Sandra Finley

Nov 072018
 

REGARDING:

2018-10-21    US Navy Ship (US Southern Command) Lands On Ecuador’s Shore to Give Free Medical Care

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CONTEXT

As I understand, with help from Wikipedia, and other sources:

Ecuador:  the government of Rafael Correa, elected in 2006,  proposed a new Magna Carta for the country with the goal of stability and social development.  A new constitution was approved,  the work of a constitutional assembly, ratified through a referendum, by the registered voters of Ecuador in September 2008 with a 63.93% to 28.10% margin of victory.

Lenin Moreno had been Vice-President under Correa and succeeded Correa as President.  It was thought that Moreno would largely continue the policies and programs of the Government as it was under President Correa;  Moreno was seen to have been a supporter of Correa.   My personal view is that the Economic Hit Men of the U.S. got to Moreno.   See items # 2 and #3 below.

 

 

BELOW

  1.   UNION OF SOUTH AMERICAN NATIONS  (UNASUR)
  2.   POKING A FINGER IN THE EYE OF THE BULLY:   CORREA AND UNASUR, SUBSTANTIAL THREATS TO AMERICAN INTERESTS IN THE SOUTH
  3.   CORREA WILL PAY, JUST AS ASSANGE AND SNOWDEN ARE PAYING,  if the American Empire has its way.
  4.   DISPLAY OF POWER BY THE U.S., TO ECUADOR  (US Southern Command Lands . . .)
  5.   NOT TAKING IT LYING DOWN

 

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1.  UNION OF SOUTH AMERICAN NATIONS  (UNASUR)

An intergovernmental regional organization. . . .   dream of creating a South American version of the European Union.   Work on UNASUR began in 2004;  it didn’t come into full force until 2011,  wikipedia – UNASUR.

The headquarters in Quito, Ecuador was built under former President Rafael Correa of Ecuador, an enthusiastic backer of the organization.

Current – – Nov 6, 2018

https://www.apnews.com/ebc07027f215423da983d9a0bb50cd6e

Many backers initially hoped to create a regional parliament, a common currency and a common defense structure. While those goals soon fell away, it did serve as a structure to resolve several regional disputes and to promote development projects.

The late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was a major backer of the organization, seeing it as a counterweight to U.S. influence . . .

But enthusiasm for the group seems to have chilled, particularly under more moderate or conservative successor governments in several key nations.   Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay and Peru suspended their memberships in April, 2018.

INSERT, Sandra:   Three postings suggest “the chill” originates in North America, not in South America:

2016-03-22 There are two sides to the story. Why do we hear only one? (Terrorists & Context: CIA – examples Mossadegh, Lumumba, Arbenz, Guevera, Allende)

Ch. 34, New Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, John Perkins, 2016.   (some quotes from Ch 34)

Ch. 38, Your Friendly Banker as EHM. The New Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (EHM), John Perkins, 2016.  (some quotes from Ch 38)

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2.  POKING A FINGER IN THE EYE OF THE BULLY
CORREA AND UNASUR, THREATS TO AMERICAN INTERESTS IN THE SOUTH

 

Correa has had the nerve to stand up, in more than one way.

  • His role in UNASUR
  • Providing refuge for Julian Assange

2010-12-14   Why I’m posting bail money for Julian Assange, Michael Moore, and other updates on Assange case

2012-06-20   Why Julian Assange’s Ecuador Move is Brilliant, AlterNet, By Ray McGovern

2012-08-26   The Organization of American States (OAS) supports Ecuador’s position on Assange

2012-12-27    Julian Assange: UPDATE plus, his address to crowds in London

2017-06-24  Ecuador’s Correa Calls Assange Case an Historic Injustice

  • Doing what “developed countries” would do,  if it wasn’t the U.S. – – taking a principled stand re Edward Snowden

2013-06-28   Ecuador suspends preferential trade with US over Snowden affair

  • All the ways in which Correa changed things to benefit Ecuadoreans

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3.  CORREA WILL PAY, JUST AS ASSANGE AND SNOWDEN ARE PAYING,  if the American Empire has its way.

Correa rebuffed the U.S. Economic Hit Men (EHM’s).

(Background:  Jaime Roldós was President of Ecuador from August, 1979 until his death in May, 1981. In his short tenure, he became known for his firm stance on human rights.   Chapter 24 (4.5 pages) in Confessions of an EHM, “Ecuador’s President Battles Big Oil“,  tells of Roldos’ work for his countrymen.  Unfortunately,  that work was antagonistic to American corporate interests.

P. xi  Confessions:  “…   Jaime Roldós of Ecuador and Omar Torrijos of Panama.  Both had just died in fiery crashes.  Their deaths were not accidental.  They were assassinated because they opposed that fraternity of corporate, government, and banking heads whose goal is global empire.  We EHMs failed to bring Roldós and Torrijos around, and the other type of hit men, the CIA-sanctioned jackals who were always right behind us, stepped in.”

  Roldos was a role-model and inspiration for Correa.)

From Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, by John Perkins (more below):

Now, here was Correa, a candidate who openly invoked the memory of Jaime Roldos. . . . Correa said that he has been approached by EHMs (Economic Hit Men) and was very aware of the threat posed by jackals. . . .  

Correa’s terms as President ended (constitutional limit).

Correa’s Vice-President, Lenin Moreno, became President.

As mentioned above, in my view it is likely that American EHM put the finger on Moreno.  Or bought his soul.

SEQUENCE  – – July 3, 2018:   The current regime (Moreno) tried to have Correa arrested.

2018-07-03  Ecuador judge orders ex-president Correa be jailed, Reuters

. . .  “Judge Daniella Camacho receives the prosecutor’s request and orders preventive prison for ex-president Rafael C. for his alleged participation in the crime of illicit association and kidnapping,” the Ecuadorean prosecutor’s office said on Twitter.

“A request will be submitted to Interpol for his capture, with the aim of extraditing him.”

Correa co-operated fully with the justice system, but through and from Belgium where he is in self-exile with his family.  He had seen the writing on the wall, and fled Ecuador before he could be arrested.

Reports are through Correa’s lawyer:   Interpol Rejected Ecuador’s ‘Red Alert’ Request Against Rafael Correa Over Lack of Evidence

(Note to self:  There is more information in  Ecuador judge orders ex-president Correa be jailed – – integrate it into this posting.)

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SEQUENCE – – TWO DAYS AFTER ORDERS FOR THE ARREST OF CORREA, the UNASUR headquarters in Quito was on the chopping block.

 2018-07-05 Ecuador’s President Moreno: ‘Unasur Must Surrender Quito HQ’

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SEQUENCE – – and then, the Moreno Government caved in on the US $9.5 billion ruling against Chevron-Texaco for all the damage they did in the Amazon.

