets the stage for military-to-military co-operation if the governments approve.

“But there’s no agreement to allow troops to come in,” he said. “It facilitates planning and co-ordination between the two militaries. The ‘allow’ piece is entirely up to the two governments.”

If U.S. forces were to come into Canada they would be under tactical control of the Canadian Forces but still under the command of the U.S. military, Scanlon added.

News of the deal, and the allegation it was kept secret in Canada, is already making the rounds on left-wing blogs and Internet sites as an example of the dangers of the growing integration between the two militaries.

On right-wing blogs in the U.S. it is being used as evidence of a plan for a “North American union” where foreign troops, not bound by U.S. laws, could be used by the American federal government to override local authorities.

“Co-operative militaries on Home Soil!” notes one website. “The next time your town has a ‘national emergency,’ don’t be surprised if Canadian soldiers respond. And remember – Canadian military aren’t bound by posse comitatus.”

Posse comitatus is a U.S. law that prohibits the use of federal troops from conducting law enforcement duties on domestic soil unless approved by Congress.

(INSERT, Sandra, June 2012: American law on posse comitatus changes – laws are enacted that overstep it, subsequent laws repeal the offending laws. Wikipedia explains some of it, near the bottom of the article at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posse_Comitatus_Act )

Scanlon said there was no intent to keep the agreement secret on the Canadian side of the border. He noted it will be reported on in the Canadian Forces newspaper next week and that publication will be put on the Internet.

Scanlon said the actual agreement hasn’t been released to the public as that requires approval from both nations. That decision has not yet been taken, he added.

 

= = = = = = = = =  = = =

CONTEXT

Etch the story of Omar Khadr in your mind when you consider that the Harper Government has entered an agreement whereby American troops come into Canada in a “civil emergency”.

Khadr was 15 years old at the time of capture by the Americans. EVERY western country, EXCEPT CANADA, that had citizens imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay challenged the Americans and got their citizens OUT.  Had the Harper Government performed its role, Khadr would not have undergone all that happened to him (details below).

Criminal, abhorrent behavior not fitting of human beings.  The behavior of animals. Those with power torturing the weak.

The Harper Government has now signed an agreement with the UNITED STATES ” .. which allows the military from one nation to support the armed forces of the other nation during a civil emergency.”

The cornerstone of the Bush Government is secrecy. It is only by accident that military information related to Omar Khadr became public knowledge.

Agreements between countries require, conveniently, that if information comes, for example, from the Americans to the Canadians, it is “classified” information, exempt from “access to information” laws.

And so, concerning the agreement just signed by the Harper Government with the Americans, “ the actual agreement hasn’t been released to the public as that requires approval from both nations.” If the Americans don’t want the terms released, they won’t be.

Six factors, CONTEXT, related to the Troop Exchange Agreement:

 

1.  ACCESS TO INFORMATION

“Access to Information” laws apply to Government documents related to its work INSIDE Canada.  For work between countries, in most cases the Governments have signed agreements that require the documents to be “classified” information, which means that freedom of information (disclosure) does not apply.

Which explains, from the newspaper report:  “Canada Command spokesman Commander David Scanlon” .. “said the actual agreement hasn’t been released to the public as that requires approval from both nations.”

During the Cold War, in most nations, the agencies of defense, intelligence, counterintelligence, and internal security remained closed to public scrutiny.  “Security was an absolute trump over any demand for openness.”

After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Iron Curtain, countries moved to more and more openness – mandated immediate disclosure of information when it concerned the “life and liberty of a person“.

However, the laws continued to include special protections for security organizations – – “the very agencies most often accused of violating civil liberties.”  Abu Ghraib in Iraq, the prison in Guantanamo Bay are prime examples.

 

2.  SITUATION IN THE U.S.  (The Agreement is with the U.S.)

In the U.S., the process of rebuilding these walls of secrecy had begun even before the terror attacks of Sept 11, 2001.  In the early 1990s, defense and intelligence agencies resisted initiatives to reform classification rules and declassify Cold War records, only to be overruled by the White House and Congress;  by the end of the decade, the political climate in Washington had shifted.  Declassification efforts were underfunded, while conservatives’ fears about the threat of espionage by agents of the Chinese government undermined efforts to develop less onerous classification policies.  “The vast secrecy system,” Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan complained, “shows no signs of receding.”

After Sept 11, secrecy became even more deeply entrenched, once again raising fears about the harm being done to civil and political rights behind closed doors.  Hundreds of aliens were detained by the U.S. government, which refused to reveal their names or their place of detention; many were subsequently deported following hearings that were closed to the public.

Hundreds of alleged “enemy combatants” – many held on slight evidence and having little or no value as sources of intelligence value – were hidden at a Defense Department facility in Guantanamo Bay.  The Central intelligence Agency ran its own network of secret detention facilities, as well as a secret program to seize suspected terrorists covertly from other nations.

Much of this was deeply disturbing, but nonetheless familiar:  It was the sort of behavior one expected to see from the regimes that had allowed security concerns to overwhelm concern for human rights.  Americans also saw a new form of secrecy emerging after Sept 11, as organizations not typically counted within the security establishment began to restrict access to information already in the public domain.”

 

3.  ARAR AND KHADR

Canadians have direct experience of the American system through the cases of Canadians:

Maher Arar

he was chained, shackled and flown to Syria, where he was held in a tiny “grave-like” cell …. In Syria, he was beaten, tortured ….

On September 18, 2006, the Commissioner of the Inquiry, Justice Dennis O’Connor, cleared Arar of all terrorism allegations, stating he was “able to say categorically that there is no evidence to indicate that Mr. Arar has committed any offence or that his activities constitute a threat to the security of Canada.”

Canadian police forces contributed to what the Americans did;  they are a big part of the reason Maher Arar was tortured and held in a Syrian prison for a year.

In BOTH the cases of Maher Arar and Omar Khadr, the ONLY reason that the Harper Government did ANYTHING, is because of public pressure.

Omar Khadr

This is what happened, at the hands of the Americans and the Harper Government.

In the early spring of 2003, Khadr was told “Your life is in my hands” by a military interrogator, who spat on him, tore out some of his hair and threatened to send him to a country that would torture him more thoroughly, making specific reference to an Egyptian Askri raqm tisa (“Soldier Number Nine”) who enjoyed raping prisoners. The interrogation ended with Khadr being told he would spend the rest of his life in Guantanamo.[6] A few weeks later, an interrogator giving his name as Izmarai spoke to Khadr in Pashto, threatening to send him to a “new prison” at Bagram Airbase where “they like small boys”.[6] At the end of March, Omar was upgraded to “Level Four” security, transferred to solitary confinement in a windowless and empty cell for the month of April.[6]

“The only Western citizen remaining in Guantanamo, Khadr is unique in that Canada has refused to seek extradition or repatriation.  …

In February 2008, the Pentagon accidentally released evidence that revealed that although Khadr was present during the firefight, there was no other evidence that he had thrown the grenade. After his comrade was killed, a wounded Khadr, on his knees, was shot twice in the back before being captured. …

This is a 15-year old child soldier.

More from the Wikipedia documentation on Omar Khadr:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omar_Khadr

Khadr states that he was refused pain medication for his wounds, that he had his hands tied above a door frame for hours, had cold water thrown on him, had a bag placed over his head and was threatened with military dogs.

