The challenge for Albertans is to find a way to keep up with the barrage of UCP changes to legislation, regulations....
One way to sort through the flak that pours into your media feed every day is to read it with two principles in mind: mutuality of interest and follow the money.
The UCP and corporate Alberta share a mutuality of interest.
The UCP depends on corporations and their shareholders and executives for financial support to stay in power. Corporations support political parties that free them from regulatory oversight...
(Sorry all you ordinary Albertans who voted for the UCP after Kenney’s blue pick-up tour of Alberta; you’re not part of the equation).
Nevertheless, both policies are a success in Kenney’s world because they reduce corporate costs and increase profits which lead to hefty dividends. If shareholders are happy, corporations are happy;
One hand washes the other, you know.
Follow the money
Given this mutuality of interest, it’s not surprising that following the money invariably leads us to the private sector.
It’s obvious Kenney’s $1.5 billion equity investment and $6 billion loan guarantee to the KXL pipeline bought him a heap of goodwill from TC Energy, its shareholders, and investors,...
The money trail is less obvious when its obscured by rhetoric about boosting the economy and saving taxpayers money
Under the guise of saving taxpayers money, Kenney will fully or partially close 20 parks and transfer 164 more to third-party managers.
Kenney is promoting more “choice” in healthcare by funneling taxpayers’ money into the privatization of healthcare, be it the Babylon Telus app which replaces real physicians with virtual ones or a policy that will
Some good news
They reacted by increasing their financial support for the NDP.
A year later Albertans are pushing back. It turns Alberta is not for sale after all.