Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT)

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Taiaiake's Windspeaker Column (Nov 01)

From: "mike sysiuk" <msysiuk_-at-_hotmail.com>
To: no_to_nato_-at-_flora.org, mobilize-globally_-at-_egroups.com
Date: Fri, 02 Nov 2001 17:10:35

FYI,

Mike

Taiaiake Alfred
Windspeaker Column
November 2001 edwind@ammsa.com

Distracted by the on-going 'war on terrorism' south of the border, it seems 
that we have forgotten about the war on us. Remember that one?  The war that 
was so important in the days before 9.11, the one for the environment, for 
our homelands and our rights?  We may have become total suckers for the news 
now, and developed a strong collective case of anthrax-envy, but the Twin 
Towers falling down hasn't stopped the greedy land developers in British 
Columbia or all those racist white fishermen in New Brunswick.  The enemy is 
still after our lands and our resources, and sad but true, they are winning 
the fight.

We've turned a blind eye to the armed assaults on Mi'kmaq fishers, the 
destruction of their property and livelihood by organized mobs and the 
police harassment of Burnt Church community members.  No one seems 
interested either in the fact that Neskonlith land is being outright stolen 
to build another white-owned ski resort in the interior of British Columbia, 
despite young Native people's determined efforts to stop it.  We've had 
little if anything to say about supporting the young women and men defending 
our land and rights in places like Burnt Church and the Sushwap.

Now more than ever, it seems that our people are scared of being labelled a 
'radicals,' or being linked in some way with 'fundamentalists'.  Grave tones 
are adopted when people talk about how 'the world has changed' as they try 
to give good reason why they're turning their backs on our young warriors to 
catch the latest TV talk about the pain and suffering of US firemen and 
postal workers.  Maybe the lies streaming from our television 24-7 have 
taken effect?  Maybe some of you actually do believe that the news is 
important, and that the US and Canadian governments are in a righteous 
battle against evil?  If that is what you believe, then smack your own face 
and snap out of it.

The truth is, bin Laden has totally taken the 'fun' out of fundamentalism.  
It's not cool to strike a rebel pose these days, or socially correct to be a 
trouble-maker anymore. People give you mean looks if you don't wave the flag 
and give a rah-rah for the troops.  I think many of our people are just 
plain scared to do or say anything that would provoke or make white people 
mad now that everyone's in a mean mood and the stakes are real.  Our most 
outspoken people are all of a sudden so quiet and complacent.  Where have 
all our strident editorialists and big-mouthed politicians gone?  None of 
our intellectuals or leaders wants to be associated with radical action.  
Everyone's into statements 'supporting the victims of terror,' 'standing 
firm with our partners against foreign terrorists,' 'being sensitive to the 
pain' or 'defending our shared homeland'… blah, blah, blah.  This is 
wartime, and people don't want to be a target, so they keep quiet and hope 
people look the other way, and don't mistake them for a Muslim.

But now more than ever, it is time to stand up for ourselves.  The so-called 
anti-terrorism laws being put forward in the US and Canada are dangerous to 
our existence. The federal government is manipulating fear and riding a wave 
of terror to a future of near-dictatorial powers for its police agencies – 
this cannot be good for our people.

Jean Chretien and his little scary smurf of a 'justice' minister are 
proposing a new anti-terrorism law even though there are plenty of laws 
already on the books against treason, murder, conspiracy, sabotage, 
hijacking, etc… Criminals have been convicted of terrorist activities in the 
past using existing laws – even the former head of the Canadian spy agency 
has said that CSIS doesn't need more laws to protect Canadians from 
international terrorists, just more money.  So why does the government need 
special anti-terrorist laws now?  I'm not suggesting any conspiracy here: 
the federal government simply wants to be able to arrest, detain and 
imprison people who oppose their policies and actions, and they will use 
mainstream societies' fears and prejudices to undermine civil rights and 
gain that power.  It's simple, really.  This is just a convenient time and 
historical moment to advance that objective.