Unallowed to use washrooms, he was forced to urinate on himself  ….

“Khadr has been reported to have been kept in solitary confinement for long periods of time; to have been denied adequate medical treatment; to have been subjected to short shackling, and left bound, in uncomfortable stress positions until he soiled himself.[29] [30][31] Khadr’s lawyers allege that his interrogators “dragged [him] back and forth in a mixture of his urine and pine oil

Khadr participated in a hunger strike, lasting 15 days before he was force fed by prison guards. He reported collapsing as he left the hospital, and that his guards administered a brutal beating.[34] On July 20, 2005, Guantánamo detainee Omar Deghayes wrote “Omar Khadr [the Canadian juvenile] is very sick in our block. He is throwing [up] blood. They gave him cyrum [serum] when they found him on the floor in his cell,” and his extract was subsequently published in The Independent[35] He also participated in a second, 200-detainee hunger strike, over June/July 2005.[36]

CBC News reported that Khadr was finally permitted to speak with his mother by phone in March 2007, nearly five years after his capture.  ”

 

4.  THE ARGUMENT FOR SECRECY REBUTTED

The justification given for more and more secrecy is that the information is valuable to the terrorists.

However, “Disclosure leads to accountability not just for information but for eliminating the vulnerability the information describes.  As a matter of human nature, the absence of this powerful incentive for action will lead to failures to address security problems, ultimately making people less safe, not more.  These outcomes will occur even if the individuals who know about a vulnerability are well-meaning and patriotic because it is very difficult for Americans to combat institutional inertia from a wide variety of sources … The dilemma is not whether information will fall into terrorist hands, but rather whether suppression of such information … will lead to even graver outcomes.”

Criticisms such as these pose a challenge to a precept that has, for many years, sustained the security establishment as an enclave in which the right to information has little hold:  the presumed identity of security and secrecy.  The assumption that the defense of national security demands strict controls on the flow of information is deeply embedded in bureaucratic – and popular – culture.  But events following the 2001 terror attacks give reason for holding an alternative view:  that in robust democracies, the parth to improved security may actually lie in a policy that encourages the free flow of information.

The 9/11 Commission, like the earlier Joint Congressional Inquiry into 9/11, concluded that informational blockages contributed to the failure of federal agencies to anticipate the terror attacks. …”  page 42.  (I would love to type up the remainder of the chapter for you!  But must end here. Try your Library.  The book is “Blacked Out, Government Secrecy in the Information Age” by Alasdair Roberts, Cambridge University Press, 2006.

 

5.  IMPLICATIONS:  INCREASINGLY, THE MILITARY AND SECURITY FUNCTION IN THE UNITED STATES IS BEING PRIVATIZED.  PRISONS, TOO

Which means:

a.  “The troops” can be hirelings of a corporation, better paid than those serving in the nation’s armed forces, and often not even citizens of the U.S.  We know that from the contracting-out of defense contracts in Iraq.  Halliburton Corporation is a well-known name in this regard.

b.  We totally lose access to information, which means that accountability goes out the window.  The citizen is rendered powerless.  There is no avenue through which to obtain a court-order to gain access to information.

And note:  The privatized prisons in the U.S. import prisoners from other jurisdictions.

****

When you bring in “the troops” from America, you get all that goes with “the troops”.

Think of the Abu Ghraib prison and the one in Guantanamo Bay – both American military prisons.  Why were these prisons not in the United States? … Prisons not on American soil are not subject to American law.  The acts carried out at these prisons could not have been done, were these publicly-funded prisons in the States.

Now look at what is happening to prisons INSIDE the U.S.:  they are being privatized.  The implications for access to information are demonstrated (page 166, from the book “Blacked Out“):

Take, for example, the question of access to information held by the operator of a privately run prison – perhaps the Diamondback Correctional Facility in Watonga, OK, a CCA prison that in 2004 held over 1,000 prisoners under a contract with the Arizona Department of Corrections, and another 800 prisoners under a contract with the Hawaii Department of Public Safety, but had no contract with the State of Oklahoma itself.

In principle, several different groups could make a legitimate demand for information about the Diamondback facility.  Advocates for the prisoners had a right to information held by CCA about internal conditions in the prison, as well as information about disciplinary procedures;  these informational claims could be grounded in the basic rights to security and fair treatment, which persist even for prisoners.  The citizens of Arizona and Hawaii also had a claim to this information, and to information about work and educational opportunities provided by CCA, so they could exercise their right to participate intelligently in political debate about the wisdom of their states’ correctional policies.  The 5,000 residents of Watonga had a right to personal security that could be jeopardized by riots or escapes at the prison, and that entitled them to information about the potential risk, …  Other residents of Oklahoma … so that they could make an informed judgment about the wisdom of a state policy that allowed the importation of prisoners from other jurisdictions.

In short, there were many groups …  so they could ensure that an array of  basic rights were adequately protected.  Unfortunately, existing disclosure law did not follow this logic.  The Diamondback prison was not affected at all by Oklahoma;s disclosure law, as it was not tied to the state corrections department by a contract.  Although CCA had an agreement with the state of Arizona, Arizona’s state disclosure law does not recognize a right to information held by contractors.  …  Furthermore, a Hawaiian court would have to be persuaded that the requested documents were Hawaiian government recoreds; Oklahomans could not use Hawaiian law to obtain information about Arizonan prisoners in the Diamondback prison.  …”

 

6.   WHICH “CIVIL EMERGENCIES” ARE WE TALKING ABOUT?

The Harper Government has signed an agreement with the United States.  Whether or not the terms will be disclosed is at the pleasure of, and requires the agreement of BOTH the Harper Government and the American.

The next email is about SPP (the “Security, Peace and Prosperity” agreement between the Harper Govt and the U.S.).  Protests over it were held across Canada last week, in every province except Saskatchewan.

Maybe the Huge demonstrations at the WTO meeting in Seattle was a “civil emergency”.  Under this new agreement, were a WTO incident to happen again, Canadian troops would be expected to be deployed to the U.S.?

Just WHICH “civil emergencies” do these administrations have in mind?  Which demonstrations by citizens in Canada would warrant the calling in of the U.S. troops?  To where would the arrested people be carried off?

Think a short while back to the incident around the SPP talks at Montebello:  Canadian policemen, disguised as demonstrators (except that with their hooded faces they didn’t resemble any of the demonstrators) were planted among the peaceful protestors, to rile things up, thereby to turn peaceful demonstration into violent, in order to discredit the protestors.  This is the Harper Canada.

It is a “civil emergency” to UN-sign this Troop Exchange Agreement with the U.S.

 

Feb 132008
 

Banksters: Index

Newcomers to the network will not know the implications of the proposed Highgate Dam in Saskatchewan, for decisions about water across Canada.

We have fought the process tooth-and-nail, one by which decisions over water are handed out of the hands of Government to other interests.  The precedent cannot be allowed to stand.

 

—————–

 

There is great urgency to get people out to the Maidstone Meeting on February 27th.

The Government has changed.  There needs to be a large attendance at this meeting. It is a ONE and ONLY chance, according to the press release (appended).

