Thursday, February 7, 2008
Environ-mental ecofascist calls for imprisonment of manmade climate change 
skeptics 



Jail politicians who ignore climate science: Suzuki
Didn't mean it literally says scientist's spokesperson

Craig Offman, National Post

Published: Thursday, February 07, 2008



David Suzuki has called for political leaders to be thrown in jail for ignoring 
the science behind climate change.

At a Montreal conference last Thursday, the prominent scientist, broadcaster 
and Order of Canada recipient exhorted a packed house of 600 to hold 
politicians legally accountable for what he called an intergenerational crime. 
Though a spokesman said yesterday the call for imprisonment was not meant to be 
taken literally, Dr. Suzuki reportedly made similar remarks in an address at 
the University of Toronto last month.

The proposal has lit up many conservative blogs since it was first reported by 
the McGill Daily on Monday.

Addressing the McGill Business Conference on Sustainability, hosted by the 
Faculty of Management, Dr. Suzuki's wide-ranging speech warned against 
favouring the economy to the detriment of the ecology -- the tarsands in 
Northern Alberta being his prime example.

"You have lived your entire lives in a completely unsustainable period," he 
told students and fans. "You all think growth and [climate] change is normal. 
It's not."

Toward the end of his speech, Dr. Suzuki said that "we can no longer tolerate 
what's going on in Ottawa and Edmonton" and then encouraged attendees to hold 
politicians to a greater green standard.

"What I would challenge you to do is to put a lot of effort into trying to see 
whether there's a legal way of throwing our so-called leaders into jail because 
what they're doing is a criminal act," said Dr. Suzuki, a former board member 
of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.

"It's an intergenerational crime in the face of all the knowledge and science 
from over 20 years."

The statement elicited rounds of applause.

"He sounded serious," said McGill Tribune news editor Vincci Tsui, who covered 
the event. "I think he wanted to send home the message that this is very 
crucial issue."

When asked for further comment, Dan Maceluch, a spokesman for Dr. Suzuki, said 
that he did not mean the statement to be taken literally.

"He's not advocating locking people up, but he is pulling his hair out."

How a law concerning climate-change denial could be enforced baffled at least 
one leading criminal-law expert. "We used to have an offence of spreading false 
news," said Kent Roach, the Prichard-Wilson Chair of Law and Public Policy at 
the University of Toronto Faculty of Law.

"But that was struck down by the Supreme Court."

Yet there could be a better blueprint for Dr. Suzuki's legal scenario.

The Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act, a Liberal-sponsored private member's 
bill that passed and was given Royal Assent last year, legally requires the 
Conservative government to abide by the international pact's short-term 
environmental targets.

In the event that conditions are not met, government officials are held liable.

"Every person who contravenes a regulation made under this Act is guilty of an 
offence punishable by indictment or on summary conviction, as prescribed by the 
regulations," the act reads, "and liable to a fine or to imprisonment as 
prescribed by the regulations."

The act adds that there are further legal measures in the event of subsequent 
and continuing offences, but does not specify the penalties.

The Conservative government said last year it would not abide by the 
Liberal-sponsored bill, since private member's bills cannot force the 
government to spend money.

National Post 

http://sovereignsentience.blogspot.com/2008/02/environ-mental-eco-fascist-calls-for.html

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