Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

The Harper government and the Insite flim-flam

by Paul Wells on Monday, August 23, 2010 8:47am - 0 Comments

Many of the comments under John Geddes’ astonishing story about the RCMP’s protracted attempts to make up new “facts” about Vancouver’s Insite safe-injection centre suggest readers are having trouble understanding what, precisely, went on here. And the reaction from other news organizations — there’s been none — suggests our colleagues prefer to believe there’s nothing new in the story.

And yet Geddes lays it out with crystal clarity. What’s at stake is not a simple matter of opinion about whether injection sites are a good idea. It is (1) an exhaustively-documented attempt by elements in Canada’s national police force to create a bogus “academic” argument against Insite. Then (2) an attempt by senior RCMP officers to reverse course and atone for that burst of academic vandalism. And finally, (3) a decision from the RCMP’s highest echelons — or from someone in government outside the RCMP — to stifle the belated atonement, instead letting the sham record stand. The first part of that story has been told before. The rest is new, and devastating. Let me try to walk you through it.

• Since Insite’s opening in 2003, Health Canada bankrolled a bunch of research into the centre’s effectiveness. The research, appearing in top peer-reviewed international journals, showed the benefits of Insite: users of the facility were more likely to go into detox than other addicts; the number of deadly dirty needles in the neighbourhood declined; Insite nurses were able to treat infections that normally go untreated.

• But those conclusions didn’t match the new Conservative government’s rhetoric. Tony Clement called the place “an abomination.” And somebody in the RCMP went on a fishing expedition for research that would reach conclusions closer to the government’s version. This wasn’t easy. The RCMP bought and paid for four studies. The first two confirmed the peer-reviewed conclusions that Insite provides “positive impacts.” The second two, which were never published in a peer-reviewed journal, simply critiqued existing studies and offered no original research.

• The fact that the RCMP bought and paid for this un-original, non-peer-reviewed “research” was something the RCMP was at pains to hide from Canadians.  “Dr. Mangham’s report has now been published,” one internal email from an RCMP drug enforcement officer said. “As per our request, the report has no reference to the RCMP.” (These emails, and the RCMP funding of the non-study studies, have been previously reported.)

• At some point, people higher up the RCMP food chain had second thoughts about the whole bogus fishing expedition. Bob Harriman, the RCMP officer in charge of fighting the drug war in Vancouver, sent a memo proposing the wording that would be used at a joint news conference with the group that has led in peer-reviewed research of Insite’s effects. At the news conference, the RCMP would acknowledge “an extensive body of Canadian and international peer-reviewed research reporting the benefits of supervised injection sites and no objective peer-reviewed studies demonstrating harms.”

• Harriman’s proposed messaging also admits that the first two RCMP-funded studies supported Insite and the second two, which didn’t, “did not meet conventional academic standards.”

• But two days before the event, Deputy Commissioner Gary Bass, the top RCMP officer in the province, called to cancel. Julio Montaner, director of the UBC-affiliated research group that was going to hold the news conference in conjunction with the RCMP, says Bass said he had been ordered not to go ahead with the joint news conference.

The public security minister’s office now claims to have no knowledge of any of this, and the RCMP is not talking. But come on: Geddes’ story makes it clear that two deputy commissioners on current active duty know every bit of this tale.

And what the tale suggests is devastating. The only “research” the Harper government is prepared to rely on, as it fights Insite all the way to the Supreme Court, was not research; was secretly bought and paid for with federal tax dollars; contradicts the actual research; has been disowned internally by the police force that bankrolled it; and would have been disowned publicly by that police force if somebody at the RCMP’s highest ranks or outside it hadn’t put the kibosh on.

This is not mere disregard for reliable data. It is an attempt by the state to put falsehood in the place of reliable data. George Orwell wrote books about this sort of thing. Go read John’s story.

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  • danby

    How is the person betting on the race morally superior?

    • wsam

      Sorry. What I meant was the fleet of foot beleive themselves to be morally and biologically superior and therefore constantly challenge others to races in order to prove their biological, moral superiority.

      Hence they are racists.

  • Inkless

    Many thanks to Gaunilon for a long and thoughtful rebuttal to parts of my argument, and for generally keeping the tone up around here.

  • chet

    I'm so glad our ever-in-touch progressive media has decided to delve into the important issue of the fairness afforded proponents of safe injection sites for drug users.