Issues with the proposed Highgate Dam on the North Sask River near North Battleford:

 

– through a Federal Government funding program (The Canada Saskatchewan Water Supply Expansion Program), responsibility for process and decisions about the water in the River were passed out of Government hands to other interests. The River is trans-boundary water.

– “Agrivision Corporation” is the group of people who organized the first meeting in North Battleford to promote the dam (“water storage alternatives”) and to line-up supporters.  They told of “equity interests” that would be available to investors.

– The Terms of Reference for the Feasibility Study were obsolete and unprofessional, highly skewed in favour of the dam. Downstream consequences of a dam were not to be studied.

– First Nations people own land in the River Valley.  There were no meetings with them. Their land would go under the water held back by a dam.

– Although it still seems preposterous to me, the Highgate Dam is a water reservoir on the map that details how the diversion of water from Canada to the U.S. is to be accomplished.  The water is channeled down from as far north as Lake Athabasca (the Northwest Territories).  Red Williams, the President of Agrivision, has been a proponent for the idea since the map was created in 1972.   (The proposed Meridian Dam on the South Saskatchewan River which we fought down 7 or 8 years ago is on the same map, as is the actual (controversial) Rafferty-Alameda Dam which sits close to the 49th parallel.)

 

From Saskatchewan we called for help from people across Canada:  Highgate – a process whereby responsibility for decisions around water are transferred out of Government hands creates a very dangerous precedent.

There was great response nationally and locally.  Officials and authorities in water and climate change challenged the Government of Saskatchewan (NDP at the time) through various channels.

A stalwart group of local people have organized their own information meetings, have made it impossible for those who are conducting “the study” to do so without public involvement, expectations, and so on.

 

 

THE GOVERNMENT IS NOW CHANGED

 

As of November, 2007 the conservative Saskatchewan Party is the elected majority Government.   The change in government means we are basically starting over.

 

ORGANIZING IS AGAIN UNDERWAY FOR THE PROPOSED MERIDIAN DAM

 

A young man from Empress AB phoned a while back.  People had come to Empress selling $20 memberships in a project, the proposed Meridian Dam (again!).  This young man already had the determination to fight; now he is armed with information collected by our network.  Kevin from Edmonton later sent in the same news: the Meridian Dam idea is again up and running.

 

MAYBE WE CAN KILL TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE ?!

 

If there is sufficient – overwhelming – public participation created by the Maidstone Meeting on February 27th, the new Government will learn what we have learned about water.

Persons who have current information know the problems with large dams in the U.S. and around the world.  The same problems.  Countries are de-commissioning dams at large public expense.  We can learn from the mistakes of others and leapfrog over them.

Actually, ANY citizen who has seen a cost-benefit analysis on a dam should be outraged that their tax-dollars would be used for such boondoggles. IF these dams proceed, it will be people from across Canada who foot the bill.

There aren’t enough rich Saskatchewanians to pay for them!

For now, let’s get the information to as many people as possible, get as many people out as possible.  Following the meeting would be a time to call the next step.

Thanks,

Sandra

====================

PRESS RELEASE

 

Good morning,

 

The much- anticipated water storage feasibility study has been completed.

The results will be presented at a public meeting on February 27th at 7:00pm CST in Maidstone. The study will address water storage alternatives, with particular focus on the alternatives studied in phase 2: the Highgate Dam and a weir system. If you are interested in this project then I strongly urge you to attend this meeting, as there will be only one.

Please see the press release below, and forward to anyone who may be interested.

 

D. Ryan Bater, Ec. D.

General Manager

Battlefords Regional Economic Development Authority

1202- 101st Street

North Battleford, SK

S9A 0Z8

Ph. 306.446.7506

Fax. 306.446.7442

 

 

MEDIA RELEASE

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

FEBRUARY 12, 2008

 

Public Meeting scheduled for water storage feasibility study results

 

The second phase of the North Saskatchewan Water Supply Feasibility Study to investigate surface water storage alternatives on the North Saskatchewan River in Northwest Saskatchewan has been completed, the North Sask River Water Resource Committee (NSRWRC) announced today.

The results of the study will be presented to the public at a public meeting at 7:00pm CST on February 27th at the Legion Hall in Maidstone, SK.

The first phase of the study was a scoping study to identify and assess water development alternatives and water use options for large scale development in the region. These alternatives include (1) no investment in infrastructure (status quo), (2) non- structural investments to develop the water resource with no storage, (3) the Highgate Dam, and (4) off- channel storage options.

In the second phase, the NSRWRC chose to further investigate on- stream storage options including the Highgate Dam and the development of a fifth option: a weir system.

The Canada Saskatchewan Water Supply Expansion Program has committed to contributing 90% of the cost of the study. The remaining 10% has been contributed by municipalities and organizations in Northwest Saskatchewan and Northeast Alberta.

 

-30-

 

For more information contact:

 

Steve McKechnie, Chairperson

North Sask River Water Resource Committee

(306) 821-6669

 

D. Ryan Bater, General Manager

Battlefords REDA

(306) 446-7503

Jan 252008
 

(Scroll down to the map)

Source: http://aquadoc.typepad.com/waterwired/2008/01/kennedy-to-cana.html

(The following is the article.  The “I” is not Sandra Finley speaking.)

January 25, 2008

Canadian Water Exports:  Will NAWAPA Return?

Robert Kennedy, Jr., recently urged Canadians not to sell or share water with the USA. Nick Lees wrote this (Link no longer valid)   article  for the 18 January 2008 edition of the Edmonton Journal.

Kennedy and Hollywood gliterati were in Banff to raise funds for theWaterkeeper Alliance. Along with Kennedy were such luminaries as Alec Baldwin, Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins, Jason Priestly, Christie Brinkley, Daryl Hannah, and Kelsey Grammer.

Here are some excerpts from Lees’ article:

“The U.S. southwest is already experiencing a water crisis, with lots of people moving there and development increasing exponentially,” said Kennedy. “They have already run out of water.

“If you talk to government officials, everybody says they are looking for Canada to bail them out.”

Water from the Colorado River is being routed for development to such places as Las Vegas and Los Angeles.

“This is in the short-term interest of a few developers,” said Kennedy, who has a master’s degree in environmental law.

“It’s not a sustainable practice. The Colorado now dies in the Sonoran Desert. It was once a river that fed a great estuary full of fish and migratory birds.”

The Waterkeeper model began in New York in the 1960s when commercial and recreational fishermen, concerned about depleted fish stocks and industrial pollution, decided to organize and restore the health of the Hudson River. A major water contamination issue in the Hudson is the PCB contamination by the General Electric Co.

Later, Kennedy was among those who rejuvenated laws that protected environmental rights and helped clean up the Hudson. He and others formed the Waterkeeper Alliance in 1999, the year the first chapter appeared in Canada. There are now 171 Waterkeeper chapters on six continents.

Kennedy is the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of the late President John F. Kennedy.

I understand that at meetings such as this hyperbole is often the order of the day; after all, Kennedy was trying to raise money. I question whether the development in the Southwest is “exponential” and I am unsure “everyone” wants Canada to bail the USA out. But he is right – some people are casting their eyes north of the border.

But Kennedy’s vent does raise the interesting issue of Canada, which has huge amounts of fresh water. I wasn’t going to elaborate on this but I might as well.

