Resourced from Montreal Counter Info
Observant individuals can easily identify many such critical bottlenecks across Canada. They share several common characteristics:
- they are of immediate and significant value to businesses and governments;
- they concentrate valued resources or essential economic functions;
- they are located at the intersection of related transportation systems, thus allowing protesters to use their scarce resources efficiently;
- most are far from major national security resources and forces, thus complicating the deployment and maintenance of these forces;
- most are close to First Nations communities that would likely be neutral if not active supporters of insurgents and would provide safe-havens and logistical support to main participants;
- all are high profile assets the disruption of which would attract (for governments) troublesome national and international political and media attention; and
- all are vulnerable (i.e., value multiplied by the ease of disruption).”
– Canada and the First Nations: Cooperation or Conflict?
Transportation Infrastructure in so-called canada
Vulnerable Infrastructure Bottlenecks by Province
20 Worst Bottlenecks in so-called Canada
(Links go to bookmarked sections of Another World is Possible: Indigenous solidarity and blocking extractive industry in Canada, hosted by Montreal Counter Info. A full PDF copy hosted by this site is here)