Alberta

spaminator

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Tucker Carlson drops bombs Alberta won't soon forget

Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Jan 25, 2024 • Last updated 2 days ago • 4 minute read
There’s nothing Tucker Carlson does better than to get under the skin of leftist progressives.

There’s nothing Tucker Carlson does better than getting under the skin of leftist progressives.


And, man, did he ever do that Wednesday during appearances in Calgary and Edmonton.


While Carlson may have wanted to “liberate” Canada from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, members of his Liberal government accused Alberta Premier Danielle Smith of courting “far-right American politics” and lambasted her for sharing the stage with the former Fox News host.

While he teased that Trudeau may “collapse on the weight of his ludicrousness and end up going back to Cuba,” there was no comment that upset more than Carlson’s joke: “I know in Canada it’s official policy that coming out of the closet is good, unless you’re the prime minister.”

Needless to say, liberals were not amused.

“Textbook homophobia: Using the insinuation someone is gay to portray them as weak, effeminate and worthy of mockery,” Fae Johnston, self-described “Queer and Trans Activist,” posted on X.


In another X post Johnston added, “If you are the premier of Alberta and you go on stage with someone the same night they make a homophobic joke, you’re saying it’s okay to make that joke.”



While some on social media defended Carlson by saying it was merely a joke and teased that Trudeau should “freeze his bank account,” there were many angry at Smith for not calling him out. But Smith was there to talk about energy and push back on the climate agenda that has helped slow Canada’s economy.

The crowd inside the packed halls in Alberta loved Carlson. The government and Ottawa scene not so much.

“A lot can be said about a person by the company they keep, Danielle Smith,” federal Employment Minister Randy Boissonnault — the MP for Edmonton Centre and appointed in 2016 as Trudeau’s “special advisor on LGBTQ2 issues” — told the Toronto Sun in a statement issued through the Prime Minister’s Office. “This is a clear example of Canadian conservative politicians bringing far-right American politics to Canada.”


Of course, that criticism was taken with a grain of salt in Alberta, where the popular American commentator stirred things up by starting his trip with a social media post of a prank call he made to Trudeau’s office, then hit Canada hard, saying, “You have political prisoners rotting in Alberta” and calling the country’s big cities “atrocities.”

Said Carlson: “Why is Toronto the face of Canada?”



An avid fly fisherman, Carlson has been to other parts of the country, including Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador, and he cited the “beauty” of those places.

While Smith told Carlson in Calgary that her province will soon “double oil production” with the intent of showing Americans how Canada is a friend and ally who can help them with “energy independence,” Carlson said Alberta should “stop being embarrassed” about trying to produce more energy.

But his encouragement and his appearances, which also included a stop in Edmonton and sharing the stage with Canadian conservative legends Dr. Jordan Peterson, Rex Murphy and Conrad Black, did not go over well with the Liberal government.

“Tucker Carlson was too extreme for Fox News so they fired him, yet he’s being embraced by conservative politicians here in Canada,” said Boissonnault. “They’re showing their true colours by choosing to share the stage with someone as dangerous and divisive as Tucker Carlson.”


Carlson, however, called Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland “dangerous” for not stopping the RCMP from arresting Rebel News reporter David Menzies earlier this month, and on the MAID (Medical Assistance in Dying) law he said “any organization that kills 50,000 people is a genocidal organization.” He also called a push toward “transgenderism” a “new state religion” that is designed to replace Christianity.

The popular commentator who has been rumoured to be considered Donald Trump’s potential running mate pick as vice-president for November, seemed to be having a ball hammering the Canadian lib-left political class and the crowd of 5,000 in Calgary and 10,000 later in Edmonton seemed to be eating it up. He teased that he heard the CBC was in the crowd and offered the opportunity for a backstage interview, saying he “dares” them to air it.


Boissonnault, meanwhile, didn’t find any of it funny.