2018-09-08 Ecuador: Correa Accuses Gov’t of US Pact After Chevron Ruling

EXCERPT

What stirred controversy was the Ecuadorean government’s response to the court’s ruling (the Arbitration Court in the Hague, Netherlands).

Salvador (Ecuador’s Solicitor General) not only said the country will have to pay Chevron  without announcing any actions against the ruling but also announced  the state had the responsibility to nullify the US $9.5 billion ruling against Chevron and in favor of the affected communities, ratified earlier this year by the Constitutional Court, Ecuador highest court, which was suspended a week prior to the Chevron announcement.  . . .

Moreno’s education minister Fander Falconi said via Twitter: “Chevron’s grave harm against our people and ecosystem are obvious… We must condemn the ruling and those responsible, its contents threaten the right of the people of the Amazon.”

Moreno’s former minister of the environment Tarsicio Granizo said: “I think a campaign by the state against the ruling of The Hague is necessary to show the world the harm Chevron caused to the Amazon and its people.”

(CANADIANS  might think of   Alberta regulator estimates oilpatch’s financial liabilities are hundreds of billions . . .)     Do We, our Regulators, our Courts, and our Leaders have the nerve to collect payment from those responsible?   In solidarity.   Or do we agree to become impoverished?

EXCERPT:

Add to the list of South American leaders  who were done away with, by the Americans, to suit American corporate interests:

president of Ecuador, Roldos “died in a fiery airplane crash.” Omar Torrijos (president, Panama) later “dropped from the sky in a gigantic fireball”. Both men dead assassinated in 1981.  Roldos at the end of May, Torrijos less than three months later, with almost no reporting in the U.S.

Now, here was Correa, a candidate who openly invoked the memory of Jaime Roldos. . . . Correa said that he has been approached by EHMs (Economic Hit Men) and was very aware of the threat posed by jackals. . . .

In 1968, Texaco (became Chevron) had only just discovered petroleum in Ecuador’s Amazon.  . . .

It makes you sick what they did (documented in the APPENDED).   And now  Lenin Moreno’s government said the state is obliged to reverse a Constitutional Court ruling stating Chevron should pay for environmental damages.

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4.  DISPLAY OF POWER BY THE U.S., TO ECUADOR

Take a look at the picture of the large “US Southern Command” ship with the Red Cross flag, deployed to Ecuador.

2018-10-21    US Navy Ship (US Southern Command) Lands On Ecuador’s Shore to Give Free Medical Care

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 5.  NOT TAKING IT LYING DOWN

(Note to myself:  excerpt out the citizen resistance in Ecuador & put it here,  from the posting Ecuador judge orders ex-president Correa be jailed)

Internationally,  Correa is included in:

2018-09-01 An Online Vigil in Defense of Julian Assange With Daniel Ellsberg, Craig Murray, Bill Binney and Ray McGovern, Consortium News

 and there’s a recent action I’ll add to this.

 It is very important that people know the connected stories of Rafael Correa, Julian Assange, Edward Snowden, Daniel Ellsberg, and others who have put their personal lives on the line, in defence of democracy, justice and fairness.  The vigil for Assange is also for Snowden and Correa.  People like Ellsberg and McGovern, Chelsea Manning (whistle blowers who are not in jail or exile) are very active in the fight.

Awareness is insurance against the propaganda that the American Empire is so good at seeding and spreading.

 

Nov 072018
 
  • Ecuador

    Ecuador’s President, Lenin Moreno. | Photo: Reuters

Unasur was championed by progressive leaders, such as former Ecuadorean and Venezuelan presidents Rafael Correa and Hugo Chavez.

Ecuador’s President Lenin Moreno is asking the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) to hand over the regional integration bloc’s headquarters building, located north of Quito, as uncertainty over the bloc’s future continues.

RELATED:
Rivadeneira: Justice is Being Manipulated Against Rafael Correa

“The Unasur building was ceded to the countries that make it up. We are going to ask Unasur to return that building so it can be better used. We are not opposed to integration, but it hasn’t worked because of a disrespect of others,” Moreno posted on his Twitter account.

Unasur, a project of regional economic and political integration championed by progressive leaders such as former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and former Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa, has faced challenges as a surge of right-wing governments have begun to oppose it. Earlier this year, six countries suspended their membership.

The organization’s leadership had fallen into the hands of right-wing Argentine President Mauricio Macri, and failed to find cohesiveness during this time. Several countries announced their suspension after Bolivia assumed the temporary leadership of the bloc.

President Moreno’s decision comes only days after his government announced it was seeking the preventive detention of former President Correa for alleged involvement in a failed kidnapping, charges he vehemently denies. Thousands of Correa supporters went out into the streets of Quito on Thursday to condemn the decision.

Nov 072018
 

CONTEXT  affects interpretation.   You may want to also look out:

 BACKGROUND  for US Navy Ship (US Southern Command) Lands On Ecuador’s Shore . . .

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  • Former President Rafael Correa

    Former President Rafael Correa | Photo: Reuters

Published 21 October 2018

The US Navy

The US Navy’s USNS Comfort ship in Esmeraldas
In a series of warming military relations between Ecuador and the United States, US Navy’s USNS Comfort lands in Esmeraldas to give free ambulatory care.

The U.S. Navy’s USNS Comfort ship arrived in Ecuador Saturday to begin providing free medical care to the city of Esmeraldas along the northwest coast. It will see patients from between Oct. 22 and 26.

RELATED:
 US Navy Plane Begins Flyovers in Ecuador

“Today, the USNS Comfort hospital ship arrived in Esmeraldas to provide medical care to those most in need,” the United States Embassy in Ecuador tweeted.

Comfort’s technical staff disembarked at the Balao oil terminal dock in Esmeraldas, Ecuador to begin installing medical equipment, according to EFE.

The Navy ship began making medical rounds this month and by December will have offered free service to Honduras, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru under the U.S. Southern Command’s Enduring Promise Program.

According to the U.S. Southern Command those on board “will work alongside partners to provide medical assistance based on the needs identified by each host nation.” In Ecuador, 53 Ecuadorean university students will support Comfort activities.

“This mission is a symbol of what can be accomplished when partners work together to aid people in need,” said U.S. Navy Adm. Kurt Tidd, commander of U.S. Southern Command in its official statement regarding the two-month medical brigade. Tidd called the deployment in Ecuador, “humanitarian in nature.”

Staff on the medical ships are expected to help an estimated 500 to 750 people per day in preventive medicine, pediatrics, dentistry, optometry, physiotherapy, and dermatology.

This is the latest in SouthCom’s attempt at soft relations with Ecuador over the past several months under President Lenin Moreno (2017-present).

Last June Ecuador’s “military hosted a team of soldiers from the Kentucky National Guard” that focused on military vehicle maintenance. The Kentucky based squad visited the country’s capital of Quito and the major port city, Guayaquil.

