In total, the City of Edmonton has a $9.4-million stake in the building, equipment and other assets leased to Greys Paper Recycling to run its recycling operation.
(…)
“We wanted them to be successful but we never became an investor so we don’t have investor’s risk,” Iveson said.
Chinada
CKNW: Xun “Sunny” Wang ran an immigration fraud ring from his Richmond office, helping wealthy Chinese businessmen buy their way into Canada
Developing… Trudeau Funding From Foreign Sources Alleged
There’ve been reports that one of the people on the Chinese list of 100 economic fugitives… has been very supportive of Justin Trudeau’s political campaign by organizing a fan club … of young people… assisting Lberal party activists in British Columbia in massive fundraising… There are photographs showing Justin Trudeau and this individual together….
The details begin at around the 24 minute mark.
h/t
The Libranos: Back A Day Early
This video is shot by Vancouver-area reporter Bob Mackin. During it he is repeatedly assaulted by Liberals trying to stop him from asking Liberal organizer Raymond Chan any questions about his ties to Michael Ching.
It’s Probably Nothing
May you buy in interesting times;
I have read so many stories about Vancouver homes selling above their listing price over the years that I find myself completely numb to the phenomenon now. Of course every once and a while I’ll read a story of some house selling at an astronomical price, and I’ll try to comprehend the logic and fundamentals behind these moves. But after so many years of seeing these stories, I find the shock and confusion fades quickly and I get back to my day as if everything was normal. But I think it doesn’t take a real estate specialist or an international monetary watchdog to see that things in the Vancouver real estate market are far from ‘normal’.
Some news articles have made an attempt to explain the drivers behind the market’s incredible jump. In this link, a real estate agent explains that the premium paid on the home he sold recently was simply the result of a very successful marketing strategy.
Yeah, that must be it.
h/t Melinda Romanoff
Yes, it is that bad.
OPM crack in context.
Chinada
“Knock Knock”
“Who’s there?”
“Reserve Currency.”
“Reserve currency who?”
Here We Go Again
Hong Kong blowing up.
Birds of a feather,
Mr. Bo was counted as a friend by Montreal’s powerful Desmarais family, which cultivated the Bo family for decades and saw its businesses in China grow as Mr. Bo rose in power. Canadian politicians also sought him out: Prime Minister Stephen Harper and former prime minister Jean Chrétien were among the last high-profile foreign visitors to Chongqing, the southwestern Chinese city Mr. Bo governed until his arrest on corruption charges.
Chinese Cyber-Theft And The Nortel Bankruptcy
Nortel had other troubles, but Shields is almost certainly right when he says that that cyber theft contributed to its bankruptcy, and the loss of almost 100,000 jobs.
Fireworks
When I saw this, I thought this was a China thing.
Hang on to your hats, Quebec
Cause there goes another $60M in Iron and Steel Mills and Ferro-Alloy Manufacturing exports.
But I’m sure it’s just the Dutch Disease.
h/t: maz2
Go West, young man, and grow up with the country.
Elect socialists, reap rewards….
The Quebec Employers Council, the largest business group in the province, expressed “deep concern about the negative impacts” of the PQ tax hikes, and economist Brigitte Alepin warns Marois could chase away the richest taxpayers.
“China is a kleptocracy. Get used to it.”
China is a kleptocracy of a scale never seen before in human history. This post aims to explain how this wave of theft is financed, what makes it sustainable and what will make it fail.
h/t Melinda Romanoff
“A colony waiting to be conquered again”
An opinion piece by Diane Francis;
The new Game of Thrones is not about military conquest but about picking off trophy assets from countries, like Canada, that are Boy Scouts and naïve enough to let them do so. And growing and nurturing large successful entities is essential to any nation-state. Size matters.
h/t Brian
Chicoms To The West Of Us, Marxist To The South
Here we are ….
Beijing-based PetroChina said it has completed the acquisition of a 20% stake in Shell’s 100%-owned land and assets in Groundbirch, in northeastern British Columbia. PetroChina didn’t disclose the value of the deal and Shell declined to comment.
h/t Adrian
“Although friends and colleagues told me they were flattered…”
… that both “Saskatchewan” and “potash” were the subject of international intrigue, high-tech espionage and a potential plot for a James Bond movie, one of the most interesting aspects to the story was that the hackers also targeted the two primary Toronto law firms involved in the transaction: Blake Cassels & Graydon LLP, which represented BHP, and Stikeman Elliott LLP, which represented Potash Corp.
The law firms had sophisticated Internet security systems in place to prevent the malware from accessing and disclosing any confidential information about the transaction or any other client information. But the fact cyber-spies interested in the potash deal would attack law firms for information that might give them, their “customer,” or perhaps their country an edge, should reinforce within the legal community the importance of continuously maintaining and updating online security.
[…]
The BHP/Potash story should serve as a wake-up call to clients who need to be sure the confidential information contained on their lawyer’s servers relating to their businesses will be kept confidential and secure, and immune from attack by cyber criminals or cyber spies.
Or, you know – it could serve as a “wake-up call” that China is a criminal enterprise.
h/t RV
The World Needs More Canada, US Pipeline Section
Further to Kate’s post, one just hopes that damn oil pipeline to the west coast gets built for the Chinese and other Asian markets (more here).
How are they going to become Canadians…
…or Americans–including immigrants’ progeny–when they are in constant contact with their home culture?
…The cheap, instant and often nearly constant communication made possible by the technology revolution has fundamentally altered the experience of moving away from home.
“Because telecommunications is everywhere and is so cheap, people never really leave their communities,” Mark Podlasly, founder of the Brookmere Management Group, a Vancouver consulting firm, told me. “You can leave but still have a 24/7 connection with your home community. People are never really gone. You can be a citizen anywhere.”..
And it isn’t just the Internet. See what’s at Rogers Cable:
…
Arabic (4)
Bangla (3)
Bengali (1)
Cantonese (6)
English (4)
German (2)
Greek (3)
Gujarati (1)
Hebrew (1)
Hindi (18)
Italian (2)
Japanese (1)
Korean (2)
Malayalam (1)
Mandarin (10)
News (1)
Polish (3)
Portuguese (3)
Punjabi (8)
Russian (6)
Spanish (9)
Tagalog (4)
Tamil (6)
Urdu (4)
Vietnamese (1)
And see the “Packs” and “Packages”.
