The Left Side

Colten Boushie Verdict Poses Critical Reconciliation Test

Pain, Anger, Sorrow After Boushie Verdict

Dr David Shindler, Tosses Cold Water on Rachel and Justin’s Bullshit.


Lions attack and devour suspected poacher in South Africa, eating ‘nearly all’ of his body

B.C. already seeking new markets for wine in Asia and the U.S.: premier Horgan

Duterte tells Philippine soldiers to shoot female rebels in their vaginas

Gerald Stanley and the fear of the ‘Indian’

Former NDP MP Stoffer apologizes five times for his ‘touchy’ behaviour

Harrison Ford: “We’ve Got People in Charge of Important Shit Who Don’t Believe in Science”

Opinion: B.C.’s pipeline vigilance is backed by science

Watching Birds Near Your Home is Good For Your Mental Health

New phone scam dupes Torontonians out of $5.1M

NDP government will cap ICBC awards for pain and suffering for minor injuries

Sorry Alberta, BC Will Not Pay for Your Bungling

Trudeau at Fault for BC-Alberta Trade Tiff, Says Singh

Trudeau Environmental Changes A Harper-Hybrid Says Elizabeth May

True North Revealed: Trudeau government welcomed oil lobby help for US pipeline push

Five Reasons the Aecon Buyout Is Bad for Canada

‘There Isn’t Time’: Endangered Orcas Need Emergency Intervention, Coalition Tells Ottawa

New Fisheries Act Reverses Harper-era ‘Gutting’
This Vigilante Scientist Trekked Over 10,000 Kilometres to Reveal B.C.’s Leaking Gas Wells

Vancouver oil spill report predicts dire consequences for Burrard Inlet

Pipelines Leak-You can count on it


Trump Considers “Bloody Nose” Strike On North Korea

BC Unveils Pot Plans

‘Big Five’ in Alberta’s oilpatch suspected of sitting on a $2 trillion liability

Should Oil Companies Be on the Hook for Climate Change Costs?

New York City plans to divest $5 Billion from fossil fuels and sue oil companies

Site C a train wreck in slow motion

 

Elon Musk’s Tesla and SA Labor reach deal to give solar panels and batteries to 50,000 homes

Why the Trudeau Government Won’t Call Out Islamophobia

How American Discourse Died

Supreme Court sides with B.C. First Nation in ancestral land dispute

More people use car-sharing in Vancouver than in the rest of North America: survey

BC Ferry forced to turn back after marijuana “smoke-in” protest of smoking ban

Entire United States Population To Be Deported For Exploiting Chain Migration

Can U.S. border guards search your phone? Yes, here’s how

Good People Don’t Defend A Bad Man

Increasing minimum wage puts money back into small business economy, says labour expert

Solar power lights school at off-the-grid Lasqueti Island alternative bastion

Dear Premier. Don’t Promote Food Banks-End The Need For Them

Glavin: Iranians have the right to revolution

 

Sleepwalking into a Firetrap

ANALYSIS-Take care of us’: Why thousands of Iranians have taken to the streets


Terry Glavin: The Liberals are dangerously wrong on China. They always have been

 

BC Hydro says three LNG companies continue to demand electricity, justifying Site C

 

Site C Cancellation Costs Exaggerated, Says Chief

 

Valérie Plante becomes first woman elected mayor of Montreal

Pope Francis warns “history will judge” climate change deniers


Opinion: Decision to approve Site C undermines reconciliation with Indigenous peoples and long-term action on climate change

Howe Sounders say no, but Woodfibre LNG Lobbyist  Former BC NDP President Moe Sihota Says Yes

Alberta NDP Premier Notley’s waffling on methane regulations could damage economy

Chinese SOE Woes in Australia a Warning for Canada


Two Killed On Kinder Morgan Pipeline Explosion


Unrestrained oil production threatens Canada’s climate change goals: OECD

Iceland’s new PM is a 41-year-old anti-war feminist and environmentalist

The National Interview: The Unsinkable Tina Brown

 

Canada walks political minefield by abstaining on UN vote against Trump embassy plan for Jerusalem

 

B.C. experimenting with ‘blockchain’ to store and share crucial data

The Scary Void Inside Russia-gate


Donald Trump And the Coming Fall of the American Empire


Pope Hits Out At Trump Over Jersusalem

Cowichan Residents Are All To Familiar With The Loss Of Competitive Local Newspapers

