“No Kings!”

Here’s a comprehensive list of what trump and his regime have done to the US:

The TikTok video takes 1 minute and 23 seconds – it shows clearly the nearly complete conversion of a “democratic” US to a fascistic dictatorship. It’s not coming! It’s arrived.

Charlie Angus posted that there’s a “No Kings” protest happening in Toronto coming Saturday – everybody nearby is invited to attend:

There may be one near you, if you live elsewhere.

If you’re in the US here’s a link to the gazillion of gatherings planned throughout the country:

9 months! That’s all it’s taken to dismantle the social, economic, governmental structure of the US. Even those of us who sit here in Canada have to be concerned – that country is too close for comfort. Too many of our own citizens laud what’s been going on – the chaos could start to spill over – it already has in provinces like Alberta with those folks who welcome the “51st state”!

So, do something. If nothing else, keep abreast of what’s been happening and make sure friends and family also know what’s going on!

No! to the “Golden Shield” scheme

Did we hear about this on July 15? There certainly was no hullabaloo in the media about it. That was nearly a month ago. We can’t let this decision pass unnoticed!

Fellow Canadians, this is an all-hands-on-deck moment.

The Liberal government has informed the United States that it has resolved its internal issues regarding the signing of Donald Trump’s “Golden Shield” missile initiative.

This message was delivered on July 15 in Colorado, when Defence Minister David McGuinty told U.S. General Gregory Guillot, his American counterpart, that Carney had “removed all restrictions on air and missile defence of Canada.”

This is way bigger than Carney caving on the Digital Sales Tax. Or his musings about cancelling the Online News Act that has pissed off Facebook. Or even dialling back the counter tariffs imposed by former Prime Minister Trudeau.

This move sends the ultimate signal of weakness and represents a serious repudiation of Canada’s longstanding position on airborne missile defence.

This cannot be allowed to stand. [Charlie Angus: Charlie Angus / The Resistance
A Message to Mark Carney: Shut Down the Golden Shield Scheme Now]

Seems to me this move deserves attention. I can’t imagine a majority of Canadians would be OK with this:

Since the threat to our nation began, Canadians have shown an unprecedented level of solidarity. The PM has been given a strong mandate because Canadians are determined to hold the line.

He will seriously undermine this support if he thinks he can placate Trump on something as fundamental as the sovereignty of Canadian airspace.

The blowback will be intense.

My advice to the Prime Minister: Not a single dime, Mark. Not a single dime. You asked for a mandate to defend us with your Elbows Up. We gave you that. But do not think you can placate the gangster.

My message to my fellow Canadians: Let’s shut this idiocy down before it gains any more traction. The PM needs to hear from you.

I urge you to use your voice. Tell him that he does not have a mandate to go along with Trump’s missile control of our skies.

Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A2
mailto:mark.carney@parl.gc.ca
Fax: 613-941-6900

It’s time to write to Carney letting him know he doesn’t have my support on this move to placate trump!

Here’s my letter:

Mr. Carney,

It seems I missed the announcement that on July 15 Defense Minister David McGuinty informed US General Gregory Guillot you had “removed all restrictions on air and missile defence of Canada.”

I was more than a little uncomfortable when you caved on the Digital Sales Tax – I understood you were trying to create conditions that might lead to a favourable trump tariff pullback, but that move was pointless – no reduction in tariffs, no new trade deal by whatever moving deadline trump’s whim broadcasted. (It also doesn’t look as if Canada can look forward to a reasonable renegotiation of UMSCA / NAFTA if trump’s and your comments are anything to judge by.)

I kept quiet, giving you the benefit of the doubt on having inside information I wasn’t privy to that influenced your decision. Seems I was wrong. You, and Canadians, got taken for a ride on that one. Par for the course with trump! You must know by now trump lies – he’s a manipulator – his word is worthless.

Now I learn about the removing of restrictions on air and missile defence of Canada. Sorry, but you didn’t make such a move on my behalf. I don’t support giving trump and his minions unlimited drone, satellite and plane access to fly over Canadian sovereign territory – that move is folly. You can’t seriously believe the American forces would be engaged in such activity to protect us!

Right now, the US is our biggest threat!

Instead of spending billions to pay for trump’s Golden Shield scheme, we should be taking lessons from the Ukrainians – building our own drone factories, strengthening our own mobile defence systems, increasing production of ammunition and other supplies for ourselves and to help supply Ukraine (against both Putin and trump).

