“As you can imagine, I’ve had a busy few days,” Klein said,
noting that major U.S.
news outlets like CNN have suddenly picked up on a buzz surrounding her latest work.
People not fooled
Speaking of the proposed U.S. government bail-out of Wall
Street, Klein said such a move is “wholly consistent” with the corporate class’s
ongoing practice of using public wealth to shore up corporate interests. But she
predicted this time it won’t be easy to pull the wool over people’s eyes.
“So much of the financial sector has revealed itself as an
Enron-style shell game,” she said. “It’s not a bail-out, it’s a stick-up.”
Klein added that transferring the economic crisis from Wall
Street to Washington
will be “explosive,” precipitating a new round of cuts to a badly weakened
public sphere. She said a planned protest march on Wall Street on Thursday,
Sept. 25 signals that not everyone supports the bail-out.
There’s a lot at stake, according to Klein. Pointing to
Hurricane Katrina as an example, she warned Americans face a future in which
heavy weather caused by global warming intersects with crumbling infrastructure.
Klein noted Katrina had weakened to a tropical storm by the
time it hit New Orleans,
suggesting it wasan act of government, and not an act of nature, that left the
population vulnerable to flooding and disorder.
She described how the right wing then used the disaster as
an opportunity to demolish public housing that stood in the way of land
developers seeking access to downtown property. She also noted that the city’s
only public hospital has yet to re-open.
Klein said she was struck by how many political and business
leaders referred positively to Katrina as creating a ‘clean sheet,’ echoing early
settlers who wrote that small pox was God’s way of clearing aboriginal peoples
out of the way of development.
"Wary" of Harper
In Canada,
Stephen Harper fits the archetype of the father-figure type leader who steps in
during crises and reassures the population that all will be well as long as he
is given more power, she said.
“I think we need to be extremely wary of how a new Harper
government would fit in as this (U.S.)
crisis migrates to Canada.”
“It’s an important time for 800 people to gather,” she said,
referring to the overflowing hall. “We
can fall apart and look to leaders to save us, or we can rise to the occasion.
We can regress or we can grow up – and it’s time to grow the hell up.”
During the question period that followed, Klein defended her
ideas and expanded on key points. Asked why the media isn’t working more aggressively
during this federal election, Klein – herself a journalist – said news
organizations have well-founded fears of retaliation, which may be cause them
to stand back on tough issues.
“This government is so vindictive,” she said, using the
experience of her partner Avi Lewis as a case in point. Lewis was cited by
government officials as a reason to shut down a program that funded
international marketing of Canadian arts and culture. A government memo referred
to the award-winning journalist and filmmaker as a “general radical.”
Lewis hadn’t himself applied for funding, but was invited to
an Australian conference that had received funds to bring in Canadian
filmmakers, Klein explained. The result of the trip was a distribution deal in Australia,
recouping the National Film Board’s investment in The Take, a Klein-Lewis film.

Strategic voting
The lecture ended with a film short about Shock Doctrine by
Mexican filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón, director of Children of Men, Y tu mamá
también and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. A longer film with
another director is currently in the works, Klein said.
Afterwards, people remained in the hall to discuss strategic
voting in the federal election. Klein recommended a national coalition called
VotePair, which has set up a vote-coordinating web site.
The site includes a ‘vote exchange’ system where voters can ‘trade’
Green, NDP and Liberal votes across the country, according to which ridings a
particular vote will have the most impact in turning back Conservatives.
A Saskatoon-based coalition called NotMyPrimeMinister is in the process of setting up a web site. The site will feature posters you can download and “plaster
your town” with, a coalition organizer said.
Visit:
www.departmentofculture.ca
www.votepair.ca
All photos: Dave Oswald Mitchell. For reprint permissions, email editor AT briarpatchmagazine DOT com.