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R.I.P to the great Charlie Kirk! ~ R.I.P to our friend Caskur!


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Topic summary

Posted by Shen Li
 - March 05, 2026, 10:06:26 PM
Another major Canadian energy project paused.

An $8.25B oilsands expansion in Alberta is now on hold because of all of the Liberal red tape.

After years of Liberal policies like Bill C-69, the tanker ban, and costly so-called clean fuel standards, companies are hesitant to invest in Canada.

Carney doesn't need to travel the world looking for markets for our energy.
Those markets already exist. We just need a government willing to remove the barriers stopping Canadian projects from getting built.

I used to work for CNRL. They had huge expansion plans that meant investment, jobs and tax revenuel. It's being cancelled thanks to Carney and the Liberals.
Posted by Brent
 - March 05, 2026, 12:59:33 PM
This opinion about how Canada became poorer than Alabama was written by former Liberal MP Dan McTeague.
QuoteLast week, Twitter/X was all aflutter about a Globe and Mail article called, "How Canada Became Poorer Than Alabama." It discusses the fact that the state of Alabama, which too many of us associate with poverty and backwardness, has overtaken Canada in per capita GDP.

The most common reaction to this story seemed to have been sheer puzzlement: "How on earth could this happen?"

Well, the short answer is that the state did everything it could to attract investment, jobs, and talent, while keeping taxes low to make Alabama as affordable a place to live as possible.

To which all Canadians should respond, "Wouldn't that be nice?!" Our government seems more concerned with virtue signalling about climate than about making Canada an easier place to get a job, build a business, and raise a family.

One specific explanation for Alabama's attractiveness jumped out at me, though: "When companies invested in Alabama, they could receive permits and begin construction quickly. Red tape was for suckers."

That about sums up why Alabama is on the up, and Canada is losing ground.

Take, for instance, our desperate need for new and expanded pipeline infrastructure. Oil and gas is the backbone of our economy, but our ability to get it to market is constrained by our insufficient pipeline network. That makes it difficult to use our hydrocarbons to fuel Canada, it restricts the amount we can sell to the United States (US), and it makes it nearly impossible to sell anywhere else.

A new pipeline from Alberta to tidewater would enable us to open up Asian markets and shore up federal revenues, while creating thousands of jobs. It would also be a boon for national unity, making confederation work for discontented Albertans who are tempted to think their province might be better off going it alone. It's a no-brainer.

Yet months after the Carney/Smith Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) promised one, there has been zero visible movement.

Well, except for earlier this month, when Enbridge CEO Greg Ebel told investors that his company has no interest in financing the proposed pipeline.

And who could blame Enbridge? After losing roughly $600 million on the cancelled Northern Gateway, the company is not about to risk another dime of shareholders' money on a project that could be halted by protests, lawsuits, or overweening regulators before a drop of fuel passes through it.

Or, in Ebel's words, "I don't think investors or the infrastructure companies should be taking on the risk of development in jurisdictions that have historically created a challenge."

Barring any real assurance that the project is going to move forward, and that the government will have their back in a tough spot, the MOU pipeline project — which I was skeptical of from the first — is simply a bad investment.

Meanwhile, Mark Carney's Major Projects Office (MPO) — the centrepiece of his "build, baby, build" campaign rhetoric — has referred just a handful of projects for review. None have received the full "national interest" designation that actually clears the way for shovels in the ground. The Alberta pipeline itself won't even be submitted to the MPO until July, at the earliest.

Remember when Carney promised to "invest in nation-building infrastructure on a scale not seen in generations?" And to use "the emergency powers of the federal government to accelerate the major projects that we need in order to build this economy and take on the Americans?" So much for that!

There's rhetoric, and there are results.

If the Prime Minister truly wanted these projects to move forward, he would slash red tape permanently, repeal (not merely 'waive on a project-by-project basis') each of: Bill C-69, the No More Pipelines Act; Bill C-48, the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act; Bill C-59, which restricts the ability of companies to tout the environmental positives of their work if it doesn't conform to a vague, government-approved standard; and a host of other legislation which restricts the operation of fossil fuel companies and adjacent businesses.

These are challenging times, economically. This past year saw the slowest annual growth for Canada since 2020, the height of the pandemic. In this climate, Mark Carney should be bending over backwards to signal that Canada is open for business.

Instead, he's bending over backwards to appeal to China, while consciously alienating our biggest customer, the US, in the lead-up to CUSMA renegotiations.