    I can see it now, a new "scandal" brewing…"unfair to drug injection sites (gate)".

    Oh but its much, much bigger than that. A wafer wasn't JUST a wafer, a long form census wasn't JUST a long form census, the 105th prorogue was sooo much more earth shattering than the previous 104.

    Remember the good old days when a scandal meant stealing tens of millions of tax payer dollars, and funnelling it back to the party in power via money laundering and under the table bags full of money?

    The days when the liberals were in power, that is?

    • McC_

      how many times do you have to be told, the noun is 'prorogation'

  • chet

    And remember the days when, after reluctantly covering that which could not be whitewashed, the media promptly ended all interest,

    leaving the teeny weeny issue of where the forty or so stolen millions of Canadian's hard earned dollars actually went? Which Liberals actually got (and technically still possess to this day) these obvious proceeds of crime?

    I mean, don't get me wrong, it's clearly not as important as a pooping puffin (humor me here) but the collective shrug was something to see, no?

    • McC_

      Chet's right, the volume, extent and depth of coverage and investigative reporting of the puffin-sparrow incident definitely exceeded the coverage of Gomery: for shame media, for shame! We all remember the self-congratulation when the Globe and Mail won the Michener award and the Globe's Daniel Leblanc and Campbell Clark won National Newspaper awards for breaking the puffin-sparrow story wide open, I still remember the reports on exactly which programming language was used to animate the guano splat. Those were the days, weren't they Chet?

      • chet

        They covered what was blasting Candians in the face, and nothing more. A look into where the stolen money went would have ended the pretext that it was "isolated" to a few bad actors – the best spin the Liberals could come up with, and a spin the media generally went with.

        That money went to liberals to use for their (re)elections. Many would argue that getting the money back, tracking it down, is the most important side of it. A side the leftist media dutifully ignored.

        Compare the ignoring of that important aspect, to the headline after headline of the pooping puffin, whether a wafer was eaten, and all the rest.

  • JamesHalifax

    Holly wrote:
    "Paul, this story is not a new one to people who follow the governments failure to deal well with climate change. "

    Holly……big ball of buring hydrogen in the sky. Remember?

    Please don't make me provide the links again, though I know you never really bothered to read them.

    • Holly Stick

      How nice that you have managed to assimilate the first piece of information about global warming. Now you can work on numbers 2 through 7:

      CLIMATE LITERACY: The Essential Principles of Climate Science

      1.The Sun is the primary source of energy for Earths climate system.

      2.Climate is regulated by complex interactions among components of the Earth system.

      3.Life on Earth depends on, is shaped by, and affects climate.

      4.Climate varies over space and time through both natural and man-made processes.

      5.Our understanding of the climate system is improved through observations, theoretical studies, and modeling.

      6.Human activities are impacting the climate system.

      7.Climate change will have consequences for the Earth system and human lives.
      http://climate.noaa.gov/index.jsp?pg=/education/e…

      • ex-canuck

        Holly Stick, your numbers 6 and 7 are debatable, especially after the exposure of the hockey stick fraud. I fail to see where the government of Canada has let anyone down, save perhaps for the global warming zealots. And they badly needed some comeuppance.

      • JamesHalifax

        Holly, as has been mentioned, I agree with your points 1 through 5.

        It's your 6 and 7 you need to work on.

        Number 6 – I call BS, as have thousands of other scientists who point out other factors the latest "climate experts" prefer to ignore. (as the points they ignore refute their findings…and impact their funding)

        Number 7. I agree climate will have consequences. However, I don't think buying GREEN CREDITS or paying a carbon tax will make a lick of difference other than making people pay more taxes, which will not do schmick for any changes in the climate. As I informed you before.

        Big ball of burning hydrogen. Really.

        Now, Holly…..try to come up with your own argument that doesn't rely on the faulty premises of those with an agenda. Try and think it through…..take your time.

        • Holly Stick

          "…I call BS, as have thousands of other scientists …" Liar. Name some of these socalled "scientists" of yours. See if you can manage more than half a dozen. Here's a hint: Monckton is not a scientist.

          Why would I act like a lying deniosaur, making up some delusional BS to fit some political agenda instead of relying on the real research of real scientists who know what they are doiing and what the limits of their knowledge is?

