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Transcript for END:CIV Clear Cuts

Time Content
01:05 → 01:10

So, as a long time environmental, grassroots activist

01:10 → 01:14

and as a creature living in the thrashing end game of civilization

01:14 → 01:17

I am intimately acquainted with the landscape of loss

01:17 → 01:20

and have grown accustomed to carrying the daily weight of despair

01:24 → 01:30

I've walked clear cuts that wrap around mountains and drop into valleys and climb ridges to fragment watershed after watershed

01:30 → 01:36

and I've sat silent near empty streams that two generations ago were lashed into whiteness

01:36 → 01:41

by uncountable salmon coming home to spawn and die.

01:41 → 01:45

Out here in B.C. and across North America when they do industrial logging

01:45 → 01:51

they actually take and just remove all of the trees. They level everything. They leave nothing but stumps and slash piles.

01:52 → 01:55

and they burn the slash piles, and they take out all of the timber.

01:55 → 01:57

and what's left is a wasteland.

01:57 → 02:01

It's like if you took a rainforest and turned it into a desert. That's what a clear cut is.

02:21 → 02:26

They use them for pulp. They export them whole to the United States and to Japan.

02:26 → 02:29

Umm, there's not very much milling that happens anymore in B.C.

02:29 → 02:34

It's just getting exported for pulp and paper, and fiber board, and plywood, and whatever else.

02:34 → 02:37

Not a lot of value added.

02:39 → 02:44

Industrial civilization, civilization itself, but especially civilization is not and can never be sustainable.

02:45 → 02:56

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that any way of life that's based on the use of non-renewable resources won't last.

02:57 → 03:02

There's still a strong push to harvest as much western cedar as they can.

03:02 → 03:06

They're bringing in huge helicopters to do that.

03:06 → 03:18

and they're high-grading; selecting only the real good high-guality timber and leaving the rest laying there, you know, in a junk heap.

03:18 → 03:25

So that's why we keep on, you know, fighting back.

03:30 → 03:42

I think the last straw was when they wanted to log the valley of Ista because of its historical and spiritual significance to our people.

03:42 → 03:49

But they log it in spite, you know, just to make a point against our resistance,

03:50 → 04:02

against our overall, persistance, with regards to treaties or encroachment, incringements of industry; development in our territories.

04:04 → 04:11

It destroys the soil in a lot these areas like this clearing behind me up on the hill.

04:11 → 04:21

You can see the soil is exposed. The ultraviolet kills off all the mosses, the funguses that hold the forest, the soil together.

04:21 → 04:27

When the stumps rot and the roots die, then the slopes slide,

04:27 → 04:31

and often there is not much regrowth. There is no regeneration of the forest.

04:31 → 04:36

They do some replanting. It doesn't always work because there is no soil left.

04:36 → 04:39

It washes down into the streams. It kills the salmon. It fills up the resevoirs.

04:39 → 04:42

It causes all kinds of flood damage downstream.

04:42 → 04:50

That's terrorism. Stripping down all the trees, ripping up the trees and the forest.

04:50 → 05:01

Now they're going to rip out the guts of the land here with... looking for copper and gold.

05:01 → 05:08

And, there has to be some kind of focus to address the injustice to our people,

05:08 → 05:15

the injustice to the land, to the water, to the wildlife. The injustice to the green life and the salmon life,

05:15 → 05:19

and the injustice to the people that want to stand up for it.

05:20 → 05:27

The thing is, when we block the road, these trees are very valuable, and the laws are all

05:27 → 05:30

profit driven, they're all driven by the corporations. The police are there to enforce

05:30 → 05:36

the corporation's right to log; not to enforce our right to stop them and protect the ecosystem.

05:36 → 05:41

There is so little that's left of the old growth forests like this that we see on the sides here

05:41 → 05:44

that people are putting their bodies on the line.

05:44 → 05:50

They are willing to make huge sacrifices to stop the forests from being sacrificed,

05:50 → 05:54

and the water, and the air quality, and the global climate.

05:54 → 06:00

Find ways to fight. Fight and protect what we have here.

06:02 → 06:08

Just look at this place. Beautiful place.

06:08 → 06:12

Why would you want to destroy it?