Sunday, April 28, 2013
MAY 1ST -- Public Information Meeting on Fracking to be Held in St. John's
The goal of this meeting is to inform people about the plans for fracking in this province, with the intent of forming a Fracking Awareness Group for the East Coast. A Fracking Awareness Group has been established on the West Coast and have been very effective in getting the word out and mobilizing people.
Learn more about what has already been done from allies reporting at the 4 O'Clock Whistle and other posts on fracking published on this blog.
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Labels: activism, BanFracking, fracking, Social Justice
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Questions for Black Spruce on the possibility of Hydraulic Fracturing on the West Coast of Newfoundland
Based on the article “Municipal leaders express concerns about fracking” by Christopher Vaughan, The Western Star April 20, 2013
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Labels: Ban Fracking, Black Spruce Exploration Corp., Canada, Flat Bay, fracking, IdleNoMore, labrador, Lark Harbour, newfoundland, Oil and Gas, Port au Port, Shoal Point Energy, Stephenville, Stephenville Crossing
Thursday, April 25, 2013
COMPANY FAILS TO EASE FRACKING CONCERNS: Important questions remain unanswered, say concerned citizens
The Port au Port /Bay St George Fracking Awareness Group April 23, 2013 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
COMPANY FAILS TO EASE FRACKING CONCERNS
Important questions remain unanswered, say concerned citizens
Port au Port East, NL: Black Spruce Exploration’s David Murray is failing to address local concerns about fracking even as he makes the media rounds, says the Port au Port/Bay St. George Fracking Awareness Group.
Mr. Murray is the head of the newly-formed company which plans to use horizontal slickwater hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, to drill for oil/gas at Shoal Point on Port au Port Bay as soon as September or October of this year.
Mr. Murray has been in damage control for the last couple of weeks after hundreds of concerned citizens turned out for an information session in Port au Port on April 7 to ask hard questions about the effects of fracking on their communities, their health, the environment, as well as on other industries in the area such as fishing and tourism.
So far Mr. Murray’s statements to the media and to the local municipalities have been evasive, unclear, and at times, even by his own admission, exaggerated. More answers are needed, says Bill O’Gorman of West Bay, before our government decides if this is something we will allow in our province.
Here are the top questions that remain unanswered:
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Labels: environment, fracking, Gros Morne National Park, Lark Harbour, Nature, newfoundland, Oil and Gas
Yet another conversation that Darin King would prefer we forget.
The following story was communicated to me by a mother who would prefer to remain anonymous. Given King's history of retaliation against critics, I don't blame her.
Concerning King: I really like the list through the Occupy link. It's all on the public record. What about the things that are not on the public record?
I shall start with one incident going back to 2001. Long before King enter politics he was a education director at the former Burin School District. In the meeting that I had with him, on the simple request of an assessment for my child to check learning disabilities - King personally attacked me and tried to stop me from pushing for an assessment for my child.
1. Your child is developmentally slow, based on his expertise dripping in condescending droplets encased with haughty and snooty tones.
2. King proceeded, that he has the PHD and compared to what do you have in levels of education and then he looks at the file - to accounting and its not even an accounting degree.
3. King proceeds to question by education background and then moves on to my abilities in both parenting and my intelligence.
4, Then he proceeds to questioned my inability to accept decisions from authority.
Of course, I objected at all that he said, and he proceeded to attacked me personally to get me to shut-up.
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Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Just protest now - call to action
No one needs permission to organize a protest. If you think it's a good idea to have a rally in your community or neighborhood, then you should. If you wanted to picket your MHA's office, then you should. If you want to write an editorial for the news or call into open line, you should. Make a sign or a banner, write the script for a protest play. There are many ways to take action, and a culture of protest emerges when people take it on themselves to just go ahead and act, feeling compelled to do so right now.
This is not to say protest actions should be impulsive -- on the contrary they need to be thought out -- but just to say that it's really up to you to take the lead and get the ball rolling if you want to effect change. Even seemingly small actions can have a big impact (putting up posters around your town, for example). There have been many protests in the last couple years we have written about on this page. If you browse through our content and the link list, you'll see lots of other ideas for protests as well. These range from occupation of public space, marches and rallies, to grassroots food-sharing kitchens, to culture jamming, and beyond. Protesting is about getting creative and thinking about what sort of action works to best convey your message.
This is not to say protest actions should be impulsive -- on the contrary they need to be thought out -- but just to say that it's really up to you to take the lead and get the ball rolling if you want to effect change. Even seemingly small actions can have a big impact (putting up posters around your town, for example). There have been many protests in the last couple years we have written about on this page. If you browse through our content and the link list, you'll see lots of other ideas for protests as well. These range from occupation of public space, marches and rallies, to grassroots food-sharing kitchens, to culture jamming, and beyond. Protesting is about getting creative and thinking about what sort of action works to best convey your message.
Read more »
New graffiti
Seeing some new graffiti around St. John's. Tag looks like "crisis". Something of the graffs brings to mind the subtle politics of the Listen Bird.
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Labels: crisis, graffiti, protest arts
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Updated: Who is trolling the "Dunderdale must GO!" facebook group?
**** Update: The Dunderdale Must GO facebook group has been replaced with the Dunderdale Must Go facebook page which is much less vulnerable to sabotage.****
This amusing exchange exposed an impostor who was sabotaging the "Dunderdale Must GO" facebook group at the centre of recent controversy.
This amusing exchange exposed an impostor who was sabotaging the "Dunderdale Must GO" facebook group at the centre of recent controversy.
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Friday, April 19, 2013
Provincial Tories talking BS on taxes...again.
Well this is pretty rich. On Wednesday, April 17th Tory backbencher Glen Littlejohn introduced a private members resolution lauding his party for the regressive tax cuts that helped created our fiscal crisis:
Wow I guess he's right. All the money must go to low income earners, because rich people don't exist. Next thing those craaazy lefties will have us taxing leprecauns and unicorns.
But hang on, don't provincial cabinet ministers make something like $150,000 a year? Someone earning that much will save about $7,000 a year from the tax cuts. Sounds like a better deal than $1,600 to me, but what do I know? I'm not a finance minister.
As we explained some time ago, the benefits of these tax cuts were heavily concentrated on the rich, but Littlejohn tries to spin it like all the money went to senior citizens and the poor. You can read it all in Hansard, but the tax relief he describes (using his numbers) is:"BE IT RESOLVED that this hon. House commends the government for returning half a billion dollars a year to Newfoundlanders and Labradorians by reducing personal income taxes and supports the government in its decision not to increase personal income tax rates to address the Province's fiscal challenge. "
- $30 million increase for Low Income Seniors Benefit,
- $7 million for Seniors tax credit (my calculation based his information),
- $42 million home heating rebate,
- $17 million on a low-income tax deduction (rough calculation based on his numbers).
"In 2013, a single individual with taxable income of $50,000 will save over $1,600, or 30 per cent, compared to the amount of taxes they would have paid in 2006 ... So, what we are doing, Mr. Speaker, the tax reductions are benefiting the lower income earners. It is not benefiting the rich – again, whoever the rich may be."
Wow I guess he's right. All the money must go to low income earners, because rich people don't exist. Next thing those craaazy lefties will have us taxing leprecauns and unicorns.
But hang on, don't provincial cabinet ministers make something like $150,000 a year? Someone earning that much will save about $7,000 a year from the tax cuts. Sounds like a better deal than $1,600 to me, but what do I know? I'm not a finance minister.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
“THE STUDENTS FIGHT BACK”
A 4 O’clock Whistle Documentary on the Recent Cuts to the College of the North Atlantic and the Student’s Response:
Including In-depth Interviews, Rally Footage, and Personal Messages from Students and Concerned Citizens
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Labels: 99% Film Fest, Canada, College of The North Atlantic, documentary, education, labrador, manifencours, newfoundland, Students
The rich are different from you and me: attitudes and opinions of the one percent
One of the defining slogans of the Occupy movement is "We are the 99%", referring to the fact that economic growth has mostly benefitted the wealthiest 1% of people in recent decades (you can read more about this trend in the US here and in Canada here).
Who are the 1% and what are their attitudes and political opinions? These questions are the subject of an on-going a multi-year study by political scientist Larry Bartels and his collaborators. They have recently released the results of a pilot study looking at a representative sample of the one percent living in Chicago (the pdf is found here), reporting median wealth of $7.5 million dollars. Among the most striking findings of the study are:
Who are the 1% and what are their attitudes and political opinions? These questions are the subject of an on-going a multi-year study by political scientist Larry Bartels and his collaborators. They have recently released the results of a pilot study looking at a representative sample of the one percent living in Chicago (the pdf is found here), reporting median wealth of $7.5 million dollars. Among the most striking findings of the study are:
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Friday, April 12, 2013
Information Session on Hydraulic Fracturing - Tuesday April 23rd in Lark Harbour
Information Session on Hydraulic Fracturing - Tuesday April 23rd in Lark Harbour
7:30 PM - Lark Harbour Town Hall
Labels: Ban Fracking, BanFracking, environment, fracking, Hydraulic Fracturing, IdleNoMore
Unrest and direct democracy: white paper for People's Assembly
Unrest
How do we understand the recent tide of indignation in the province? It is something of a conundrum to Kathy Dunderdale (listen to her 11 April call to VOCM, if you enjoy the feeling of being spoken to as though you are a small child) but to other commentators as well. It has something to do with the recent budget and its associated cuts and layoffs, but this era of austerity in the province is understood to be less severe than previous iterations of the same (one of the questions Bill Rowe puts to the premier on the call).
Of course, this needs to be framed alongside Muskrat Falls and the price tag, which through some form of economic acrobatics, is nothing to do with the financial situation of the government, and therefore nothing to do with the necessity of cuts and layoffs.Granted that this is somewhat difficult for thinking people to accept, let us assume, for argument sake, this is so. Nonetheless, the proliferation of protest and resistance to the project, notably by the NCC, as well as potential corruption and political manipulation, impacts the way cuts, layoffs, and other austerity measures are perceived.
