Friday, August 23, 2013
I know it is from last year but somehow I missed it and it is a good story for labour day. And from the Vancouver Sun, of all places
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Colliery Dam Struggle - Leadership – Theirs and Ours
A
strong people need no leader –
Benaventura Durutti
True
leadership is obedience – Sub Comandante Marcos
There
are two ways of looking at leaders and leadership:
The
first is that of Durrutti's, leaders as bosses, people who can force
their way on to others, people who have power over us, but not
necessarily our respect. This form of leadership, their
leadership, is that of the Council majority and the city
bureaucracy.
The
second form of leadership, that of Marcos, where leaders have little
or no power over us and can lead only by example and moral suasion.
This leadership grows out of respect. Our leaders
clearly articulate the people's wishes and have no personal agenda
other than that of the people. They have no police or army to beat us
into submission if we disagree with them. If they were to lose our
respect, their leadership would crumble and they would fade back into
the masses.
Such
is the leadership provided by Dave and Jeff. (And even though they
have legislative powers, our "Fab Four" City Councillors
and Chief Douglas White clearly share these moral attributes)
Our
leaders are not the only source of ideas. We are not receiving gifts
from on high from some know-it-all elite. Where our leaders have
special skills, they use them to the public benefit, yet at the same
time they articulate the viewpoints expressed by the populace. Many
ideas come from "below" and through our spokespeople become
public conversations.
Durrutti's
concept also means, "we don't need leaders because we are all
leaders." In large measure this is true with the Colliery Dams
struggle. A multitude of people have come forward and played
leadership roles by taking on tasks or acting upon their own ideas.
Think of the fund-raisers, the Colliery Dam float, the Silly Boat
race, the Colliery Dam Singers, the tee shirts, posters, the speeches
to Council, the petitions, the people handing out fliers and so on
and so on, all done by people who have taken leadership. Our
movement would have not gotten very far without this form of
leadership.
Finally,
in a system based upon maintaining alienation and passivity, just by
standing up and getting involved at any level, you are a
leader.
Tuesday, July 09, 2013
The Colliery Dams Dispute in the Larger Context
After
the First World War the present system of representative democracy
was finalized with women's suffrage, and not much has changed since.
I would suggest that this concept of democracy is that of council
majority and that permanent government that is the city bureaucracy.
This concept of democracy is in direct conflict with a new
conception of democracy.
The
older concept reduces democracy to voting for candidates every number
of years. Once in power these members can do more or less as they see
fit. Should the masses object to the policies imposed upon them, they
are treated as a virtual enemy. Should they persist in their protest,
the state is there to repress them with force and violence. Civil
disobedience arises when democracy is not working properly, where
people have been excluded from the process.
For
a population that was mostly uneducated, inarticulate and insecure,
this system was not too problematic. People grumbled but obeyed. We
saw this with the damming of the Arrow Lakes in the mid-1960s.
Thousands of acres of prime farm land was destroyed and small towns
inundated. There were complaints, but no action was taken. This is an
example of Peter C. Newman's concept of Canadian deference to
authority. However, today, with a population that is well educated,
highly articulate and full of confidence, - such as the people
fighting the destruction of Colliery Dam Park - deference has flown
the coop. For them, the older democracy is not democratic at all but
is more of an elective dictatorship.
It
is no coincidence that at the same time as the Colliery Dam protests
erupted, so too the spectacular revolts in Turkey, Egypt, and Brazil.
A global movement for a new form of democracy has evolved and
encompasses everything from Spain's Neighborhood Assemblies and the
Occupy Movement to the Neighborhood Committees of Venezuela.
With
the new-style democracy, people must have a say over every important
event that impacts upon their lives. Democracy must be 24-7 not every
4 years. People prefer delegated power rather than independent
representatives. All stakeholders must be involved and a rational
compromise sought acceptable to the overwhelming majority. People
with different ideas are not always the enemy, but a source of
valuable input to be included, not excluded. Political power is to be
horizontal, not top-down, webs and networks, not tightly controlled
centralized bodies.
