I have been ashamed of my country only twice in my life. The first time was when we declared war on Iraq in 1990.
The second was last week when I listened to a British journalist upbraid Canadians for allowing our government to undermine new international action on climate change.
I never thought Canada would declare war in my lifetime and I never thought my Canadian government would undermine collective efforts to do the right thing internationally.
I was wrong on both counts.
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The connecting issue for both of these events is oil.
In 1990, we were protecting Western interests in the oil resources of the Middle East. In 2009, we are protecting western interests in the Alberta tar sands.
I’m not sure we are protecting Canadian interests because I don’t know what interests Canada would have in polluting the Athabasca watershed, destroying 500 sq. kilometres of landscape, increasing the cancer risk of nearby populations and increasing Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions by five percent.
On the other hand, the government of Alberta says there are 173 billion barrels of oil that can be recovered from the tar sands using today’s technology. At $50 per barrel, that means there is more than $8.6 trillion to be made, and more as the price of oil rises. A lot of people have an interest in that.
People feel shame when they see themselves as others see them and their behaviour contradicts their stated values and beliefs. It makes us want to cover ourselves, or hide because a real part of ourselves feels exposed.
It was more than a little irritating to be shamed and exposed by a Brit. After all, what crime could Canadians commit that Britain hasn’t done many times over?
On the other hand, the feeling of shame suggests the journalist had touched a nerve. Why would I feel shame if I had nothing to hide?
Even though it seems like this is a debate about mining in Alberta, it is really about you and me.
Even though I live in Toronto, I am fully implicated in this issue. I drive a car that burns gasoline. I heat my home with natural gas. My pension fund earns income from Suncor and some of the other 91 commercial projects located there.
My government wants to make the politics of climate change to be about what the Chinese will or won’t do, and what the Indian government will agree to or won’t.
But the climate is changing more because of what Canadians and Americans are doing than anyone else. The average Canadian produces almost five times more carbon dioxide than the average Chinese produces and more than 10 times what a citizen of India produces.
My government is being mean and petty, selfish and deceitful, but if you and I don’t change the way we live, we’ll be no different.
If you’re old enough to remember the cartoon strip Pogo, then you’ll remember cartoonist Walt Kelly’s most famous line: “We have met the enemy and he is us”.
Kelly used that on a poster for the first Earth Day in 1970. It’s still true.
Christopher Lind is the director of the Toronto School of Theology.