As well, in early October, the U.S. military reinitiated its ‘fly-over’ program in which U.S. planes will surveil “Ecuador’s coast for three to four days every month to ‘fight against drug trafficking, organized crime, human trafficking, illegal fishing, and contraband’ ”, according to The Progressive.

Former Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa (2008) won domestic and regional praise when in 2009 he made good on a campaign pledge to not renew the U.S. Navy lease for its base located along Ecuador’s Pacific coast, citing national sovereignty and long-held U.S. imperialism in the region for the change.

“The arrival of the vessel is part of the strengthening of defense cooperation between the governments of Ecuador and the United States,” added Ecuador’s Ministry of Defense.

Moreno also received U.S. Vice President Mike Pence in Quito earlier in June where they signed military cooperation agreements, reportedly discussed Julian Assange’s asylum, as well agreeing on a US$10 million loan to Ecuador in order to deal with the “Venezuelan migration crisis.”

Tags

Nov 072018
 

A Swedish teenager sets a ball rolling.  A youth in Sudbury catches it and throws it to us . . .    Great!   I’ve reserved  Friday, December 7 on my calendar.

 

With thanks to Dianne Rhodes:

Please save the date: Friday, December 7, 2018.  

During the international climate negotiations in Katowice, Poland, youth are asked to join Greta Thunberg and strike from school on Friday, December 7, 2018.

 

Following the hottest summer on record in Sweden since records began 262 years ago, Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg started cutting classes at school. Dismayed by lack of real action on the climate crisis, Greta said, “If grown-ups don’t give a <__> about my future, I won’t either.

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2018/sep/01/swedish-15-year-old-cutting-class-to-fight-the-climate-crisis   

On Friday, November 2, 2018, a youth in Sudbury, Ontario was the first youth in the Western Hemisphere to join Greta’s #FridaysForFuture #ClimateStrike.

https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/1359966275742?fbclid=IwAR3Os_7Et2BpidP_1yg5M-xUtQiLB5CvCx3LlUTvrtvZ6xUPoZndwW6UzPI  

 

The 1.5C report from the IPCC made it abundantly clear that #WeDontHaveTime to wait now.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/07/climate/ipcc-climate-report-2040.html
http://report.ipcc.ch/sr15/pdf/sr15_spm_final.pdf      

 

Climate Reality Canada, iMatter Canada, and Citizens’ Climate Lobby Canada are hoping you will help us.   Together we can create the largest school strike for the climate on record.

 

Our agreed message for the youth is: “You are jeopardizing our future.”

 

For now please mark your calendars: Friday, December 7, 2018, for the  #FridaysForFuture  #ClimateStrike

Keep calm and price carbon. Thanks.

Truly, Cathy

“If you want to be incrementally better, be competitive – If you want to be exponentially better, be cooperative.” – Unknown

Cathy Orlando, MSc BEd
Citizens’ Climate Lobby
International Outreach Manager and Canadian DirectorCell Phone/ WhatsApp:  1 (705)  929-4043Email: cathy@citizensclimate.org
Twitter: @ConnectedCathySkype: Trinx350THANK YOU FOR YOUR LEADERSHIP ON THE CLIMATE CRISIS
“The real problem of leadership is a failure of nerve. Leaders fail not because they lack information, skill, or technique, but because they lack the nerve and presence to stand firm in the midst of other people’s emotional anxiety and reactivity. “   http://www.bobthune.com/2016/06/summary-edwin-friedmans-a-failure-of-nerve-in-500-words/

 

At Citizens’ Climate Lobby we believe that people are good, and that democracy works. We are confident that our approach will work because we see progress. We stand for a solution, not in protest of other solutions. We don’t expect perfection from ourselves or others; this is a process and we know that people can improve. Together, we are a community that offers one another comfort, support, and fun as we work.

 

 

 

Nov 052018
 

Background for:

2018-11-01 Alberta regulator privately estimates oilpatch’s financial liabilities are hundreds of billions more than what it told the public, National Observer

ALBERTA,  Oil patch liabilities “hundreds of billions”.    Means ALL Canadians will pay.   Or . . .

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(UPDATE:  add to the Tally:  2019-11-06 Houston Oil And Gas, Calgary, Leaves Up To 1,400 Orphaned Wells After Going Bust, Huff Post)

“HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS” – CORRUPTION OF THE REGULATORY PROCESS

We are looking at corruption, the same as in third world countries that have resources to exploit.

Kevin Taft does an excellent job in his book  Oil’s Deep State  of telling the story for  Alberta and Ottawa.   He weaves in background tactics and money that fuel what’s happening, but originate in the U.S.   As I was reading, I was thinking:

  • you could change “Alberta and Ottawa” to “Saskatchewan and Ottawa“,  the story is the same.
  • you could change “Oil” to “Uranium and Nuclear”, the story is the same.
  • you could change “Oil” to “Seeds”, the story is the same.
  • we are fighting hard to create a different story, when you change “Oil” to “Water”.

In short, Kevin Taft has documented a widely-used template.   The corporatocracy uses it.   It’s to our benefit to understand, and to apply it in our struggles.  Postings related to “Oil” only:

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Specific example, SASKATCHEWAN, but applies in other parts of Canada, too:

2018-06-07    Provincial Auditor Saskatchewan: abandoned oil & gas wells, $4 billion (Alberta will be many times more). Revolving door: former premier Brad Wall now at Osler Law Firm (help for Kinder Morgan). Before that, Dwayne Lingenfelter (NDP Deputy Premier) to Nexen (just one example).

EXCERPT:

Tax-payers across Canada – – maybe we should start tightening our belts ?   or, how about revolution?

  • The SK Provincial Auditor is talking potential $4 billion cleanup costs for abandoned wells
  • Alberta has many times more wells than Saskatchewan, wonder how much they’re adding to the tab?  (UPDATE:  The National Observer just answered the question – – thanks!)
  • We are also supposed to pony up $4.5 billion to buy a 50-year-old pipeline, and
  • Then add more billions to build a pipeline
  • While, 2018-06-01,  Every Canadian Already Gives $100 a Year to Big Oil, Study Reveals

 People from Saskatchewan and Alberta have a reputation for being tough people.   As far as I can see, they are getting fleeced by Government officials they adore, AND by the industry millionaires and billionaires.   After the money has been siphoned off, to people who are paid millions of dollars a year, and to “shareholders”,  Citizens across the country  are on the hook to pay billions upon billions of dollars for cleanups and bailouts.   And I’d guess,  billions more if we don’t do effective resistance.

