Bill Dauterive is gay? OMG
Bill Dauterive is gay? OMG
Predictable.
Harper was in power for a decade and didn't deliver a single pipeline for Alberta, or even any measurable progress towards one, but it's all Trudeau's fault.
It's definitely disingenuous, but Trudeau and Co did kill two pipelines that would have helped Alberta during this crisis, and put in legislation that pretty much means that it wont be possible to build any more. I think Energy east was a lost opportunity in particular, as the feds could have threatened to withhold subsidies to Bombardier until Quebec got on board, and would have reduced Canadian dependency on Saudi oil. Instead they changed the rules to include downstream emissions which doesn't really make sense. C-48 is a tanker ban for the west coast, and C-69 will make it so no more pipelines can get approved in the future, so they do bring up the point that the liberals have not been friends of the oil industry.
That said, I don't believe they are responsible for the price of Alberta oil dropping from 70 dollars to 20 since july, but the industry has been fragile for a few years now and I can't say that Trudeau and company have been particularly helpful. I do know that if Bombardier was starting to go under, or the east coast fisheries, or the Ontario Auto industry, the feds would be there with plans on how to help, but have been conspicuously silent as the oil and gas industry dies a slow death.
I mean, I'm probably in the minority here, but the feds should be discouraging fossil fuel development and transitioning towards renewables. So I have no qualms with the oil industry taking a hit, whether by deliberate government action or indifference or world markets.
But I also cannot really think of anything Harper did that materially helped the oil sands.
It is a dying industry. Yes it is one we still rely on, and yes Canadian oil is better than Saudi oil. I get that we need oil. But I'm okay with the government not subsidizing the industry.
100% agree.
Oil and Gas is a dying industry.
But so is auto manufacturing. So is Canadian Aerospace. The Canadian auto plants are there mainly because of subsidies, which, once they run out, the plant closes. Bombardier is even worst. They exist simply due to government subsidies. Yet at the end of the day, Canadians continue to work in those industries, and the feds continue to support them. I don't agree with the federal government playing favorites, especially in the case of regional industries, because to favor Ontario, Quebec, the Atlantic provinces and BC while giving the shaft to Alberta and Saskatchewan isn't in the national interest.
Albertans will understandably begin to think federation is broken when they pay for equalization for Quebec and Ontario, Quebec and Ontario industries get federal government bailouts, and they cannot qualify for equalization and their industry is given the squeeze by the federal government even while the industry is in crisis.
Up until Canada can get by without importing oil from the Saudis and the industry worldwide is dead, I think the government should at least try to maintain it. They are currently almost killing it, and having Alberta collapse in fiscal ruin isn't going to help anybody.
The oil industry is heavily subsidized, but at the same time, they are among the most highly regulated industries in Canada. I mean, consider that the government decided to consider the upstream and downstream increase of emissions for energy east. Imagine putting those restrictions on others industries? Considering increased pollution from vehicles when considering building a Auto Plant? Increased emissions from jets from bombardier? Other industries are not getting that kind of regulatory squeeze.the oil industry is already heavily, heavily subsidized.
and I'm not sure I agree with you about the auto plants, all I have read has them rebounding from the bailouts and thriving.
what I do get is the political anger Trudeau has to deal with from Alberta. merited or not, I understand it.
and I don't disagree with Canadian oil > Saudi oil.
my big thing with pipelines is that I don't trust any of the pipeline companies to not cut corners / costs in construction. nor do I trust the oversight or regulatory authorities. I guess I'm of the mindset that if you're going to do this, do it right. and I don't have a lot of faith in the ability of the current players to make that happen...
That's how the Auto industry in Canada survives.The federal and Ontario governments are each investing more than $100 million to support a $1-billion partnership with Ford Canada.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne are announcing the conditional grants of up to $102.4 million each at a Ford engine plant in Windsor, Ont.
The Ontario government says the investment will create 300 new jobs at Ford in the province and protect hundreds more.
And to quote myself, just a week after I say it, GM closing all operations in Oshawa.The oil industry is heavily subsidized, but at the same time, they are among the most highly regulated industries in Canada. I mean, consider that the government decided to consider the upstream and downstream increase of emissions for energy east. Imagine putting those restrictions on others industries? Considering increased pollution from vehicles when considering building a Auto Plant? Increased emissions from jets from bombardier? Other industries are not getting that kind of regulatory squeeze.
https://globalnews.ca/news/3345073/justin-trudeau-ontario-auto-sector/
That's how the Auto industry in Canada survives.
You don't here about a plant staying open, god forbid expanding, without a shit ton of government tax breaks, low interest loans and grants behind it.
While expanding the oil and gas industry doesn't make sense for a very long term, right now it's the best bet. Especially with how much the Americans are expanding their energy industry with 2-3 pipelines coming online and their shale gas production ramping up. It really doesn't make sense to leave Canadian oil in the ground when we should be selling it for as much as we can while it still holds some value.
The one thing I did like about energy east was that most of the pipeline was already built, with most of it simply needing to reverse flow from east to west to west to east. It would have helped Alberta and cut off dependency on Saudi oil, it was a win win.
So the native community in western canada wants to build pipelines for Alberta's oil .... many of the same communities that opposed the lines that had been promoted by oil companies.
What does everyone think?
That makes less sense. Specific first nations along the route are taking the risks of having a pipeline run through their land for the benefits, why would you spread out and dilute what they would receive while not mitigating any of the risks? It would be pennies for everyone once every first nation got its hand in the pot.As I posted earlier (in the wrong area lol), I would give the native communities this opportunity. But it would be for all communities across canada to share in.
Yeah, sure. Or not, it's already fundedHeck, I would even agree that the government should subsidize the costs of building it.
Isn't that what got first nations in this mess they are in in the first place? Giving up rights to territory for things like guns and booze?But in return, I think that the aboriginal communities should be willing to make concessions, a win win solution
They get more money from the government of Canada and land claims than they will ever get from a single pipeline. Not only that, but how utterly condescending would that be? Give up everything that your ancestors negotiated in your behalf so the government of Canada will grant you the economic freedom to lift some of your communities out of poverty. Talk about blackmail.In return, I would like all land claims to be cancelled/ended. All reserves to be taken from under the control of the queen and canada itself.
At which point they are assimilated within a generation as those outside first nations communities would buy up all the property. And maybe not even assimilated by native Canadians, a lot of those outside Canada would rush to buy property at rock bottom prices.They would have to abide by Canadian laws and regulations.
Each family that has a property on a reserve, now will own that property outright, as will non natives who own a dwelling on these properties.
So every first nation that DOES use their traditional rights and live their traditional lifestyle are suddenly forbidden to do so.And finally, all fishing and hunting rights (which 850000 thousand of the 900000 registered aboriginals) never really use anyways imho
Heh. I am entirely unsurprised that Doug & Rob were both idiot fake-tough guy bullies as kids. It definitely carried over to their adult lives as well.Doug Ford could very well be the next prime minister of canada .... if scheer fails to win the next federal election.
That would be scary.
The guy is a moron and so was his brother.
They both were idiots in rexdale and use to always come over to keillor Mackay high school to try to play the toughie lol
Handing out they're decals from their dads factory and bullying the little kids lol
Twits .... the both of them