When Alaska Constitutional Convention member Vic Fischer and the wife
 of the Governor who established the Alaska Permanent Fund, Bella 
Hammond, signed onto a lawsuit protesting action taken  by the Pebble 
Mine developers, little did they think they would be
 hit with a $1 million bill for legal expenses.
People were out to protest the Governor's decision to stick it to Vic and Bella. 
The Governor's former Attorney General, 
Dan Sullivan promised in his confirmation hearings, that he would fight the US government
 by filing suit against every action that infringed on Alaska's 
sovereignty (just about any action the feds take in their minds).  The 
administration sees this as a way to wear down the Feds  and keep them 
from requiring resource extracting corporations - large and small - to 
prove they won't do any serious environmental damage while they are 
taking Alaskan resources to the bank. When they sue the federal 
government, the administration is using money that belongs to the State 
of Alaska, that is, money that collectively belongs to all the residents whether they agree with the Governor or not.  
So
 it's no wonder that when others sue those corporations and oppose what 
the Administration wants to do, they assume it's the same sort of political tactics they use.  They go into win-lose mode and declare 
these people enemies of the State (anti-development is one such term) 
and set up obstacles to do what is their own strategy against the feds. 
 Parnell and his associates can't imagine or understand that there are 
people who do this sort of thing out a belief in public duty and public 
good.  For Parnell it's just a tactic to maintain and increase their power.
But
 some people use these sort of lawsuits the way they were intended. Not 
simply as a way to clog up the process or to protect their personal 
financial stake, but  because they strongly believe it's in the best 
interest of the future of the state.  Of course, Parnell says he 
believes that too, but when his actions are always on the side of large 
corporations - ones he used to work for like being the lobbyist for 
Conoco Philips - the lines between public and private good are seriously blurred.  A large, multinational corporation that, despite their feel 
good ads and pocket-change-to-them strategic contributions to the 
community, really have no interest in Alaska except how our resources 
will help their company's bottom line. Sure, as individuals, their employees may enjoy Alaska's wonders, but their collective work as employees is NOT for Alaska, it's for the corporation and its stockholders.  
Individuals 
who raise objections to their projects are dubbed "anti-development" as 
though all development were good and all opposition to development were 
bad.  These folks go to court, risking their own money, to fight their 
case.   Most jurisdictions recognize this sort of public interest 
lawsuit and protect the folks that undertake them.  But the Parnell 
administration got legislation passed to prevent such suits that oppose 
their projects and their corporate backers by intimidating them with the
 threat of having to pay the State's legal fees.  Now if they sued the 
state over offering abortions or for the right to buy as many automatic 
weapons as they can afford, I'm sure he would not think they needed to 
pay the court costs if they lost.  And I don't think the State of Alaska
 will pay the Feds' legal costs if they lose any of their suits against 
the Feds.  And even if they do, it's our money, not the Administration's
 personal money.  This is part of the stifle dissent campaign that shut 
down coastal zone management programs.  We're the state with the largest
 coast and the only coastal state without a coastal zone management 
program.  No program means no pesky local folks raising objections to 
corporations developing projects that threaten their community and 
environment.  
The Feds, in other words, should leave 
Alaskans alone to do things their own way, but the local communities 
should simply let the State do whatever it pleases to them.   This 
inconsistency suggests to me that the issue isn't so much to protect 
Alaskans' best interests, but to protect the Parnell Administration to 
do what it wants to protect its corporate sponsors.
I 
realize that Parnell and Sullivan (the one running for Senate, not the 
mayor) have converted to the church of commerce which says that whatever
 corporations do is good, so that their sense of the public good is 
consistent now with their actions.  We all seek confirmation in 
ideologies that support what we want to do.  But some ideologies better 
match what how things actually work in the world. And they make us, sometimes, give up what we want for what is the right thing to do.  
And
 so I'm sure that Parnell and his backers looked at today's rally with 
disgust and condescension.  Taking to the streets to protest simply 
demonstrates your lack of power.  If you have real power, you talk to 
the Governor privately without inconvenient questions being raised.  You
 work out your deals and you do what you want as unobtrusively as 
possible.  But you are always ready to squash any opposition.  
The protestors used all the symbolism of the location they could.  
On
 the plaza of the Atwood Building that houses so many state offices, 
with the large faceless building looming over them, they mocked 
Parnell's "Choose Respect" anti-domestic violence campaign by holding a 
large sign in defense of two Alaskan icons: the last active signer of 
the Alaska constitution Vic Fischer; and the wife of the governor who 
established Alaska's Permanent fund, Bella Hammond.  It read:   "Real 
Alaskans Don't Bully Their Elders."
They mocked the 
anti-tax line often used by conservatives, and used by Anchorage 
Assembly Chair last night, to justify the draconian anti-union ordinance
 passed last spring, that seniors will lose their homes because they 
can't pay the property tax.  The other big sign said, "Don't Evict Bella
 Hammond" (with the attempt to charge her exorbitant court fees.)
These
 are the same kinds of tactics the Palin administration (of which 
Parnell was a part) used by charging huge sums for public records 
requests.   
