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Alberta passes draconian laws abolishing property rights

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    Alberta passes draconian laws abolishing property rights

    “At the same time, they couldn’t believe that any government, in Alberta of all places, would actually start seizing their property without compensation.”


    NATIONAL POST

    Lawrence Solomon: Tyranny of the north

    Lawrence Solomon <http://opinion.financialpost.com/author/lawrencesolomon/> Aug 19, 2011 – 10:34 PM ET | Last Updated: Aug 19, 2011 11:18 PM ET

    Alberta passes draconian laws abolishing property rights

    Venezuela’s dictator, Hugo Chavez, was in the news this week for brashly announcing an expropriation of the mineral rights of the citizens of his country. We don’t seize private property that way in our democracy. We seize it silently and in plain sight, as seen in the province of Alberta, which so deftly passed stealth legislation two years ago that most Albertans are only now discovering the government’s audacious takeover of their property rights.

    The stealth occurred through a suite of four cleverly worded laws passed under the radar in 2009 and 2010. Their effect is to place all economic power in the hands of Cabinet, usurping the role of the legislature and negating the role of the courts.

    “These laws — which have just been used to tear up some two dozen oil sands leases — are without precedent in either Canada or the Western democracies,” states Keith Wilson, an Edmonton-area lawyer who recognized their implication a year ago and has been criss-crossing the province ever since to argue for their repeal. “The Alberta Cabinet can do virtually anything it now wants to do — it can tear up any contract that it had made without any recourse by the party on the other side. That contract could be a farmer’s water licence or grazing lease, a real estate company’s development rights, a forest company or a mining company lease, anything.”

    What recourse does the farmer or company have if it objects? None. The laws extinguish any right any party has to the courts to remedy the expropriation of their property. How much compensation is the government required to provide for the expropriated property? None, although the government may, on a purely voluntary basis, provide compensation if it wishes.

    In other provinces and in other democracies, expropriated parties can negotiate with the government for fair compensation and they can go to court if they feel the government’s offer is unfair. In Alberta, the expropriated party can appeal to no court. It is a supplicant, powerless to do anything but plead for mercy, or offer political contributions in exchange for a settlement closer to the expropriated property’s fair market value.

    The sweeping laws, which grant Cabinet the right to make “law on any matter within the legislative authority of the Legislature,” are constitutional, harkening back to what’s known as the Henry VIII clause, passed in the 16th century to give that monarch emergency powers. The province of Alberta feels it needs comparable powers today because of an overriding modern-day need — for a “paradigm shift” to a sustainable economy that will counter global warming and allow for an “Outcome Based Cumulate Effects Management System.” The era of private-sector rights is over, the province explains. The private-sector now needs a “social licence to operate.”

    How could this legislation have passed, with nary any public debate? Part of the answer lies in the high-minded language of the legislation, which spoke to the province’s need to “give direction and provide leadership in identifying the objectives of the Province of Alberta, including economic, environmental and social objectives” and “to create legislation and policy that enable sustainable development by taking account of and responding to the cumulative effect of human endeavour and other events.”

    Most politicians and most members of the public were lulled. Those who weren’t lulled — Alberta’s multinationals and other big-business interests whose lawyers alerted them to the draconian legislation — decided to stay silent, for fear of retribution from the province. “They were cowed, pure and simple,” Wilson explains. “At the same time, they couldn’t believe that any government, in Alberta of all places, would actually start seizing their property without compensation.”

    Business is no longer staying silent, particularly since April 5 of this year, when the province announced it would be rescinding dozens of oil sands and mineral leases that it had earlier entered into with large companies, such as Imperial Oil and Athabasca, as well as smaller operators. Electricity consumers, too, have gone public, because the government’s new powers allow it to dramatically overbuild the provincial power grid without regulatory approvals following public input. The proposed network of transmission lines isn’t needed to meet economic goals — they will be tripling the cost of delivering power — and it isn’t needed to meet the demands of consumers — no conceivable electricity growth rate in the province could justify this level of overbuilding. But the network is needed to meet global-warming goals.

