As the Nigerian protesters’ case against Shell[1]
and the brutal treatment of peaceful protesters in Texas via TransCanada’s
encouragement[2] highlight
all too well, the planet’s biggest energy providers are more than willing to
work outside of the law to meet their interests. In Nigeria, peaceful
protesters were subjected to violence by the Nigerian government with the
alleged encouragement of Royal Dutch Shell PLC. With the eyes of the free world
watching in Texas, the police response to peaceful protesters allegedly encouraged
by TransCanada was less brutal but no less audacious.
In the latter case, two protesters who handcuffed themselves
together on TransCanada’s construction equipment “were subjected to choke
holds, stress positions in which their free arms were handcuffed, contorted,
and then pepper sprayed, burning their skin. They were then tased…”[3]
In Nigeria, where much of the world has turned their attention away from, one
can only imagine the heightened brutality that peaceful protesters suffered.
The message these companies, and their respective puppet
governments, are sending is clear: opposition of any kind will be severely
punished. And the weak response by Americans and the international community to
these violations of human rights and, in the case of America, some of our basic
underlying principles as a country seems to confirm the fact that engaged
environmental advocates are seen more as individuals to blame for the violence
perpetrated against them, and not the victims of ruthless business and
government practices.
Or maybe Americans and the international community simply do
not care about issues of human rights violations anymore unless they are on a
massive or extremely local scale. The irony of our interconnected world is that
our proximity to one another in terms of information and news has forged a
disconnect among many here in the United States, in particular. That is, the
constant news stories about human rights violations across the world, and here
in our own country, has appeared to create a cognitive screen that individuals
use to tune out the worst aspects of our contemporary world. After all, who wants to be bothered with such
serious issues like human rights when our favorite football teams will be
playing this weekend?
The hard fact is that we are all in this ship together,
fellow Americans and fellow citizens of the world alike. We cannot ignore the
abuse of rights in one area of the world or one state in our country without
also implicitly condoning these types of abuses. It’s not what most people want
to hear on a Saturday morning but in the words of Samuel L. Jackson, it’s time to wake the f*%k up.[4]
One of the smallest steps we can take to do that is to vote this November for
President Obama.
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