How do we understand the recent tide of indignation in the province? It is something of a conundrum to Kathy Dunderdale (listen to her 11 April call to VOCM, if you enjoy the feeling of being spoken to as though you are a small child) but to other commentators as well. It has something to do with the recent budget and its associated cuts and layoffs, but this era of austerity in the province is understood to be less severe than previous iterations of the same (one of the questions Bill Rowe puts to the premier on the call).
Of course, this needs to be framed alongside Muskrat Falls and the price tag, which through some form of economic acrobatics, is nothing to do with the financial situation of the government, and therefore nothing to do with the necessity of cuts and layoffs.Granted that this is somewhat difficult for thinking people to accept, let us assume, for argument sake, this is so. Nonetheless, the proliferation of protest and resistance to the project, notably by the NCC, as well as potential corruption and political manipulation, impacts the way cuts, layoffs, and other austerity measures are perceived.
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Labels: direct democracy, horizontalism, occupy, PANL, People's Assembly, politics, theory, unrest
Monday, April 8, 2013
A Special Report on the “Public Forum on Horizontal Slickwater Fracturing” (April 7) at Port au Port East
Reposted from the blog of the 4 O'clock Whistle
At 2pm on April 7th about 400 hundred people showed up to take part in a public forum on Shoal Point Energy’s proposal to conduct horizontal slickwater fracturing (fracking) on the West Coast of Newfoundland. Several presentations were given on the subject ranging from an overview of the Province’s existing and environmental assessment process (which appears to contain the potential of producing a biased assessment), to the threat of environmental damage from fracking. Several representatives of government were present, including Tom Marshall, as well as representatives of the Department of Natural Resources and the Canada Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board. However no representatives of Shoal Point Energy appeared to be in attendance.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Free James Learning!
******************Update*****************
Jim Learning was released April 10th, on day five of his hunger strike.
Visit NunatuKavut for more info...
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Jim Learning was released April 10th, on day five of his hunger strike.
Visit NunatuKavut for more info...
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Labels: freedom, hero, jail support, Jim Learning, muskrat falls, NunatuKavut, protest, rights
Saturday, April 6, 2013
PROVINCE WIDE RALLIES IN SUPPORT OF STUDENTS AT THE COLLEGE OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC
***Facebook event page for province wide rally points***
CORNER BROOK CNA DEMONSTRATION TO TAKE PLACE!
AS PART OF PROVINCE WIDE RALLIES IN SUPPORT OF STUDENTS AT THE COLLEGE OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC
This coming Wednesday, April 10th at 12:00 PM, Students at the College of the North Atlantic in Corner Brook, joined by CNA students across the province, will walk out of the school to protest cuts to the CNA. The demonstration will start at the CNA at noon, and from there will march to the Sir Richard Squires Building.
All citizens of Corner Brook and the Surrounding Area, including the students, faculty and staff of Grenfell Campus are invited to join the demonstration in a show of solidarity.
Something to note: Memorial University is currently under review, and may be facing cuts in the future. It is IMPORTANT to point out that many of the programs that have been cut at the College of The North Atlantic had more students enrolled in them then there are in many of Memorial’s programs.
This is an issue that affects all of us, and now is the time to stand together!
Let’s show support for the students!
Come to the demonstration:
Wednesday, April 10th at 12:00 PM, Starting at the CNA
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Labels: austerity, Canada, College of The North Atlantic, Corner Brook, education, Grenfell Campus, Happy Valley Goose Bay, labrador, Memorial University, newfoundland, st. john's
Friday, April 5, 2013
The Thin Skin of Darin King
Cabinet minister Darin King has a hard time dealing with criticism. Time and again, he has responded to dissent against his authority with suspensions, censorship, funding cuts and other abuses of power. I'm not sure if this is a misguided PR strategy, an authoritarian ideology, a Napoleon complex or an just an over-inflated ego at work, but his behaviour is an affront to democratic society and he needs to be called out for it.
In that spirit, here are some examples of Darin King abusing power or just generally acting like a dick.
In that spirit, here are some examples of Darin King abusing power or just generally acting like a dick.
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Thursday, April 4, 2013
PROVINCE WIDE RALLY AGAINST CUTS TO THE CNA
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT:
A PROVINCE WIDE RALLY WILL BE HELD ON WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10TH AT NOON. COLLEGE OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC STUDENTS WILL BE WALKING OUT OF CLASSES AND DEMONSTRATING.
LET'S SHOW OUR SOLIDARITY!
A PROVINCE WIDE RALLY WILL BE HELD ON WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10TH AT NOON. COLLEGE OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC STUDENTS WILL BE WALKING OUT OF CLASSES AND DEMONSTRATING.
LET'S SHOW OUR SOLIDARITY!
SUPPORT THE STUDENTS!
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Monday, April 1, 2013
Trade and Local Implications of #CETA -- public event at The Lantern, April 4 at 7 pm
Via the St. John's chapter of the Council of Canadians:
Do you know what CETA is and what it might mean for us?
Facebook event HERE
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