The conception of rights
enshrined in the
current Constitution of Canada dates back to the days of the British
conquest and rebellions against it. It is a conception
that enshrines and protects the rights of the Crown with institutions,
values, aims and practices established for that purpose. Before that,
the French Crown also imposed laws and practices
in defence of private property which also contributed to shaping the
country's future.
In
order to understand the conception of rights enshrined in the
Constitution it is necessary to look at the conditions which prevailed
at any particular time, how the ruling elites dealt
with them, in whose interests they intervened and the results of the
intervention.
For instance, between 1663 and 1673,
under the tutelage of King
Louis XIV of France, some 800 young women were sent to what was then
called New France "to marry, found a home
and establish a family to colonize the territory." What is often not
told is that any of the men of European descent who were joined to
Indigenous women and rejected this edict were
deprived of their property. Refusing to succumb to unjust laws, French
and Scottish fur traders moved west and joined their lives to those of
the Cree and Anishinabe (Ojibway). Their
descendants formed a distinct culture, collective consciousness and
nationhood in the Northwest. They established distinct Métis
communities along the fur trade routes which were also
brutally attacked by the colonial settler state to deprive them of
their lands and way of life.
The
colonial
state
used racism to divide the peoples from the
get-go, declaring the Indigenous way of life as devil-inspired and the
Indigenous peoples to be the enemies of the
aspirations of the settlers to establish homes, farms and communities.
The British policy of divide-and-rule was at the basis of the
conception of rights which enshrines private property and
puts all decision-making power and the monopoly on the use of force in
the hands of an elite which usurps power for purposes of enriching
themselves at the expense of all others. So long as the settlers served
their purpose, all the better but no sooner the peoples united against
injustice, all have been dealt with brutally no
matter who they are.
The republican conception of
rights put forward by the Quebec
Patriots as well as the reformers in Upper Canada in the mid-1800s are another case in point. The British
opposed this conception which called for vesting sovereignty in the
people no matter their national origin. The British brutally suppressed
the rebellions and denied any conception of rights
which would vest decision-making in the people.
Meanwhile,
to understand the conception of rights imposed by the British in the
Constitutions of
1840, 1867 and 1982, it is necessary to see what the conditions reveal
today. For
instance, conditions today show that the incorporation of the Royal
Proclamation of 1763 into the Constitution 1867 made the Indigenous
peoples wards of the Crown and designated all
their lands Crown lands.
We go into the past to
enrich our ability to solve problems and open society's path to
progress today.
In this regard,
CPC(M-L) takes the
approach to the study of history
and political theory in a manner which deals with the relations people
enter into and what kind of society this gives
rise to. This includes a militant call to oppose attempts to divide the
people for purposes of maintaining the status quo, a practice
introduced by the British colonialists and upheld by the
Anglo-Canadian colonial state established on the basis of carrying out
the genocide of Indigenous peoples whose lands were expropriated and
everything was done to extinguish their way of
life. Despite the Supreme Court of Canada's verdict that the
colonizer's "doctrine of discovery" known as terra nullius (that
the land belonged to nobody prior to European assertion
of sovereignty) never applied in Canada, "as confirmed by the Royal
Proclamation (1763)," the fact remains that what is called the colonial
settler state -- to distinguish it from a colonial
state which did not import people to settle the land but used the local
people to serve the colonial power -- did not consider
Indigenous
peoples to be human beings. It made them wards of
the state with no names and set a course of cultural genocide to
extinguish their way of life. This led to what can only be called
crimes against humanity and acts of genocide which carry
on to this day. The treatment of the Indigenous peoples informs the
notion of rights contained in Canada's Constitution. To understand the
Constitution requires recognizing the truth of the
relations between the racist Anglo-Canadian state and the Indigenous
peoples.
So too the suppression of the
Métis Nation striving to
declare nationhood in Manitoba which the ruling elite used to give rise
to the Northwest Mounted Police and then the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police. The conception of rights which are privileges
and are given and taken away by "the Crown" at its sole discretion is a
medieval remnant incorporated into the
Constitution to underscore the division of the polity between those who
govern and take all the decisions on the basis of the self-interest of
the person of state and those who are governed
and are kept separate, in a subservient position.
