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Saying Goodbye to Tom Flanagan

It comes as no real surprise to those who have witnessed Tom Flanagan casually call for state assassinations or defend the very civilizing project that led to the abhorrent Indian Residential School system to learn that he made flippant comments regarding child pornography while giving a talk on the Indian Act. So when Flanagan, a former adviser to Stephen Harper, was summarily dropped as a commentator by the CBC and labelled a persona non grata by the Alberta Wild Rose Party and Conservative Party of Canada, the reaction among many in academia was: What took you so long?
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When it comes to political science approaches to the problem of Indigenous rights, the work of Tom Flanagan and Barry Cooper qualify as perhaps our least helpful.

For his part, Flanagan published a book in 2000 titled First Nations? Second Thoughts, in which the rights of Indigenous peoples in Canada were disparaged and denied. Today the book enjoys a mostly non-academic following. Yet since 2000, Flanagan and Cooper have contributed to the public discourse on Indigenous rights in a manner not unlike a pundit that the media has mistakenly identified as an "expert."

It comes as no real surprise to those who have witnessed Flanagan casually call for state assassinations or defend the very civilizing project that led to the abhorrent Indian Residential School system to learn that he made flippant comments regarding child pornography while giving a talk on the Indian Act in Lethbridge, Alberta (comments captured on video by Indigenous activist, Arnell Tailfeathers). So when Flanagan, a former adviser to Stephen Harper, was summarily dropped as a commentator by the CBC and labelled an official persona non grata in the eyes of the Alberta Wild Rose Party and Conservative Party of Canada, the reaction among many was: What took you so long?

Not everyone was relieved, of course. Flanagan's friend and University of Calgary colleague, Barry Cooper, provided a bizarre defense, literally calling anyone who distanced themselves from Flanagan "stupid." As the two continue to derail, however, it is helpful to remember that despite being media regulars, their corner of the discourse on Indigenous peoples has always been a source of difficulty.

Consider their most recent commentary on Indigenous rights and Cooper's attempts to beatify the ridiculous. According to Cooper, Indigenous rights claims amount to so many "complaints, assumptions and assertions that have no basis in reality" -- they are simply "projections of the imagination" or what Flanagan calls "word magic." Cooper compares this imaginative whimsy to the "self-evident structure of the common sense world" to which Cooper and Flanagan have gained access. You see, most of us remain enslaved in the Matrix. We live in a dream-castle, if you will -- a lurid fantasy that has captured "aboriginals, bureaucrats and lawyers, both on the bench and at the bar, as well as ... numerous academics, journalists and intellectuals" -- in other words, anyone with relevant education or experience.

To evidence this grand deception, Cooper cites an immense body of scholarly literature that has withstood the most demanding levels of interdisciplinary academic scrutiny. Actually he cites "a 'classic study' published in 2000 by my longtime colleague, Tom Flanagan, called First Nations? Second Thoughts." Cooper deploys Flanagan's "classic study" to debunk some common myths: the myth that Indigenous peoples have certain rights because they were here first. The myth that European and Indigenous civilizations were equal and therefore engaged one another as sovereign nations. The myth that they forged nation-to-nation treaties that affirmed Indigenous jurisdiction.

"In reality," Cooper informs us, "every human in the New World came here, or their forebears came here, from the Old World." You may recognize this as the stale "We're all immigrants" argument. The trope falls apart the moment we acknowledge that Indigenous peoples weren't immigrants for the simple fact that there was no nation on the North American continent for them to immigrate to. Rather, they are it -- they are the original nations.

One reason people get tricked into supporting Indigenous rights, Cooper and Flanagan argue, is the myth that Indigenous and European civilizations were equals. Preposterous! Anyone properly attuned to reality and common-sense and not magical words can discern that they were not equals because of the "technological, military and political advantages that the Europeans developed, including the legal concepts of sovereignty and the state." As everyone knows, the equality of civilizations is a function of having western technologies and legal concepts. Ergo, the west is superior by definition. Fancy that. Maybe natives should have thought of that before they developed their 35,000-year-old civilization on an entirely different continent than Europe.

In any event, the notion that Indigenous peoples would also possess of form of sovereignty by virtue of having a civilization is a non-starter for the duo because sovereignty is something that only states possess. An astute historian, Cooper informs us that "sovereignty is a 16th-century term developed after the wars of religion to describe the new post-medieval regime. The two go together: no sovereignty without states, no states without sovereignty." In reality, you see, we always use terms in exactly the same way as they were used in the 16th century. For instance, Flanagan means "reddish," and a Cooper is someone who makes barrels. Obviously. We also practice things in exactly the same way as we did in the 16th century. I rode a horse to work today. I am a cobbler for the King. Ergo, sovereignty is a term only suitably used with reference to states. Welcome to "common-sense."

Moving from the strange to the ridiculous, we find Cooper contending that the term "First Nations" is racist because it implies that prior occupancy (being here "first") gives Indigenous people some kind of special legal and moral standing. Now, let's leave aside the fact that when Indigenous peoples speak about "nations" and "sovereignty" they are not referring to the 600 or so First Nations bands and reserve lands currently administered under the Indian Act, but rather the 60 or so nations and traditional territories currently under occupation. Let's also ignore that recognizing "prior occupancy" is a fundamental feature of European common law traditions -- our laws are rooted in respect for prior occupancy. Let's instead meditate for a moment on the question of how Flanagan and Cooper have been allowed to take up so much space in the public debate on Indigenous rights.

Flanagan has provided a qualified apology for his latest gaffe. His only mistake, it seems, was that he allowed himself to be lured into the conversation by a "rambling" Indigenous person. Perhaps this was an example of the "word magic" we've been hearing about.

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