Four items tie things together (Sask.):

  1.   Excerpt, 2018 Auditor General Saskatchewan Report:   future cleanup costs of oil & gas (o&g) wells could exceed $4 billion
  2.   Brad Wall, 2017,  starts work for Osler Law Firm (oil & gas, Kinder Morgan one of its clients) – 3 months after stepping down from Premier’s role.   (Wall is not a lawyer.)
  3.   The 2016 request from Brad Wall to the Federal Government, for $156 million to help with cleanup costs of estimated 1,000 abandoned wells.  Two years later the Provincial Auditor reports  30,000 abandoned wells and potentially $4 billion in costs.

(Not to mention the cost of cleanup related to the uranium industry in northern Saskatchewan.  In 2017 the costs for one mine were 10 times higher than the original $25M estimate.   No one pretends that these newspaper reports represent a comprehensive list of the cleanups to be done in northern Sask.   http://thestarphoenix.com/business/mining/abandoned-mine-cleanup-project-poses-a-deep-moral-problem.)      (also http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/uranium-gunnar-mine-cleanup-cost-saskatchewan-1.4114674))

There’s documented examples

  • the horrendous costs of cleaning up abandoned o&g wells, bodies of water and mines
  • all the while, there have been sweetheart royalty deals and tax avoidance.

Not addressed here:

  • health costs from pollution to pay for
  • exorbitant salaries and perks documented in other postings.

 

A TRICKLE IN TAXES and ROYALTIES PAID:

2018-10-26  CRA files appeal in multibillion-dollar tax case against Cameco, Saskatoon Star Phoenix

It’s possible that the appeal would not have happened without all the pressure mounted by Canadians to ensure that the CRA did its job.

And for oil and gas:

2017-10-26 Revealed: oil giants pay billions less tax in Canada than abroad, The Guardian

GOVT WEB PAGE.   DRILLING INCENTIVES.  Looks to me like the ROYALTY RATE is 2.5% in Saskatchewan, a fraction of what is collected in other countries.  The revolving door is no surprise.

 

CLEAN-UP, THE MINING INDUSTRY:

Just one example:

2018-06-09 Giant Mine, by Jimmy Thomson, The Narwhal (Yellowknife, Gold Mine, bankrupt, a billion dollar cleanup.)

a toxic smorgasbord of buildings, tailings ponds and a quarter-million tonnes of arsenic stored underground  . . .   before large amounts of arsenic start escaping from collapsing buildings.   … 

The poisoning from the Giant Mine has been known for a long time.   News is sneaking out, a billion dollars — ALL from tax-payers.

 

NOW FOR THE WHOPPER – – except that it’s the oilpatch’s liability, not ours – – if we stand together:

2018-11-01 Alberta regulator privately estimates oilpatch’s financial liabilities are hundreds of billions more than what it told the public, National Observer

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Anyhow, after reading    Alberta regulator privately estimates oilpatch’s financial liabilities are hundreds of billions more than what it told the public, National Observer, 

it’s important to remind ourselves about the Corporatocracy that is running the show.   Alberta regulator privately estimates   is just one piece in a much larger picture that stinks.

Nov 052018
 

(This was originally Item #2  in

2010-02-11   Manipulators without conscience. This is your food. Bayer’s GM rice. Triffid (U of S) GM flax.  Jane Jacobs on separation of commerce and governance.)

 

THE PROBLEMS WE GET INTO WHEN WE DO NOT HAVE A SEPARATION OF POWERS BETWEEN THE STATE AND COMMERCE: JANE JACOBS

The GM rice and GM flax outrage is part of the Democracy Movement that is currently sweeping over North America.

It illustrates one of the WHY’s we don’t have democracy in Canada or in the U.S.

If a people fail to maintain a separation of powers between the commercial and governance (guardianship) functions in their society, they succumb to corruption.  The current situation is completely predictable.

There are steps that must be taken to evolve, or to strengthen democracy.   But those evolutions will be futile if we don’t also get the corporations out of Government (bureaucracy and agencies) and out of the Universities.  I say this from experience and on the authority of:

Jane Jacobs’ book Systems of Survival (1992).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systems_of_Survival

Jacobs describes “two fundamental and distinct ethical systems, or systems of survival as she calls them. These systems supply ethical direction in the conduct of human life.

Jacobs uses the term “ethical syndrome” rather than “ethical system”. “Syndrome” in her usage does not mean “disease” or “disorder”, but merely, from its Greek roots, “set of elements that go together”. She argues that each syndrome arose naturally out of different modes of human behavior, but that they can conflict and cause serious problems if not understood.

(INSERT:  the two sets of ethics are different because they each serve a different functional need of the society, one evolved for the guardianship of resources and the other for the commercial function of the society.)

The subtitle is “A Dialogue on the Moral Foundations of Commerce and Politics

In the preface, Jacobs explains, “This book explores the morals and values that underpin viable working life. Like the other animals, we find and pick up what we can use, and appropriate territories. But unlike the other animals, we also trade and produce for trade. Because we possess these two radically different ways of dealing with our needs, we also have two radically different systems of morals and values – both systems valid and necessary.” [1]

The end point is that if a people do not understand and if they allow the “two radically different systems of morals and values” to be used in the wrong territory (commerce in government and vice versa), corruption is the consequence.  Jacobs points to Africa for example.  Today we needn’t look so far.

The GM flax and rice stories are testament to the need to get the corporations out of Government and out of the Universities, the separation of powers that is critical to prevent the corruption of the democracy, a thing we must achieve if we are to be successful in the Democracy Movement.

Rallies for democracy (No Prorogue) and work on Proportional Representation are not sufficient.  Corporatocracy is running the show through politicians, but MORE IMPORTANTLY through the bureaucracy, agencies of Government and through the “educational” system, our Universities.

The values of corporatocracy are in direct conflict with democratic values.  We will not evolve democracy unless we are able to separate the powers.  The quislings working within Government and the University on behalf of the corporate interest must be sent out of Government.   They belong on the corporate payroll, not on ours.

It is up to us, through Government, to fund our universities.  Corruption is inevitable when the Government hands over governance AND sells our universities (the knowledge base) to the corporations.

Nov 042018
 

The National Observer

used FOI to obtain content of the Alberta Regulator’s presentation to an Oil Company audience.   It’s pretty shocking.   I insist on context!   which you’ll find in:   REMINDER: A tally, citizens are on the hook for . . .

The battle in Ecuador led by former President Rafael Correa, to insist that the Oil and Gas companies pay the cost of clean-up, is our time of solidarity.

Reference  2018-09-08 Ecuador: Correa Accuses Gov’t of US Pact After Chevron Ruling

Scroll down to SEQUENCE – – the Moreno Government caved in on a US $9.5 billion ruling against Chevron for all the damage done in the Amazon.

Cleaning up Alberta’s fossil fuel industry could cost an estimated $260 billion, internal regulatory documents warn.

The staggering financial liabilities for the energy industry’s graveyard of spent facilities were spelled out by a high-ranking official of the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) in a February presentation to a private audience in Calgary.