An
integral part of this history concerns the relations between
trappers, voyageurs, fur traders settlers and Indigenous peoples and
between them and established colonial institutions of
rule, including the Catholic Church in Quebec whose main role was to
keep the habitants in thrall, and the relations between the Indigenous
peoples and the patriots in Lower and Upper
Canada, as well as help they received from American revolutionaries at
the time and enlightenment forces in Europe and the Americas.
The struggle of the Patriots in the mid-1800s espoused the
most
advanced ideas of the time, as did Louis Riel when founding the Métis
nation in Manitoba. For instance, in Quebec, the
patriots based their nation-building project on the anti-colonial
cause, the abolition of the feudal seigneurial system, the granting of
citizenship rights equally without distinction as to
national origin or belief, gender or other consideration, including to
the Indigenous peoples. The Anglo-Canadian state continued to treat
Indigenous peoples as non-persons until the 1960s
and continues to treat people of Indigenous origin as second class
members of the polity to this day. It does the same with all migrants
and workers of all origins under conditions of a
so-called global labour market which considers human beings to be
disposable.
The Quebec Patriot's Declaration of
Independence issued in 1838
called for the constitution of a republican form of government to
enshrine those ideals as the law of the land. This
cause was akin to the great wars of independence in Latin America and
the Caribbean at that time as well as the national movements in Italy
and other countries. Related developments in
those days led to the formation of the International Working Men's
Association by Marx and Engels in 1864 and, in 1871, to the Paris
Commune.
The Patriots fought for institutions
consistent with the needs of
the times, especially the demand that decision-making power be vested
in the citizens of the new republic, not in the
British Crown. For this, their rebellion was crushed by the British
through force of arms, the suspension of civil liberties, mass arrests,
burning of homes, the hanging of 12 Patriots and the
forced exile of 64 others.
It should be kept in
mind that this was also the era when in the
United States the direction was set on the basis of the ideology of
Manifest Destiny. It held that "European Americans"
-- i.e. white people -- were "divinely ordained to settle the whole of
the North American continent." The slave state in the hands of white
men of property pushed settlers ever further
westward towards the Pacific, eventually herding the Indigenous peoples
into reservations, engaged in murderous campaigns to wipe them out and
has sought ever since to deprive them on
their hereditary lands, resources and hereditary rights as well as
rights by virtue of being human. All of this spilled over into what was
known as "British North America." The North West
Mounted Police (NWMP) was specifically established in 1873 to bring the
authority of the Crown to the North West Territories (present-day
Alberta and Saskatchewan). Its jurisdiction
grew to include the Yukon in 1895, the Arctic Coast in 1903 and
northern Manitoba in 1912. In 1904 King Edward VII added the word Royal
to the NWMP which then subsequently
became the Royal Canadian Mounted police (RCMP).
The
conception of rights contained in the Constitution of the
country called Canada does not protect anyone from the ongoing assault
on the hereditary and human rights of Indigenous
peoples and the global anti-social offensive which treats the peoples
of all origins and occupations as "disposable" and those who resist as
criminals. This is so because there is no way to
sort out conflicting interests in a peaceful manner which advances
nation-building. Societies are under constant attack today. The saying
applies "If injustice is law, resistance is duty." It is
not a matter of laws and rules. It is a matter of a just cause and
social responsibility to intervene for justice, for rights. Human
agency is intervening to affirm rights. It is pro-active and not
primarily a matter of being reactive to laws and rules imposed by the
state which to this day is based on the anachronistic definition of
rights enshrined in the Constitution, including the
Charter of Rights of
Freedoms added in 1982.
The
need for the political movements of the people to take up the
work for a modern constitution cannot be overemphasized. Only the
working people have an interest in enshrining the
rights which belong to all by virtue of their being. Establishing
cohesion within the body politic around the independent politics of the
working class is urgently needed to open a path to
progress and avert the dangers which lie ahead as a result of the use
of force to impose the will of the Crown in the name of high ideals.
This article was published in
Volume 51 Number 17 - July 1, 2021
Article Link:
https://cpcml.ca/Tmlm2021/Articles/MS51174.HTM
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca