Edmonton Journal

Trekkie licence plate sparks Indigenous anger

Pulled from use after Indigenous activists protest

- JAck hAuen

Is the word assimilate offensive? At issue is a legal battle that has just been launched that pits the right of a Star Trek fan to have it on his licence plate against Indigenous groups opposed to the word.

The Justice Centre for Constituti­onal Freedoms has filed a lawsuit on behalf of Nick Troller, a Winnipeg man whose licence plate — ASIMIL8 — was rescinded by the provincial government for being offensive to Indigenous people.

“It’s another case that pits the Charter freedom of expression against the new, phoney right not to be offended,” said JCCF President John Carpay, a former Alberta Wildrose party candidate. Carpay said he can understand why the plate might offend someone, but the word still shouldn’t be censored. “There’s a difference between words that are inherently offensive regardless of how you use them, such as vulgaritie­s, obscenitie­s, four-letter words, versus words like ‘war’ or ‘assimilate,’ which can have positive or negative connotatio­ns,” he said.

Troller said the licence plate is clearly a reference to the Borg, a fictional race from Star Trek that forcibly assimilate­s other cultures. The plate holder says, “WE ARE THE BORG” and “RESISTANCE IS FUTILE.”

“The word ‘assimilate’ is just a word — it is neither good nor bad. We assimilate nutrients into our bodies in order to live,” Troller said in his affidavit.

But Indigenous activists say Canadians should do more to understand why the word could be considered offensive.

Anishinaab­e Nation member and University of Manitoba assistant professor Niigaan Sinclair called free speech a “bogus argument” and said that Indigenous people are having “a very understand­able reaction.”

“If Indigenous peoples feel triggered by a licence plate or a sports logo, or the name of a historical figure on a building, Canadians would be best served to listen to why Indigenous peoples are triggered, and show some care and sensitivit­y when they express themselves,” he said.

“You can’t just say whatever you want to say without any worries of consequenc­e or responsibi­lity.”

Troller used the licence plate for two years before the provincial Crown corporatio­n rescinded it in April, following two complaints.

“The Borg uses these phrases and the word ‘assimilate’ as a core part of their dialogue,” he said in his affidavit. “The meaning of the word ... has not changed between the time that I obtained the plate and the time MPI ordered me to surrender it.”

Sinclair said that’s the problem. Many Canadians aren’t aware of the struggles Indigenous people have faced in the past, which protects them from considerin­g others’ feelings, he said.

“Canadians don’t know their own past — or they only know parts of it — and they particular­ly have not been trained well to understand the complexiti­es that Indigenous peoples have experience­d,” he said.

The word “assimilate” is a grim reminder of past pain inflicted on Indigenous communitie­s, said Ry Moran, director of the Winnipeg-based National Centre for Truth and Reconcilia­tion.

“For basically the entirety of this country’s history, Indigenous peoples have been forcibly assimilate­d through really extremely destructiv­e means and ways,” Moran said. “Words like that, meant or not, have an actual impact on many people.”

Sinclair encouraged Canadians to reflect on whether their speech was “responsibl­e.”

“We live in a time period where we’re waking up to the violence and genocide of the past, particular­ly in this country, where Canadians have never had the opportunit­y to understand that, and Indigenous people are living in the intergener­ational effects of that violence,” he said.

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