I remember Marc Reisner recounting (in the ‘Epilogue’ of Cadillac Desert) a 21 April 1981 visit to San Francisco by British Columbia premier Bill Bennett to address the Commonwealth Club. He castigated those who wanted to stop building dams. But when asked by a questioner if BC would consider selling some of its water to the USA, he firmly replied “No”. Then he added: “But come and see me in twenty years.” Looks like we are overdue.

That brings us to the North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA), a plan conceived in the early 1950s by Donald Baker, an engineer with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. The plan would divert water from Canada to the USA (see map below). He took his plan to Ralph M. Parsons, head of the Pasadena engineering firm bearing his name, who instantly fell in love with it.

Newnawapa

Parsons started the nonprofit NAWAPA Foundation to “spread the Gospel” about NAWAPA.

NAWAPA attracted the interest of some folks in Congress, especially Sen. Frank Moss (D-UT) and Sen. Hiram Fong (R-HI). Even Gov. Tom McCall, Republican governor of Oregon, and Stewart Udall (initially, when he was Secretary of the Interior) were supporters, but the plan eventually fell into disfavor by the late 1970s. However, I have heard talk about “bringing NAWAPA back”, just as I have heard people suggest reviving a plan to study the diversion of Columbia River water to the Southwest USA.

Here is an article about NAWAPA by Lyndon H. LaRouche, so you might consider the source as you read it. There is even aCanadian site proclaiming “Why NAWAPA is Necessary”. Reisner also has a good discussion of NAWAPA in the ‘Epilogue’ of Cadillac Desert (the source of much of my NAWAPA information).

As a graduate student at the University of Arrizona in the early 1970s I remember some of my professors discussing NAWAPA and the Columbia River scheme, and plans to tap Alaskan water (a component of NAWAPA). In those days it was common for people to say that fresh water flowing into the sea was “wasted”; some people still say that.

Not all Canadians think selling water to the USA is a bad idea. When I was at the University of New Mexico I received a call in the late 1990s from a staffer of Canadian MP Alan Mills, a Conservative who represented Toronto suburbs. She wanted to know if the Southwest USA could use Great Lakes water. “Do fish swim?” I said. She said MP Mills was supportive of such exports and was trying to get the Great Lakes region to agree to them. Dream on, Mr. Mills. It sure is an interesting time to be in the water business in the western USA – and western Canada.

“Water flows uphill to power and money.” — Unknown

Jan 152008
 

http://www.thestar.com/News/article/294018      (Backup copy below)

 

I CITE THIS BECAUSE OF the StatsCan statement in the G&M article “Two face jail time” :  “Mr. Morrison called the response to the census a “resounding success,” especially on Canada’s native reserves.”

A repeated theme of my work over the years has been that Government use of “spin doctors” or “communications specialists” also contributes to the undermining of our system of governance. We learn to mistrust what the Government says, because too many times we see through the spin. It is as though we are thought to be stupid.

In the G&M article Census branch director-general Peter Morrison is quoted:  “Mr. Morrison called the response to the census a “resounding success,” especially on Canada’s native reserves.”

The response to the Census was a disaster that caused large cost overruns as the Government sought to get compliance.  The part of the statement related to First Nations, of and by itself MIGHT be true.  But in the context of the court cases it is very misleading.

First Nations’ compliance is a separate issue.  It was being handled by StatsCan, Jan.2008:  “Statistics Canada seeks co-operative approach as compliance climbs“.

Charges won’t be pursued against natives on reserves because their compliance rates used to be considerably worse, says Anil Arora, director general of the census program branch at Statistics Canada.”

… oh.  What we see here is that the Census branch director-general has changed?  in January 2008 when the “35,000 natives” article was written, Anil Arora was the director general.  In the July article “Two face jail“, Peter Morrison is the director-general.

http://www.thestar.com/News/article/294018   

Published On Tue Jan 15  2008

No charges sought for 35,000 natives who ignore census

By the numbers Native census participation rates

1986: 952 reserves, 136 incomplete

1991: 1,123 reserves, 78 incomplete

2001: 1,080 reserves, 30 incomplete

2006: 1,123 reserves, 22 incomplete

Statistics Canada seeks co-operative approach as compliance climbs

Jan 15, 2008 04:30 AM

Robyn Doolittle

Staff Reporter

Thousands of natives across Canada refused to complete the 2006 census – including the Six Nations in Ontario – and will not face any legal consequences, despite the fact that 64 people not living on reserves were charged under the Statistics Act.

Charges won’t be pursued against natives on reserves because their compliance rates used to be considerably worse, says Anil Arora, director general of the census program branch at Statistics Canada.

“One has to pick a path. One has to pick a road and you pick a road that is obviously yielding success. Twenty years of experience has shown us that working with the community is the best,” Arora said.

The maximum penalty for not completing the census is a $500 fine and three months in prison. Of the 64 charged, nearly all decided to complete it rather than go to court.

Some 35,000 people living on reserves refused to complete the census, Arora said. As a courtesy, Statistics Canada seeks permission from the band office before entering the reserve, although it isn’t legally obligated to do so.

The census isn’t mailed out to reserves, because many still use a P.O. box system, which means census takers can’t verify addresses, Arora said.

In 1986, there were 952 reserves in Canada. Of those, about 136 reserves refused to complete the questionnaires. As a result, an aboriginal liaison committee was established, which employed and trained native people to conduct the surveys.

By comparison, there are 1,123 reserves across Canada today, with 22 refusing to complete the census.

However, said Arora, more and more reserves are modernizing so that in the future Statistics Canada may be able to mail the census form directly to people on the reserves.

Six Nations, outside Brantford, is one of the largest reserves that refused to participate in 2006.

Chief William Montour hopes to change the reserve’s attitude. Montour first served as chief between 1985 and 1991. After working in the government more than a decade, he was re-elected in December.

He used to agree with the majority of his constituents the census wasn’t something native people should be forced to complete. For one, Canadian reserves are bombarded by government pollsters, he said. People don’t understand the use of the census. And, most important, a deep distrust of the federal government remains.

“I used to think this way. I’ve since changed my mind,” said Montour. “We’ve got to convince the community that we’ve got to have these kinds of numbers.  More and more it gives us the ability to argue for more programs and services.”

Natives on reserves have to answer the long questionnaire – which normally only one in five Canadians get – because “that information is in demand,” said Arora.

Six Nations claims a population of about 22,800 natives. There could be hundreds more non-status natives, perhaps with aboriginal relatives, living on the reserve.

At the Alderville First Nation community, outside Cobourg, a notice went out in the community newsletter that census takers, many from within the native community, would be stopping by.

“If people wanted to do it they could,” said Chief James Marsden. “I think it’s good myself. For resources and funding, it’s good to have the proper count for Ontario.”

But it’s a tough sell to some, he said. “It’s probably the same as voting,” he said. “A lot of bands won’t vote in federal or provincial elections. `We have our own jurisdiction. We’re our own nation.'”

Jan 042008
 

The story of the Harper Government’s intended copyright laws (mid-December) is wonderful, both as a threat and as a success.  I laughed as I read..

Let’s celebrate the wild!

If you missed the story, the details are in (7) below – CBC, THE GLOBE & MAIL, & BBC NEWS ON CANADA’S PROPOSED COPYRIGHT LAW.  It is an amazing event with wider implications. 

