I remember that , sadly to many don’t .LA.....1970s
I remember that , sadly to many don’t .LA.....1970s
Charest sounds a lot like Trudeau because they’re both Liberals. Trudeau being a federal lib & Charest being a provincial lib.Jean Charest sounds a lot like Trudeau.. guess Trudeau will have a new QC Lieutenant!
I doubt it. He’s just a distraction. Watch & wait. He’ll fade back to Quebec provincial politics as a Liberal when he gets no traction by trying to parachute into the federal leadership role.
This guy will push so many Conservatives to the PPC.
They’re both the same. Just one is a deflection in the Conservative leaders selection, & the other is Justin Trudeau.Actually not sure which one I hate more, Trudeau or Jean Charest
You are of course, entitled to your opinion, as am I not to share it. I look to the sixties as better times to be sure, most people are unaware of the "boiling frog" that has been on the rise since the embracing of neo-liberal economics by the likes of Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and our own Brian Mulroney. Neo-liberal economics puts the prime focus of or functioning as a society on the bottom line of the income statement, all else is secondary. This has led to deregulation of the financial sector, which in turn made international trade more simple, along with what can be seen is the exporting of jobs from our manufacturing sector. Add to that job losses from automation and you have a severely weakended manufacturing abse which was once the backbone of the middle class economy. The shrinking of our middle class can be tough to nail down, in part because the actual definition of what constitutes a middle class income varies greatly across the country, but generally speaking, due to the higher costs of education and housing, fewer millennials are able to reach middle class status in their twenties than their baby boomer parents. Incomes for all but the top ten percent have not kept pace with a rising cost of living leaving the purchasing power of our paycheques in a downward spiral.You are still living in the 1960’s , we have the largest middle class in the history of mankind , if you missed the boat , whose fault is that ? So does the corporate sector control the regulatory agencies , WCB , the CRTC and the CRA ? Where is this dying environment ? I can see beatle killed pine in our forests , but there is growth exploding in those forests , the same with clear cuts after a year or two the forest floor is booming . Our atmosphere is much cleaner then forty or so years ago as well what with the usage of natural gas and unleaded gasoline . Your doom and gloom senarios do not fit reality imho .
Rex Murphy: Pierre Poilievre draws rock star crowds of people tired of Trudeau — National Post
He has the charisma of not being charismaticapple.news
O&G isn't going anywhere. Do you have anything against the use of hydrogen from hydrocarbons?The common denominator when you dig for it always seems to draw us back to the Alberta oil & gas industry. As an economic force it is a huge part of Canada's economic strength, as an environmental risk it is our greatest weakness. It all comes down to personal choice in how much of a trade-off between the two you are willing to support. Is the threat to our collective future worth the short term profits ?
In a 1992 episode of “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” the Enterprise finds Scotty from the original series suspended in a transporter buffer and brings him back to life after 75 years. While interacting with the crew, the ship’s chief engineer, Geordi La Forge, informs Scotty that he told the captain his current task would take an hour and that it was an accurate estimate. “You didn’t tell him how long it would really take, did ya?” asks Scotty. “Oh, laddie, you’ve got a lot to learn if you want people to think of you as a miracle worker.”The common denominator when you dig for it always seems to draw us back to the Alberta oil & gas industry. As an economic force it is a huge part of Canada's economic strength, as an environmental risk it is our greatest weakness. It all comes down to personal choice in how much of a trade-off between the two you are willing to support. Is the threat to our collective future worth the short term profits ?
"The natural science in GEO-6 makes clear that a range and variety of unwelcome outcomes for humanity, with potentially very significant impacts for human health, become increasingly likely if societies maintain their current development paths. This paper assesses what is known about the likely economic implications of either current trends or the transformation to a low-carbon and resource-efficient economy in the years to 2050 for which GEO-6 calls. A key conclusion is that no conventional cost–benefit analysis for either scenario is possible. This is because the final cost of meeting various decarbonisation and resource-management pathways depends on decisions made today in changing behaviour and generating innovation. The inadequacies of conventional modelling approaches generally lead to understating the risks from unmitigated climate change and overstating the costs of a low-carbon transition, by missing out the cumulative gains from path-dependent innovation. This leads to a flawed conclusion as to how to respond to the climate emergency, namely that significant reductions in emissions are prohibitively expensive and, therefore, to be avoided until new, cost-effective technologies are developed. We argue that this is inconsistent with the evidence and counterproductive in serving to delay decarbonisation efforts, thereby increasing its costs. Understanding the processes which drive innovation, change social norms and avoid locking in to carbon- and resource-intensive technologies, infrastructure and behaviours, will help decision makers as they ponder how to respond to the increasingly stark warnings of natural scientists about the deteriorating condition of the natural environment."
