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V Thompson

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  1. Very glad to see this legal action. Government and the RCMP need to be told they cannot infringe on people's rights to safely observe an action from a place not covered by an injunction i.e. from the side of a road, and journalists' rights to cover any protest must be respected. The egregious disrespect for peoples' rights to observe without harassment or arrest, and demonstrators or land defender's rights to be treated with respect at all stages of detention and arrest, as well as their belongings beings respected and returned, is essential for our democracy in Canada. CIRG should be punished, penalized and disbanded and a precedent will hopefully be set that would disallow any such similar group as CIRG from ever being formed again.
  2. Very glad to see this legal action. Government and the RCMP need to be told they cannot infringe on people's rights to safely observe an action from a place not covered by an injunction i.e. from the side of a road, and journalists' rights to cover any protest must be respected. The egregious disrespect for peoples' rights to observe without harassment or arrest, and demonstrators or land defender's rights to be treated with respect at all stages of detention and arrest, as well as their belongings beings respected and returned, is essential for our democracy in Canada. CIRG should be punished, penalized and disbanded and a precedent will hopefully be set that would disallow any such similar group as CIRG from ever being formed again.
  3. Absolutely great article. So well documented, thorough, and in my opinion balanced too. The truth may be hard to hear for some, but there's no point in avoiding it like an osterich with its head in the sand. Let's get on with a transition to more value added and ecologically based forestry, with realistic financial support for tenures moved to First Nations and local forestry communities on condition they manage in this new paradigm.
  4. Absolutely great article. So well documented, thorough, and in my opinion balanced too. The truth may be hard to hear for some, but there's no point in avoiding it like an osterich with its head in the sand. Let's get on with a transition to more value added and ecologically based forestry, with realistic financial support for tenures moved to First Nations and local forestry communities on condition they manage in this new paradigm.
  5. This so sad and infuriating and mirrors in many ways the situation of mountain caribou in the Inland Temperate Rainforest.
  6. This so sad and infuriating and mirrors in many ways the situation of mountain caribou in the Inland Temperate Rainforest.
  7. This so sad and infuriating and mirrors in many ways the situation of mountain caribou in the Inland Temperate Rainforest.
  8. This so sad and infuriating and mirrors in many ways the situation of mountain caribou in the Inland Temperate Rainforest.
  9. This so sad and infuriating and mirrors in many ways the situation of mountain caribou in the Inland Temperate Rainforest.
  10. Shocking to actually see the clearcuts on your video. More people need to be aware of what's happening and the plan to log all the original forest in BC. Most people don't know that that has been the default plan for logging in BC, and except for some questionable deferrals in terms of timing and placement, and plan to save old growth according to the Old Growth Review Panel which may or may not be activated before all the original or primary forest is gone, this plan for logging all primary or orginal forest is still there!
  11. yes Robert Hart. And Old Growth Revylution has not closed communication with Downie Timber, BCTS or FLNRORD or anyone else in industry, communities and Indigenous communities. We are holding tight for now and hopefully continuing communication.
  12. yes Robert Hart. And Old Growth Revylution has not closed communication with Downie Timber, BCTS or FLNRORD or anyone else in industry, communities and Indigenous communities. We are holding tight for now and hopefully continuing communication.
  13. Old Growth Revylution blockade shakes up business as usual in the Revelstoke area. Old Growth Revylution’s camp as the snow began to fall The Old Growth Revylution (OGR) blockade continues. We have had a constant presence at the Bigmouth River Forest Service Road since July 6, 2021. The blockade has been moved closer to Highway 23. We’re now about .8 km in from the highway. We have a huge tarpee and a camper and another camper coming on board. People rotate going up there. The snow removal involved is massive—120 km north of Revelstoke can have 37 feet of snow in a season and we have had record snowfalls this year. People keep donating—snowblowers and equipment and money. Extraordinary. When we began in early July, 2021, British Columbia Timber Sales (BCTS) was punching a road into the three cutblocks in Argonaut Creek which had not been deferred. Eleven cutblocks had already been deferred earlier in the year until mountain caribou herd planning is completed. At the moment, this is timed for the end of 2022. The road-building equipment was removed due to our blockade. The Bigmouth River Forest Service Road blockade in summer 2021 In late August, BCTS asked if they could stabilize this road, but OGR said they would not let them in to do this unless they deferred these last three remaining blocks in the pristine Argonaut Creek valley. They never replied, but sent helicopters in twice to ditch the road by hand. These last three blocks were scheduled to be auctioned off in the fall of 2021, but this did not happen as the road was probably still unstable and certainly unfinished, and there was a blockade on the Argonaut and, in fact, the whole Bigmouth Valley and Louis Lee branch. The last three blocks of Argonaut Creek valley were deferred in the November 2, 2021 announcement of proposed deferrals. These three blocks were not conditional on Indigenous approval or anything else. So this was a clear win, which was mostly due to the OGR blockade. OGR then did a pop-up blockade of the Akolkolex logging road near Revelstoke because Downie Timber was logging in proposed deferral areas. Downie stopped logging in these proposed deferral areas, but—it has to be said—this was largely due to being given approvals for additional adjacent cutblocks. The action also led to a meeting with Downie, which has opened communication. There has been discussion of logging in some areas rather than in others in the Bigmouth. However, OGR has declined this “compromise” and continues to emphasize policy change at the provincial level to stop logging old and primary forests. So here we remain. Virginia Thompson is a member of Old Growth Revylution.
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