New Politicians Wanted: No Gerontocrats Need Apply

The real pirates of the Caribbean

 


The Fight for Free Time

Rafe Mair Leaves Extraordinary Legacy
I Left Vancouver Because Vancouver Left Me

Ellen Page speaks out about violence and homophobia

Opinion: B.C. needs a full public inquiry into fracking

Pope Francis warns “history will judge” climate change deniers


Marine Harvest-Going Rogue

Our Southern Resident Orcas are Headed for Extinction

Facebook

Elizabeth May explains how the sale of a construction company to China can hurt BC

The BC NDP government announced on December 11th, 2017 that they would continue constructing the controversial Site C Dam project. Few, other than the most obedient party loyalists could find any justification for continuing this ill-fated project.

The much-heralded BCUC review provided all the ammunition needed to give the project the hook.

Green MP Elizabeth May has correctly raised cogent arguments and posed yet unanswered questions about the impacts of Site C on environmental and economic grounds. The Peoples Republic of China own fund and control The China Communication Construction Company.

Federally the NDP has been opposed to site as is covered in NDP MP Alistair MacGregor’s reply to my expressed concerns about Site C.  This letter is the matter of another post that follows.

The Trudeau government likely approval would leave BC captive in our own province with hands tied unable to act in the public interest.

The tides have shifted. The Chinese involvement with their ‘State Owned Enterprise’ (SOE) is a show stopper. This is a classic ‘This Changes Everything Development.’

Premier John Horgan’s second chance. He must cancel this project and prevent BC Hydro from awarding all construction contracts now.

BC NDP Premier John Horgan

 

OPINION-By Elizabeth May-Green Party MP

Originally published by the National Observer

The imminent sale of one of Canada’s largest construction companies to the Peoples’ Republic of China should give B.C. Premier John Horgan pause. In fact, it should lead him to a smart reversal of his support for the Site C dam project.

Aecon is a Canadian construction giant, currently holding contracts with BC Hydro for 30 per cent of the work on Site C’s generating station, powerhouse, spillways, and other related construction. Aecon is also in the midst of being sold for $1.45 billion to the China Communications Construction Co Ltd. (CCCC), a state-owned enterprise of the People’s Republic of China.

I was the first member of Parliament who has raised concerns about this sale. On December 11, 2017, in response to my question about CCCC’s terrible human rights, safety and environmental record, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau assured the House that the review of the sale under the Investment Canada Act would be thorough. Right now, it’s being reviewed on national security grounds. But most business observers seem to assume that the sale will be rubber-stamped. Why should this matter in relation to Site C?

The obvious concerns are about workforce requirements. With Korean giant Samsung also holding a significant portion of the work, the prospect of temporary foreign workers gaining a lot of the promised jobs is a reasonable one.

But what the B.C. government should be reviewing is the impact of the Canada-China investment treaty, formally known as the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA). This lop-sided treaty was passed without a vote in Parliament by former Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s cabinet in 2014. It locks Canada in until 2045, granting rights to companies owned in China to challenge any regulations, laws, or court rulings that reduce the Chinese company’s expectation of profits but what the B.C. government should be reviewing is the impact of the Canada-China investment treaty, formally known as the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA).

This lop-sided treaty was passed without a vote in Parliament by former Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s cabinet in 2014. It locks Canada in until 2045, granting rights to companies owned in China to challenge any regulations, laws, or court rulings that reduce the Chinese company’s expectation of profits. Samsung has similar rights under the Canada-Korea Trade agreement, which was inexplicably supported by the federal New Democratic Party. Unlike the treaty with Korea, however, the Canada-China FIPA allows for completely secret complaints hearings and arbitration.

The investment agreement with China allows complaints to start at the government-to- government level with six months of secret wrangling in which China’s larger economic weight is likely to lead to all manner of concessions by our government. If the matter is not resolved in the six months, then the state-owned enterprise of the People’s Republic of China may move to a secret hearing against the Government of Canada. British Columbia will not even have standing to be heard at the hearing – if it could find out about it.

The practical impact of this is huge. Horgan’s government will find itself at a disadvantage should it seek to toughen rules for workplace safety, for the environment or to belatedly and inadequately respect Indigenous rights. Any attempts to insist that Samsung and Aecon hire only Canadian workers, much less British Columbians, will lead to complaints.