You need to get out more. You are so clueless as to what is really happening.We've been handing over more and more control to the corporate sector for the last forty or fifty years ans what have we got to show for it? A vanishing middle class and a dying environment. I'll tell you what's clueless, it's the "profit above all else" mindset of the very few at the top of the food chain.
PS: What is it about people like you that find it so hard to express themselves without insult and name-calling ? Didn't your parents ever teach you any manners ?
I remember as a kid on our very occasional trips to Vancouver, known to all as "The Big Smoke". Driving along the Upper Levels highway and looking over the city covered with a layer of smoke. Despite the smoke it was a far better place than now.I remember that , sadly to many don’t .
Take your blinders off when looking around. The real problem is over governance. And the resulting inflation in both the number of government employees and their pay. Case in Point: It took longer for the permitting process to twin TransMountain than it did to design and build the original pipeline. It often takes 4 months just to get a building permit on property you already own around here.You are of course, entitled to your opinion, as am I not to share it. I look to the sixties as better times to be sure, most people are unaware of the "boiling frog" that has been on the rise since the embracing of neo-liberal economics by the likes of Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and our own Brian Mulroney. Neo-liberal economics puts the prime focus of or functioning as a society on the bottom line of the income statement, all else is secondary. This has led to deregulation of the financial sector, which in turn made international trade more simple, along with what can be seen is the exporting of jobs from our manufacturing sector. Add to that job losses from automation and you have a severely weakended manufacturing abse which was once the backbone of the middle class economy. The shrinking of our middle class can be tough to nail down, in part because the actual definition of what constitutes a middle class income varies greatly across the country, but generally speaking, due to the higher costs of education and housing, fewer millennials are able to reach middle class status in their twenties than their baby boomer parents. Incomes for all but the top ten percent have not kept pace with a rising cost of living leaving the purchasing power of our paycheques in a downward spiral.
"Is Our Middle Class Shrinking ?"
While there may be some instances wher what you say is correct, it is by no means representative of the whole. Post-secondary education has become a "for-profit" operation, moving it out of range of most without the financial means (or their family's) to cover the cost without ending up having to enter the workforce with a crippling amount of student debt. Jobs in the resource sector are nowhere near as pleantifula s they once were, and the competion for the few that are out there is high, often attracting applicants from outside the province. When I was young you didn't worry about finding a job after high school, because you could always go mining or always go logging. Not so these days.Millennials have several problems, mostly of their own making, the rest caused by an education system that has been over run by ideologues. There are lots of good paying resource industry jobs waiting, a shortage of qualified trades people everywhere but millennials don't want to get their hands dirt, don't want to miss out on city night life, and often as not have degrees that have no value in the job market.
These days they go into the trades and go pipelining .While there may be some instances wher what you say is correct, it is by no means representative of the whole. Post-secondary education has become a "for-profit" operation, moving it out of range of most without the financial means (or their family's) to cover the cost without ending up having to enter the workforce with a crippling amount of student debt. Jobs in the resource sector are nowhere near as pleantifula s they once were, and the competion for the few that are out there is high, often attracting applicants from outside the province. When I was young you didn't worry about finding a job after high school, because you could always go mining or always go logging. Not so these days.
Yeah, resource extraction only gets a body so far.While there may be some instances wher what you say is correct, it is by no means representative of the whole. Post-secondary education has become a "for-profit" operation, moving it out of range of most without the financial means (or their family's) to cover the cost without ending up having to enter the workforce with a crippling amount of student debt. Jobs in the resource sector are nowhere near as pleantifula s they once were, and the competion for the few that are out there is high, often attracting applicants from outside the province. When I was young you didn't worry about finding a job after high school, because you could always go mining or always go logging. Not so these days.