          Here: start with the beginner's links: http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/200…

          • Oliver

            JamesHalifax is a complete idiot, don't bother with him.

  • Be_rad

    As with Jack Mitchell's note about his intention to depart, I won't try a sentimental appeal. If your real life and sensibilities have led you to this decision, all the best.

    I have benefited from reading your posts, have responded to some – both in agreement and disagreement – and have no doubt that you have been sincere in what you have had to say and what you believe.

    Perhaps you won't be so unequivocal about returning?

    Regards

  • JustinWordswrth

    Goodbye, Gaunilon.

  • mike kVancouver BC

    just another example of how fear and politics can play a role in destroying something that has proven to be effective . As long as the addict is alive there is a chance .If someone is dead there is no chance . Not to mention health care costs of someone going untreated ,hep c ,hiv to mention a few .deseases that effect not only this generations but future generations ,babies etc .
    This decision to close insight if it goes through is so wrong on so many levels . Come on Ottawa wake up . Hiding a problem does not make not so

  • Crit_Reasoning

    Gaunilon, thanks for your consistently excellent contributions to these boards. IMHO you're one of the best commenters here, so I'm very sorry that you're going to be withdrawing (hopefully temporarily).

    I share your concerns about the uncivil "piling on" effect for those who don't favour the majority opinion. It's understandably frustrating when you take the time to craft an intelligent, honest, well-reasoned argument only to face a torrent of drive-by crap-flinging and abuse, just because you had the audacity to disagree with the lib-left consensus.

    Even though you've experienced this scenario many times, you've been remarkably patient and classy about it. In fact, I've almost never seen you lower yourself by engaging in the personal sniping that is depressingly common in these parts. (I wish I could say the same about myself, but unfortunately I'm as guilty of this behaviour as many others). I agree with Paul Wells that you deserve kudos for keeping the tone up around here.

    God bless, and I hope you resume commenting soon (or at least visit often). It's getting to be awfully lonely around here for obtuse conservatives like us. ;-)

    • s_c_f

      gaunilon: I've noticed over the last couple of months that the tenor of the dialogue seems to have degraded somewhat.

      CR: I share your concerns about the uncivil "piling on" effect for those who don't favour the majority opinion

      Me too. Ever since the census was the main topic, I've seen a lot more nasty attacks for no apparent reason. Unprovoked insults have become more common, especially on certain blogs here, where they are the majority of responses to any opinion that is conservative or pro-government.

      You and Gaunilon are two of the most civil on these boards. I really try to hold back, but unlike you guys I don't restrain myself when someone is aggressive or rude. The conservatives and those who are civil towards conservatives have always been outnumbered, but it's become more hostile than ever before. I think I have a limit too, I'm just not sure what it is, before I'd move on and find another board. But if people like Gaunilon are moving on then I'm closer to that limit, and by the tone of some comments I've received lately, many people here would prefer to have an echo-chamber anyway.

    • http://dredtory.blogspot.com/ Sir_Francis

      It's understandably frustrating…to face a torrent of drive-by crap-flinging and abuse, just because you had the audacity to disagree with the lib-left consensus.

      Let us not mar the condign solemnity of the hour by suggesting that the only way to "face a torrent of drive-by crap-flinging and abuse" around here is to "disagree with the lib-left consensus". Let us recall that there are such things as Andrew Coyne threads and Mark Steyn threads, wherein any suggestion that government is not a vampirical polypoid abomination extruding from the darkest pits of human crime or that the most urgent mission of Western Christian Aryans is to out-breed the world's Muslim wogs is doomed to a deluge of invective and a -135 thumb rating.

    • http://dredtory.blogspot.com/ Sir_Francis

      And let us not condescend to Gaunilon by denying the obvious fact that he was not wholly above the behaviour he deplores, as this writer found out not long ago, when arguments he crafted carefully, respectfully, and in good faith were rarely accorded such open-mindedness as he had often been shown even by notorious trolls like Jarrid and Wilson.

      That said, I wish Gaunilon all the best with his thesis and a lively, invigorating viva.

      • s_c_f

        Just the fact you call Jarrid and Wilson trolls pretty well invalidates everything you said. There are commenters far worse on this very page. Jarrid, for instance, while strongly conservative, is actually quite civil and avoids hostile arguments completely. If you tried to find a single hostile or insulting comment from Jarrid, you would fail. Wilson is more aggressive, but at the same time Wilson also avoids insults and invective. Both those names were very poor choices. You've also invoked their names while they are not around to defend themselves, which is not dignified. The fact that you consider them both trolls says something negative about your character.

