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Fog of stupidity?
Maybe attacking nature with
chemicals isn't all that smart
Mike Warkentin
Winnipeg's best Kenny G
impersonator recently announced that activist Glenda Whiteman will soon
be flying into a rage.
I
guess that's one way to look at city entomologist Taz Stuart's recent
announcement that the city would probably begin malathion fogging in
the near future.
Whiteman, you'll remember, is the
sometimes-rabid woman who has in the past been arrested by police while
trying to stop fogging equipment from leaving city yards.
I
vividly remember her looking pretty bad while screaming at the top of
her lungs as the cops stuffed her into a cruiser during a protest a few
years ago, and I couldn't help but think that she was doing a
disservice to her cause.
Whiteman and the anti-fogging movement came off badly on TV, just as
Critical Mass cyclists came off badly when the Winnipeg Free Press
irresponsibly ran a one-sided story last year under the headline
"Critical Mass riders block ambulance."
My
own research showed that the cyclists did no such thing, and I realized
then how easy it is for mainstream media to discredit contrarian views
or actions with a little ignorance, a few carefully chosen words and
some footage of an activist looking like a mad beast.
With that in mind I moved past the images of Whiteman's violent arrest
and started thinking about pesticide use.
I
sprayed chemicals while I was a student, and I never really liked it. I
felt a bit uneasy about spraying Kill It All or whatever it's called,
and I couldn't help but think about what the murderous little droplets
were doing to my lungs on a windy day.
That said, I like a lawn
that looks like a putting green, and I like to be able to enjoy our
brief summer without slapping mosquitoes all fucking night.
In
the past I've even made brash statements about how the city should just
nuke the bugs so I can enjoy some rye on my porch, and I've said some
disrespectful things about the 'sandal-wearing tree huggers in
Wolseley,' mostly while scratching bites on my ankles and shins with
the end of a beer bottle.
Consider this an apology to those people - I just really hate mosquito
bites and really love a summer night.
But
I also admire the fact that an entire neighbourhood will band together
to tell the city exactly where it can cram its chemicals. I like
watching people stand up to authority, because those people are going
to come in really handy someday, and dissenting voices get people
thinking and reconsidering and doing all the things humans should do on
a regular basis if they want to remain human.
All this was
running through my mind a couple of weeks ago as I stood in Home
Depot's napalm-death chemical section. I had a weed problem, but I also
had real moral dilemma on my hands. Avoiding the issue for a moment, I
wandered over to the garden centre, a place I often visit when the
bastards are grinding me down.
Standing among the hanging
baskets and potted ferns and wild grasses and cedars and geraniums and
sunflowers, I realized that the answer was pretty clear:
If nature can push its way through my asphalt, perhaps it deserves to
be there more than the asphalt.
Mike Warkentin still makes the occasional joke
about Wolseley residents.
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