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Maude Barlow, chairwoman of the Council
of Canadians, is condemned for not calling off "Maude's Mob."
Activist Jaggi Singh is in jail for allegedly possessing a weapon
that he never owned or used--a theatrical catapult that shot stuffed
animals over the infamous fence in Quebec City during the Summit
of the Americas.
It's not just that the police didn't get the joke, it's that they
don't get the new era of political protest, one adapted to our postmodern
times. There was no one person or group who could call off "their
people," because the tens of thousands who came out to protest the
Free Trade Area of the Americas are part of a movement that doesn't
have a leader, a center, or even an agreed-upon name. Yet undeniably,
it exists nonetheless.
What is difficult to convey in media reports is that there weren't
two protests that took
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Visit Quebec: Its a gas,
gas, gas.
PIERRE ROUSSEL/NEWSMAKERS
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place in Quebec City--one a "peaceful" labor march, the other a "violent"
anarchist riot. There were hundreds of protests. One was organized
by a mother and daughter from Montreal. Another by a van load of grad
students from Edmonton. Another by three friends from Toronto who
aren't members of anything but their health clubs. Yet another by
a couple of waiters from a local café on their lunch break.
Sure there were well organized groups in Quebec City: The unions
had buses, matching placards and a parade route; the "black bloc"
of anarchists had gas masks and radio links. But for days the streets
also were filled with people who simply said to a friend, "Let's
go to Quebec," and with Quebec City residents who said, "Let's go
outside." They didn't join one big protest, they participated in
a moment. How could it be otherwise?
The traditional institutions that once organized citizens into
neat, structured groups are all in decline: unions, religions, political
parties. Yet something propelled tens of thousands of individuals
to the streets anyway, an intuition, a gut instinct--perhaps just
the profoundly human desire to be part of something larger than
oneself.
Did they have their party-line together, a detailed dissection
of the ins-and-outs of the FTAA? Not always. But neither can the
Quebec protests be dismissed as vacuous political tourism. George
W. Bush's message at the summit was that the mere act of buying
and selling would do our governing for us. "Trade helps spread freedom,"
he said.
It was precisely this impoverished and passive vision of democracy
that was rejected on the streets outside. Whatever else they were
searching for, all were certainly looking for a taste of direct
political participation. The result of these hundreds of miniature
protests converging was chaotic, sometimes awful, but frequently
inspiring. One thing is certain: After at last shaking off the mantle
of political spectatorship, the last thing these people are about
to do is hand over the reins to a cabal of would-be leaders.
The protesters will, however, become more organized, a fact which
has more to do with the actions of police than the directives of
Maude Barlow, Jaggi Singh or, for that matter, me. If people wandered
and stumbled to Quebec City, profoundly unsure of what it meant
to be part of a political movement, something united us all once
we arrived: mass arrests, rubber bullets, but most of all, a thick
white blanket of gas.
Despite Canada's Liberal Party line of praising "good" protesters
while condemning "bad" ones, treatment of everyone on the streets
of Quebec City was crude, cowardly and indiscriminate. The security
forces used the actions of a few rock throwers as a camera-friendly
justification to do what they have been trying to do from the start:
clear the city of thousands of lawful protesters because it was
more convenient that way.
Once they got their "provocation," they filled entire neighborhoods
with toxic fumes, forcing families to breathe through masks in their
living rooms. Frustrated that the wind was against them, they sprayed
some more. People giving the peace sign to the police were gassed.
People handling our food were gassed. I met a 50-year-old woman
from Ottawa who told me cheerfully, "I went out to buy a sandwich
and was gassed twice." People having a party under a bridge were
gassed. People protesting their friends' arrests were gassed. The
first-aid clinic treating people who had been gassed, was gassed.
Tear gas was supposed to break-down the protesters, but it had
the opposite effect: It enraged and radicalized them enough to cheer
for "Black Blockers" who dared to throw the canisters back. It may
be light and atomized enough to ride on air, but I suspect the coming
months will show that gas also has powerful bonding properties.
Naomi Klein is the author of No Logo. This story
originally appeared in the Globe and Mail.
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