Category: Ethical Energy

The Rockefellers vs. Albertans

How come American $$$ influence in Alberta’s election is okay?

Alberta is in the final days before an election and the backbone industry of its economy is practically broken because all pipeline projects out of the province have been stalled or ended. This didn’t happen for no reason. This was planned and is precisely what a Rockefeller Brothers Fund campaign was funded to bring about.

The Tar Sands Campaign has been running for more than a decade with financial help from the US$870-million Rockefeller family philanthropic foundation. The goal of the campaign, as CBC reported in January, is to sabotage all pipeline projects that would export crude oil from Western Canada to lucrative overseas markets.

h/t Ken Kulak

Related: Danielle Smith interviews Vivian Krause h/t Watcher

Regina Rally: Anti-Carbon Tax Convoy

It’s on.

Twitter is shielding some of the videos with “sensitive image” warnings. Of course.

You can catch updates and more tweets at #ReginaRallyAgainstTheCarbonTax

Ryan Meili’s Pipeline Of Deplorables

Brian Zinchuk;

It’s not very often you see the provincial leader of the opposition smear someone you know during question period, but I saw that on April 1, when NDP Leader Ryan Meili smeared Jason LeBlanc, an Estevan farmer and auctioneer.
 

Back in 2016, Jason hired me to do a photo and video project documenting a year on his family farm. Having grown up on a farm myself, I was amazed at the scale and complexity of his operation, 15,000 acres in size. But more significantly, I got to see a work ethic that is next to impossible to match. If he sleeps, I don’t know when. The video series just rolled over half a million views on YouTube for the primary video, and 800,000 views for another one. In it, you can see for yourself just how hard he and his family work. This is one serious farmer.
 
Since that time we’ve become friends. We agree on most things, but not everything, and I’m not afraid to tell him that, and he’s not afraid to tell me the same. This is what is called a relationship built on mutual respect.
 
So imagine my surprise when I watched NDP Leader Ryan Meili take a run at Jason for 13 minutes during question period on April 1, fittingly, April Fool’s Day. Conveniently he did this where he had parliamentary privilege, and can say whatever he wants without reprisal. I say that because his allusions bordered on slanderous.
 
[…]
 
Jason delivered the longest speech on Parliament Hill when that convoy made it to Ottawa, saying, “In my hometown of Estevan, Saskatchewan, we are known as the Energy City. We are proud of that claim and proud of our city, but Prime Minister Trudeau’s policies have had profound impacts on our community. The state of uncertainty has clouded investments, killed jobs, eroded community support for programs, made it difficult for businesses to obtain and retain qualified employees, decreased property values and turned people’s dreams and hopes of an amazing life into a nightmare.”
 
Pretty radical stuff, huh? He spoke in particular about climate change, clean coal, and the carbon tax, and I watched all of it on live feeds on Facebook.

Read it all.

Behind in the polls by a margin of 55% – 31%, smear by association is about all Meili has to reach for these days.

Well, things got a little heated at the legislature yesterday.

But Moe accused Meili of a double standard on Tuesday, pointing to a demonstration the NDP leader attended on Monday.
 
“The NDP leader also attended a rally just as recent as yesterday, Mr. Speaker. That rally was about minimum wage, but the person who organized that rally is an outspoken anti-pipeline activist,” said Moe.
 
The premier’s staff pointed to specific tweets posted by Saima Desai, who helped organize the Fight for $15 rally and is also editor of Briarpatch magazine. Some date back months; others are more recent. Desai makes remarks like “abolish prisons” and points to a letter about “abolishing the police.”
 
“By his new-found standards, does that mean that the leader of the NDP shares both of those positions?” Moe asked. “By his new-found standards, was his attendance at yesterday’s event an endorsement of the organizer’s anti pipeline, anti-police and anti-prison agenda?”

You can catch the full exchange on video here. (forward to 2:01:40 mark)

Jason Leblanc had a few words for him, too.

A word of encouragement for Mr LeBlanc from a slandered deplorable emeritus – Cam Broten’s political career died in ignoble defeat three years ago and I’m still here. I wager we’ll be both be around to taste the sweet schadenfreudy goodness of Meili’s departure, too.

Footnote: As I was pulling this post together, I caught this in passing — CBC veteran reporter Stefani Langenegger, her finger still searching for the pulse of the province.

Sad.

Morning update: The cheap shot headlines are rolled out in a reminder of how much they hate us.

I Want A New Country

Let me ask, if you were a Western Canadian, and your own government put in laws that stop you from being able to “use your head and your feet” to doing something for the world that you see as a great thing, how would you think, feel and SEE things? What would you think or feel if you SEE that your own federal government didn’t support you, forgets about you, or doesn’t really care about you?

It’s a long and detailed blog post. so grab a coffee.

I Want A New Country

From the comments;

Good news for anti pipeline activists. Groper has stuck it to Alberta again. Our little prince has appointed a female MP from B.C. to the position of Treasury Board president. She is an avid environmentalist who hates pipelines and was vocal in caucus in her opposition to pipelines. She also was behind oil tanker bans when serving as a provincial cabinet minister.

