Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Facing Assault: Snarling Selfies Poke Fun At Kinder Morgan Claim Dirty Looks Harm

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 09 Nov, 2014 02:13 PM
    VANCOUVER — Bulging eyes, scrunched noses, bared teeth — anti-oil pipeline protesters are facing off against energy giant Kinder Morgan with the meanest mugs they can muster.
     
    Scores of people are posting snarling selfies online after legal arguments made in B.C. Supreme Court last week that facial expressions constitute assault.
     
    Kinder Morgan lawyer Bill Kaplan told the court that activists who have blocked a subsidiary pipeline builder in a Metro Vancouver conservation area obstructed workers in part by making faces. Millions in damages are being sought.
     
    A social media meme poking fun at the assertion has gone viral. Professed environmental advocates, random members of the public, at least one of the defendants and Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson have uploaded interpretative photos dubbed the "Kinder Morgan face."
     
    "It feels a little bit like Kinder Morgan are stepping in it," said Stephen Collis, one of five defendants named in two legal actions, adding he finds the joke hilarious.
     
    "This is one of the ones where they really did put their foot in their mouth. People are going to pick up on that."
     
    Three days of hearings into an injunction application against the protesters wrapped up on Friday, with a judge reserving his decision until Nov. 17.
     
    Kaplan had argued the defendants conspired against Kinder Morgan, employing social media and telephone networks to harm the oil company and pipeline builder Trans Mountain as they seek to nearly triple capacity by expanding a route under Burnaby Mountain.
     
    He entered into evidence photographs of protesters wearing facial expressions he said demonstrate anger and violence.
     
    "One of the things I will argue is that is not only intimidation, but that is actually an assault," he said on Wednesday.
     
    In his reply to the court two days later, Kaplan reiterated his position and said obstruction amounts to assault. He did not return to the depictions of protesters' demeanours.
     
    "If I'm walking along the road and you place yourself in front of me, the choice is to retreat or to contact. When 45 people do it arm-in-arm, yelling, it's intimidation and assault."
     
    He went on to provide criminal code definitions of assault, intimidation and causing a disturbance.
     
    "It can be offended by fighting, screaming, shouting, swearing, singing or using insulting or obscene language."
     
    It was just one of many remarks eliciting fresh titters from the defendants' supporters in the public gallery, shielded from the court by soundproof Plexiglas.
     
    Protesters mounted around-the-clock blockades of two prospective bore hole sites and a nearby park starting in early September. It prevented the company from conducting field studies. The City of Burnaby has taken its own legal action to try to halt the survey work approved by the National Energy Board.
     
    A Facebook event titled "Sing out and stand up for Burnaby Mountain" invited the public to keep up the vigil over the weekend.
     
    Snearing, smirking, scorching scowls continue to stack up on social media, with captions including: "Desperate times call for desperate faces," "How's this for the 'evil eye'?" and "Orwell coined 'face crime.' Exactly what's happening when pipeline protesters r criminalized for making faces."
     
    Ali Hounsell, spokeswoman for the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, said on Saturday the company recognizes there are a variety of views on the project. She said expressing them through social media is their right.
     
    "But I think it's important for people to remember that the individuals that are trying to do this work ... are your neighbours. They're hard-working everyday men and women," she said.
     
    "It is somewhat concerning that people are making light of and even seem to be celebrating the bullying of these individual workers."
     
    Defendant Lynne Quarmby, who chairs SFU's microbiology department, said the meme points to the "absurdity" of the legal arguments.
     
    "(Kaplan) talked about the intimidating Jack-O-Lantern that had 'No Pipelines' carved into it. And the Kinder Morgan face is along those lines," she said, adding she took her own selfie of herself smiling.
     
    She was asked whether she felt the trend could cause any harm.
     
    "In that silly thing going viral? No! It's like cute cat videos, my goodness."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada adds 43,100 jobs in October, unemployment rate falls to 6.5 per cent

    Canada adds 43,100 jobs in October, unemployment rate falls to 6.5 per cent
    OTTAWA — Canada's latest labour-market survey says the economy generated 43,100 net new jobs in October and dropped the unemployment rate to 6.5 per cent, its lowest level since November 2008.

    Canada adds 43,100 jobs in October, unemployment rate falls to 6.5 per cent

    Baloney Meter: Does the income-splitting plan only benefit 15% of Canadians?

    Baloney Meter: Does the income-splitting plan only benefit 15% of Canadians?
    OTTAWA — "The prime minister and the finance minister in the past week haven't been able to say the words 'income splitting' in this House. They are running from their own policy. They clearly don't want to draw attention to the fact that 85 per cent of Canadian households get absolutely nothing from this plan." — Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau in the House of Commons, Nov. 5.

    Baloney Meter: Does the income-splitting plan only benefit 15% of Canadians?

    Head of China's Amazon wants to sell 200,000 Canadian lobsters on his site

    Head of China's Amazon wants to sell 200,000 Canadian lobsters on his site
    HANGZHOU, China — Chinese e-commerce juggernaut Alibaba hopes to sell 200,000 Canadian lobsters next week, its founder declared Friday — one dividend of Stephen Harper's ongoing effort to cultivate "pretty important" economic ties between the two countries.

    Head of China's Amazon wants to sell 200,000 Canadian lobsters on his site

    Justice minister sees possible silver lining in wake of harassment controversy

    Justice minister sees possible silver lining in wake of harassment controversy
    OTTAWA — Justice Minister Peter MacKay says the misconduct allegations made against two Liberal MPs — along with the sexual violence allegations made against former CBC host Jian Ghomeshi — could have a silver lining.

    Justice minister sees possible silver lining in wake of harassment controversy

    Canada signals it intends to buy at least four F-35s by 2017: Pentagon briefing

    Canada signals it intends to buy at least four F-35s by 2017: Pentagon briefing
    OTTAWA — A leaked Pentagon briefing says Canada has signalled to Washington that it wants to buy at least four F-35 stealth fighters, but a spokesman for Public Works Minister Diane Finley insisted Friday that no decision has been made.

    Canada signals it intends to buy at least four F-35s by 2017: Pentagon briefing

    Harper's first day in China heavy on economic ties

    Harper's first day in China heavy on economic ties
    HANGZHOU, China — Prime Minister Stephen Harper made the pitch for Canadian exporters on Friday while also extolling Canada as an excellent place to do business during his third visit to China.

    Harper's first day in China heavy on economic ties