        I know you like the equate "conservative" with "troll", but it's your own shortcoming to do so.

        • http://dredtory.blogspot.com/ Sir_Francis

          If you tried to find a single hostile or insulting comment from Jarrid, you would fail. Wilson is more aggressive…Wilson also avoids insults and invective.

          I do hope that was meant as comic relief!

          At the risk of committing an immodesty, I must point out that I did describe Jarrid and Wilson as having often been open-minded with me, in mitigation of their otherwise assiduous trollishness. As to the fundamental nature of that trollishness, I believe my verdict to be perfectly defensible and consistent with the experience of others on this board. You are, of course, free to disagree and free to impute all kinds of unaccountable and gratuitous enormities to my "character", upon which you are clearly an expert.

          …they are not around to defend themselves..

          How do you know, exactly? Do you have access to this site's IP logs?

        • http://dredtory.blogspot.com/ Sir_Francis

          I know you like the equate "conservative" with "troll"…

          I most certainly do not equate "conservative" with "troll". I equate "shallow, drivelling partisan who spouts puerile vapidities" with "troll", and, if you had a quantum of the fair-minded magnanimity you appear to think you have, you would acknowledge (at least implicitly) that I have never engaged with people such as Madeyoulook, CriticalReasoning, Olaf, or the late, great Gaunilon as if they were trolls, despite the wide philosophical divides that stand between us. I wouldn't even call you a troll, though you often seem to be begging for it. ;)

  • no more non-partisan

    Geez without contributors like the monk this board is just another electronic food fight like the Globe. Way to go Macleans.

    Ms Stick ..brought to you by Canada's News Weekly…….

    "Your longwinded explanation of peer review is crap. Climategate shows that opposing views are censored? Liar. It's just a pompously phrased dog-whistle for Stupid Conservative denialists.

    "…In short, peer review is never as good an indicator of a report's quality as simply reading the report…" Bull. Then you get ignoarant blog 'scientists' misinterpreting the data to fit their partisan political agendas.

    What experience do youhave with peer review, if any, and in what field?"

    Pretty well says it all.

  • john g

    That sucks. Will miss your contributions greatly. I agree with you about the degradation in the quality of the dialog; this site is still miles better than any of the other mainstream media comment sections but your departure will unfortunately reduce the SNR even more, and perhaps serve to encourage those who would prefer that all conservative voices be stamped out here. Hope you will return.

    Cheers.

  • Mulletaur

    Work hard on your thesis and come back soon, Gaunilon.

  • s_c_f

    And lastly for the conservatives on the site: We few, we happy few, we band of brothers… …. it has been my honour to stand back-to-back with you and face all comers.

    Right back at ya!

  • Phil

    I'm disappointed by your decision, although I can certainly empathize (or is it sympathize?) with it.

    I'll be keeping an eye out for your return.

    Hopefully the rest of us will take this as a reminder to reach for a higher level of civility.

  • madeyoulook

    G, I will miss your commentary, and not just because I would be in close agreement with it 85-95% of the time. I most intensely valued the conversations we would have when our opinions differed.

    As a non-practicing agnostic fundamentalist (with gusts to indifferent atheist), I fear that my prayers for you, well-meaning as they would be, will vary from useless to damaging.

    But I do wish you every success with your thesis. Please poke in from time to time with a comment (for it is obvious the census hasn't been discussed enough yet) and an opportunity for a dozen folks to blast you with "How's the thesis going?"

    Us commenters will miss you. Conan said so.

  • ex-canuck

    some points of clarification:

    Quantify, quantify, quantify. The prime rule of good science. One knows that this requirement does spoil the fun for the destructive generalisers who glibly draw conclusions like points 6 and 7.

    Never ever take too seriously sweeping, essential principles, usually enumerated by some convincing spark in quasi official circles.

    • wsam

      Like when right-wing market fundementalists tell us we have to cut taxes and hold up the Laffer curve as proof?

      • Holly Stick

        No, no, no, it's always correct if rightwing market fundamentalists do it.

        ex-canuck, what a shame you failed to follow the links and actually try to learn something.