I
wish the city Council majority would consider what they are doing in
this world historical context. I invite them to stick their toes into
the cool waters of the new democracy. They can do so by bringing all
the stakeholders together, and most especially the First Nations, and
find a rational solution to the conflict.
Tuesday, July 02, 2013
Austerity Equals Mass Murder
More
evidence how austerity and other neoliberal attacks kill people –
literally by the millions see
Monday, June 24, 2013
Occupy Continues!
The usual pundits, engaging in the usual wishful thinking, have long dismissed the Occupy Movement as something that is over and done with and as a failure. The following article from the Guardian shows what has really happened.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jun/23/protests-spirit-of-occupy-alive-istanbul-rio
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Class War Over A Nanaimo Park!
Colliery Dam Park is
the best park in Harewood, a working class neighborhood of Nanaimo
BC. The park has two small lakes, the result of a coal company dam a
hundred years ago. People too poor to afford the swimming pool, or
those who prefer non-chlorinated water swim there in the summer.
Others go there to fish or just laze by the water. It is also a place
of exquisite beauty.
For reasons we can only guess, the City bureaucrats and the Council majority wish to destroy this park by tearing out the dams. Many people fear that sleazy developers are behind the scheme, wishing to plant their crummy condos on the flood plain. (The stated reason is "safety" – there is a fear of earthquakes destroying the old dams) A mass movement, with probably 90% support has arisen to challenge this action.
This Save the Colliery Dams coalition, with almost 2300 members, has been very flexible dealing with the City, accepting their claim that the dams might need repair or replacement. The difference between the people and the City is how this is done. The people want the dams to be removed, replaced or repaired in a staged, organized fashion. They want something solid on paper. The City on the other hand just wants to tear the dams down this summer and makes vague promises of rebuilding next year. Given the history of governments and promises, you cannot blame the people for finding this unacceptable.
For reasons we can only guess, the City bureaucrats and the Council majority wish to destroy this park by tearing out the dams. Many people fear that sleazy developers are behind the scheme, wishing to plant their crummy condos on the flood plain. (The stated reason is "safety" – there is a fear of earthquakes destroying the old dams) A mass movement, with probably 90% support has arisen to challenge this action.
This Save the Colliery Dams coalition, with almost 2300 members, has been very flexible dealing with the City, accepting their claim that the dams might need repair or replacement. The difference between the people and the City is how this is done. The people want the dams to be removed, replaced or repaired in a staged, organized fashion. They want something solid on paper. The City on the other hand just wants to tear the dams down this summer and makes vague promises of rebuilding next year. Given the history of governments and promises, you cannot blame the people for finding this unacceptable.
Furthermore,
the bureaucracy and Council majority actions have done nothing to alleviate this suspicion – meetings behind closed doors, motions
rammed through without debate and a whole catalogue of political
trickery. These include stone-walling, denial, ridicule, strawman
arguments and spin. These tactics are dishonest and treat the people
as the enemy. (It should be added that while the city trots out its
experts, the Coalition also has its engineers, geologists etc, but
the counter-information is dismissed out of hand by the City.)
This
is an obvious failure of the governmental system. Rather than
democracy, we have an elected dictatorship. Once elected, many (most?) officials think
they can do whatever they want and the people be damned. (Pardon the
pun.) Furthermore, we have a permanent, unelected government in the
shape of the bureaucracy. They should be working for us, not the other
way around.
If
the situation wasn't ugly enough, count on our City council majority
to make matters worse. Let's put out that camp fire with a bucket of
gasoline! They are seeking a preemptive injunction against us in
case we engage in civil disobedience to stop the destruction. I have
never, in my long career as an activist, pamphleteer and organizer,
heard of such a thing. Generally, the injunction is granted AFTER you
do something. A preemptive injunction smacks of 1984. When you think
about it, such an action negates your basic democratic rights.
It
is really amazing what is happening here. I could spend 50 years
handing out pamphlets on how the system is authoritarian and how we
need real democracy – people's power – and never do as much to
educate people of the nature of the system as one bullying action on
the part of the City. I ought to thank the Council majority and the bureaucracy for making this old radicals task so easy!
I
have never seen so much anger in my life as the residents of this
neighborhood are expressing. This is going to be a long hot summer!