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'Rule of law' racism, C-51 and the coming resistance wave

Photo: Chris Yakimov/flickr

It's a sign of how utterly frightened they are of democracy when politicians and pundits start lecturing us about the "real" definition of civil disobedience. This usually happens during the sanitizing rituals of the January Martin Luther King Day holiday, when King's revolutionary calls to justice are erased in favour of saccharine, self-congratulatory events wholly unconnected to the civil rights movement's multiple, powerful legacies.

But public cautions around "acceptable" forms of dissent began hatching in late 2016 when the Trudeau government announced support for a slew of harmful pipelines that, along with other environmentally destructive projects like B.C.'s Site C and Muskrat Falls, will inspire increasing levels of direct action.

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Image: Wikimedia Commons
| June 9, 2016
Columnists

A clarion call to save the planet is uniting global climate action

Photo: SumOfUs/flickr

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Photo: Prime Minister of Canada/flickr
| November 26, 2015
Columnists

Canadian mining company may be held liable for human rights abuses committed abroad by its foreign subsidiaries

On July 22, 2013, Justice Brown of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice released her decision on whether or not related lawsuits against three mining companies, Hudbay Minerals Inc. ("Hudbay"), HMI Nickel Inc. ("HMI") and Compañía Guatemalteca de Níquel S.A. ("CGN"), would be permitted to proceed (the "Hudbay Actions"). The defendants brought preliminary motions in March of this year to strike each of the claims on the basis that they disclosed no reasonable cause of action. As discussed below, Justice Brown quite rightly dismissed all three of the defendants' motions. This is a groundbreaking decision because it will result in the first time that an action is litigated in Canada on the question of whether a Canadian parent company (i.e.

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The Institut du Nouveau Monde and Minalliance: A disingenuous alliance

There are times when credulousness becomes guilty and there are times where false pretense loses its ability to convince. The collaboration announced between the Institut de nouveau monde (INM) and Minalliance, to organize public "conversations" about the future of mining in Québec, is clearly one of these times.

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| August 7, 2011
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