  • Brick Wall

    Has this link been posted yet? It's the emails behind all this kerfuffle.
    http://www.pivotlegal.org/pdfs/RCMPsecretlyfunded…

    • Holly Stick

      Funny, the same people who go on about the faked up scandal they call "Climategate" in their unimaginative fashion are not likely to sit down and read your emails. If they did so they would distort and misinterpret what the emails say, anyway.

  • JamesHalifax

    Holly wrote:
    "And you are still too stupid to find the Reply button. Stupid Conservative"

    Geez, Holly, that is a lot of anger coming from a 15 year old.

  • Hunter Mars

    Another big bag of stupid .un conscionable .

  • Brody Abel Williams

    It"s time to shut it down , Insite does not save lives , what it does is keep addicts comfortable in there uncomfortability and Keeps poverty pimps in business. truely if addiction is such a huge concern then its time to open up treatment on demand. Look at it this way if you have someone that you truely love that is a addict would you give them a clean rig or would you want them in a treatment program ?

  • RFS

    I'm not surprised by the Harper government's shenanigans. They really ought to leave Insite alone; leave their idealogy out of it. If Insite is doing such good, only a moron would interfere…just as we're seeing. If it aint broke Steve-O dont bloody fix it!

  • citizen_CA

    Miss your commenting. Hope you will decide to come back soon.

  • modster99

    Sorry to see you go – I liked your posts.

  • JamesHalifax

    The only way to have a program like Insite work is to approve the Government supply of Heroin for up to one year. During that year, addicts will have to agree to live in a facility with full time medical staff and counsellors. I think we all know that people hooked on that garbage are NOT thinking straight.
    The goal of course, is to wean them off drugs, take care of their phsychological problems so that escape isn't their main goal in life.

    costly? You bet. But probably cheaper than all of the crimes committed to get drug money.

    Only under these circumstances should Government get involved in the drug trade. Insite as a free standing shooting up joint shouldn't be an option. We're enabling people who need help…and insite only offers them a place to break the law without consequence.

    As a former Victoria resident, I was sick of all the junkies, crime, and human filth covering the streets when the new shipment of "horse" hit the streets. There is nothing more off-putting than stepping around human feces or vomit covering the sidewalk in front of such places.

  • Lord Kitchener's Own

    We're enabling people who need help

    Yes, we're enabling them to GET HELP!!! What part of the studies' findings which show that addicts who use Insite are more likely to enter rehab and more likely NOT TO DIE even if they don't is so complicated for people to understand?

    I can't believe how vociferously some people are fighting against a program which has been shown by independent research to get more people into treatment programs, keep more people alive, and save the health care system millions and millions of dollars.

    Insite only offers them a place to break the law without consequence.

    Only in the paranoid and misinformed minds of some conservatives is this the only thing that Insite does.

  • wsam

    "There is nothing more off-putting than stepping around human feces or vomit covering the sidewalk in front of such places."

    What about finding a severed head on your front step. That's pretty damn off-putting if you ask me. Or having to walk past a congo-line of celbrating Germans, each one naked and extremely obese, when all you are just trying to do is grab a couple extra croutons from the salad buffet. I'm never going on that cruise again. I can tell you that. Off-putting hardly describes it.

  • danby

    Oh! Let me guess: Tony Clement fundraiser on Lake Muskoka?
    (I get the severed head is Munir Sheikh, but who are these obese Germans????)

  • Mulletaur

    Not all of us, Emily. Not all of us.

  • JamesHalifax

    Actually, Kitchener,

    It was found that most junkies have nothing to do with Insite. My suggestion would definetely get the attention of the drug addicts who would not think long term care…..they would think in the immediate term.

    Free Heroin.

    Given that the next fix is always first and foremost in the mind of a junkie…..I daresay my idea would be far more beneficial.

    (though very costly – but think of it as foreign trade with Afghanistan)

  • http://www2.macleans.ca/ Janice Rose

    LOL – danby, I'm surprised you even responded to that strange post.

  • wsam

    That's racist.

  • danby

    I've read and reread Janice's post and at no time does she challenge you to a race.
    Quite frankly, I don't know what you are talking about.

  • JustinWordswrth

    Remember: It is within all of us the ability to live a virtuous and moral life. But the best of us can overcome that.

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