“At a time when Albertans are faced with anxiety over their pension plans, housing, and health care, the premier is spending her time talking MAGA conspiracy theories with a Pro-Putin propogandist – do your job, premier.”



Smith criticized Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault as someone “who is best known for stealing the CN Tower” — as a Greenpeace activist, Guilbeault scaled the CN Tower to protest climate change in 2001, making the point that she is doing her job by saying buying Alberta’s oil is more ethical than purchasing it from places like Iran or Venezuela.



The Liberals may not have appreciated Smith sharing a stage with Carlson, but the audience sure did.

They gave her a standing ovation.

Carlson may not have liberated Canada, but he did manage to complete his mission of upsetting a whole bunch of Liberals.

jwarmington@postmedia.com
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
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www.canadianforums.ca
Where would Alberta be as a State?

Provinces are in red.

View attachment 22644


Peter Zeihan says Alberta would be better off as 51st U.S. state​


"Alberta as a U.S. state would not simply be rich — the richest in the Union, in fact — but would have a vibrantly well-financed and diverse economy that would put its former (and a lot of its new-found) countrymen to shame," writes the American author in The Accidental Superpower.

 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit

Peter Zeihan says Alberta would be better off as 51st U.S. state​


"Alberta as a U.S. state would not simply be rich — the richest in the Union, in fact — but would have a vibrantly well-financed and diverse economy that would put its former (and a lot of its new-found) countrymen to shame," writes the American author in The Accidental Superpower.

If SK and AB combined....unstoppable.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Jagmeet Singh makes his case to Alberta’s new NDP leader amid party separation talks
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Mickey Djuric
Published Jun 27, 2024 • 2 minute read

OTTAWA — Breaking up the federal and provincial arms of the New Democratic Party would be a mistake, federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh suggested on Thursday, as members in Alberta increasingly vocalize their desire for a separation.


Singh said the federal and Alberta NDP need to remain united in their goals to bring down conservatives.

“We are united in our goals to take on conservatives, to bring forward a clear vision for a government that works for people,” Singh said in Toronto.

“And the best way we achieve that goal is by being united.”

It’s a message he said he delivered in a conversation this week with Alberta’s new NDP leader, Naheed Nenshi, who took over the helm of the Alberta party from Rachel Notley earlier this week.

But Nenshi intends to ask party members if they want to separate from the federal party, an issue he had campaigned on during the leadership race.

Party constitutions dictate that members of a provincial NDP are automatically members of the federal party. But the link has caused headaches for the Alberta NDP and Nenshi is not backing away from his pledge to address it.


“You know me, I don’t wait on things,” Nenshi said on Monday during his first press conferencing following his win.

“But really the issue on this one for me is simply that the members are really talking about it. I hear it every day and the way I like to lead is that I don’t like things that are bubbling under the surface.”

He plans to bring up the issue with members “as soon as possible” while conceding that it will ultimately be up to members to decide whether or not to divorce, despite his opinion.

“There’s no point in dilly-dallying about it,” Nenshi said. “I promise that I will put in a transparent process for the members to make the decision once and for all.”

The NDP in both Alberta and Saskatchewan NDP have for years now tried to distance themselves from federal policies around oil and gas, and the carbon price. Notley and Singh have publicly feuded in the past, particularly over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which Singh publicly opposed. The pipeline was critical to Notley’s political fortunes in Alberta.


Singh is heavily criticized in the Prairies for propping up the Liberal government through their confidence-and-supply-agreement, and is blamed for helping keep Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in power.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe both often draw links between their NDP opponents provincially, and Trudeau’s decisions in Ottawa, many of which have been backed by Singh and the federal NDP. Smith and Moe contend Trudeau is overstepping into provincial jurisdiction including in health care, energy and the environment.

Smith’s United Conservative Party launched a campaign following Nenshi’s win on Sunday after the former Calgary mayor, who doesn’t have deep roots within the New Democrats, captured 86 per cent of the vote on the first ballot.

