Pubdate: Mon, 19 Jan 2004 Source: Maclean's Magazine (Canada) Copyright: 2004 Maclean Hunter Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.macleans.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/253 Author: Brian Bethune Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/alan+young POLEMICS AND ELEGIES Non-Fiction Writers Pour Their Hearts Into Topics That Matter To Them -- And To Us By its very nature, Canadian non-fiction can never offer the thematic unity often found in CanLit. But every year writers pour as much passion as any novelist or poet -- and considerable literary skill -- into topics that matter to them. The best also deserve our consideration. Some recent highlights: Passion is certainly the defining emotion of Alan Young's Justice Defiled. A Toronto law professor, criminal lawyer, media commentator and self-proclaimed defender of "hookers, druggies, gamblers and minor criminals," Young calls his book a "professional suicide note." (He may well be right about that, considering he takes as his guiding light the famous declaration of Shakespeare's Dick the Butcher: "The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers.") Young's tone of moral outrage never wavers. There are far too many lawyers, he argues, precisely because the Criminal Code is obscenely bloated. Why, asks Young, does the code contain a section on "theft in general" and 59 other sections on specific types, including "theft from oyster beds?" It is, in fact, ridiculously easy to become a criminal in Canada: simply get caught waterskiing at night. That might be dangerous and even negligent, but it would be better dealt with through bylaw regulation than the same array of legal procedure as an accusation of murder. The core of Young's argument is that "lifestyle" offences -- drugs, prostitution, gambling -- should be removed from the code. It's morally wrong, he contends, to criminalize people for the pursuit of pleasure, a human drive that will never be stamped out. It cruelly misuses resources -- in 1992 the Toronto police budget allocated $7.3 million for the morality division, six times the funding for the sexual assault squad. And it fosters hypocrisy and corruption among lawyers, judges and cops, all members of high-stress professions who, studies show, indulge in intoxicants and buy sexual services at least as much as the rest of us. Justice Defiled offers few practical remedies. (Young doesn't really mean superfluous lawyers should be killed -- at least, I don't think he does.) And those he does come up with, like informal neighbourhood courts for judging low-level offences, have a scary potential for abuse. But that doesn't vitiate the core of moral truth in his description of a dysfunctional system. An equally valuable book is Saskatchewan historian Bill Waiser's All Hell Can't Stop Us (Fifth House), an exhaustive reconstruction of the 1935 Regina Riot, one of the most dramatic events of the Depression. In April of that year hundreds of single unemployed men walked out of federally run relief camps in the B.C. Interior, places where they had cleared forests, built roads and dug ditches in return for food, board and 20 cents a day. The men were determined to wring a "work for wages" program from Ottawa. But then-Prime Minister R. B. Bennett found it easy to ignore protestors thousands of miles away, and the men decided to take their demands to him. On the nights of June 3 and 4, almost 1,400 men began the On-to-Ottawa Trek in Vancouver by climbing aboard eastbound trains. With the trek widely expected to pick up hundreds of new recruits as it approached Ottawa, a worried federal government decided to make a stand in Regina. The railways were pressured into refusing to carry the men further, and the government bolstered its RCMP manpower. On the evening of July 1, while Regina citizens and trekkers gathered in the city's Market Square, Mounties and local police, many wielding sawed-off baseball bats, charged the crowd in a bid to arrest the leaders. The trekkers quickly responded with volleys of stones and bricks, or bats of their own. City police eventually fired into the crowd. The toll from the Depression's bloodiest day: hundreds injured, including more than a dozen who were shot, and two dead, one a policeman killed by a blow to the head and the other a trekker who died later. An inquiry quickly absolved the authorities of any blame, but Waiser's well-written account exposes that conclusion for the whitewash it was. The Regina Riot was a classic police-provoked disturbance. But All Hell Can't Stop Us is more than a work of solid scholarship; at a time when mass demonstrations and policing are again hot issues, Waiser's book is also a provocative cautionary tale. Justice Defiled: Perverts, Potheads, Serial Killers and Lawyers Key Porter $36.95 All Hell Can't Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot Fifth House $29.95 - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin