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we want to drink your…

vulcan blood.

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"Please Lord let me have another oil boom and I won’t piss it away"

This morning we were feeling particularily frustrated with the Alberta Government’s complete lack of vision when it comes to what to do with Alberta’s “new found” wealth.

So, we wrote a letter to the Edmonton Journal…

“Please Lord let me have another oil boom and I won’t piss it away”

Albertans are privileged to have the option of issuing $300 rebate cheques. But simply because we have the ability to do so, it does not mean we should. We could do many things with this money. We could build a giant statue of Ralph Klein in Churchill Square, but it doesn’t mean we should.

Let’s invest in our communities. Let’s invest in our education and advanced education systems. Let’s invest our wealth in the future of our province so that the generations of tomorrow can enjoy the economic wealth that the politicians of today take for granted.

ahhh. That feels a little better now.

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Michael Ritter Scandal

who let the ritter out? who? who? who? who?

Not Alberta’s Court of Queen’s Bench.

For anyone interested (following up from an earlier post), Edmonton’s own Mr. Michael Ritter, the former Chief Parliamentary Counsel to the Alberta Legislature, has been making headlines across the world! Well… Albertans do have that “entrepreneurial spirit…”

Edmonton Sun: Ritter fighting to stay at home.
Bloomberg: Canadian Charged with $43 Million Embezzlement of Merrill Lynch.

We’ll have more coverage as it comes…

Here’s an open ended question for all you loyal daveberta readers: How much legislation was passed in Alberta while this upstanding gentleman was our Counsel?

Click here for the complete Michael Ritter Scandal Chronology…

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Richard Nixon and Project Independence

We’re currently reading “The Tar Sands: Syncrude and the Politics of Oil” by Larry Pratt for our Canadian Public Policy class. It’s quite an interesting read. We never knew natural resource policy and the history of Alberta’s tarsands was so interesting.

As well, we thought this clip from pages 49 – 50 of said book was interesting and quite telling…

One month following the outbreak of the Yom Kippur Middle East war of October 1973, with the United States deep in the grip of Watergate fever compounded by the anxiety over the Arab oil boycott, former U.S. President Richard M. Nixon appeared on American television to prescribe strong medicine, his antidote for the energy crisis.

Nixon named it “Project Independence.” The challenge facing the United States, he declared, was to regain the strength of self-sufficiency in energy. This was a key to Americans predominance among the nations. “Our ability to meet our own energy needs is directly linked to our continued ability to act decisively and independently at home and abroad in the service of peace, not only for America, bur for all nations in the world.” Calling for “focused leadership” to achieve self-sufficiency by 1980, Nixon likened his challenge to earlier crash programs to develop the atomic bomb and to put a man on the moon. He went on to promise massive public funding for the exploration of American’s remaining energy resources-Alaskan oil and gas, offshore oil reserves, nuclear energy and synthetic fuels from coal and oil shale. A few days later, Nixon reiterated his challenge, linking it to rumour circulating Washington that the “blue-eyed Arabs” of Canada were taking advantage of America‘s energy plant. The United States, Nixon asserted, should be independent of all oil producing countries, “including our Canadian friends,” by 1976. Canadians “can be pretty tough on us sometimes when they are looking down our throats.” This did not mean that the U.S. would not continue to desire the oil of he Middle East of the gas of Siberia or that she would cease energy cooperation with Canada or Latin America. “But it does mean that the United States must be independent in this area, and we can be.”

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let the games begin.

It seems that the Alberta Liberals are getting their game face on for the next provincial election.

This evening, the Edmonton Castle Downs Constituency will nominate Chris Kibermanis as their Alberta Liberal Candidate for the next election. You may remember that Castle Downs produced the closest race in the last election, with Kibermanis, 29, originally defeating cocky Tory incumbent and playboy-wannabe, Thomas Lukaszuk, by 9 votes.

But it was not to be. In the days following Kibermanis’ election, Lukaszuk and his O.J. style Tory Legal team descended on the Castle Downs results in an orgy of legal attacks which ended in the usurping of the original results which had been approved by Elections Officials. In the end, a 9 vote deficit turned out to be a 6 vote surplus… suspicious indeed.

This time, the rematch looks to be hot as Kibermanis has at least a year to campaign as the Alberta Liberal candidate. It is not known whether Lukaszuk, who as much as we can tell, doesn’t do more than sit pretty in the backbenches and jump when ordered, will seek re-election.

Tonight’s nomination meeting is the first of what will be a string of candidate nominations in the coming months and also comes on the heels of the Connections 2005 Pasta Supper which drew over 500 Alberta Liberals last Friday in Edmonton.

With the race to replace aging Premier Ralph Klein in full swing and looking to be nasty (our “Deep Throats” in Calgary are witnessing the emergence of a “Ted Morton insugency” in many supposedly Paul Mar… er… “Jim Dinning friendly” ridings), Kevin Taft and the Alberta Liberals are more than definitely in a position to make major gains in soft-Tory ridings like Castle Downs.

Let the games begin!

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Michael Ritter Scandal

when visa isn’t enough: the michael ritter story.

Money stolen from Merrill Lynch: $43 Million.

Money stolen or unlawfully possed and hidden in offshore bank accounts: $10.3 Million.

Money stolen through fraud in a US pyramid scheme: $230 Million.

Being denied bail AND facing extradition charges to the United States: Priceless.

Because, when Visa isn’t enough, there’s always theft, fraud, and money laundering.

Click here for the complete Michael Ritter Scandal Chronology…

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privacy is "the cornerstone of a liberal democracy"

Oui, c’est un press release

Prof probes impact of post 9/11 surveillance

Immediately after the 9/11 Al-Qeada terrorist attacks, government officials in both the U.S. and Canada were quick to pass legislation to increase surveillance of their citizens. But now, four years later, as fear of further terrorist attacks has become less acute and suspicion of government leaders’ motives has heightened, more and more people are starting question the increased invasion of their privacy, says Dr. Kevin Haggerty, director of the criminology program in the University of Alberta Department of Sociology.

“Right after 9/11 it was impossible for anyone to say no to anything that would purportedly increase security,” said Haggerty, who recently co-authored a paper on the use of surveillance as response to terrorist threats, which was published in the Canadian Journal of Sociology.

Increasing the ability of lawmakers to monitor our Internet use, financial transactions, personal movements and cell phone use were just a few of the measures in the U.S. Patriot Act and the Canadian Public Safety Act that became law shortly after 9/11. But many of these measures had been proposed and rejected as unwarranted privacy invasions in previous years, Haggerty said.

The steep increase in surveillance infrastructure after 9/11 has been “intensive” and has “proceeded with little public debate or protest,” he added. “But polling and censor numbers are showing us that people have lost some of their trust in authorities, and we are now looking more critically at the restrictions being placed on our civil liberties.”

Read the rest here.

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5-6-7 billion!

We thought this was interesting.

Check out the US National Debt Clock and the US Federal Government Budget Spending.

The United States Bureau of Public Debt has some pretty skyrocketing debt numbers as well.

In 2000, the US National Public Debt was $5,674,178,209,886.86.

As of yesterday, the US National Public Debt was sitting at $7,950,034,655,748.03.

holy shite.

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oggle the bazoogle.

According to the “Which Big Lebowski character are you?” quiz:

Why don’t you check it out? Or we cut off your Johnson!


The funny thing is, we’ve never seen the movie and have no idea what it means.

Can anyone enlighten us?

(props to funcentral for the link to this quiz)

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the oberg effect.

August 30-31: Alberta Infrastructure and Transportation Minister and Tory Leadership Candidate, Lyle Oberg visits the Ukraine and meets with Ukraine’s Minister of Transportation and other government and business officials.

Sept 9: Ukrainian President Victor Yushchenko fires his cabinet.

Mere coincidence? Decide for yourself.

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top scientific discovery.

Top American researchers and analysts have disected the reason for United States President George W. Bush’s unique grasp of the English Language.

Brilliant. Freaking brilliant.

(Props to Expat for the link)

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still digging our hole…

When we finish digging our hole from Garneau to the other side of the world, we now know we’ll end up in the south Indian Ocean!

From That Canadian Girl via Darren Barefoot.

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the incredible grandinite blog survey!

An email from Aaron of Grandinite fame…

Friends of the Canadian Blogosphere:

As I stated, not one month ago, on Calgary’s QR 770 with Rob Breakenridge: you have not heard the last of Aaron Braaten.

I bring to you the Great Canadian Blog Survey at Canadianeconomist.com.

There’s info on the site if you want to direct people straight to the survey and cut out the middleman. If you get a pop-up, that’s the survey.

Please help me publicize it. If you link to it, just respond to this email so I can acknowledge you in the final reports.

Let’s get ‘er done.

The more respondents the survey gets, the faster the report will come out and the sooner you ‘linkers’ are immortalized in Canada’s best blog survey, done by a blogger for his fellow bloggers.

Plus you will be helping a budding young economist finish his master’s thesis.

Five minutes out of your busy day of blogging. Five minutes is all I ask.

To those of you who link to it: thank you. For those of you who do not, please take my survey!

Cheers,

Aaron Braaten


Founder of:

http://www.canadianeconomist.com
http://www.albertablogs.com
http://www.grandinite.com

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born with a tail on martin.

Don Martin that is.

Derek, from Born with a Tail, has posted his review of National Post columnist Don Martin’s inward looking five-part series on why Alberta is better than the rest of Canada. We very much enjoy the Raymakerian-style of blog posting.

Check it out.

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everytime a bell rings, a political hack loses his moustache.

Rod! Say it ain’t so!

From Wednesday’s Edmonton Journal

…the moustache, Love said he “hacked it off” because he got tired of looking at it after 35 years.

Rod Love (seen here), who is “not a lobbyist,” recently re-left Premier Ralph Klein’s Office as Chief of Staff for the second time to rejoin the private sector. He also parted ways with his trademark massive moustache.

Mr. Love, who has been heavily involved in Kleinesian politics since 1980 was also one of the geniuses behind Stockwell Day’s “leadership” of the Canadian Alliance, and Belinda Stronach’s Conservative leadership bid. He is also very supportive of the Jim Dinning camp of the Alberta Progressive Conservative leadership race, so don’t rule him out briefly coming back to the Premier’s office after Dinning smacks the bejesus out of the Ted Morton/Lyle Oberg/Mark Norris group only to be defeated in the next election (yes, you heard it here first!).

Alberta Liberal leader Kevin Taft is suggesting that the Alberta Government instate a cooling off period for insiders like Love, who hop in between the private consulting jobs and high level political positions. The issue came up after Mr. Love’s new consulting firm took out a large advertizment in last Tuesday’s Globe & Mail business section praising the experiences of Mr. Love.

Currently, there is a one year cooling off period for retiring or defeated Cabinet Ministers.

We tend to agree. A cooling off period for political insiders wouldn’t be so bad.

And yes, if you would like to see the newly moustachless Mr. Love, check out this coverage by Kevin Rich at CFCN Calgary.