I hope your “decision” was a Canadian ploy (comparable to the UK, Japan, and the EU) promising a big deal but having no intention of spending a single nickel (we no longer have Canadian pennies) on the project. But if that was the case, you’d better wink in our direction, letting us Canadians in on the game.

Are you hearing us? We will support you when you stand up to trump. But know we are ready to push back when you try to placate that wannabe dictator.

We Canadians are determined to stand strong against trump! Whether that means sustaining, even intensifying, the boycott on US agricultural and manufactured goods, refusing to travel to the US, refusing to become the 51st state. It definitely means not giving in to bullying regarding trump’s fantastical “Golden Shield” scheme.

Just sharing my thoughts with you before I take to the street with my sign:

Shut Down The Idiocy!
No US Drones over Canada!

Sincerely
Judith Newman


Sign the No Golden Shield petition to show your concern.

Build “Canada Strong” — the right way

Don’t gut the laws that protect it.

At the top of my inbox this morning was the weekly newsletter from the David Suzuki Foundation. I’ve subscribed to the newsletter for a long time. I read it but I don’t often do anything with what I’ve read.

Today the newsletter argued something I have felt strongly about for a long time – Canada can’t move forward economically in any strategic way if we don’t work with the environment in the process. I contend “the environment” has to be our #1 priority.

You can’t “build” a stronger economy, a caring society, a healthy community, safe cities and towns, … , when you’re constantly having to deal with wildfire, flood, hurricanes, drought, disease, insect infestation, …. (sounds like the list of “plagues” named in the Passover story).

In any given season, more and more people today are directly affected by these environmental events/happenings.

Each uncontrolled fire, every flood, epidemic/pandemic, drought, famine, hurricane costs our communities huge amounts in recovery costs – which, had the destructive environmental event not occurred (or not have been as severe) could have been used to “build Canada Strong!”

Here’s what the Suzuki Foundation newsletter had to say:

Premiers Doug Ford and Danielle Smith have already dismantled environmental protections in Ontario and Alberta. Now, they’re teaming up to pressure Ottawa to weaken the last line of defence: federal environmental laws.

They are hiding their deregulation agenda under the cloak of “nation-building”, but if the rules that protect endangered species, reduce climate risk, uphold Indigenous rights and give the public a say are eroded, so too is Canada.

It’s a “no-brainer”. We have to protect the environment!

We reduce flood risk by keeping our wetlands healthy. A strong biodiversity reduces the impact of changes within an integrated ecosystem. Limiting carbon emissions would stabilize annual global temperature over a period of time. Just a few examples of how looking after the environment would bring long term benefits.

Rising global temperature impacts different parts of our country differently – right now, NS where I live (usually one of the wetter regions of Canada), is experiencing “drought” conditions – we’re in serious need of rain which is nowhere in the forecast for the next few weeks. Not just a gentle rain or fog, we need repeated heavy rainfall to soak into the ground, to fill our lakes and raise the level of our streams/rivers.

The threat of wildfire grows each day as our sunny weather remains unabated. We experienced several severe wildfires three years ago, we don’t want a repeat.

Black-legged ticks continue their march across our province due to rising temperatures, from the countryside into the cities, bringing with them an increase in Lyme disease cases.

It’s critical for Canadians in every part of our country to understand we need to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels while building a greener economy. We need to work in harmony with the planet.

If Canada wants to build a better future, we must maintain the natural systems that support economic activities and all life. We must invest in clean energy, sustainable infrastructure and policies that respect the planet and people.

We need to say it loud and clear:
Protecting the environment is in Canada’s interest. Build “Canada Strong” — the right way. Don’t gut the laws that protect it.

In Canada, we’re at a critical and uncomfortable moment! For the past 60+ years we’ve built an integrated economy with the US suddenly to be faced with significant challenges to our sovereignty! We must find a way to greater self-reliance, a reduced dependence on the US, for our economic stability. It’s understandable that our federal and provincial governments want to make some big changes to facilitate economic development and expansion. And there’s pressure to move quickly – but expanding our reliance on gas and oil development at the expense of supporting our growing green energy capability is short sighted. Our rush to extract the rarer minerals (now very useful for our exploding digital way of life), by ignoring indigenous voices on whose lands these minerals are found, is asking for conflict where a slower collaboration might find a more harmonious way to benefit all of us.

At the moment, it feels as if things are quiet on the Canadian political landscape, but there are many conflicting pressures bubbling beneath this apparent calm surface. The trade deal talks with the US have passed a couple of deadlines with no deal, only more tariffs and threats. Interprovincial solidarity is an illusion we can’t rely on, either.

This is a moment when we Canadians need to understand we stand together or we fail. Any policy we make regarding our economic development needs to embrace the environment as our #1 priority. If we continue making decisions which extend environmental degradation at the current pace, we’re in for a long, rough ride.

What’s in trump’s Bill?

From the NYT Newsletter this morning – July 1 2025

I’ve just provided headings and a link to much more information. We’ve all been hearing about this BBB – but we should know what’s in it. It’s not going to affect us here in Canada directly – but god help us if we should turn into the 51st state! All of this crap would affect us big time!

The Senate is still debating a key part of President Trump’s domestic agenda this morning — what he has called his big, beautiful bill. Senators are racing to pass it before the July 4 deadline.

By now, you have probably heard two things about the proposal. First, it would cut taxes in a way that would largely benefit the wealthiest Americans. Second, to recoup some of that lost revenue, it would cut health care programs, particularly Medicaid, and would leave nearly 12 million more Americans uninsured over 10 years.

Those parts are important, but they are far from the only elements in the sprawling 940-page bill. The legislation also touches on food stamps, clean energy, mass deportations, student loans, military spending and more. Today, I’ll explain some of those less discussed provisions.

The other pieces

Because this bill is foremost about the federal budget, it goes through a special procedure — called reconciliation — that lets the Senate pass it with a simple majority, no filibuster allowed. Republican lawmakers have therefore treated this as a rare opportunity to accomplish a bunch of different priorities.

Food stamp cuts

Clean energy disinvestment

Funding for deportations

Less student loan relief

More military spending

And much more: The proposal would create tax-advantaged savings accounts for newborns, called “Trump accounts,” that would start with $1,000 in government contributions. It would increase money for air traffic control and the Secret Service. And it would help pay for America’s 250th anniversary celebrations next year.

To see all of the provisions — there are nearly 300 — check out this list that my colleagues have put together, which explains everything in the bill and how much it would cost or save.

What’s next

It’s still not clear whether the bill, as it currently stands, will become law. Senators need to vote on their version, and then it will go back to the House for final passage. Republicans control the House by a thinner margin than they do the Senate, and a few defectors could complicate things. Still, Trump has demanded they pass it — and Republicans have not bucked the president much since his return to office.

I just felt you might want to stay informed!

Good luck keeping up with it all.

Heed The Message!

Heed the message!

And I’ll tell you: there are things happening in America right now that feel like I’m living in a Soviet Union 

I was thankfully too young to see, but had the misfortune to live in my first years. A president threatening to jail opponents while the crowd cheers.

TV networks turned into pure propaganda, calling it “news”

Armed militias patroling the streets, calling it “freedom.”

Laws bent to protect the powerful, not the people.

As you know, the U.S.S.R. was already a terrible of a place to live, so that many people ran away at the first chance.

That’s why when I hear Americans say “my vote doesn’t matter” or “all politicians are the same,” I feel something crack inside me

Victor Kravchuk

Day by day this is what is happening in the US. It’s unbearably painful watching this scenario unfold. I’m sitting here in Canada on edge, because once full dictatorship is realized in the US, Canada will be under the gun, if not literally, economically, for certain. trump has repeatedly threatened that.

trump says he holds all the cards – I’m not sure what cards Canada holds, some, for sure. But it’s not hard to imagine Canada as Ukraine in the not distant future! Canadians aren’t ready for what could be ahead for us.

I think Carney is smart enough to see this possible reality ahead of us. I’m just hoping he’s smart enough to outmanoeuvre trump. I’m ambivalent about the rescinding of the digital tax this past weekend. Yes, it reinstated the trade talks but trump is braying that we “caved”.

I feel trump is playing cat and mouse – ya, the trade talks are back on for the moment, but he can call them off on any pretext he wants. Look at him side eye and we’re back to the beginning.

Nothing he says or does is reliable. I’m expecting any trade deal that gets hammered out will not be good for Canada. That will leave us feeling betrayed by our government (although nobody would be able to have “negotiated” anything better).

I’m not sure what that will do to Canadian nationalist feeling and tenuous unity we’re experiencing at the moment.

In some ways, Canadians are more aware of what’s going on in the US than most US citizens. We certainly understand the threat trump represents. I’m just nervous that our solidarity isn’t strong enough for us to stand together when the going gets really rough economically; when the 51st state threats become more insistent (those threats are again being made – I hope we’re all hearing them – I hope our boycott of US travel and products holds).

Canadians, like Americans, are used to a basic level of affluence. Our young people expect instant gratification. They’re not used to doing without – they complain if they have to work hard to achieve some goal – many expect opportunities will be handed them on a platter.

It’s our fault – we older folks who grew up making do with a whole lot less – pampered them, we fulfilled the desires of our children and grandchildren because we could afford to. We didn’t ask them to earn that gratification. Hence, they expect life will be easy for them.

It’s been getting harder, and many are struggling to find a way to carry on. When the going gets a whole lot harder – and I’m expecting it will – will they decide to give in to trump’s demands for the 51st state?

So many Canadians have no idea what it could be like living in a US controlled by this dictator! This current BBB (Big Beautiful Bill) would eliminate health care for many Canadians living in a 51st state; it would increase food insecurity for our children; it would mean loss of any environmental protection; no support to help after the harm wrought by hurricanes, wildfires, flooding; and on an on, Most of what’s in that bill is aimed at destroying the lives of middle class and poor Americans so the wealthy can live as they want. A good proportion of Canadians would fall into that group of disadvantaged.

It looks like we’re between a rock and a hard place.

Kravchuk is laying out for us what’s ahead. He’s letting us know, as clearly as he can, that it’s not a life we want to choose.

It’s obvious that there’s no sitting this one out – everybody is going to have to take participate in the resistance if we’re going to survive with any independence, and our values intact!

Freedom Line by Viktor Kravchuk 🇺🇦🇺🇸

Nothing Feels Urgent Anymore…

I just finished reading William Finnegan’s “Nothing Feels Urgent Anymore – And That Should Terrify You

He writes of the US –

“In the early stages of collapse, the warning signs come like alarms: loud, unmistakable, emotionally triggering. You feel compelled to respond. To signal. To warn others.

But we’re not in that phase anymore.

We’re in the part where everything bleeds together. Where Trump’s criminal and idiotic antics, Supreme Court nullification, dollar decoupling, tariff tumult, and cabinet secretariat stupidity all feel like background noise.

We are experiencing the flattening of outrage.

This isn’t a failure of attention. It’s a feature of the system now. And it’s not just cultural. It’s strategic.”

It feels like that here in Canada – we’re in limbo – although I’m sure a lot is going on in preparation for the reconvening of Parliament on May 24 (I think that’s the date), there isn’t a ton of stuff in the news so there isn’t much to react to.

It feels weird!

I feel like I’m holding my breath.

I’ve just reached out to Charlie Angus to see if we can get a “Resistance” event going in NS – but here’s the thing – I haven’t sorted out what we’re resisting at the moment – trump’s 51st State threats have gone quiet right now. Resistance to Poilievre was essential during the election- that’s now over. While still Conservative Party leader, he lost his parliamentary seat so he won’t be there delivering his bombastic nonsense (Andrew Sheer will be acting opposition leader in the House – who knows how he’s going to handle responding to the government’s proposals). Poilievre will continue making pronouncements (likely unchanged from his carping before and during the election) but it won’t have the same force until he’s elected in his “safe” Alberta seat – he won’t be back in Parliament until the fall.

I feel we need to maintain our wariness and opposition to trump and those stupid tariffs. Yes, trump has dropped the “51st state” crap, for now. But it lurks, just the same. He’s moved on from threats against Panama and Greenland to his shiny new jet (how silly is that!), and all the lovely AI deals he’s made in the middle east, and he’s just today more or less given up on his buddy Putin, he says. What does he turn his attention to today?

Here in Canada we’re left waiting for the third or fourth shoe to drop – no clue what it’ll be about. So yes, resistance to this all the idiocy – but at the moment it has no shape. We’re in limbo here.

Another week or so, we may find ourselves with focus – we need to continue working at being informed so we can jump in the moment there’s some real issue that needs our attention and voices!

By the way, if you happen to live in Nova Scotia and still need connection to Resistance, please get in touch. I believe Charlie Angus has a bigger picture shaping his Resistance efforts. I need to know more about that. If you feel you do, too, get in touch. I can’t organize an event on my own – I need colleagues willing to put in some time to make the phone calls and help set up the structures for an event – this isn’t a commitment to a long term project – just the one gathering. I’d love to make it happen – I think it could provide some focus to shape this “slow” period for all of us.

Silence Is Not An Option

I’m trying to get a feel for how I can best participate in our current political world. I’m an outsider to the US mess. I keep an eye on the war in Ukraine, on the horrific destruction in Gaza, watchful of China’s moves on Taiwan and the suppression of liberty in Hong Kong. There’s chaos everywhere.

It takes me back to a Kingston Trio song from the early 60s:

Details different, situation the same (SNAFU)!

I realized recently I can no longer fight on the palisades; but I’m still good at reading stuff from all over the map and building a bigger picture. That’s what I’m finding myself doing at the moment.

Today, I’ll share a few things I’ve read you might find helpful / interesting, too.

Alex Himelfarb’s recent contribution to Pledge For Canada is a must-read, I think. He’s explaining the historical connections we have as a federation and the role taxes play in keeping a nation together. He ends with:

To build a more resilient, less dependent – democratic – Canada, we will need to rebuild our collective toolkit, find a new solidarity across our differences, and rediscover the common good. We will need government strong enough to harness the market and democracy strong enough to harness government. 

What We Owe Each Other describes Canada’s equalization policy and how it operates. It’s a good refresher for all of us, including Albertans. There’s also this tidbit that clarifies provincial contribution to the national economy (in case you think Alberta contributes the most – it doesn’t).

Corey Hogan has written a useful piece about three myths underpinning the Alberta separation movement: Three Alberta Separation Myths.

The next several months could be a dangerous time for Alberta. It does not take a majority of Albertans voting to separate to severely damage our home – serious talk alone will be sufficient.

Consider the example of Quebec in the 1970s: companies moved from Montreal to Toronto to escape political uncertainty. This was despite the fact that corporate taxes were lower in Quebec than Ontario at that time.

Putting so much political risk into the equation will more than undo any other Alberta Advantage we create. It’s incumbent on all of us to tread carefully. Now is a time for cool heads and facts.

There are also the Treaties which govern much of the land in Alberta! It could be argued most of the province is controlled by those treaties and the First Nations Peoples will determines what happens there. (Tried tracking down the source, unsuccessful.)

One other quick link to “The Truth About 51st State Supporters“:

when a Canadian proudly declares they support Trump over any Canadian leader, what they’re really saying is:

✔️ They would rather see this country controlled by a foreign dictator than governed by Canadians.

✔️ They support the rise of authoritarianism over the principles of democracy.

✔️ They would rather burn this country to the ground than see a government they don’t like in power.

That’s not patriotism. That’s treasonous thinking.

I’ll end today with an incredibly moving piece by Victor Kravchuk – a “Ukrainian living through war”.

Let me ask you something:

If tomorrow you woke up and your country was being erased, not just by missiles, but by hate. If you saw strangers online spreading that your story no longer mattered, that your pain was inconvenient, that your survival was a political annoyance…

Wouldn’t you want someone to write you back?

Wouldn’t you want someone, somewhere, to care enough to keep your voice alive?

That’s why I’m still here. 

And that’s why you, reading this right now, are part of something I’ll never be able to measure.

Gotta step away from my computer and get on with life.

It’s a gorgeous warm, sunny day here in NS. Dandelions everywhere. Magnolias and azaleas in bloom. You can see the leaves growing on a day like this.

I have to head out for a walk – to feel connected to it all.

Resisting at 82… Realizing I’m too old to march!

Ramona Grigg (an elderly American woman – my age) raised some important questions today for people enraged by the trump regime’s clear efforts to install a dictatorship in the US. 

If Speaking Truth to Power is Heroism in America, We’re in More Trouble Than We Know.

If it’s becoming brave to demand our constitutional rights, the need for resistance is NOW.

RAMONA GRIGG

MAY 09, 2025

Toward the end she says:

I’m not going to end this by attempting to come up with solutions, … other than to stress the ‘keep on fighting’ part. How we fight works on a day-to-day, minute-by-minute judgement call: what does this fresh hell require of me?

This right here is what I’m doing. It’s what I have the energy and the skills for. Praise you for what you’re doing! Whatever it is, it’s better than doing nothing. And maybe together we’re building a force formidable enough to make a difference.

It’s what I have the energy and the skills for….” that jumped out at me.