Albertans will see a series of ads on television, radio, and online platforms “starkly contrasting the tax-and-spend record of Nenshi with the common-sense leadership of Smith,” the UCP said in a statement Thursday.

“We’ve had enough of Trudeau in Ottawa, we don’t need one in Alberta,” a slogan on their recent ad says.

“Naheed Nenshi, Trudeau’s choice for Alberta.”
 

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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Calgary-area mother left shaken by encounter with cat-killing cougar
The woman fears the cougar might be targeting her young daughter after it killed one of the family’s pets

Author of the article:Noah Brennan, Newsroom Staff
Published Sep 11, 2024 • Last updated 15 hours ago • 2 minute read

Calgary-area resident Jessica Low poses at home on Wednesday, September 11, 2024, where a cougar returned Tuesday night after killing one of her family’s cats earlier in the day, and Low came face-face-to-face with the cougar through the patio door window.
Calgary-area resident Jessica Low poses at home on Wednesday, September 11, 2024, where a cougar returned Tuesday night after killing one of her family’s cats earlier in the day, and Low came face-face-to-face with the cougar through the patio door window. Noah Brennan/Postmedia
A shaken Calgary-area mother fears a cougar might be targeting her young daughter after it killed one of the family’s pets early Tuesday afternoon before returning to the home hours later.


Jessica Low’s five-year-old daughter was inside the house when she spotted a cougar outside her patio window around 12:15 p.m. Tuesday, along with the body of one of the family’s two barn cats. The cougar returned to the same window at around 9 p.m., Low said.

“We heard some banging . . . I thought it was my son just being silly in his room,” Low said of the second encounter. “Then my daughter spotted it back at the same window it had come to earlier.

“It was head-butting the window and staring us down.”

Low lives with her husband and three young children on the outskirts of southwest Calgary near the Ann and Sandy Cross Conservation area, and the two encounters with the cougar have left her in a state of fear.

“I’m shaken up,” she said. “We’re just staying inside and hoping that it gets caught.”


She has not let her children outside since and when leaving the home, they pile into the car with the garage door still closed, she said.

Two Fish and Wildlife officers were on the road outside Low’s home Wednesday afternoon speaking to nearby residents. There were no sightings of the cougar Wednesday, one of the officers said.

“Predators being active in mid-day in proximity to residences is always a concern,” said provincial Fish and Wildlife officer Phil Marasco.

“The fact that this one came back twice is the reason we’re here,” Marasco said. “To follow up and make sure we’re covering our bases.

“We hope (the cougar) moves off,” he added.

Cougar attacks cat
A screenshot from Instagram account @leelowlemon shows a young cougar outside of Calgary-area resident Jessica Low’s home.
Low said her concerns are heightened by the feeling the cat is coming after her youngest daughter.


“The fact that it came back that quickly into the same window that it saw my daughter at . . . is extra scary,” she said.

The area where Low lives is known for having wildlife such as bears, cougars and coyotes.

“They’re around but they don’t usually come out during the day,” Low said. “We’ve never seen one at night even, so it’s not something I had been worried about.”

Low said she was expecting Fish and Wildlife officers to return later on Wednesday to set traps on her property.

“Hopefully it’ll be dealt with in the next 24 hours or so,” she said. “If it’s caught, I’ll feel a lot better.”

While one of the family’s two cats was killed by the cougar, the other one is still missing.

Fish and Wildlife officers ‘actively monitoring the situation’

Alberta Fish and Wildlife Enforcement Services only respond to situations where there is an immediate public safety risk, according to a spokesperson for the Ministry of Public Safety and Emergency Services.

“Our officers are actively monitoring the situation and are currently evaluating the next steps to ensure the safety of both the residents and the wildlife,” said Sheena Campbell, communications director for the ministry.

“In the meantime, Fish and Wildlife officers continue to educate local residents on how to stay safe in cougar territory.”