CONTENTS

(1) INTRODUCTION

(2) IT IS AN EXCITING TIME  – THE FIGHT OVER POWER

(3) WHAT IS the F Word?

(4) WILL WE SUCCOMB TO THE F Word?  RECONCILIATION OF DEFINITIONS

(5) COMMENT ON THE RESISTANCE TO THE PROPOSED COPYRIGHT LEGISLATION

(6) INTENTIONAL?  OR IS IT IGNORANCE?

(7) CBC, THE GLOBE & MAIL, & BBC NEWS ON CANADA’S PROPOSED COPYRIGHT LAW

—————– 

(1) INTRODUCTION 

I was alerted to the proposed copyright laws by CBC Radio show “Search Engine” which covered the action in Calgary at Jim Prentice’s constituency office.  Prentice is Federal Minister of Industry, responsible for the proposed legislation. 

Much of the commentary on the changes to the copyright laws is about the impact on access to music.  My concern is somewhat different (but not unique) and detailed below.  

I laugh now at the sense of urgency (panic!) when I first heard about the proposed legislation.  It is incredible how fast the word spread.  There was such an uproar that Jim Prentice backed off tabling the legislation, although he said it will be tabled in January.  No need for panic.  

It is possible that we may yet need to wade in on this issue. If you are worried that there hasn’t already been enough of a storm of protest to stop this legislation before it gets out of the starting gates, contact Prentice now. 

Jim Prentice Constituency Office, Suite 105, 1318 Centre St NE, Calgary, Alberta T2E 2R7;  403 216-7777;   Fax 403 230-4368; Prentice.J  AT  parl.gc.ca 

In the past, I felt that we had to participate in every single crucial issue.  Today there are SO MANY people who are standing up for the public interest with such great creativity and success that life can be sane and fun.  We aren’t all so urgently needed.  The Tide is indeed Turning, with a vengeance. 

As for my own concerns with the legislation:   .. how to explain it without using words that cause people to say in ridicule, “Are you nuts?  This is Canada.” 

And so I have to ease into the “F” word.  Here goes:  

 ——————- 

(2) IT IS AN EXCITING TIME  – THE FIGHT OVER POWER

 I am anxious to forward to you a great article from Harper’s Magazine about the regulation of chemicals in Europe versus North America.  And another article from the New York Times about (I forget).  

Simultaneously, on CBC Radio I heard about proposed changes to the Canadian copyright laws.  Ouch! Does that mean I wouldn’t be able to send the Harpers and NY Times articles to you without going through red tape? (I don’t know the answer because I don’t know the details of the legislation.)  … but then, realistically the Government cannot stop people from using the internet to spread information. 

The proposed laws are restrictive.  That I know.  Should restrictive laws that can’t be enforced be ignored?  …. . NO, the EXISTENCE of such legislation enables the Government, any Government, to shut me – you, anyone –  down, if it chooses to single me or you out.  Hiring a lawyer to defend oneself will more than likely cripple a person financially and emotionally. 

I speak from experience:

Old-timers in our network may remember that the Government of Canada contracted out part of the Canadian Census work to weapons manufacturer Lockheed Martin.  The existence of laws that force Canadians to fill in a census form meant that a failure to cooperate with an agenda that further enriches a war corporation with tax-payer money, provides the Government with the threat of a jail sentence over the dissenting individual.  (Update: I told you that Statistics Canada had turned my case over to the Justice Department for intended prosecution.  And that a letter and package had been delivered to my door one evening –  some time ago.  There has been nothing further to report.) 

Back to the copyright laws: 

The police could investigate and obtain copies of my emails and know that I was contravening the copyright laws by downloading and disseminating copyrighted information (whether music or other) from the world wide web.    Charges could be laid. 

Whether or not the Government could fully enforce the laws doesn’t matter – – they would have the tool to intimidate me and others.  Also, the law becomes a tool to limit access to information.  The rationale would be the protection of corporate investment in the information. 

Is that argument legitimate?  No.  It is easily understood if you look at a parallel example:  the patenting or ownership of seeds by a corporation.

How can the corporation claim ownership, even if the Government cooperates by granting a patent?  The seed contains elements that are the product of a long line of development by nature and by many people over years.  The corporation attempts to appropriate that which belongs to “the commons”, to all of us and to nature.

Compare “copyright”.  The words, language and thoughts contained in information are an amalgam created by many, many people over time.  Indeed, activists often play a role in the creation of the content of some information.  We create the fodder used to create the awareness, the commentaries, displays, the panel discussions, the footage, the workshops, the song, media coverage, classroom material, etc.  Not all, but some. 

Can I claim ownership of what I write, to the point where you can be sued for copying it?  How can that be?  I know I am completely dependent upon the world around me, and on people who have gone before, on teachers, even on the gods or the muse, to inform what I create.  I am not smart enough to think up the ideas by myself.  

A writer can sell books, a publisher can sell magazines.  They earn an income.  But surely the words and thoughts are an amalgam, like the seed, that belongs in the public sphere because they are the product of not-organized collaboration.  

The Government will enact laws to prohibit or limit our ability to share the information?  … I see it as an attempt to appropriate part of “the commons”, our knowledge base, to preserve corporate financial interests.

And to limit access to information, which the internet provides in spades. 

To whom do the airwaves belong?  They, too, belong in the public sphere.

And yet we don’t question their appropriation by corporations.  We only “regulate”.  

Is there some fault in my logic?

  • the Government makes it illegal to copy information
  • it cannot possibly enforce the law
  • but the police now have a law and can be summoned to investigate citizens under that law

I am reminded of the RCMP being sent to investigate organic farmer Marc Loiselle who is active in the fight to prevent the transnational corporations from contaminating all grain stocks and our food supply with GMO’s.  Some may recall the incident from our time fighting against the introduction of roundup resistant wheat (successfully).  Marc was only one of several farmers in Manitoba and Saskatchewan who had the police knocking on their doors. 

  • our tax dollars being used to send the police to investigate local farmers.  Surely this is no more than a scare tactic at the behest of Monsanto, in this case.  It was an outrage.  Think of the anxiety of Marc’s children and wife when the police came to their place.
  • the RCMP being used by Monsanto to intimidate citizens, because there is a law under which they can patent seeds. 

(I have a bit of experience with copyright through the writing and publishing of a book on bulghur wheat, and also through having a trade-mark registered in Canada and the U.S.  I let the trade-mark lapse after the fight against the registration and patenting of herbicide-tolerant wheat and terminator seeds.  I told the patent lawyer that the system is suspect.  And Parliament won’t change the legislation that permits corporations to patent life forms, in spite of two decisions from the Supreme Court of Canada that repeatedly drew attention to the need. Patents and copyright (“intellectual property rights”) are closely connected to each other.) 

SO:  The power struggle over the copyright law (item #7).  Round one, hopefully a knock-out!    Way to go!  Michael Geist (Ottawa) for initiating the facebook page.

Kempton Lam in Calgary who organized a crowd to attend the Industry Minister, Jim Prentice’s, local open house to express their views on copyright.  Jesse Brown on CBC Radio for bringing the issue to attention.

Pretty amazing – Canadians coast to coast – in a matter of a few days.    Victory.  

