This is why 'an inquiry would delay action' argument is bull****.
Disturbing trend in debate on inquiry into missing, murdered aboriginal women
It's damaging to frame discussion as choice between inquiry and immediate action
I am seeing a disturbing trend in the multitudinous op-eds streaming out of the mouths and fingers of pundits on the issue of whether there ought to be a national public inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women (MMIW).
While lip service is generally paid to the welfare of indigenous women, two messages are actually coming out loud and clear:
1. An inquiry will tell us nothing we do not already know and,
2. We can have either an inquiry, or put the money into addressing the (known) root causes of the problem.
I want to address the second point first, because it is the most insidious, and apparently unquestioned of the two.
It is becoming an accepted truth that there is money out there, bulging out of a briefcase in someone’s office perhaps, just waiting to be spent wherever the public decides to aim it at. Apparently, though it is never stated so baldly, the Canadian public merely needs to make a choice: inquiry or action now. It’s up to us!
This is a classic false dichotomy. Only limited alternatives are presented, when in fact there are many more ways to approach the issue. Allowing this to be framed as an either/or situation is incredibly dishonest but plays wonderfully into divide and conquer tactics.
Why either/or dichotomy is so problematic
First off, the briefcase stuffed near to exploding with money does not exist. Neither for an inquiry nor for addressing underlying causes of indigenous vulnerability.
Can the money be found somehow? Absolutely, but that is not a given.
What is a given is that this government is incredibly hostile to the idea of an inquiry and has done next to nothing to address root causes so far, despite repeated calls to do exactly this.
Just because the issue of a national inquiry on MMIW is gaining public traction does not mean we are going to somehow magically alter this government’s attitude.
It is most certainly not the case that we, the public, will simply come to a decision and provincial and federal governments will march to our tune.
'Choice' vilifies those most affected by loss
Essentially, if you are one of the people supporting a national public inquiry into MMIW, then you are making a choice to spend all of the available (imaginary) funds on that instead of spending it to alleviate (supposedly known) root causes.
You are delaying action. You are actively putting more indigenous women and girls into harms way.
You are going to be responsible for all of the indigenous women and girls who are disappeared and murdered until such a time as an inquiry wraps up and action can finally be taken.
That is the logical extension of the logical fallacy at play here, and it is vile beyond compare.
To allow this debate to be framed in such a way actively vilifies grieving families, vilifies grassroots organizations, vilifies indigenous peoples and Canadians who give a damn and want MMIW to become a priority.
http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/aboriginal...o-missing-murdered-aboriginal-women-1.2749508