Yeah, resource extraction only gets a body so far.
There need to be changes made in the distribution of wealth, but that won't change the fact that the days when you could strap on some snowshoes and run a trap-line are gone. They. . . will. . . not. . . return.
When I have advice to give, I say "Do you like working with your head or your hands? If the former, go to higher ed. If the latter, go plumber, electrician, carpenter, HVAC. These are good-paying jobs than cannot be outsourced to India, China, or Malaysia. Ditto police, fire, and other government jobs."
Life sucks. Get stuck in or be a victim.Because resources are - for those who don't know - are finite. Nothing is infinite, but sadly too many like to THINK they are, ergo the problem.
I believe it's Makrel, or Herring? Regionally there's a shortage of bait fish which means lobster fishermen will have a harder time getting them; no bait, no lobster. Which has increased the price of it. Of course there are fishermen who deny there's a shortage and they might be right, but they could also be very, very wrong. I don't understand why being cautious is a bad thing, but it seems to be.
Sadly true.
You almost need work in both areas to make ends meet nowadays.
It is left leaning governments like the Federal Liberals and NDP everywhere that have killed off so many resource industry jobs, so one might say that government policy is contributing to the lack of decent jobs. It is also government policy that encourages out of province applicants to the good jobs.While there may be some instances wher what you say is correct, it is by no means representative of the whole. Post-secondary education has become a "for-profit" operation, moving it out of range of most without the financial means (or their family's) to cover the cost without ending up having to enter the workforce with a crippling amount of student debt. Jobs in the resource sector are nowhere near as pleantifula s they once were, and the competion for the few that are out there is high, often attracting applicants from outside the province. When I was young you didn't worry about finding a job after high school, because you could always go mining or always go logging. Not so these days.
Resource extraction makes a person over $100 000 a year. Entry level. Just have to be prepared to not being able to go to the bar every night.Yeah, resource extraction only gets a body so far.
There need to be changes made in the distribution of wealth, but that won't change the fact that the days when you could strap on some snowshoes and run a trap-line are gone. They. . . will. . . not. . . return.
When I have advice to give, I say "Do you like working with your head or your hands? If the former, go to higher ed. If the latter, go plumber, electrician, carpenter, HVAC. These are good-paying jobs than cannot be outsourced to India, China, or Malaysia. Ditto police, fire, and other government jobs."
True that. More often that not that kind of money comes with a camp job so there is the isolation from friends and family to consider, but for a single person, or someone just getting started in life it's a great way to put together a few bucks for a down payment or whatever. That was standard procedure when I was growing up in the Okanagan, that kind of money just wasn't available without a trade, and even then wages have always been somewhat depressed around here. They call it the "sunshine tax", competition for local jobs with a decent wage were high, and that forced the wages down. Still, that being said, the resource industry is not as strong as it used to be. Automation in the forest, and a bigtime shift to whole log exports has taken that away. Offshore competition and environmental crackdowns have taken a toll on mining too, I'd bet there aren't half the mines operating in BC that there were thirty or forty years ago.Resource extraction makes a person over $100 000 a year. Entry level. Just have to be prepared to not being able to go to the bar every night.
And money makes the world go round .True that. More often that not that kind of money comes with a camp job so there is the isolation from friends and family to consider, but for a single person, or someone just getting started in life it's a great way to put together a few bucks for a down payment or whatever. That was standard procedure when I was growing up in the Okanagan, that kind of money just wasn't available without a trade, and even then wages have always been somewhat depressed around here. They call it the "sunshine tax", competition for local jobs with a decent wage were high, and that forced the wages down. Still, that being said, the resource industry is not as strong as it used to be. Automation in the forest, and a bigtime shift to whole log exports has taken that away. Offshore competition and environmental crackdowns have taken a toll on mining too, I'd bet there aren't half the mines operating in BC that there were thirty or forty years ago.
I left the carpentry/cabinetmaking trade in the Okanagan to go mop floors and make beds in oil sands camps. Nothing glamourous to be sure, but six or seven years doing that sure put a different face on my retirement picture. All through that time though I watched wages drop steadily, along with changes in the industry that cut back the manpower needed. It all comes down to money.