Cougars can be found all around the Calgary area and are generally elusive, Campbell said.

She advises the community to remain cautious and report any further sightings to 1-800-642-3800.
cougar-1[1].jpg
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Calgary-area mother left shaken by encounter with cat-killing cougar
The woman fears the cougar might be targeting her young daughter after it killed one of the family’s pets

Author of the article:Noah Brennan, Newsroom Staff
Published Sep 11, 2024 • Last updated 15 hours ago • 2 minute read

Calgary-area resident Jessica Low poses at home on Wednesday, September 11, 2024, where a cougar returned Tuesday night after killing one of her family’s cats earlier in the day, and Low came face-face-to-face with the cougar through the patio door window.
Calgary-area resident Jessica Low poses at home on Wednesday, September 11, 2024, where a cougar returned Tuesday night after killing one of her family’s cats earlier in the day, and Low came face-face-to-face with the cougar through the patio door window. Noah Brennan/Postmedia
A shaken Calgary-area mother fears a cougar might be targeting her young daughter after it killed one of the family’s pets early Tuesday afternoon before returning to the home hours later.


Jessica Low’s five-year-old daughter was inside the house when she spotted a cougar outside her patio window around 12:15 p.m. Tuesday, along with the body of one of the family’s two barn cats. The cougar returned to the same window at around 9 p.m., Low said.

“We heard some banging . . . I thought it was my son just being silly in his room,” Low said of the second encounter. “Then my daughter spotted it back at the same window it had come to earlier.

“It was head-butting the window and staring us down.”

Low lives with her husband and three young children on the outskirts of southwest Calgary near the Ann and Sandy Cross Conservation area, and the two encounters with the cougar have left her in a state of fear.

“I’m shaken up,” she said. “We’re just staying inside and hoping that it gets caught.”


She has not let her children outside since and when leaving the home, they pile into the car with the garage door still closed, she said.

Two Fish and Wildlife officers were on the road outside Low’s home Wednesday afternoon speaking to nearby residents. There were no sightings of the cougar Wednesday, one of the officers said.

“Predators being active in mid-day in proximity to residences is always a concern,” said provincial Fish and Wildlife officer Phil Marasco.

“The fact that this one came back twice is the reason we’re here,” Marasco said. “To follow up and make sure we’re covering our bases.

“We hope (the cougar) moves off,” he added.

Cougar attacks cat
A screenshot from Instagram account @leelowlemon shows a young cougar outside of Calgary-area resident Jessica Low’s home.
Low said her concerns are heightened by the feeling the cat is coming after her youngest daughter.


“The fact that it came back that quickly into the same window that it saw my daughter at . . . is extra scary,” she said.

The area where Low lives is known for having wildlife such as bears, cougars and coyotes.

“They’re around but they don’t usually come out during the day,” Low said. “We’ve never seen one at night even, so it’s not something I had been worried about.”

Low said she was expecting Fish and Wildlife officers to return later on Wednesday to set traps on her property.

“Hopefully it’ll be dealt with in the next 24 hours or so,” she said. “If it’s caught, I’ll feel a lot better.”

While one of the family’s two cats was killed by the cougar, the other one is still missing.

Fish and Wildlife officers ‘actively monitoring the situation’

Alberta Fish and Wildlife Enforcement Services only respond to situations where there is an immediate public safety risk, according to a spokesperson for the Ministry of Public Safety and Emergency Services.

“Our officers are actively monitoring the situation and are currently evaluating the next steps to ensure the safety of both the residents and the wildlife,” said Sheena Campbell, communications director for the ministry.

“In the meantime, Fish and Wildlife officers continue to educate local residents on how to stay safe in cougar territory.”

Cougars can be found all around the Calgary area and are generally elusive, Campbell said.

She advises the community to remain cautious and report any further sightings to 1-800-642-3800.
View attachment 24633
why would the cougar target one specific kid? :confused:
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

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