Canadian experience with FIPAs has been largely one of loss and paying out damages to large U.S. multinationals. The first treaty with anti-democratic measures to give foreign corporations superior rights to domestic companies was NAFTA. Under Chapter 11 of NAFTA, for the first time in history, foreign corporations were given status to challenge government decisions. The challenges need not be based on government’s unfair treatment of a foreign company.

In fact, Canada has had to pay damages for banning a toxic gasoline additive, for banning the export of PCB contaminated waste, and even for rejecting a completely unacceptable open pit mine in a lobster-fishing community in Digby Neck, Nova Scotia. That project put forward by the U.S. corporation Bilcon, also threatened the survival of the most endangered whale species on the planet, the right whale. Bilcon won its case against Canada and is seeking $300 million in damages. The Government of Canada is appealing.

Anyone reading the report of the British Columbia Utilities Commission knows that Site C is an economic boondoggle and threatens the province’s long-term fiscal health. Now the premier has to consider the potential threat of damages if he should regulate improved workplace safety or environmental measures in construction. He must pull the plug on Site C before the China Communications Construction Co Ltd. purchase of Aecon is confirmed.

 

 

Cowichan Malahat Langford NDP MP Alistair MacGregor Responds To Site C Query

 

Dear Richard,

Thank you for taking the time to write to my office with your concerns regarding Site C approval and the ongoing ramifications of the associated trade deals with China. I have

Read more…

AECON takeover by Chinese Government Controlled Company Stalled For National Security Review

An Aecon Construction employee looks at Toronto Pearson International Airport’s new Terminal 1 in this Dec. 2003 photo.

The takeover of Aecon by a Chinese firm has been held up while the federal government

Read more…

“White people — they run the court system. Enough. We’re going to fight back,” Debbie Baptiste

Read more…

Sorry Alberta, BC Will Not Pay for Your Bungling

Pipeline is a desperate, dangerous and doomed bid to fix decades of resource mismanagement.

 

By Mitchell Anderson – TheTyee.ca

Mitchell Anderson is a freelance writer based in Vancouver and a frequent contributor to

Read more…

Horgan May Regain Political Currency In Struggle To Stop Kinder Morgan

They say that a week is a long time in politics and that certainly rings true for Premier Horgan and the BC NDP. Dogged by his impossible to understand the decision on Site C it

Read more…

Horgan’s right on Kinder Morgan, even if he got Site C wrong

On Kinder Morgan, John Horgan is standing up for British Columbians — as he should (BCNDP/Flickr)

Originally posted on the Commonsense Canadian

By Damien Gillis

Dear Premier Horgan,

I’m still mad at you for

Read more…

Town Hall Meetings-Compare PM Justin Trudeau and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh’s Response To Protesters

Let’s call a spade a spade. Justin’s Town Hall meetings billed as an open exchange have been manipulated and orchestrated.This was particularly the case at the Nanaimo gathering. If he really wanted to hear what

Read more…

Martyn Brown: Losing it like Trudeau in British Columbia

This was the expression on Justin Trudeau’s face just before he turned around and shouted “come on, come on” at hecklers at his Nanaimo town hall meeting. BRUNO S

By now, you’ve probably

Read more…

Conservatives Call For A Review of China’s Corrupt State Owned Enterprise Role In Canada

The significant role of China’s SOE China Communication Construction Company in the Site C adventure will show us what is left of the idea of sovereignty in BC and Canada.

The BC NDP has

Read more…

Rachel Notley’s war cry against B.C. is an ill-fated strategy

Opinion by Laura Adkin Originally posted in the National Observer

Premier Rachel Notley is clearly frustrated by British Columbia’s new obstacles to the expansion of pipeline capacity for transporting Alberta’s diluted bitumen to the

Read more…

We Are Getting Very Close To A Constitutional Crisis Over The Kinder Morgan Pipeline Expansion

BC Premier John Horgan is well within his rights to demand assurances that any spills from an increased supply of Alberta bitumen, diluted or otherwise would be able to be cleaned up before it receives

Read more…

What Happened – Site C and Saturday’s NDP Provincial Council Meeting

Jef Keighley Vice President South Surrey BC NDP

Re: What Happened – Site C and Saturday’s NDP Provincial Council Meeting Thank you all for your continuing support and participation in ou ongoing struggle ongoing

Read more…

This Site C Technical Briefing Prepared To Justify Site C Should Have Been Thrown Into The Garbage Can

This is the document prepared by Don Wright Deputy Minister to the Premier. It is a pathetic attempt to justify approving the continuation of the controversial Site C Dam project.

