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Anti-poverty group disrupts opening night

aluc

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http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1148939428683&call_pageid=970599119419

Protests don't stop festival
Stratford opener goes on despite demonstration
Anti-poverty activists target `playpen for rich'

May 30, 2006. 01:00 AM
RICHARD OUZOUNIAN
THEATRE CRITIC

STRATFORD—The 2,000 who entered the doors of Stratford's Festival Theatre last night for the opening performance of the season first had to pass through a gantlet of demonstrators from a coalition of groups organized by the Perth County Coalition Against Poverty.

The protesting groups referred to the opening night crowd in their advance publicity as "a who's who of the rich and vile" and condemned the festival as "a playpen for the rich."

Despite vows by the groups to shut down the production, the show went on last night.

Observers saw anywhere from a few dozen to 60 protesters, who tried without success to storm a fence separating them from the theatre.

There was a heavy police presence at the theatre, no doubt prompted by the participation of the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty, a Toronto-based group that has rallied in large numbers on other occasions and had skirmishes with police.

The ironic part of the situation is that the play the protesters were trying to stop people from seeing was William Shakespeare's Coriolanus, an exploration of what happens to a country when an impoverished mob sets out to overthrow the well-fed establishment.

Stratford's artistic director, Richard Monette, addressed that irony and several others in a speech he made to the Stratford Board of Governors on Sunday night.

"Tomorrow night's protestors," said Monette, "will be picketing a play that, at the very least, raises uncomfortable issues surrounding poverty, and forces us to think about them in an even-handed way.

"Here's another irony. The Stratford Festival, which one of the coalition websites describes as `an annual playpen for the rich,' wasn't actually founded for that purpose. To be honest, it wasn't even founded to further the cause of art.

"It was founded (by Tom Patterson) to keep the citizens of Stratford out of Skid Row," Monette said.

"Even when he was in high school, Tom could see that the decline of the railway industry in Stratford was going to destroy the town's economy. Jobs were going to disappear. People were going to lose their homes. Lives were going to be ruined. There was going to be serious poverty.

"Tom used to talk about this with his classmates, and they'd toss ideas around, trying to come up with something that could be brought in to save Stratford from becoming a ghost town.

"An international hockey school was one idea that came up. But Tom thought that a better bet, for a town named Stratford, on a river called the Avon, would be a festival of Shakespearean theatre ....

"The festival saved Stratford, and it is now a major economic engine not just for this city, but for the entire region, generating $125 million worth of economic activity each year. Its presence directly and indirectly provides more than 3,000 full-time jobs that otherwise wouldn't exist.

"It generates nearly $56 million in tax revenues for all levels of government each year — nearly 25 times the amount, by the way, that it receives in federal and provincial funding.

"Tom had the vision. But it took the backing of some very well-heeled people to turn that vision into a reality ....

"So when the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty says, on its website, that the supporters of the Stratford Festival are `experts in keeping us in poverty,' that is indeed an irony. And a very sad one."



Now they're targeting a flourishing industry that has brought the town of Stratford a viable source of employment for thousands in that area. Wow attacking the entertainment and tourism industry - these pinkos really don't want anyone to have any fun do they? Just because they covet other peoples success in life  they want to ruin it for all. I guess they want to bring all the hardworking people in this country down to their level - a bunch of complainers and malcontents.  $10 per hour min wage.....right....sounds good but hardly feasible.  Where's Bill Cosby.....we need him right now.
 
http://www.torontosun.ca/Entertainment/Theatre/2006/05/30/1605764-sun.html




Tue, May 30, 2006
Anti-poverty group disrupts opening night

By CHIP MARTIN, SUN MEDIA



STRATFORD, Ont. -- On the main stage here yesterday it was Coriolanus. Outside it was cops.

About 200 police officers from four Southern Ontario forces, including Toronto, Waterloo Region, Hamilton and London, held back about 40 protesters as they attempted to disrupt the opening night ceremonies of the Stratford Festival by chanting "make the rich pay" and other anti-poverty slogans at the tuxedoed and ball-gowned theatregoers.

The protesters, some from as far away as Kingston, tried to crash barriers set up by the police, but were prevented from doing so.

The action was led by the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty and was intended to the bring the "ugliness of poverty to the attention of the community," said organizer John Clark.

"This embarrassment at the Stratford Festival is only a small indication of the mobilization that will take place" by the poor as they press for improved benefits and a hike in the minimum wage from $7.75 an hour to $10, Clark said.

The protesters, competing with the sound of bagpipes that were playing to welcome the guests, chanted : "We're hungry, we're angry. We won't go away."

Local residents who watched the protest had harsh words for the protesters. Many were heard to complain about the attire, language and demeanour of the activists, some of them wearing bandanas to cover the lower half of their faces.

Some residents, like bed and breakfast operator Andrew Watson, came out to challenge the protest as wrongfully targetting a Stratford institution that provides jobs and a major boost to the city's economy.

"I'm just really upset," he said.

The play began at 7:30 p.m. as scheduled and after one last rush at the barriers, the protesters left.
 
Kudos for the organizers of the Stratford festival for:

1. Putting together a community (not government or bureaucratic) effort to create something positive that would attract investment and create jobs,

2. Standing up and defending their actions, not meekly cowering and spouting the PC line, and;

3. Making sure the show will go on.

These "protesters" are simply thugs who are using brownshirt tactics attempting to intimidate the community and extort wealth in the form of "social benefits", minimum wages etc. An uncomfortable thought is they are not to different from the Taliban or Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam in terms of what they are about (using force to achieve their ends, since they cannot or will not attempt to gain community consent), the main difference being scale (i.e. how many people they can mobilize) and tactics (they haven't gotten around to snipers and IED's, but they have laid traps to break the legs of police horses in the past).

We need to get the word out about people like Tom Patterson, and provide them media cover and support however and wherever possible to encourage community building (as opposed to bureaucratic Empire Building) and shine the cold light of truth on these "protest groups".
 
Playpen for the rich? That explains the bus loads of high school students who go there year after year.

The protest organisers best be careful what they wish for. I'd love to see them get their wish - shut down the festival for one season, nay, one month and see what that does to the local economy.
 
God, OCAP does it again.  I'm sure some of you know (while others are probably blissfully ignorant of who I am) I do somewhat lean to the left, but even i recognize that OCAP is a pathetic excuse for an organization.  They seem more interested in disrupting regular people than actually helping those who need it.  They disgust me. 
However what bothers me the most is that starting this coming academic year at my Alma mater, Trent University, each student will be forced to pay a 1 dollar donation to the Peterborough arm of OCAP.  The reason is that someone sneaked this measure on to the end of year referendums and no one really noticed, at least no one outside of the PCAP/OCAP movement. 

 
I love how these special interest groups sneak legislation into student council referendums at the universities. They know the general student body doesn't give a rats behind about the elections and referendums,  so they end up having the student body unknowingly do their bidding. What's the lesson here? Participate in your university's political matters I guess. :-\
 
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