It struck home and I felt compelled to message her:

Hey Ramona, keep up the “Shouting”! I realized recently that my days to actively participate in a physical protest at the US consulate in Halifax, or our city hall square, or on our waterfront are over! I no longer have the physical stamina to find a spot to park my car, walk to the protest with my sign, and stand around for even so much as an hour! I just can’t do it. No pretending any more. I think that’s part of what’s been immobilizing me – keeping me from being able to sew anything, to create anything. But, like you, I can still write coherently. Which I’m doing even though my audience is small and shows no signs of growing larger! Oh, well. I do what I can. Keep doing what you can, girl!

I’m frustrated by my declining physical capacity! I have no trouble getting around the grocery store, walking from my car to the change room at the pool three mornings a week, being physically active enough to do all the stuff I do in a day, in a week. What I can’t do any more is any extended walking – my knees and back have become cranky and push back when I overextend myself. I have to accept I’m not going to be able to participate in whatever the next protest is, or even the energy to instigate and organize one.

I wish I had a magic wand that would make my writing / shouting visible. I wish I knew what it would take to get a gazillion subscribers to read and converse with what I’m thinking. I have to accept there’s no reason to be noticed. I’m not some well known TV personality who’s jumped over to Substack and found an instant following. Not a well known academic or writer, or political figure who’s already attracted attention. Just carrying on, putting what I’m thinking out there when I have something to say.

I also know shouting publicly makes it likely I would be stopped at the US border where I to attempt a visit the US. Good thing that’s not on my agenda any time soon.

That brings me to Rachael Gilmour’s video today.

https://substack.com/home/post/p-163223839

I watch Rachel Gilmour’s commentary, but I don’t as a rule pass it on. This one is a doozy! She’s calling out the CPC for an email they sent out using serious falsehoods about the three automatic recounts happening from the election (because the results were very close) calling them “rigging” from Liberals!

This looks like how PP’s “cooperation” on a united Canada is going to play out. More stupid lying and confrontation. Too bad.

Please check out what Gilmore has to say – she’s right about how recounts happen in a Canadian election! Nothing to do with the party, directly. All overseen by a judge. Thank goodness there are actual paper ballots to recount!

And this is my today’s contribution to the Resistance conversation!

A Warning From Charlie Angus

Charlie Angus sounded an alarm this morning – those of us who voted for an independent, more self-sufficient Canada need to heed it.

I know what you were thinking: the election is over, Canada will negotiate a new deal with Trump, and life will return to normal.

I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but that’s not how it’s going to play out.

In a world of gangster leaders like Trump and Putin, Canada’s repudiation of the MAGA march just won’t stand. The authoritarian, anti-democratic “project” has been years in the making. It’s been driven by the likes of Bannon and Hungary’s Victor Orban — and they aren’t going to let Canada stand tall as a model of liberal democracy.

The online platforms are already gearing up with BOT farms disrupting online conversations. It’s all about undermining both Carney and Canada.

He goes on:

On the domestic front, there is no way the Conservatives will give Carney the grace period needed to build trust with the public. The Maple MAGA machine will do everything it can to undermine Carney. 

Just watch.

He ends with:

In the MAGA world it is unacceptable that Canada is seen as a symbol of the resilience of liberal democracy.

In the coming months, it will not just be the new Prime Minister who is put to the test. Canada, our shared values and nationhood, will be tested as well.

I know we will rise to the challenge, but only if we can identify the toxic playbook being used by Maple MAGA and the far right.

Here’s my reply when I restacked his message:

Thanks Charlie for sounding the alarm. I think I’d have come to the realization myself eventually, but better I should get here sooner.

I believe we need the resistance you’re building right now more than ever. We Canadians need to keep pushing back against Maple MAGA, trump MAGA, and Russian efforts to bring Canada to heel.

We need to keep those protests going – both to support American efforts to resist trump, but also to make complacent Canadians aware of the bumpy future we also face – not from our Liberal government, so much, as from Poilievre and Conservative efforts.

What Canada needs at the moment is a strong collaboration of politicians and citizens to work through the problems we face. I was hoping PP losing his seat might send a message that Canada needs a different approach from him. I wasn’t hopeful he could actually bring that; I was pretty sure he had but one song. But I was holding my breath allowing him the possibility of actually putting Canada first.

I can see from your piece, my hope is naive. You’re right. The attacks have already started. We need to build our resistance as quickly as possible so we can fight back in support of our independence, our autonomy.