“We can continue down our current path until the impacts are felt by the public … or we can start to implement the numerous changes that we now know need to be made,” Alberta Energy Regulator vice-president Robert Wadsworth said in February.

The estimated liabilities for the oil-rich western Canadian province are far higher than any liability amount made public by government and industry officials.

The official who delivered the new estimates is Rob Wadsworth, vice president of closure and liability for the AER. He said that a “flawed system” of industrial oversight is to blame for a problem that ultimately could leave taxpayers on the hook to cover a portion of the costs.

He also called on all stakeholders to accept tougher regulations and move away from a system that now allows the largest companies to take centuries to clean up their toxic well site graveyards.

“We can continue down our current path until the impacts are felt by the public … or we can start to implement the numerous changes that we now know need to be made,” say notes from Wadsworth’s presentation. He added that the liabilities are underfunded and the collection of security funds from industry is “insufficient.”

Until now, the public has been told the liabilities have been calculated at $58 billion, far less than Wadsworth’s estimate. The presentation did not spell out what he based his estimate on and Wadsworth declined an interview. The government meanwhile has only collected $1.6 billion in liability security from companies.

The liabilities include costs that companies must assume to shut down aging and inactive oil and gas exploration wells, facilities and pipelines once they are no longer needed. Another significant part of the liability is the clean-up of toxic tailings ponds from oilsands extraction mines near Fort McMurrray. The ponds have sprawled to cover an area the size of Kelowna.

The tailing ponds are used by companies to dump the waste from the mining of bitumen. The process normally requires hot water to separate bitumen from the oily deposits of sand beneath the boreal forest in Alberta.

‘We have known these programs were flawed’

The AER said its vice president’s comments were “a snapshot in time of estimated total liability” and based on a “worst-case scenario” of a complete industry shutdown.

This explanation contrasts with statements in Wadsworth’s presentation that the estimates are “likely less than the actual cost.” He also warned in his presentation that liabilities from conventional wells were getting larger due to an “increasing number of licensees with questionable financial capacity to meet closure obligations.”

The AER also says that “industry companies are responsible” for the costs in Wadsworth’s estimate.

On the industry side, a spokesman said that the liabilities might not be as high as they appear.

Lars De Pauw, executive director of the Orphan Well Association — an industry-funded group that assumes responsibility for the inactive wells of bankrupt companies — said the association’s work is getting done this year at a cost that was 30 per cent below the public estimates made by the regulator.

A screenshot from a private presentation delivered by Alberta Energy Regulator vice-president Robert Wadsworth in Calgary on Feb. 28, 2018 outlining the financial liabilities in the province’s oilpatch. Image from AER presentation

 

But in his February presentation, Wadsworth said that the current rules are so weak that companies can delay setting aside money to cover cleanup costs until they are out of business and can no longer afford to pay anything.

“Even though we have known these programs were flawed, there has been no proactive change to the liability programs,” according to speaking notes accompanying the first presentation, delivered on Feb. 28 to the Calgary-based Petroleum History Society. “Until recently, the implications of our flawed system had not been realized.”

Robert Wadsworth, AER, Alberta Energy Regulator, liabilities

Alberta Environment Minister Shannon Phillips answers questions in an interview in her Edmonton office on Oct. 30, 2018. Photo by Dave Carels, Global News

 

Industry will be held to a ‘higher standard now’

Wadsworth said that tougher regulations would be needed to prevent the problem from getting worse while ensuring that “we don’t trip economic growth” for a sector that is an important engine in Canada’s economy.

But he told the industry executives in June that the current pace of cleanup was too slow. The 15 largest companies, for example, would need about 300 years to clean up all of their wells — more than 150,000 — in the absence of new regulations to make them accelerate their efforts.

The overall industry average is lower, but it would still take them about 50 years to abandon their current inventory of inactive wells, he explained.

“You are going to be held to a higher standard now,” he said to the industry leaders, according to the notes from his presentation. “We are going to be implementing abandonment targets to slow the growth of inactive wells.”

Robert Wadsworth, AER, Alberta Energy Regulator, liabilities

A slide from a presentation delivered by AER vice-president Robert Wadsworth on Feb. 28, 2018 shows the growth in the number of inactive wells in Alberta. Screenshot from AER presentation

 

He said that the new targets would be needed to make a dent in the total liabilities, while introducing “more credible” standards.

The internal documents also indicated that the regulator was working with officials at the highest levels of the Government of Alberta (GOA) to solve the problem.

“Two shoes need to drop before we can really move in a deliberate, integrated and collaborative way to change the system with industry, GOA, creditors and stakeholders and to ensure success,” he told industry executives in June.

Stronger rules in Texas and New Mexico

Wadsworth’s February presentation also noted that Alberta and B.C. had weaker regulations for collecting security deposits and managing the cleanup of oilfield sites than other oil-producing jurisdictions such as Texas and New Mexico.

“While we could have made improvements to security collection, the financial backstop mechanism and implementation of targets, why have we not done so?” he asked.

He added that recent developments have provoked efforts to change the regulatory system, including a legal case involving a bankrupt company called the Redwater Energy Corporation, which went out of business before it could clean up its inactive wells to prevent environmental contamination. The provincial regulator has taken the case to the Supreme Court to challenge existing bankruptcy rules, in order to get permission to collect money needed to clean up Redwater’s wells from its creditors, instead of using taxpayer dollars.

Robert Wadsworth, AER, Alberta Energy Regulator, liabilities

A slide from a presentation on Feb. 28, 2018 by Alberta Energy Regulator vice-president Robert Wadsworth compares the management of liabilities in different jurisdictions. Screenshot from AER presentation

‘Have a great weekend!’

Alberta has also been lobbying the federal government to change the national bankruptcy law so that companies can’t walk away from their cleanup obligations.

While the presentation noted that industry has decreasing capacity to pay for higher fees or taxes to cover these types of costs, it also said something must be done to address a rising number of inactive wells:

“We must understand and share information about our work as we make difficult decisions. We will be open and transparent in our liability facts; telling a compelling, accurate story of the liability across all sectors, including contamination, to Albertans that is clear, timely and easy to understand.”

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP), an industry lobby group that represents most of the country’s oil and gas industry, declined to comment on estimates from the newly-released documents, suggesting instead that the regulator should be asked to explain them.

In recent months, CAPP has lobbied against efforts to increase federal oversight of companies through new legislation — the Trudeau government’s Bill C-69 — arguing that the “Canadian oil and natural gas industry is regulated by some of the highest regulatory standards in the world.”

The lobby group also declined to say what the regulator’s views say about the state of oversight of the industry. It also declined to answer questions about whether it believed its member companies were well-positioned to cover the cost of their liabilities and whether they were doing a good job of managing these liabilities to ensure that taxpayers would not be left on the hook.

