The international conservative movement is the biggest threat to real climate action. It has succeeded so far, in demonizing a PM who's very mediocre attempts at climate action proved to be too much for BIG FOSSIL FUEL COMPANIES...and the fossil fools who run them.
Now we have a 'business friendly' banker coming to the rescue. What he will have to offer Canadians so inattentive they imagined their affordability issues boiled down to a carbon tax that paid them money........is a mystery to me.
We ordinary Canadians better start using the brains God gave us....and fast, if we intend to leave something for our children other than climate disasters and the variety of proxy wars, starvation sanctions, and tariff conflicts these fascists are crafting to save their version of western civilization. Climate denial and more fossil fuel energy projects isn't an answer to anything the planet actually faces.
'Carney’s rigid deference to market logic is further reflected in the platform plank that deals with housing, which pledges to build four million homes “over the next several years.” ' Deference to marked 'logic' is what got us into the current mess. We built for the rich and ignored the poor. Starting with Mulroney. A great example of the fallibility of market 'logic'.
“What these corporate-backed groups really mean when they talk about removing internal trade barriers is dismantling regulations that protect workers, consumers, the environment, and nascent industries.” We, the public, need to pay close attention to this process and speak up when it goes awry.
I’m very familiar with his resume. He’s no doubt an accomplished individual. But we should look at what he’s advocating and whether it meets the moment.
Fwiw, I’ll be voting for my NDP MP Blake Desjarlais, who is being challenged by the exceptionally odious former Conservative MP Kerry Diotte.
Blake Desjarlais is a federal NDP MP. I'm not really in the business of telling people who to vote for, but would urge them to look at the policies each party is proposing and the political landscape in their riding, rather than each party leader's resume, which I don't think tells us much.
The international conservative movement is the biggest threat to real climate action. It has succeeded so far, in demonizing a PM who's very mediocre attempts at climate action proved to be too much for BIG FOSSIL FUEL COMPANIES...and the fossil fools who run them.
Now we have a 'business friendly' banker coming to the rescue. What he will have to offer Canadians so inattentive they imagined their affordability issues boiled down to a carbon tax that paid them money........is a mystery to me.
We ordinary Canadians better start using the brains God gave us....and fast, if we intend to leave something for our children other than climate disasters and the variety of proxy wars, starvation sanctions, and tariff conflicts these fascists are crafting to save their version of western civilization. Climate denial and more fossil fuel energy projects isn't an answer to anything the planet actually faces.
'Carney’s rigid deference to market logic is further reflected in the platform plank that deals with housing, which pledges to build four million homes “over the next several years.” ' Deference to marked 'logic' is what got us into the current mess. We built for the rich and ignored the poor. Starting with Mulroney. A great example of the fallibility of market 'logic'.
“What these corporate-backed groups really mean when they talk about removing internal trade barriers is dismantling regulations that protect workers, consumers, the environment, and nascent industries.” We, the public, need to pay close attention to this process and speak up when it goes awry.
I’m very familiar with his resume. He’s no doubt an accomplished individual. But we should look at what he’s advocating and whether it meets the moment.
Fwiw, I’ll be voting for my NDP MP Blake Desjarlais, who is being challenged by the exceptionally odious former Conservative MP Kerry Diotte.
Blake Desjarlais is a federal NDP MP. I'm not really in the business of telling people who to vote for, but would urge them to look at the policies each party is proposing and the political landscape in their riding, rather than each party leader's resume, which I don't think tells us much.