———————–

(3)  WHAT IS the F Word? 

I was confused some time ago by reading that there is a name for government based on corporate values.  It is called (the F word) fascism. 

I did not understand how that definition reconciles with the more common definition of fascism which is: 

” a political regime that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government …”.

From understanding my vulnerability under copyright laws, I can now reconcile the two seemingly different definitions of fascism. 

———————–

 (4) WILL WE SUCCOMB TO THE F Word?  RECONCILIATION OF DEFINITIONS 

Fascism as

(a)  a system of government that embraces corporate values, AND / OR ?

(b)  a system of government that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of opposition 

The relationship is this: 

You embrace (a); you end up with (b).  Necessarily and simply – because corporate values are at odds with protection of the public interest.  

To protect and promote the corporate interest (if that is its agenda), the Government will at some point have to resort to the tactics of a police state.  We saw that when the RCMP was dispatched to the home of Marc Loiselle, when the Government of Canada threatened me and other people with jail over the unnecessary contracting out to a corporation that makes billions of dollars every year from the sale of military weapons.  

The Government passes a law that favours corporate interests.  In a hinterland economy like that of Saskatchewan, a corporate-friendly government gives away the resources for minimal royalties and little effective regulation to protect water, land and health. The corporation then pays dividends on large profits to shareholders, not to the citizens of the Province. 

The pro-corporate laws from pro-corporate government become more necessary at times when the population, the slumbering giant, wakes up smelling something fishy.  The struggle for power is on!  In the case of the copyright law, the power of the corporation – derived from its huge financial wealth – money –  –  are threatened by the internet.  The response of the collaborating government is to introduce copyright law to remove the threat.  The influential must remain influential.  

The f-word is fascism.  One can never imagine how it is that intelligent people like the Italians and Germans allowed the establishment of fascist Governments in their countries during the 1920’s and 30’s.  

Well …

  • we have accepted corporate contributions to political parties.  He who pays the piper the most money, calls the tune. 
  • we have accepted the idea of “public-private-partnerships”.  It’s very much in the choice of words.  A public-private-partnership is more accurately Big Government working hand-in-hand with Big Corporations. 

Will we end up with fascist government? 

No, AS LONG AS PEOPLE CAN SEE:

  • Government that is run by corporate interests 
  • eventually leads to fascist government.

As long as we have email and unobstructed access to information, our collective ingenuity and power is unleashed.  

The proposed coyyright laws of the federal government need to be watched.

I’ll be phoning Michael Geist, author of the Facebook web site that initiated the information flow around the proposed law. And host of CBC Radio programme Search Engine, Jesse Brown.  Congratulations to them!

They’ve taught us strategy that will work well with the proposed legislation around CORPORATE DONATIONS TO POLITICAL PARTIES.  The fun is on!

—— 

4  a.  FURTHER DEFINITION OF FASCISM 

(apologies – I picked this up from a web site and lost the address.) 

“It has become customary among libertarians, as indeed among the Establishment of the West, to regard Fascism and Communism as fundamentally identical. But while both systems were indubitably collectivist, they differed greatly in their socio-economic content. For Communism was a genuine revolutionary movement that ruthlessly displaced and overthrew the old ruling elites; while Fascism, on the contrary, cemented into power the old ruling classes. Hence, Fascism was a counter-revolutionary movement that froze a set of monopoly privileges upon society …” 

“Fascism has a grave moral defect, Ropke argued: it fails to recognize the individual as the key social unit. Right economic reasoning, he said, begins not with the nation but with human action, and right social policy begins with the recognition that society is made up of individuals with souls.

Fascism, on the other hand, by ignoring the individual soul, is socialism’s close cousin because it exults in the idolatry of the state.

“definition of the economy of fascism: an economy in which big business reaps the profits while the taxpayer underwrites the losses”  

========================== 

(5)  COMMENT ON THE RESISTANCE TO THE PROPOSED COPYRIGHT LEGISLATION  

One blogger wrote: 

I agree that the influence of big money/lobbyists are deeply troubling. I am glad that Canadians are doing something to voice our concerns. 

========================== 

(6)  INTENTIONAL?  OR IS IT IGNORANCE?

I don’t think that taking the slippery path toward the F Word is intentional. Jim Prentice isn’t setting out to create fascism or a police state.  Brad Wall, the new Premier of Saskatchewan thinks that he’s doing great things for Saskatchewan – it’s “development, development, development”

– Enterprise Saskatchewan – – which means money, money, money.  The corporation happens to have the honey pot.  The Government has a BIG one too – – ours! 

The problem is in understanding the raison d’être for government.  We elect and pay the Government to protect and promote our interests.  Not those of the corporation. 

It’s not that simple.  They will say, of course, that OUR interest IS money, money, money!

You cannot sleep with those you are responsible for regulating.  You definitely cannot accept money from them.  In the Information Age, you will be prevented from pimping for them. 

========================== 

(7) CBC, THE GLOBE & MAIL, & BBC NEWS ON CANADA’S PROPOSED COPYRIGHT LAW 

(a)  CBC   Go to:  (Link is no longer valid) 

————

(b)  THE GLOBE & MAIL, TEXT 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20071209.WBmingram2007120

9191018/WBStory/WBmingram/ 

New copyright law starts Web storm

Mathew Ingram, December 9, 2007 at 7:10 PM EST 

The new copyright legislation, which was expected to arrive in Parliament this week, has been delayed — although it’s not clear whether the delay is a result of the criticisms and public outcry described below. 

The federal government is expected to release the latest version of a new copyright law this week, but it has already whipped up a storm of negative publicity on the Internet – a blogosphere and Facebook tsunami with Industry Minister Jim Prentice at the centre. 

One of the architects of this storm is Dr. Michael Geist, a professor of law at the University of Ottawa and an expert in copyright and the Internet, who says he is afraid that the new law will copy the worst aspects of the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act. 

Among other things, Geist says, the legislation will likely “mirror the DMCA with strong anti-circumvention legislation – far beyond what is needed to comply with the WIPO Internet treaties,” and will likely contain no protection for “flexible fair dealing. No parody exception. No time shifting exception. No device shifting exception. No expanded backup provision. Nothing.” 

Dr. Geist has posted a YouTube video that lists 30 ways in which people can protest the legislation, and has set up a Facebook group as a central rallying point for those opposed to the new legislation. 

The law professor’s fight has also been adopted by half a dozen influential blogs, including Boing Boing, whose co-founder Cory Doctorow is a Canadian author and former Electronic Frontier Foundation staffer. 

In a recent post, Doctorow wrote that “The US’s approach to enforcing copyright in the digital age has resulted in 20,000 lawsuits against music fans, technology companies being sued out of existence for making new multi-purpose tools, and has not put one penny into the pocket of an artist or reduced downloading one bit. The USA stepped into uncharted territory in 1998 with the DMCA and fell off a cliff — that was reckless, but following them off the cliff is insane.” 

Canadian copyright lawyer Howard Knopf has also been blogging about the legislation, and CBC’s Search Engine show tried to get Jim Prentice to come on and do an interview, and solicited questions from readers (host Jesse Brown got more than 240 responses) but the minister said he couldn’t go on the program. 