It is an insulting

Read more…

Seth Klein On the Site C Dam Economics

??

A Revolution Is Coming to Ottawa in Two Weeks.

Are Leap movement and advisers to Bernie Sanders and Jeremy Corbyn crashing the NDP’s party?

An Ottawa gathering on the eve of the NDP convention, brings together Leap Manifesto organizers Naomi Klein and

Read more…

BC Liberals Pick Andrew Wilkinson on 5th Ballot

The BC political landscape has shifted considerably as Andrew Wilkinson steps into the leader’s role of the BC Liberal party.

Wilkinson came from behind to capture the prize. Job 1 will be to heal the

Read more…

Is Rebellion Brewing In the Ranks of the BC NDP?

An Open Letter from NDP Members About Site C An appeal to the provincial government to reconsider its decision.

By Andrea Craddock, Rita Wong and Mary Madsen Yesterday | TheTyee.ca

Rita Wong is an

Read more…

Site C Dam Decision Causes Friction Within NDP Ranks Ahead of Provincial Council Meeting

Seldom has there been the level of disconnect and disappointment amongst NDP members and supporters that there is over the decision to proceed with the Site C Dam in the Peace River Valley.

Today’s

Read more…

Trudeau: “We will stand by our decision. We will ensure that the Kinder Morgan pipeline gets built.”

“The lines are drawn, the curse it is cast. The leaders now will later be last.”

If the lines to that iconic Bob Dylan song-The times they are a’ changing’ would only come true.

The

Read more…

Fraser Institute Deputy Ensconced In Premier Horgans Inner Circle

This a remarkable development, a former Fraser Institute director and right-wing Vancouver Sun columnist, brought into government by former Premier Christy Clark, is now ensconced in BC NDP Premier John Horgan’s inner circle.

Fazil Mihlar

Read more…

Why more people aren’t talking about the Asian oil spill as big as Paris?

 

The Current covered this last week. I am finally getting around to it. Considering the probable role that the Chinese Corporate Communist Government will play in our affairs via their positioning with the

Read more…

Site C Dam Summit Must Explore Whether B.C. Needs A Progressive Party Rooted In The Leap Manifesto

 

COMMENTARY Site C dam summit must explore whether B.C. needs a progressive party rooted in Leap Manifesto

by Charlie Smith

Charlie Smith-Editor-The Georgia Straight

Many British Columbians who voted against the

Read more…

Three Former Green Party Staffers Accuse Elizabeth May Of Workplace Bullying

The ‘Me Too’ movement is spreading out in scope and impacts. There are many forms of harassment and bullying in the workplace is as prevalent or more so than sexual assaults.

In both cases, it

Read more…

Funding Libraries Is The Way To Beat Fake News

Originally published by Entropy Magazine

 

The Fakery of ‘Fake News’ Written by Lisa Eve Cheby

I remember the days when we all got our news in the morning or evening at 5 o’clock,

Read more…

Americans pull ahead of Canadians in the race against climate change

This excellent National Observer report gets behind the much needed, Well doh!, reality check.

Adding to the present mess we have Premier Horgan in Asia unabashedly hustling for the LNG frackers, and PM Trudeau greasing

Read more…

Opinion: It’s time for forestry to benefit British Columbians, not multinational companies

Over the past 20 years, approximately 100 sawmills have shut down in B.C. and more than 22,000 forest industry jobs have disappeared. JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS

 

By Bob Williams

Read more…

Will Premier Horgan and PM Trudeau Allow and Approve China’s Communist Party A Lead Role In Constructing the Site C Dam?

The Site C Dam project includes the involvement and investment of the China Communication and Communication Company, (CCCC) a Chinese Communist Government State Owned Agency (SOE) that is directly controlled by China’s Communist Party,

Read more…

Five Reasons the Aecon Buyout Is Bad for Canada

Companies run by the Communist Party of China meddle in politics, break promises and kill rivers.

The headquarters of China Communications Construction Co. Ltd. Image has been digitally altered.

 

By Andrew Nikiforuk |

Read more…

Thought Police for the 21st Century

Watch the Hedges interview here:

By Chris Hedges Global Research, January 23, 2018 Truthdig 21 January 2018 Theme: Media Disinformation

The abolition of net neutrality and the use of algorithms by Facebook, Google,

Read more…