Once again the
corporate media's powerful thought control propaganda machine was
successful in evoking the required Pavlovian call to which so much
numb grey matter responds, and the Twitter was glowing with loathing
condemnation for the occupy encampment.
I offer my best damage control, asking: How many
people die every day, unreported, in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside? Where do the drugs come from, whose hands do they travel through,
before they reach people like Ashley? Why aren't the corporate
media or police investigating these crimes? What's going on at
the underfunded and therefore underrepresented Missing Women's
Inquiry, and the disappearance of hundreds of women from Vancouver's
DTES? What's going on in Afghanistan, where heroin is a major
export crop?
Vancouver's camp medical team had previously saved people from
overdose, where were the news teams for those stories?
Thankfully, Vancouver's People's Assembly Occupy Revolution set up
a medical tent the first day the camp was founded. Victoria's
camp has no such organization established. Why not? Where is the
health authority? Where are the service providers, who might
offer psychological and/or medical support when the inevitable
happens? Why is it a big surprise that people who do illicit
drugs are attracted to a safe community?
Yes, there are individuals offering their assistance, I don't mean
to take away from their efforts. And yes, Vancouver's InSite saves
many lives each year. But obviously it's not enough.
Obviously the society we live in is so spiritually bankrupt that
people continue to reach for illicit substances as a way to either
enhance, or (most likely in the case of the street community) to
escape their painful reality.
Vancouver's revolutionaries realize that the dominant culture, and
not themselves, are to be held responsible for Ashley's death.
She is one example why so many are determined maintain the camp's
existence. The knee jerk response, to close the camp and throw
the homeless back to their bedbug ridden shelters or back alleys where
they can die alone, is precisely what we're struggling
against.
After a couple of frustrating social media hours last night,
attempting to reach the mass of brainwashed corporate media junkies, I
began to wonder if it wasn't all just a big set up. What if
the authorities knowingly allowed tainted heroin to enter the camp?
Wouldn't that be a convenient turn of events. Some idiot
called me a bitch, and I logged out.
This morning's Occupy Vancouver facebook page indicates their
determination to succeed, to construct a humane, egalitarian,
compassionate society, is more resolute than ever:
From
Facebook: Condolances to the friends and family of the deceased.
I would also like to thank the heroic effort of the Occupy Vancouver
medics that provided CPR before paramedics arrived. As a nurse
volunteering at OV I can say we have saved a number of lives at the
camp. If the city wants to deny people the ability to stay in a camp
with 24/7 first aid and medical staff and force them to sleep under
bridges and alleys how many more would be dead? The reality is that
aside those privalaged individuals that are there only for the
politics the camp is a safer alternative to the streets and
prefereable to some than the sro's and shelters because of the non
hierarchical and Democratic community we provide. OV provides
hope.
From
Facebook: So, it's this simple. If a young woman had died 2
blocks from main & hastings.... No one would know, save her
family and friends. It happened in exactly the place where we are
trying to bring attention to these inequities. And we are demonized
for it. I'm so sorry Ashley, I'm sorry our entire society did not
treat you with caring and dignity. I'm sorry that your only refuge
from the pain was escape. And I so very sorry Ashley that we didn't
reach you in time to keep you with us.