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Time for some radical moves

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    Time for some radical moves

    Quote:
    Sun, September 11, 2005
    Time for some radical moves

    By Ted Byfield

    Paul Martin, if he hews to a tried and true Liberal formula, will call an election, probably in the New Year, in which his Liberals will portray themselves as representing the interests of Canada, against the Tories who represent the interests of the Alberta "oil barons."

    These will be the same oil barons who, he will say, are pocketing untold zillions of dollars from gasoline prices running in the range of $1.50 a litre, a price that may already be throwing thousands of Ontarians out of work.

    The election will be a response to the bald theft by Ottawa of Alberta resource revenues, probably disguised (as my editor Licia Corbella intelligently foresees) as a "carbon tax."

    Its purpose, Martin will say, is to enable Canada to meet its environmental responsibilities and to enable Alberta to "share" its soaring oil and gas revenues with the rest of the country.

    Alberta will resist the bill ferociously, and on that pretext Martin will "let the people decide," by calling an election in which he will sweep Ontario and win.

    Once in federal hands, the Alberta money will be used to prop up Ontario and Quebec manufacturing industries against competition from China.

    Since such an endeavour is futile, those industries will collapse anyway, and the temporary advantage provided by our natural resources will be lost to both Canada and Alberta.

    So what can Albertans do about this? I think we can do two things:

    First, we must quickly develop programs of research and technology that will put Canada in the forefront of the world, and we should use the undoubted billions that will accrue to this province --the revenues Martin wants to steal -- to carry out that program.

    We should design it so that it will be centred, not only in Alberta, but in Saskatchewan, Manitoba and British Columbia as well.

    We should describe this initiative, not as a plan to enrich Alberta, but as a plan to enable Canada to meet the competition that Asia is already offering, a competition which will soon overwhelm us, if we do not act to meet it.

    So the federal election should become one of the Martin plan for Canada versus the Alberta plan for Canada, stressing that the Alberta plan seeks to build, where the Martin plan seeks to prop up.

    He is trying to prolong the past.

    We are preparing for the future.

    When Martin, echoing last month's Courchene Report, declares that the Alberta plan would cause a massive shift in the Canadian population from East to West, we should reply that it will be no more massive than was the shift that went on, through most of the 20th Century, in the opposite direction.

    But at the same time, we should make something else very clear, namely this: The Alberta vision does not require ratification from Ottawa.

    If Canada rejects it -- that is, if the Liberals win the election with the customary huge majority from Ontario -- then we should forget all about Canada and with precisely the same economic assumptions, advance the Alberta plan to Albertans.

    This would not take very long.

    I think much of the present provincial Conservative caucus would support it, enough perhaps to turn the provincial government in its favour -- or, if not, to defeat the government after a caucus walk-out, and bring about an immediate provincial election with the Alberta program the sole issue.

    If the Alberta program carried the election, the next step would be right behind it -- a referendum under the Clarity Act, with the question indisputably clear.

    We're proposing to go it alone. Since Canada doesn't want Alberta, then Alberta doesn't want Canada.

    It's that simple.

    If Alberta pulled out, where would that leave B.C.?

    The choice would soon become clear -- either join the U.S. as a Pacific coast state, or join Alberta.

    How soon before Saskatchewan and Manitoba followed?

    The role of prairie hinterland to an impaired Canada would not remain attractive very long.

    All these eventualities should be laid before the people of Ontario in the coming election.

    If they give us the usual answer -- that they prefer the crooks to the Westerners -- then the hour of decision will be upon us.

    It will be then or never.

    Radical?

    You bet!

    But has anybody got a better idea?

    #2
    Ted is off on a number of things in this article but the main theme is right? The fact is this is exactly how the federal Liberals intend to play this game?
    Gomery will now release his final report Feb 1, 2006 so we can expect an election shortly after that? All this noise about "sharing the wealth" is heating up right now for a spring election! The Liberals, as always, are ready to divide the country to stay in power?
    I find it very interesting that Klein is contemplating giving the people of Alberta a dividend check on their oil and gas, right now? How does that look to the rest of Canada? How do you think Albertans might react if they are told they must give up that dividend check for the "National Interest"? And let us never forget...the oil and gas belong to the PEOPLE of ALBERTA, not the government!
    The whole thing is being pushed to a confrontation...in the very near future? Will the people of Alberta finally get it? Will our fellow westerners realize they can't win in this country called Canada? If Alberta ever votes to go I suspect Sask. and BC will be right there with us?
    The scary part is that the rest of the country is basically bankrupt when the west goes(see export figures) and really can't allow that to happen? Maybe Ralph Klein should be using the surplus to buy some fighter planes and guns! Also fostering some tight alliances with our friends to the south to help us with our war of independence!

    Comment


      #3
      Our friends to the south those that have used B S E ,soft wood ,the pacific salmon ,the northwest pasage ,the packing industry ,R-Calf .
      THOSE FRIENDS

      Comment


        #4
        THOSE FRIENDS who buy 80% of our exports? Those friends who have made our province the power house of Canada? Those friends who risked their money to develop our natural resources?
        Yep, those friends! Every day you should be thankful for those friends!

        Comment


          #5
          A U.S. state has alot more autonomy Horse than any "western"...Canadian province.
          Did you ever try to export some of your own grain, elect a Senator, etc.etc.etc....

          Comment

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