The Facebook group Geist set up has more than 10,000 members after less than a week, and helped to generate a small but opinionated crowd of vocal critics who gathered at an open house event held by the Industry Minister in his home riding in Calgary on Saturday.  

Other sites that have been following the issue include Fair Copyright and Digital Copyright Canada as well as Online Rights Canada  

———————————- 

(C)  BBC NEWS ON CANADA’S PROPOSED COPYRIGHT LAW  

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7149588.stm   (2011 April – the link is still valid.)

Last Updated: Tuesday, 18 December 2007, 13:21 GMT    Power of Facebook affects law 

Internet law professor Michael Geist looks at how Facebook has the power to affect legislation. 

The power of Facebook, not just a social networking tool  

If 2006 was the year of YouTube, 2007 has been Facebook’s year. The growth of social media, led by Facebook, has taken the world by storm.  

Since January, Facebook has added 250,000 new users each day with nearly 60 million people worldwide now using the site. 

The hyper-growth does not tell the whole story, however.  

Facebook has also acquired considerable attention regarding its user privacy policies, online marketing strategies and the short-sighted decision of some companies and governments to block employee access to the site. 

While these issues have shone the spotlight on some of the challenges of social media, the lasting lesson of Facebook may come from a series of events that unfolded over the past two weeks in Canada. 

They demonstrate that Facebook is far more than just a cool way to catch up with old friends; rather, it is an incredibly effective and efficient tool that can be used to educate and galvanise grassroots advocacy, placing unprecedented power into the hands of individuals.  

 Not only had tools like Facebook had an immediate effect on the government’s legislative agenda, but the community that developed around the group also led to a “crowdsourcing” of knowledge. 

Michael Geist 

On December 1st I launched the Fair Copyright for Canada Facebook group, with limited expectations. This seemed like a good way to educate the public about the Canadian government’s plans to introduce new copyright reform within a matter of days. I sent invitations to a hundred or so Facebook friends and seeded the group with links to a few relevant websites. 

What happened next was truly remarkable. Within hours the group started to grow, first 50 members, then 100, and then 1000. One week later there were 10,000 members. Two weeks later there were over 25,000 members with a new member joining the group every 30 seconds.  

The big numbers tell only part of the story. The group is home to over 500 wall posts, links to 150 articles of interest, over 50 discussion threads, dozens of photos and nine videos. 

Ten days ago, it helped spur on an offline protest when Kempton Lam, a Calgary technologist, organized 50 group members to descend on the Canadian Industry Minister, Jim Prentice’s, local open house to express their views on copyright. 

While Facebook was not the only source of action, the momentum was unquestionably built on thousands of Canadians, who were determined to have their voices heard. 

Jim Prentice has delayed introducing new copyright reforms  

Much to the surprise of sceptics who paint government as unable or unwilling to listen to public concerns, those voices had an immediate impact.  Ten days after the Facebook group’s launch, Jim Prentice delayed introducing the new copyright reforms, seemingly struck by the rapid formation of concerned citizens who were writing letters and raising awareness. 

Not only had tools like Facebook had an immediate effect on the government’s legislative agenda, but the community that developed around the group also led to a “crowdsourcing” of knowledge. Canadians from coast to coast shared information, posed questions, posted their letters to politicians, and started a national conversation on copyright law in Canada. 

This scenario cannot be repeated for every issue. In this instance, Canadians increasingly recognized the detrimental effect of the proposed copyright reforms on consumer rights, privacy, and free speech, and were moved to act. 

Yet for similarly placed concerns, the lesson of the past two weeks is that politicians, companies, and other organizations can ill-afford to ignore a medium that is capable of mobilizing tens of thousands within a matter of days. Those caught flatfooted may ultimately find themselves struggling to save face. 

Michael Geist holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. He can be reached at mgeist  AT  uottawa.ca or online at www.michaelgeist.ca

———————  

For more information, google “copyright legislation + Jim Prentice”  (Prentice is Federal Minister of Industry).

Dec 132007
 

The video tells the story of Skye Resources, a Canadian Company based in Vancouver, in Guatemala.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q20YxkM-CGI

Skye Resources is creating hatred for Canada.  It will be deeply etched in the minds of these Guatemalan children that CANADIANS destroyed their homes and their lands.  The story will be handed from generation to generation.  Festering, never healed.  That’s the way of injustice.   Once-happy people begin to carry poison in their minds.  The examples from history are legend.

I have told you the story of visiting the Acadian Museum in Louisiana,  Their ancestors were evicted from Nova Scotia in 1755.  TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS AGO.  They have never forgotten.  As I walked in the Museum and read the story of the “genocide committed by the English” I became more and more uncomfortable.  These people hate me – – and I didn’t have anything to do with their tragedy.  May the gods help us:  this happened 250 years ago.

It will be the same for these people from Guatemala.  They won’t forget.

Skye Resources is PEOPLE.  The Board of Directors of Skye Resources is responsible.  They are sowing the seeds of hatred.

The list of people on the Board is appended.

Should I just do nothing?   …  not when there is lots that CAN be done.

I invite you to join with me.  Watch the YouTube video for starts. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q20YxkM-CGI

If you need more information, go to the Mining Watch web site:  http://www.miningwatch.ca/index.php?/Skye

See below.  I’ve appended an excellent letter from the MWatch web site, written to Skye Resources CEO, Ian Austin, by Victoria L. Henderson MA Candidate,  Department of Geography, Queen’s University.

YOU AND I HAVE INVESTMENTS IN SKYE RESOURCES THROUGH CANADA PENSION PLAN.

I HAVE PROTESTED.  IT ONLY TAKES A MINUTE.

Together we own 629,000 shares worth $8 million of Skye Resources stocks. (Scroll down at  – – Link no longer valid – –  http://www.cppib.ca/files/PDF/CDN_Equity_Holdings_March31_2007_-_ENG.pdf)

I’ve sent the CPP Investment Board (CPPIB) an email requesting them to disinvest.  My email will be worth zippo without an email from some of you, too!

CPPIB has guidelines for ethical investing. It’s our money.  They should take direction from us on whether or not we want to be party to the actions of Skye Resources.

EMAIL:  csr  AT  cppib.ca

———————————————–

Skye Resources Inc.
1111 Melville Street
Suite 700
Vancouver, BC V6E 3V6    Canada

Tel: 604-602-9500
Fax: 604-602-9510
Email: info@skyeresources.com

WHO is Skye Resources?  (Link no longer valid:  http://www.skyeresources.com/corporate/board_of_directors)

Ian Austin  – President and CEO.

