Calling Their Buff.
CANADA -- When the Texada Land Corp. started logging old-growth
Douglas fir and Garry oak on Saltspring Island in November 1999, field
naturalist Briony Penn and others protested that the togging was
"denuding" the land and disrupting endangered ecosystems.
"Ten percent of our island is being clearcut as we speak,"
Penn declared. No one listened. That changed last January when Penn
showed up in downtown Vancouver leading a "lady Godiva"
protest. Joined by five other bare-breasted women, Penn circled
Texada's headquarters building. "We've tried everything
to raise awareness about endangered ecosystems, but they won't
listen to the scientists and they won't listen to the people,"
Penn told the press. "I've got a Ph.D. and no one listens. I
take my clothes off, and here you all are." Penn reminded the press
that Lady Godiva rode through the streets of Coventry, England "to
protest the greed and taxation that was ruining her community," and
noted that "in the new millennium, greed is once again destroying
communities."
COPYRIGHT 2001 Earth Island Institute
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
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