Phillips, the Alberta environment minister, said the solution involves partners at other levels of government, including municipalities, First Nations and the federal government.

“We have a number of liability questions that remain unanswered because this is a long term problem and we did not see leadership from the previous (Alberta) government for 44 years,” she said. “There’s no question that there is more work to be done.”

Asadollahi, the environmental consultant who is a director of policy research at Horizon Advisors, made similar comments, noting that the Alberta government has its work cut out for it after previous governments failed to take action.

“So the current government is essentially (inheriting) bad policies and poor decisions of previous governments that were trying to make a buck or two in the short term.”

The office of United Conservative Party Leader Jason Kenney declined an offer to review the new estimates and documents released by the regulator, and to comment on the issue.

“Thanks for the opportunity but we’re going to pass,” wrote UCP spokeswoman Christine Myatt in an email to Global News, National Observer and the Toronto Star on Oct 26. “Have a great weekend!”

 

Nov 022018
 

(UNGA = United Nations General Assembly)

Venezuela and the US: Contrasting Worldviews at the UN

  • US President Donald Trump and US Ambassador Nikki Haley at the 73rd UNGA, 2018.

    US President Donald Trump and US Ambassador Nikki Haley at the 73rd UNGA, 2018. | Photo: Reuter

 

Without compromise, continued divisions in Latin America can devastate the whole region, writes Nino Pagliccia.

The 73rd United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) that kicked off September 25 brought together the presidents, heads of governments and high-ranking representatives of the 193 UN member states. The General Assembly is the main deliberative and policy-making organ of the UN. It is the only UN body with equal representation, where each country has one vote.

However, it is the general debate that takes place during the first five days that draws most of the attention. That is when heads of state take turns to speak about their countries achievements and challenges, and make statements of commitments and political position. It is an occasion to tell the world where they stand on many issues. It is a great opportunity for all those who want to see and hear the speeches of the world leaders direct on the UN live stream videos.

There is usually a lot of anticipation.

One country out of the 193, with a few exceptions, elicits the expectations of all the others for its geopolitical implications and impact. It is the United States of America. The reactions range from diplomatic rebuttals or concurrence, to expressions of defiance.

In our region of the Americas, I would like to focus on the speeches of the president of the United States, Donald Trump, and the president of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro Moros. Understanding the position of the two countries today is key to understanding the future of Latin America.

We have seen a great deal of confrontation between the two countries over the years. Venezuela is trying to consolidate its socialist Bolivarian Revolution initiated by Hugo Chavez in 1999, and the U.S. is overtly attempting to stop it by provoking a regime change and establish a pro-neoliberal government that Venezuela openly and vehemently rejects.

Can we foresee any compromise in their position from their speeches at the UN?

How far or how close are the ideologies and relationships between the two countries as far as we can tell from what was said or not said at the UN? The speeches can be downloaded from the UN website.

Donald Trump’s Speech:

Donald Trump started out with what seems to be his trademark, praising himself for the best administration in the history of the United States. That caused laughs from the audience. Trump was caught off guard by the unexpected reaction and off-script said, “but it is OK”. I mention this only to highlight the contrast in the reactions from the audience to the two presidents. President Maduro received several rounds of applauses and a standing ovation at the end.

Having put that comment out of the way for the benefit of those who have not had the chance to watch the speakers on video, what did Trump really say?

Overall, in term of U.S. foreign policy, Trump dedicated almost a quarter of his speech to issues related to the Middle East. While praising the “advances” that the United States has made against terrorism, surprisingly he did not make a single reference to Russia’s important balancing contribution to de-escalating conflicts in the region.

On the other hand, only four short paragraphs were dedicated to Venezuela. I quote them in full:

“Currently, we are witnessing a human tragedy, as an example, in Venezuela. More than 2 million people have fled the anguish inflicted by the socialist Maduro regime and its Cuban sponsors.

“Not long ago, Venezuela was one of the richest countries on Earth. Today, socialism has bankrupted the oil-rich nation and driven its people into abject poverty.

“Virtually everywhere socialism or communism has been tried, it has produced suffering, corruption, and decay. Socialism’s thirst for power leads to expansion, incursion, and oppression. All nations of the world should resist socialism and the misery that it brings to everyone.

“In that spirit, we ask the nations gathered here to join us in calling for the restoration of democracy in Venezuela. Today, we are announcing additional sanctions against the repressive regime, targeting Maduro’s inner circle and close advisors.”

That short reference to Venezuela understates the U.S. determination, drive and actions to delegitimize and destabilize the democratically elected and therefore legitimate Venezuelan government. It does so by using old Cold War language like ‘socialism,’ ‘communism,’ ‘misery’ and ‘repressive regime.’ We will never know how Trump reconciles his contradiction apparent in another statement in his speech, “We believe that when nations respect the rights of their neighbors, and defend the interests of their people, they can better work together to secure the blessings of safety, prosperity, and peace.”

But that old language addressed at Venezuela may well be aimed at China as well with his call to “resist socialism” and its “thirst for power.” In fact, when Trump’s language is put together with other keywords in his speech like militarism (“Our military will soon be more powerful than it has ever been before”), sovereignty (“We will never surrender America’s sovereignty to an unelected, unaccountable, global bureaucracy”), protectionism (“The United States has just announced tariffs on another US$200 billion in Chinese-made goods for a total, so far, of US$250 billion”), and patriotism (“We reject the ideology of globalism, and we embrace the doctrine of patriotism”), we notice an affirmation of what political analyst Andrew Korybko called the “Trump World Order” and Trump’s “alternative model to what is now the Chinese-led Liberal-Globalist order.”

Those same words, though, together with a practice of intolerance for diversity, could also suggest a desperate transition and indicate that the “alternative model” is one of ultra-nationalism. We know from the history of the 20th Century that ultra-nationalism was a disastrous social experiment for the world.

The new U.S. strategy includes a retreat from many of the international commitments, such as the Commission on Human Rights and the International Criminal Court, among others, in the name of “patriotism” and for the sake of “sovereignty”. However, U.S. interventionism in the affairs of other sovereign states continues making more evident the U.S. doctrine of exceptionalism.

Nicolas Maduro’s Speech:

Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro stated the intention of his presence at the UNGA in order “to bring the truth of a people that struggles.” And as such he spoke frankly, directly and forcefully. His words were explicit and compelling about Venezuela’s principles and the issues affecting Venezuela vis-à-vis the United States. His speech had a lot to say about the United States, referring to Donald Trump five times by name, and no less than eleven times as the “president of the United States.”

Here are some of his quotes categorized by relevant topics. No further comments are necessary.

On the United States withdrawing from international commitments showing exceptionalism:

“The president of the United States yesterday, from this podium, threatened the governments of the world to submit to his designs, to his orders and to collaborate with his policies in the United Nations system, or they [the U.S.] would act accordingly.”