(Link no longer valid)

621 26th Ave W
Vancouver, BC V5Z 2E5
(604) 733-2013

Gord Bacon, Bacon Donaldson & Associates

12271 Horseshoe Way’ Richmond, BC, Canada V7A 4V4;   Phone: (604)277-2322; Fax: (604) 274-7235

Bob Horn,  Robert Horn
2557 Killarney Rd
Victoria, BC V8P 3G6
(250) 383-3550

Terrence Lyons

David McIntyre

Sheila O’Brien    (Link no longer valid)

12112 Schmidt Cres
Maple Ridge, BC V2X 8A2
(604) 467-9318

Ron Simkus, (Link no longer valid)

2151 Shaughnessy Hill
Kamloops, BC V1S 1B9
(250) 828-2434

David S Smith  (Link no longer valid)

3125 Thacker Dr
Kelowna, BC V1Z 1X6
(250) 769-3273


“We all cannot be heros but we can do brave things” (Martin Luther King Jr)

LETTER TO SKYE RESOURCES FROM VICTORIA HENDERSON (Victoria is a Canadian hero!):

Thursday January 25, 2007 04:18 PM

Ian Austin, President and CEO
Skye Resources
Suite 1203-700 West Pender Street
Vancouver, BC
Canada, V6C 1G8

 

Dear Mr. Austin,

Thank you for taking the time to respond to my letter of 28 September 2006 regarding the activities of Skye Resources/CGN in El Estor, Guatemala. I appreciate your attempt to address my concerns and trust that you share my belief that Q’eqchi Maya peoples in El Estor deserve a reasonable and just resolution to the issues at hand.

When I visited Chichipate last August, community elders spent several hours explaining to me and my colleagues why they are opposed to your company’s plans to mine in El Estor. The list runs long and includes not only concerns over property rights and environmental damage, but also fears about a resurgence of the deplorable violence that marked Canada’s last mining experiment in the region. I refer here to the complicity of INCO/EXMIBAL in human rights abuses carried out during the 1970s and 1980s. As I am sure you are aware, Guatemala’s Comisión de Esclarecimiento Histórico or Truth Commission has documented EXMIBAL’s involvement in abductions, political killings, and multiple executions in Guatemala. Given that EXMIBAL was a majority owned subsidiary of INCO and that INCO is a key stakeholder in Skye Resources it is not difficult to understand why Q’eqchi peoples are concerned. The active participation of CGN employees in the most recent spate of land evictions in El Estor can only deepen this fear. Having spoken with colleagues returning from El Estor and having watched video footage of the “squatter” displacement, I must question your company’s description of the evictions as unfolding in a “peaceful atmosphere”. It would seem to me that there could be few things less peaceful than having one’s home torn down — or worse, burned down — by callous strangers, while a barrage of armed police officers watch on from the sidelines. The angry screams of a mother desperate to know where her now homeless children will sleep; the hopelessness of a man who can do nothing but bury his head in his hands and sob: these images provide a less than fitting testament to the “peaceful atmosphere” of which you speak. If you have not already seen video footage of the evictions, I encourage you to view it by visiting the following site:

The absence of gunfire should not be confused with peace. At its most basic level, peace requires the security of self and home — two things Maya peoples in Guatemala have historically and systematically been denied. In the interest of both corporate transparency and personal integrity, I respectfully request that you rescind your comments about the “peaceful atmosphere” of the evictions. Further, in place of using your company website to give thanks to the Guatemalan National Police for the “professional manner” in which it carried out the evictions, I urge you to join the international community and indigenous organizations such as CONIC (National Campesino and Indigenous Coordination) in demanding that the Guatemalan government make reasonable and just reparations to the affected communities. Despite your website’s statement to the contrary, the situation in El Estor has in no way been “resolved”.

Resolution in this case requires that outstanding issues be addressed. I ask for your consideration of the following six points of discussion, raised in your letter of 9 October 2006:

1 – WOOD COLLECTION

You have indicated that Skye/CGN allows those with “legal permits” to transport wood through company property. I would like to take you up on the offer of learning more about how this program works. As you know, I was told by the elders of several communities that Skye/CGN prohibits wood collection from traditional Q’eqchi lands. If nothing more than a formality separates indigenous communities in El Estor from collecting the wood they need, then this issue should be relatively easy to resolve.

2 – PROPERTY RIGHTS

According to your website, Skye Resources has entered into an agreement with the Guatemalan government to survey and document land holdings in El Estor in order to determine “exact property lines and tenure.” This strikes me as a serious conflict of interest on the part of Skye Resources. Further, it sends a combative message to indigenous peoples whose lands are in dispute. Not only should Skye Resources remove itself fully from the surveying process, but it should also cease exploratory activity until such time as “exact” property lines and tenure have been determined.

3 – LAND “DONATION”

I was told by the CGN Community Relations Team that “we” (meaning Skye/CGN) donated lands to Chichipate. I accept that you are not claiming credit for such a gift and that you are not prepared to comment on any land transactions that might have occurred during the INCO/EXMIBAL operation. Given that INCO is a key stakeholder in your company, however, I would ask your assistance in directing me to an appropriate contact at INCO in order that I may follow up on the land “donation” to Chichipate.

4 – RAXCHE’

It would be difficult to argue with the vision of Raxche’ that you outline in your letter. Improvements to the health and education of those living in the municipality of El Estor are of paramount concern. The problem, as I understand it from speaking with Q’eqchi elders, is that there is a significant breach between the Raxche’ vision and the Raxche’ reality. If there is one issue on which members of different local communities seem to agree, it is that Raxche’ is dividing indigenous people in the region. One hopes that this is not what Skye/CGN intended and that you will investigate in order to determine why this view seems so widely held. Your letter states that Raxche’ has five projects in Chichipate. Aside from painting the local basketball courts, which community elders acknowledge, I would appreciate if you could describe the nature of the other four Raxche’  projects in Chichipate.

5 – MAYA COSMOVISION

I respectfully submit that your understanding of Maya cosmovisión fails to appreciate the deep spirituality that links Maya peoples to the Earth. I have visited Cerro 400 and you are correct in stating that, had I not been told, I would never have known that the area had been mined and reforested. I, however, am not Maya. The idea that the earth can be gutted and covered over “as if nothing had happened” is wholly inconsistent with Maya cosmovisión. Pointing out how “natural” a site may look after it has been mined is to confound the deeply spiritual with the highly superficial. Moreover, it is to disrespect the history of Maya peoples. As one Q’eqchi gentleman explained at a public meeting on mining held this summer in El Estor: “They (foreigners) come and bulldoze our land. It hurts us a lot, because we have dedicated many hours and much sweat in working that land.” I understand that you have a job to do, Mr. Austin. However, I urge you, in carrying out your job, to remember this gentleman’s words. He was speaking as much to you as he was to me and to the others in El Estor.

6 – “COURTESY VISITS”

You have noted that it is the policy of the CGN Community Relations Team to pay “courtesy visits” to communities in the municipality of El Estor. It seems to me, however, that it is the communities themselves that extend the true courtesy by allowing foreigners onto community property and by consenting to dialogue about a project that threatens both a way of life and a means of survival.

In conclusion, let me say again that I appreciate your having taken the time to address my original letter. Your last correspondence indicates that Skye Resources seeks “to learn how to improve (its) consultation processes and to better understand how (it) is perceived” in Guatemala. To that end, it is my sincere hope that you take the opportunity to reflect on issues presented above; that you address each of the six points of discussion; that you rescind your comments on the “peaceful atmosphere” of the recent land evictions; and that you join those who demand that the Guatemalan government make reasonable and just reparations to the affected communities in El Estor.

I look forward to your response.

Sincerely,

Victoria L. Henderson

MA Candidate
Department of Geography
Queen’s University
Mackintosh-Corry Hall, D324
Kingston, ON (Canada) K7L 3N6

Tel:  +001 613 533 6000, x 75936
Fax: +001 866 876 8348
Email: 2dtvh(at)qlink.queensu.ca