Did you know that the stupidly named USA PATRIOT law passed last week by the 
United States Congress allows US authorities to arrest and detain 
non-citizens with no legal protections?  Or that it also allows them to ban 
non-citizens (including landed immigrants and members of indigenous nations 
divided by the border) from entering the United States permanently?  In 
putting forward very similar measures on the northern side of the border, 
the Liberal Party is simply falling in step and following orders from their 
bosses in Washington.

The new definition of a 'terrorist' proposed by the federal government 
–apparently outside of any logic or reason, but definitely on the inside 
with the right-wing fanatics running the government in the US – includes any 
person who does anything 'with the intention of compelling a government to 
do or to refrain from doing any act'.  You read that right: anyone who tries 
to stop the government from doing what it wants to do.  And it goes further, 
as it defines 'terrorism' to include acts that are 'intended to cause 
serious interference with or disruption of an essential service, facility or 
system, whether public or private, other than as a result of lawful 
advocacy, protest, dissent or stoppage of work.'  Translated into English, 
this means that the only forms of protest allowed against government and 
corporations in Canada are those licensed by the federal government.

You don't want that nuclear waste coming though your hometown?  That's 
extremism.  You don't care for that giant garbage dump filled with 
Torontonians' trash being built next door?  That's a radical view.  You 
block a logging road to stop them from cutting down those ancient trees on 
unsurrendered lands?  Terrorist.

Of all the peoples of the world, indigenous peoples surely have the most 
compelling case for lashing out in a murderous rage.  We endure a genocidal 
occupation of our homelands and a humiliating denial of our existence as 
nations.  Think back only as far as this past summer, just  days before 
9.11, when all of the world's governments together declared at the UN 
Conference on Racism in Durban that the only people in the world who do not 
deserve the protection of human rights law are us, indigenous people.  The 
Irish and the Palestinians have nothing on us so far as rational motives for 
aggression go.

Yet in spite of it all, we have remained peaceful people, asking only that 
our rights as human beings be respected; demanding only that we be treated 
with dignity.  Our resistance has been creative and it has been non-violent. 
We are not cowards who kill innocent people for a political cause.  We are 
so committed to peace that we don't even call for harm to come to the very 
ones who hurt us and who are occupying our land and benefiting from the 
degradation of our rights.  In our struggle for justice, we have never 
killed innocent people, embarked on a strategy of destruction, or used 
violence to advance our cause.  Weapons have only ever been used in 
self-defence, when governments and organized racists have used terror 
tactics against our people.  And even then, our actions have been marked by 
restraint, discipline and honourable conduct.  We are not terrorists.

If terrorism is using violence against innocent people to pursue a 
political, religious or ideological objective, who is the real terrorist?  
Ask all the innocent people starved out and abused by police in Kahnawà:ke 
and Kanesatake in 1990, ask the young people beaten and shot at in Burnt 
Church this Fall, ask the ones who were at Gustafson Lake, go and ask the 
relatives of Dudley George in Ontario. They'll tell you what terrorism is, 
and they'll tell you what a terrorist looks like.  I have a bumper sticker 
on my wall at the office.  It has a SWAT policeman all masked-up and 
decked-out in black, holding a machine gun.  The caption reads: "I'm from 
the government, and I'm here to help."  Now that's a terrorist.

Forget about anthrax attacks and Muslims bombing your house, Brothers and 
Sisters – those people are not after you and me.  That's not our war.  The 
ones we need to be afraid of are doing their dirty business under cover of 
the rule of law.

Personally, I think the law is an ass; I disagree strongly with the 
government's policies; and I totally support those people who stand in 
defence of their lands, lives and homes. I won't stand down from our fight 
against injustice just because white peoples' nerves have been rattled.  But 
I am non-violent, and I do seek change through peaceful means.  I gave up on 
violent aggression when I quit the US Marines back in 1985 and adopted the 
Great Law of Peace as my creed. Yet according to George Bush and Jean 
Chretien, that puts me in the same category as bin Laden and his crazed 
henchmen.

The way things are going now, it's getting downright dangerous to be an 
Indian with an opinion and the guts to say it.  I might as well just go 
ahead and change my name to something like Tayak-Azziz Al-Fared, and get 
used to being a target.

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