Update.

Galt Oil, Inc

Gwyn Morgan;

Canadians watching Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election might be tempted to find comfort in their certainty that such foreign interference could never happen here.
 
Except it already has. And while the Russian government at least denies interfering in American political affairs, the perpetrators who meddled in Canadian elections have publicly trumpeted their success in devising and executing their plan aimed at helping elect who they wanted.

And now they’ve come for agriculture, while even purportedly conservative provincial governments remain asleep at the wheel.

Building energy and the west required iron will and stoic discipline

Like farming, petroleum exploration and production is a “can do” business like few others, not for the faint of heart, where extreme challenges are faced head on because there is no other way. Maybe the petroleum industry needs to start concentrating actions along that plane, to focus on things we can do something about, rather than things we can’t.  https://boereport.com/2019/03/11/building-energy-and-the-west-required-iron-willed-and-stoic-discipline/ 

In The Mail

A subject near and dear to the heart of SDA Nation, from a western Canadian author.

ffinsanity

 
 
“Sparing no sacred cows, Terry Etam cuts through the media rhetoric, government propaganda, and widespread ignorance of the energy sector to get to the heart of what needs to change—and what needs to stay the same—if the challenges of moving away from fossil fuels are to be met, while maintaining the quality of life we have come to expect and rely on.”

 
At Amazon and Indigo

Dead Rose Country

Licia Corbella;

The circumstances surrounding the appointment of anti-Alberta oil activist Ed Whittingham to the Alberta Energy Regulator are even more troubling than initially believed.
 
Whittingham, the former executive director of the Pembina Institute from 2011 to 2017, was appointed to the five-year, part-time, quasi-judicial AER board on Feb. 12 by Alberta Energy Minister Marg McCuaig-Boyd.
 
As a board member, Whittingham is one of the bosses of the AER’s interim president and CEO, Gordon Lambert. The problem with that is Whittingham and Lambert are co-founders and business partners of Academy for Sustainable Innovation (ASI).
 
If that sounds overly cosy, it is.

Showing Up To Riot

Tom Shepstone, Natural Gas Now;

When the DAPL pipeline opponents were burning bridges, destroying property, vandalizing equipment, leaving tons of garbage and costing North Dakota millions, I wrote a post titled “DAPL Vandals and the Trendy Elitists Who Coddle Them.” I pointed out the rioters and vandals had monetary support through a group called Rising Tide North America, which was funded by the Max and Anna Levinson Foundation (guilt-ridden, virtue-signaling heirs of an oil company) and the Tides Foundation. One of the biggest funders of the latter, in turn, has been Warren Buffett’s kid, through the NoVo Foundation. The Buffetts, of course, own trains and DAPL is competition when it comes to shipping oil by rail.
 

Now, there is the prospect of similar protests in South Dakota as pipeline opponents rise to fight other essential infrastructure needed to move Bakken and Canadian oil to market. The Badlands state isn’t called that for nothing, though. Governor Kristi Noem has propose two bills that are now before her State Senate that would potentially go after these funders, enablers and “riot boosters.”

Finally.

I Want A New Country

Lorne Gunter;

After the death of Energy East, the Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) decided to file access to information requests with the federal government asking whether foreign oil imported to Canada was subject to the new upstream/downstream scrutiny.
 
The answer, revealed Wednesday, is outrageous.
 
Imported foreign oil is not subject to the same Liberal environmental regulations as Western Canadian oil.
 
Oil imported from Saudi Arabia, the U.S., Iraq or any other country is not subject to upstream/downstream regs.

United We Roll

Updated:

The United We Roll convoy has reached Ottawa;

Hundreds of trucks are expected to roll into Ottawa Tuesday to protest the federal government’s policies on the oil industry.
 
The main portion of the United We Roll Convoy set out from Red Deer, Alta., last Thursday and made stops in Regina, Dryden, Thunder Bay, and Sault Ste. Marie before mustering at Arnprior, Ont., just outside the capital.
 

The rally is expected to occupy almost a kilometre of Wellington Street, in front of Parliament.

Those aren’t oil trucks. Those are Reichstag Fire trucks.

Meanwhile, in Juxtaposeland…

https://twitter.com/RachelCrossUTK/status/1097526170013306883

Truckers For Pipelines

Calgary Herald;

Organizers of a truck convoy to Ottawa to pressure the federal government to fast-track pipeline construction say the effort is snowballing.
 
Proponents of pushing hundreds of trucks and other vehicles to Parliament Hill in February say a GoFundMe page and a recruitment effort are swelling the effect of the so-called Yellow Vest protest that’s expected to embark from Red Deer on Feb. 15.
 
[…]
 
Several protest convoys of hundreds of vehicles have already trundled through Alberta venting anger over legal and political roadblocks facing the Trans Mountain and Energy East pipeline expansions.
 
Organizers of the Convoy to Ottawa effort say they’ll harness that momentum and emotion for the countrywide trek that is expected to end with a rally on Parliament Hill sometime between Feb. 19 and 23.

A “rally”? Fill the streets, park them and walk. Turn that city into a parking lot.

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