On U.S. sanctions:

“Yesterday the president of the United States, from this very podium, announced new sanctions, pretentious economic and financial sanctions against our country, precisely in the sanctuary of the law, in the sanctuary of international legality. Does the United Nations System know that unilateral sanctions, using domination, the favorable currency, and financial persecution, are considered illegal from the point of view of international law?”

On U.S. interventions:

“Venezuela is the victim of permanent aggression in economic, political, diplomatic and media aspects by those who govern the United States of America.”

“Economically, Venezuela has been subjected to a series of illegal, unilateral measures of economic persecution in the past two years.”

“Yesterday in this same place the president of the United States of America attacked, once again, the noble people of Venezuela, [with] its interventionist role, its pretentious role as judge, party and police of the world.” This was a reference to Trump’s announcement of new sanctions against Venezuela.

On U.S.–Venezuela discrepancies:

“It is a historical conflict, we have said it many times to the world, our people know it very well, it is the conflict between the interventionist imperial doctrine, Monroe’s neo-colonialism, versus historical doctrine of rebellion for independence, dignity, justice, freedom, and republican [democratic] equality.”

“Do we have differences, President Donald Trump? Of course we do. But it is people who have differences who must dialogue; it is those who have differences in this world that have to put on the table their goodwill and their ability to speak.”

On Venezuela’s worldview:

“Venezuela is a country that advocates and commits itself to the construction of a multipolar, pluripolar and multicentric world. There isn’t just one economic model. We cannot allow a unique economic model, a single ideology to be imposed.”

“We believe in a different world, our generation saw the so-called bipolar, two-bloc world go by, what was then called Cold War, which some seem to want to bring back in their attacks to China, to Russia and to humble countries like Venezuela. To initiate a struggle and a fight against countries like Russia and China is a contradiction against what must be a human international policy that recognizes the emergence of new poles of power and the need to build a multipolar world.”

On Venezuela today:

“Today, Venezuela is stronger than ever, we have learned how to resist, we are standing and ready to continue advancing in the construction of a social model of our own, that of the socialist revolution of the 21st century, we say it to the world.”

On dialogue:

“I am willing to speak with an open agenda on all the issues that the government of the United States wants to speak, with humility, with frankness, with sincerity.”

“Despite the immense historical differences, despite the immense ideological differences, despite the immense social differences… I would be willing to shake the hand of the president of the United States and to sit down to talk about bilateral and regional issues.”

Conclusion

Despite the awareness that back-channel conversations can take place between conflicting countries, this possibility is quite remote first and foremost because this is a one-way “conflict.”  It is the United States that is interfering with Venezuela and not the other way around. U.S. sanctions and military threats are unilateral and the Venezuelan government has responded only in the form of official statements of rejection and denunciation without threats nor retaliation.

Having said that, after a long-standing confrontation, imposed sanctions and threats against the DPRK, we never imagined Trump thanking Chairman Kim Jong Un “for his courage and for the steps he has taken” – around withholding development of nuclear weapons – as he did at the UNGA. We can only hope.

Trump did not refer extensively to Venezuela in his speech but his message was precise and unequivocal. I paraphrase: we will continue imposing sanctions and socialism is very-very bad, all nations should oppose it. He did not utter any military threats at the UNGA. Even then, several heads of state rejected the notion of interventions, military or otherwise.

What Trump did not say about Venezuela, he did say about Syria and “the corrupt dictatorship in Iran” and the “chaos, death, and destruction” its leaders have caused together with “mayhem across the Middle East and far beyond.” Strong words.

Perhaps Trump’s real message was his geopolitical view of the world and the U.S. position in it. He put it very concisely and explicitly in one sentence, “We reject the ideology of globalism, and we embrace the doctrine of patriotism.” It was a reference to pulling out from obligations of international responsibilities and commitments, at the same time that it does not rule out U.S. offshore intrusion in order to disrupt any perceived threat to its power and interests. China and Russia are seen as such a threat.

Aside from the political ideology, it is possibly in the geopolitical view of the world where lies the greatest divide between the United States and Venezuela.

The United States is increasingly defending itself from a developing multipolar world with China, Russia, Iran, and other nations – including Venezuela. The Trump administration seems to have adopted a daring, and possibly dangerous, redesign of U.S. geopolitical strategy in order to avoid being pulled in by the sheer force of attraction, and consequently lose the unipolar exclusive power that has been its historically persistent strategic drive.

Beyond the obvious defense of independence and rejection of the economic war on Venezuela, Maduro has clearly stated his belief in a multipolar world that recognizes and includes China and Russia. Venezuela is wholeheartedly accepting the inevitable reality and is embracing the opportunities that it brings.

Those worldviews are too far apart to even conceive a point of contact. But Venezuela, with the international law on its side, continues to call for a dialogue with the opposition, the U.S. and the international community.

I think it was unfortunate that Trump did not take the occasion of the UNGA to meet face-to-face with Maduro. Without a dialogue there cannot be any possibility of compromise in their positions. And without compromise, continued divisions in Latin America, potentially escalating to more serious confrontations, can devastate the whole region.

Nov 022018
 

Banksters: Index

 

This article by Brent Patterson falls under  “Beyond Banksters“,  the dissed Canada Infrastructure Bank vs the Bank of Canada – –  financing of public projects.

Background for new people:

(2017)  Canadians are to purchase from $180 to $188 BILLION DOLLARS worth of infrastructure, over 12 years.   The plan for how we are to raise the money to pay for it, involves a huge transfer of public assets and money over to “the banksters”.   We get to be the poor guys;  they get to keep on being the rich guys – – forever.  It is a tried and true recipe for violence and poverty.

Asset recycling” is one of the strategies used by the marriage of Big Money + Big Govt.  Basically it’s privatization of public assets. Not surprising that Trudeau is going that way: the “economic advisors” hired by the Liberals were the same as used by Harper Conservatives.

REFERENCE:

Banksters: Index

2017-06-07  Why Trump’s So-Called Infrastructure Plan Is Good for Wall Street But Bad for America, by Bernie Sanders

EXCERPT:

scroll down (in the Sanders’ article) to:   TOP 10 FAILED PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS (USA).  This is important documentation.

These kind of projects are being proposed for Canada, under the $188 billion (up from $180 billion) in infrastructure spending we are to embark on over 12 years.

The Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB) has to be stopped!

– – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Will the Trudeau government ‘recycle’ Parks Canada ‘assets’?

http://rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/brent-patterson/2018/10/will-trudeau-government-recycle-parks-canada-assets

Photo by Brent Patterson

“The federal government has identified a potential source of cash to help pay for Canada’s mounting infrastructure costs — and it could involve leasing or selling stakes in major public assets such as highways, rail lines, and ports,” the Canadian Press reported in April 2016.