And behind the demonstrators loomed the 
huge (and in my opinion, awful) mural of some of Alaska's founders - 
Ernest Gruening, Bill Egan, Bob Bartlett, and Ralph Rivers.
I
 realize that I'm sounding a little ideological myself here.  But how 
else can you explain what's going on?   With corporations being seen by 
the Supreme Court as 'people' deserving the constitutional rights 
reserved for individual human beings (though actual human women, 
Indians, and slaves weren't originally given all these rights)  like 
freedom of speech, we now have inordinate corporate money funding pseudo
 think tanks to pump out studies that discredit legitimate science on 
everything from evolution to the link between cigarettes and cancer, or 
the harmful effects of all the chemicals in household products,  to 
global climate change and they push a corporate agenda that has created 
the greatest disparity in wealth America has seen for nearly a century. 
 
They're funding the Tea Party members of Congress who shut down the government over the Affordable Care Act. 
 While they justify this because, they say,  the ACA will bankrupt the 
US, and they want to keep federal spending sustainable, they absolutely refuse
 to consider any new taxes to help reduce our debt, even though the tax 
rates today are the lowest in 50 or 60 years.  And they had no such 
misgivings about the money to be spent on their (and it was mostly their) war against 
Islam (well for some that's what it is) which brought huge corporate 
profits for defense contractors at the cost of countless lives 
interrupted and ended.  
Not only do they kill in the 
name of Christ, they promote guns, not helping the poor, and treating 
foreigners with hostility and deportation.  That's not the Christ I've 
been told about
 who said things like:
For I was hungry, and you fed me. I was thirsty, and you gave me a drink. I was a stranger, and you invited me into your home. 
As
 you can see, I'm agitated today.  I can find you links to support all I
 say, and I'm confident that in 20 years, most sane and rational folks 
won't see anything amiss in a post like this.  (I'd like to think that's
 true of sane and rational folks today.)  But I'm also mindful not to 
fall into the same strident rhetoric of the people I oppose because of 
their abuse of facts, of truth, of the people they are supposed to 
represent, of their power.  
But I think my words and 
actions are moderate compared to the people who support the Governor and
 encourage him with model legislation from ALEC to pass laws that 
intimidate publicly minded citizens from legally protesting programs 
they see as harmful to our way of life.  People like Vic Fischer, Bella 
Hammond, and the other, less well known, people who expect that Pebble 
Mine, like most other huge mining operations around the world, will take
 its money out of state and leave in the state huge environmental 
degradation.   The history of mining suggests this is not an 
unreasonable expectation.
I would note that 
Michael Dingman has a piece in the ADN today that argues in part, that: 
"Something happened in court last month that the anti-development folks don't want you to know about. 
Rather
 than focusing on the facts of the court case -- which they don't want 
you to know -- they are going to show you photos of former State Senator
 and Alaska Constitution Delegate Vic Fischer and former First Lady 
Bella Hammond because they are sympathetic Alaskan heroes.
Don't fall for it."
I would argue that my claims about Parnell's pro-corporate stands are 
much easier to document and much more accurate than Dingman's 
characterization of Fischer and Hammond as part of the anti-development 
movement.
Vic Fischer and Bella Hammond and I are not 
anti-development.  He was part of the constitutional convention that 
wrote in Article 8:
"It is the policy of the State to encourage the settlement of its land 
and the development of its resources by making them available for 
maximum use consistent with the public interest. "
And
 then went on to innumerate how to allocate those resources.  That's not
 anti-development, but apparently Governor Parnell believes his 
administration alone should determine what 'consistent with the public 
interest' means. 
Bella Hammond's husband ushered in 
oil development and, understanding that oil was a finite resource added a
 program to reserve a portion of the wealth raised for the use of future
 generations.
Governor Parnell's notion of public 
interest appears to have been affected by his years arguing the 
interests of Conoco Phillips before the legislature.  The real problem 
in Alaska is that people are not at all alarmed by this obvious conflict
 of interest.  I guarantee you that if the former lobbyist for the 
Sierra Club were running for Governor, the Right would create such a screech 
and howl in the election that you'd think Satan himself were running.  
Alaskans - and the Democrats play a role in this - would see that 
conflict, but don't seem to have a problem with the Governor's obvious 
conflict.  I think we have petro dollars - we know about the Corrupt 
Bastards Club  before Citizens United - and later Citizens United to 
thank for this.  
Bella Hammond and Vic Fischer (and I) are
 for development that will benefit the people of Alaska and is 
sustainable and won't damage the other resources important to Alaska.  
Immediate short term profit for political supporters shouldn't be the standard, but rather the long term benefit to Alaska's current and future residents.  These don't seem to be worries for the Governor and his people.  And 
that worries me too.  What also worries me is their stifling of channels
 of dissent where citizens can raise legitimate questions.  To the 
Parnellites, any hint of a question of their intent brings out a loud 
charge of anti-development. It's either or.  Development is good.  Any 
opposition is bad.  It's an almost biblical application of good and 
evil, and they always see themselves among the good. 
[I've been having problems with feedburner lately intermittently working and not working to connect my posts to subscribers and other weblogs.  This one was posted Oct. 23 but has not been linked elsewhere, so I'm reposting it to see if that will help..]