Bayman’s Paradox

Governance

Governance

Newest posts in this category.
From Protest to Profit: Political Opportunism in Newfoundland Activism
Governance
By: Holly Revollàn-Huelin
Aug 27, 2025 7 min read
In Newfoundland, protest often begins as resistance but too often ends in opportunism. From Muskrat Falls to offshore oil to fracking, the loudest voices have turned outrage into political bids, industry appointments, or personal leverage. Figures like Andrew Parsons and Kevin Aylward illustrate how quickly protest visibility can shift into corporate roles, while local archetypes — the ambitious candidate, the elder, the enforcers, the gatekeeper, and the consultant-in-disguise — show how movements fracture into manageable pieces. The result is predictable: credibility is spent, trust erodes, and outside agendas advance. Protest becomes currency, traded for status, reputation, or influence — until even the evidence of resistance begins to vanish. Read More...
From Protest to Profit: Political Opportunism in Newfoundland Activism
Gatekeeping the Land: How Claims, Secrecy, and Global Agendas Collide in Newfoundland
Governance
By: Holly Revollàn-Huelin
Aug 26, 2025 7 min read
In Newfoundland, land is treated less as heritage and more as leverage. Sweeping claims, untested legal structures, curated “documentation,” and a surge of mineral exploration all reveal how governance vacuums are exploited. From the silenced 6(1)/6(2 debate to UNDRIP consent politics, outside agendas thrive on ambiguity. Land becomes currency, heritage becomes narrative, and without transparent governance, decisions about Newfoundland’s future are already being signed elsewhere. Read More...
Gatekeeping the Land: How Claims, Secrecy, and Global Agendas Collide in Newfoundland
Selective Outrage: When Environmental Principles Depend on Who Profits
Governance
By: Holly Revollàn-Huelin
Aug 15, 2025 7 min read
This piece exposes how “outrage” in Newfoundland’s environmental and political movements is often selective, serving alliances rather than principles. Using examples from Jasen Benwah’s shifting stance on wind projects, UNDRIP land claim gatekeeping, and Darrell Shelley’s opportunistic politics, it shows how ecological harm is condemned or excused depending on who benefits. The article ties these local double standards to global financial agendas like GFANZ, where narrative control matters more than actual environmental impact, and warns that until consistent standards are applied, the land will remain a bargaining chip and truth negotiable. Read More...
Selective Outrage: When Environmental Principles Depend on Who Profits
The Technocracy of the Base: Why Grand Agendas Flourish Where Local Governance Fails
Governance
By: Holly Revollàn-Huelin
Aug 10, 2025 8 min read
This editorial exposes the “Technocracy of the Base” — a governance culture in Newfoundland where councils and committees operate more as administrative layers than as engines of strategy. Drawing on the Local Paradox framework, it shows how weak local capacity, reinforced by social conformity and peer pressure, creates the perfect environment for top-down agendas to flourish. From Muskrat Falls to Paris Agreement-aligned wind and hydrogen projects, decisions are accepted without scrutiny, not out of agreement, but from the ingrained belief that resistance is futile. Breaking the cycle will require more than policy tweaks — it will take cultural change, strategic capacity, and the courage to dissent. Read More...
The Technocracy of the Base: Why Grand Agendas Flourish Where Local Governance Fails
The Consultant Trap: When Charm Replaces Consent
Governance
By: Holly Revollàn-Huelin
Aug 5, 2025 15 min read
This first-person exposé unpacks how charm and consultation are used as instruments of control in weak governance environments. Drawing from the author’s lived experience with ARCO (L'Association régionale de la côte Ouest) and FFTNL (Fédération des francophones de Terre-Neuve et du Labrador) in early 2000s Newfoundland, it traces how a routine website contract and a parallel community job offer unraveled into a pattern of manipulation, silence, and erasure. From RCMP-style charm tactics to abrupt contract terminations, the piece reveals how institutional actors—often under the guise of civility—extract credibility while suppressing dissent. With firsthand documentation and academic grounding, the article exposes how consultation becomes performance, and participation becomes permissioned. In places like Newfoundland, where governance structures are hollowed out, charm often replaces consent—and the muzzle comes with a smile. Read More...
The Consultant Trap: When Charm Replaces Consent