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Methow Valley News

July 11, 2001

Endangered Species

Publisher's comment by Lee Hicks

Freedom and civil disobedience

The week of celebrating democracy and independence spawned a number of events illustrating the privileges and limits of our freedom.

In northern Idaho, a pathetic group of Aryan Nations demonstrators marched peacefully with their tired message of racism and hate.

Elsewhere in the Northwest, a Seattle protester allegedly whacked Mayor Paul Schell with a megaphone, breaking his cheekbone. The protester’s defenders, or maybe "rationalizers," claimed the action was born of frustration over the city’s attitude toward the black community.

Down in the Klamath Falls, Ore., area, irrigators cut through a weld on a Bureau of Reclamation headgate to express anger at losing crops, livelihoods and a lifestyle to endangered species-related water restrictions.

Although the irrigators’ actions were illegal and could lead to prosecution, various protests related to the issues in past months have been well-organized and peaceful. Organizers said they have rejected some stronger actions of civil disobedience advocated by more militant factions. And the county commissioners, who support the irrigators, have refused to pass an ordinance condoning confrontation with federal agencies.

The result is that the Klamath protests have gained national attention for issues that affect the Methow as well. The manner in which the irrigators have framed their message is a remarkable contrast to the seemingly mindless violence that marred world trade protests in Seattle and elsewhere in the world.

Many of the WTO protesters seemed barely informed of what they were against or for, and their actions detracted from the debate of what could have been legitimate grievances.

Thus far the Klamath-area protesters mostly deserve praise for their peaceful restraint. They’ve made their point—much better than did the WTO outlaws.

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