We need to be alert for every opportunity to rally – at the moment it’s quiet out there. But as soon as the distractions and stonewalling start up (I suppose that will come with the opening of parliament), we better be ready with our signs. 

One of the things that’s made the protests in the US effective, particularly with regard to the deportations, has been the advance organizing done by community groups who have been in a position to jump into action as soon as someone in the community has been rounded up. People have predetermined what roles they would play, who would call the lawyers, who would bring out the signs, who would make calls, who would sent emails. Within hours, protests have arrived at the right places and they’ve been able to interfere with the disappearing of community members. We need similar advance planning. 

I haven’t found that group of friends who will march with me. I know, I just need to start by calling one or two people to plan for what’s coming….

The election is over. Now what?

That’s David Suzuki’s headline from the piece linked below

Climate issues disappeared during our election. Building energy independence, self-sufficiency, expansion of pipelines were the “big” ideas. The costs of sustaining our reliance on fossil fuels were nowhere to be found. 

OK, so we understood the “enemy” we were fighting was US expansionism, Canadian annexation, trump’s threatening the destruction of our economy. Except for our determined Green Party, the other leaders were focused on the economic realities facing us. We accepted that.

But the election is over. Now what? 

We can’t lose sight of the overarching threat that ignoring climate issues presents us. We can’t forget about the economic and social costs of increasingly destructive heat domes, violent storms, wildfires, floods, droughts, migrating disease threats, habitat loss, and on and on. We can’t pretend these threats don’t matter – they impact everything else in our lives.

We need to keep discussion about these serious issues alive; we need to place them at the forefront of all decision-making going forward.

The tough conversation is, of course, what balance can we, must we, strike between sustained use of fossil fuels and changing over to clean energy resources. That conversation threatens Canadian unity! 

Both Alberta and Quebec claim they feel exploited/hard done by/undermined/ignored by the rest of the country. Alberta is threatening to vote for separation.

Nevertheless, we’ve got to find a way to talk about these tough issues in a civil manner. We’ve got to drop the bombast and hostility and name calling and threats in order to solve what are existential problems!

am holding my breath, hoping this election has sent a message to our politicians about how they MUST conduct themselves! We’ve sent them to Ottawa to solve serious problems! They damn well better get to work and stop with the name calling and other stupidity we’ve seen for far too long! Our parliamentary system may be confrontational by design. Right now, I believe, all parties must cooperate to resolve the many grave issues we’re facing.

I suppose, in the global scheme of things, Canada’s contribution to climate change is relatively small, but that’s no reason for not putting climate issues at the centre of all our political decisions. There are a number of tipping points to be concerned about: the mass death of coral reefs, the abrupt thawing of the permafrost, collapse of the Greenland ice sheet, breakup of west Antarctic ice, sudden shift in the West African monsoon, loss of Amazon rainforest, shutdown of Atlantic currents. Any one of these impending scenarios could have catastrophic consequences for all life on earth.

The thawing of the permafrost is of particular concern to Canada since most of our north is frozen and increased thawing is causing major difficulties for northern communities (not to mention the release of astronomical amounts of methane into the atmosphere). But even more than that we are experiencing drought on the prairies, heat domes in the west, more severe storms affecting the Atlantic provinces, wildfires in many parts of the country, unexpected flooding following torrential rainfall everywhere – we’ve experienced all of these disaster events during the past decade. We should all be concerned. 

(From Suzuki’s piece this morning):

This election was in large part about countering threats from our neighbours to the south — neighbours we once thought we could rely on but who have turned against us in efforts to weaken our economy and come after our resources. Let’s hope our new government is up to the challenge. Part of that will be showing there are better ways.

During the election campaign, the fossil fuel industry and its political supporters used the tensions between the U.S. and Canada to argue for ramping up the industry — to build more pipelines and oil and gas infrastructure. The ostensible justification is that doing so will make Canada more energy independent. It’s a bogus argument, given that pipelines and oil and gas infrastructure don’t get built overnight.

If we truly wanted to become energy independent, we would focus on the most cost-effective and efficient energy: renewable energy from wind, solar, geothermal and energy storage. We need a clean-powered, connected electricity gridthat facilitates interprovincial transmission. That would give us independence not only from the U.S. but from the multinational oil companies that seek only to enrich their owners, executives and shareholders.

The election is over. Now what? 

Our election may be over, but our work is just beginning.

I agree!