Stephen
Harper should be joined by NZ's John Key and Australia's Tony Abbott.
---SMR
---SMR
“A
novel legal approach. I like it. These clowns -- and Obama too -- not
to mention Davie Cameron are much closer to the guillotine than they
realize.
“Alons
enfants de la Patrie! (Sing to La Marseillaise)”
--Mike
Ruppert
The
case for charging Stephen Harper with crimes against humanity for his
role in advancing climate change
“HARPER COULD BE LIKENED TO A CRIMINALLY NEGLIGENT PARENT OR A DRUNK DRIVER”
25
September, 2013
“Harper’s
modus operandi is to expand Canada’s resource economy by any means
necessary. In this sense, climate change and the associated
casualties are a side effect of Harper’s mission to sell off the
tar sands as quickly as possible.” —Dante
Ryel
Based
on a review of the empirical evidence linking Stephen Harper’s
climate change policies to advancing harmful climate change, Dante
Ryel concludes: “It should be clear now that there is a
substantive case against Stephen Harper and that a trial for crimes
against humanity would not be frivolous.”
What
do you think? Has Ryel made a convincing case against Harper? To read
Ryel’s original article, click on the following linked title.
Alternatively, read a reposting of it below.
Crimes against humanity: Stephen Harper and the ethics of climate change by Dante Ryel, rabble.ca, September 23, 2013
After
publishing a
piece on the ethics of climate change in August I received a
considerable amount of feedback about a statement I made regarding
Stephen Harper. I implied that our Prime Minister might be tried for
crimes against humanity as a result of his climate change policies.
Several
people who responded (especially those within my immediate family)
are concerned that this statement might harm my employment prospects
as I head back out into the workforce this January.
I
strive to think and act and speak in accordance with reason and logic
and would hope that the opinion piece in which this controversial
statement exists is a good reflection of this character. However, I
must apologize for one significant error. I suggested that Harper may
be tried for crimes against humanity. Instead, I should say that
Harper ought to be tried for crimes against humanity.
“May”
is descriptive, passive phrasing, while “ought to” is
prescriptive or, in philosophical
jargon: normative. Precedent suggests that it is quite unlikely
that any western leader will ever be tried for the destruction they
cause, which makes the word “may” slightly inaccurate. Saying
that Harper “ought to” be tried for crimes against humanity is
much more appropriate and for this omission I apologize.
Still,
to suggest that Harper ought to be tried for crimes against humanity
is a substantial charge to lob against a Prime Minister so we should
explore the case further and demonstrate that it is based on
empirical evidence and consistent with our notions of justice.
Since
the case should address crimes against humanity we will ignore the
financial consequences of climate change and the impact of climate
change on other species and focus instead on human casualties.
Two
separate organizations, both closely linked to the United Nations,
have released reports with similar results. In 2009, the Global
Humanitarian Forum estimated that at
least 300,000 people die a year as a result of climate change and
in 2012 DARA International released a
report estimating 400,000 human deaths per year.
If
this number remains constant then climate change would kill around
four million people each decade.
Unfortunately,
as greenhouse gas emissions accumulate in our atmosphere, and climate
change advances, the annual rate of casualties will probably increase
as time goes by.
Predicting
the human impact of climate change in the future and translating this
into a specific number of casualties is impossible but it is
important to consider the most dangerous risks we are exposed to.
These are a collection of some of the most dire warnings from
relevant, respectable sources.
Many
within the scientific community have warned of the threat of societal
collapse as a result of climate change. For example, in 2008 130
Canadian climate science leaders signed a
letter that began, “Humanity is conducting an unintended,
uncontrolled, globally pervasive experiment, whose ultimate
consequences are second only to global nuclear war.”
One
of Canada’s most celebrated wildlife biologists, Neil
Dawe, recently
announced very publicly that he would not be surprised if
the generation after him experienced the extinction of humanity.
Security
experts across the planet are very concerned about climate change as
well. A CIA
commissioned report refers to climate change as a threat
multiplier and other security agencies from Australian
Defense Force to the European
Council are studying this problem closely.
The
potential totality of climate change is frightening and distinguishes
this problem from any other threat our species has ever encountered.
If a climate change induced collapse of civilization were to reduce
our population from seven billion to one billion this would entail
100 times more casualties than our species had endured during World
War II. The process of collapse would involve unprecedented
amounts of human suffering.
Our
Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, should be tried for the central role
he has played in advancing climate change. Since Harper became Prime
Minister, Canada has been awarded
the most obstructive nation at annual climate change
conferences for six consecutive years by the Climate Action Network.
This makes Harper one of the most destructive climate criminals on
the planet.
Over
the next century, climate change could dwarf World War II if we
compare the two in terms of the total human casualties they will
cause. However, the intentions of Stephen Harper are quite different
from Adolph Hitler.
Harper’s
modus operandi is to expand Canada’s resource economy by any means
necessary. In this sense, climate change and the associated
casualties are a side effect of Harper’s mission to sell off the
tar sands as quickly as possible. In Canadian
law, this difference in intentions would be enough to lower
Harper’s charges from first degree murder to second degree murder.
Harper
could be likened to a criminally negligent parent or a drunk driver.
Perhaps
the most appropriate analogy is to compare Harper to a parent who has
locked his children in a car on the hottest day of the summer. A
significant note in this analogy is that Harper
has scientists and citizens desperately trying to tell him that his
actions are potentially deadly but instead of heeding these warnings
he is cutting
the scientists’ funding and muzzling them and dismissing
the citizens as radicals.
It
should be clear now that there is a substantive case against Stephen
Harper and that a trial for crimes against humanity would not be
frivolous.
The
idea that my statements could make me seem irrational, radical or
mentally unstable to potential employers is disturbing. Instead of
climate change advocacy, silence should be considered a symptom of a
serious mental disorder which entails myopic greed, disastrous
ignorance, crippling fear, apathy or some combination of all of the
above.
Employers
should value climate change activists for our tenacity, energy and
intelligence. We are attempting to solve the most complicated and
urgent problem humans have ever faced.
Dante Ryel has
an Honours BA in Philosophy and Mathematics from York University and
is currently studying Energy Systems Engineering at Mohawk
College. He is a co-chair of the System Change not Climate
Change group in the Hamilton Chapter of the Council of Canadians and
sits on the committee of Hamilton 350.
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