Current polling suggests that the public isn't holding this against him, at least not yet, because Canadians see him as a steady hand at the wheel. But he reads to me like the activist he's always been, doubling down on policies and attitudes which have gotten us into our present mess.

I said before that Canadians associate Alabama with poverty and backwardness. But the Globe and Mail piece makes clear that this idea isn't so much incorrect as out-of-date. The state was a basket case for a long time, reaching a low point in the 1980s. But the really inspiring part of that story is that instead of ignoring it, they looked the problem right in the face and turned things around.

Canadians should learn from that story. Here's hoping we do, before it's too late.
Posted by Shen Li
 - March 04, 2026, 10:16:07 PM
A B.C. nurse was fined $93,000 for pointing out that there are two genders.
Posted by Thiel
 - March 04, 2026, 01:31:04 PM
Canadians take a look at Mr. Carney's Bill C-3. While Mr. Carney talks out of one side of his mouth about the need to reduce immigration and at the same time increases the number of temporary foreign workers 20 percent.

That is nothing compared to devastation Bill C-3 will cause to the country's health care and housing woes. This will allow generational migration based on one great great great grandparent having Canadian citizenship.
Posted by Thiel
 - March 04, 2026, 01:26:31 PM
Quote from: Brent on March 04, 2026, 12:48:03 PMIf you needed proof that the federal Liberals have completely lost the plot on immigration, look no further than the statements coming from India's High Commissioner to Canada, Dinesh K. Patnaik.

In a recent interview with CBC News, Patnaik suggested that because of our "complementary economies," Canada should be eager to welcome an additional 60 million Indians.

Let that number sink in for a moment. Sixty million.
The Carney government needs to grow a spine. When a foreign diplomat suggests something this outrageous, the response from Mr. Carney should be a firm and unambiguous "no."
Posted by Lokmar
 - March 04, 2026, 01:23:07 PM
Quote from: Brent on March 04, 2026, 12:48:03 PMIf you needed proof that the federal Liberals have completely lost the plot on immigration, look no further than the statements coming from India's High Commissioner to Canada, Dinesh K. Patnaik.

In a recent interview with CBC News, Patnaik suggested that because of our "complementary economies," Canada should be eager to welcome an additional 60 million Indians.

Let that number sink in for a moment. Sixty million.

Thats fukin shit! I hope your countrymen wise up!
Posted by Brent
 - March 04, 2026, 12:48:03 PM
If you needed proof that the federal Liberals have completely lost the plot on immigration, look no further than the statements coming from India's High Commissioner to Canada, Dinesh K. Patnaik.

In a recent interview with CBC News, Patnaik suggested that because of our "complementary economies," Canada should be eager to welcome an additional 60 million Indians.

Let that number sink in for a moment. Sixty million.
Posted by DKG
 - March 03, 2026, 10:04:44 AM
It isn't just the countless scandals former prime mininster Justin Trudeau and his corrupt government were guilty of during his decade of darkness for which he and the Liberals were never held accountable. It was not SNC-Lavalin, the draconian mishandling of COVID-19 mandates, unlawful use of the Emergencies Act, or the accumulation of our now $1.3 trillion debt due to endless misspending and waste, which continues today.

It is all of that combined with a higher cost of living, lack of affordable housing, social unrest, race-based policies, climate scaremongering, rising antisemitism, climbing youth unemployment, and the deliberate destruction of our national identity, and the fact that the Liberals are still governing over us. And of course, mass immigration.
Posted by Shen Li
 - March 02, 2026, 11:54:36 PM
Posted by Herman
 - March 02, 2026, 07:58:56 PM
Posted by Herman
 - March 01, 2026, 08:05:56 PM
Posted by Herman
 - February 27, 2026, 03:52:09 PM
Quote from: Brent on February 27, 2026, 12:51:37 PMWhy?
Because the Liberals will not let us ship enough natural gas to the East of the country.
Posted by Thiel
 - February 27, 2026, 01:40:27 PM
The Canadian construction association predicts there will be 100,000 building related lay-offs this year due to Canada's collapsing housing market.
Posted by Brent
 - February 27, 2026, 12:51:37 PM
Posted by Herman
 - February 26, 2026, 03:32:58 PM
Quote from: Brent on February 26, 2026, 01:13:22 PMWhat is wrong with this country. :facepalm:

Australia ships LNG 25,000 kilometres to Eastern Canada amid Asian slump
https://financialpost.com/commodities/energy/oil-gas/australia-lng-canada-asia-demand-slumps
You beat me to it.