That article highlights that the Trudeau government’s 2016 budget makes reference to the controversial concept of “asset recycling,” otherwise known as privatization. It quotes management consultant Michael Fenn who says, “Asset recycling is a way to attract private-sector investment into activities that were formerly, exclusively, in the public realm.”

Now, CBC notes that a report prepared by the consulting firm KPMG for Parks Canada says that bridges and dams are “prime targets” for divestment and that such a move could reap millions of dollars of revenue for the federal government.

“The report identified 183 dams and bridges worth almost $1.3 billion as prime targets for disposal, whether through sales or transfers to other levels of government,” according to senior reporter Dean Beeby.

The KPMG report, which Beeby obtained through the Access to Information Act, says:

“There are no apparent legal show-stoppers in terms of ability to transfer land under the dams and bridges to another entity. This should be examined more closely by PCA [Parks Canada Agency]. …Transfer to another entity is very likely to achieve the outcomes desired by PCA.”

“The non-core bridges and dams ‘have moderate to potentially high pre-feasibility as a transfer candidate,'” the article adds, and references bridges and dams that cross the Rideau Canal, which has a stretch that basically runs south-north through Ottawa (which is situated on unceded and unsurrendered Algonquin territory).

The photo caption at the top of the article features “The Bank Street Bridge over the Rideau Canal in Ottawa.” That’s the bridge just south of the controversial public-private partnership (P3) redevelopment of the Lansdowne Park fairgrounds.

At the moment, the Hog’s Back Road bridge and water-control dam that crosses the Rideau River — just east of the Hog’s Back Bridge that crosses the Rideau Canal — appears to be in the preparatory stages for “rehabilitation” with the involvement of the construction giant Aecon (the company involved in building the Site C dam on the Peace River).

The Hog’s Back Road bridge and dam separates Hog’s Back Park and Mooney’s Bay Park, where a large P3 playground was recently opened.

When I asked an Aecon worker at the site on October 29 about the bridge, they said that my inquiries should be directed to Parks Canada.

The rehabilitation of a bridge does not necessarily mean that it is an “asset” about to be sold. But homeowners would be familiar with the concept of repairs and renovations to make one’s home more appealing to potential buyers.

And if KPMG is telling Parks Canada that “there are no apparent legal show-stoppers in terms of ability to transfer land under the dams and bridges to another entity” then we also need to consider that the scenic Hog’s Back Falls, the observation area, nearby trails, small restaurant and sitting area may all be “assets” of interest to investors.

(Hog’s Back Park itself is administered by the National Capital Commission, which is a Government of Canada Crown corporation overseen by the Minister of Heritage.)

A large field adjacent to the falls has also been used for the 1930s-style circus Carnivàle Lune Bleue and Mark Monahan’s Ottawa Folk Festival (now renamed CityFolk and staged at Lansdowne Park) and would be a prime spot for similar enterprises.

As the KPMG report notes, “Both private and public sector parties could achieve some benefits by being the stewards of the non-core waterway assets.”

While all this appears to be very preliminary, it would be interesting to hear from Catherine McKenna, the minister responsible for Parks Canada, on her thoughts regarding this KPMG report and the spectre of selling Parks Canada assets.

Brent Patterson is a political activist and writer.

Photo by Brent Patterson

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Oct 312018
 

(The   Banksters: Index  is updated to include this posting.)

Supreme Court of Canada Dismisses Constitutional Bank of Canada Case, Claiming It Is a Political Matter

Toronto, May 31, 2017 – After nearly 5.5 years of contentious litigation between the Committee On Monetary and Economic Reform (COMER) and the Government of Canada involving three separate Federal Court and two additional Federal Court of Appeal hearings resulting in contrary decisions, on May 4, 2017, the Supreme Court of Canada dismissed COMER’s “leave” (permission to appeal) application from the second judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal.

Following established practice, the federal Supreme Court does not issue reasons when it dismisses a leave application. The dismissal by the Supreme Court of the Leave application, means only that the Court does not want to hear the appeal. The jurisprudence on this is clear: it does not mean that the lower court decisions are correct in law. The possible reasons for the Supreme Court not wanting to hear the case are many and various, including the washing of their hands or “deference” to the political process – hence, this is why reasons are not issued by the Supreme Court in leave dismissals.

We believe that the case has ample legal merit, and should have proceeded to trial. It is not uncommon for the Supreme Court to refuse leave on a given issue multiple times, finally to grant leave, hear the appeal and the case then succeeds. The Supreme Court controls its own agenda, both in its timing and on the merits of issues it will or will not hear. (Annually, fewer than 8–10% of all cases filed are granted permission and heard at the Supreme Court of Canada.)

It should be noted that throughout this arduous and expensive legal process, the substance of this lawsuit initiated in the public interest has not been addressed. The matters raised by the lawsuit are summarized in the original news release (pdf) issued on December 19, 2011.)

While COMER is disappointed in the Supreme Court’s failure to comply with its perceived duty to the plaintiffs and to the citizens of Canada under the Constitution and the Bank of Canada Act, two things are undeniable:

1. Through this long judicial odyssey, public knowledge, awareness and consciousness of the vital issues have been raised immeasurably, not only in Canada, but abroad. We know this from the significant feedback and informed commentary COMER and its legal counsel have received.

2. The current Supreme Court dismissal is not the end of the struggle over these critical issues!

The proposed Canada Infrastructure Bank makes crystal clear the urgent need to now concentrate efforts within the political arena. In its arguments, the Crown has contended that the Government’s decision to drastically reduce its borrowing from the Bank of Canada was made by the people of Canada through the political process although the changes made were never debated publically nor in Parliament. This failure of the political process has led to the exponential growth of Canada’s debt incurred by all three levels of government due to accumulated deficits and compounded interest charges as well as to significant fiscal restraints on funding government programmes and infrastructure expenditures.

A press conference was held on June 3, 2017, at the Law Offices of Rocco Galati.

Related Information

Background: Two individual Canadians and COMER have confronted the global financial powers in the Canadian federal court. In early August 2013, the case was struck.

Information about this case is available on the Federal Court website. Search for court number T-2010-11.

Notice of hearing at the Federal Court on December 7, 2016
Decision of Federal Court, February 8, 2016, and filed appeal. Summary
Litigation Update, October 14, 2015 (pdf)
Litigation Update, May 13, 2015 (pdf)
Amended Statement of Claim, March 26, 2015 (pdf)
Appeal Update, January 26, 2015
Decision, April 24, 2014 (pdf)
Motion to Appeal, April 24, 2014 (pdf)
Appeal, December 10, 2013
Press Release, December 2011 (pdf)
Amended Court Filing, Jan. 2012 (pdf)
Proceedings, December 5, 2012 (pdf)