    The province needs to vastly expand its transmission network, the province explains, because “many sources of renewable or low-emission power are located far from where electricity is used. There are hydroelectric resources in the northern area of the province, wind and solar in the south, co-generation in Fort McMurray and biomass in the northwest.” That it is ruinously expensive to bring that renewable power long distances to market via unneeded transmission lines <http://probeinternational.org/library/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/ipcaa-letter-pc-caucus-oct-26-2010-1.pdf> matters little in the face of the planners’ needs to meet global-warming targets. To meet another global-warming target, involving the storage of carbon dioxide, Alberta has blithely expropriated without compensation province-wide subsurface storage rights.

    Alberta law now allows the Cabinet to “manage whatever is necessary to achieve or maintain an objective or policy, including managing all or part of the cause of an effect or those matters that affect or that might affect the economy, social objectives, the environment, human health or safety, a species or any element of any of them.” The Alberta Cabinet has given itself the most sweeping central planning powers in the Western world, tyrannical powers that would leave a mere Hugo Chavez dumbstruck.

    Financial Post

    __________________________________________________ _________________________________________________

    For this article and more, go to website: landownersagainstbills.com

    #2
    Tom: But its okay by Tom Jackson I guess as he pretty well supports our PC government as they can do no wrong.

    Am I wrong on this or are you FINALLY seeing the light?

    Our local MLA Lloyd Snelgrove supports ALL of the controversial legislation and said so in the local papers as he defended the government's position on these bills. He interprets Wilson's concerns as "opinion" as if that negates the whole objection to these nefarious bills which are in effect a "power grab".

    Comment


      #3
      Thank GAWD for Monsanto's Roundup and Roundup-ready crops. We can save the cost of those extra passes over the fields and buy more Monsanto products with the money saved.

      And as more and more weeds become resistant to Roundup and similar products we can shift to another product to buy to control those and on and on she goes. Pretty soon ALL of the weeds will become resistant to herbicides and then what?...I have it...more passes over the field with our cultivators, discs and plows.

      Comment


        #4
        Wilagro are you saying we were better off before Round-up?

        Comment


          #5
          Albertans - Born Stupid, Stay Stupid!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

          Comment


            #6
            I think what he's saying is that the world would be better off with no wars, and people could concentrate on feeding themselves instead of running from bullets.

            Comment


              #7
              Ridiculous press release. 'Pay for research so we can feed the world'.

              Canadian farmers cannot afford to feed the world. Duh.

              Nor can the poor afford to buy from G 8's.

              If we choose to sell to people who have no money, we are indeed stupid, and have ridiculous leadership.

              Nor can Canadian farmers afford to fund the research to develop drought resistant varietes that are suitable for regions of the Sudan, and Territorial Africa where they are being planted and developed in the poorest land.

              Biotech companies should beg Saudi Arabia for funding where they have dry regions. At least they can afford to pay for the research. The Canadian government borrows money to fund.

              Unsound, uneconomical practices and wayward governing will not help farmers. It's simple economics. Pars

              Comment


                #8
                Godamn Director cans of lard sitting on their asses scared of the wind of recognition, that might identify a fleeting thought that passed directly from their herd-minds straight to their bowels.

                Drones with no vision and no balls may as well be neutered.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Parsley,

                  I knew you would enjoy this article!

                  Be NICE! Be Positive!

                  Better to have folks fed and happy than shooting nukes at each other because they want YOUR food, water, land, and freeedom to defend your way of life... Parsley!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Wilagro,

                    Why do you think I posted this?

                    I am as Wildrose as they come!

                    I told you folks that I resigned from the PC Alberta Party in March after it was clear my local MLA was NOT going to look after us. PST? Bills 10, 19, 24, 36, and 50? After the powerline meeting in Killam MLA Doug looked me straight in the eye and said "Tom... if we don't do it... the Feds will!"

                    And MLA Minister Jack is as Progressive/(read Liberal) as the rest of them...

                    What are the Chances MLA Doug... MLA Lloyd and MLA Ted and his buddies will change their (Liberal) ways...???

                    And listen to the people of Alberta... Instead of insisting they have the God Given Right to confiscate everything you own, by cabinet order?

                    Ted Morton said "I am the answer to the Wildrose problem!" Yesterday!

                    You bet he is... the best thing for us (Wildrose) would be if Ted Morton became Premier of Alberta!

                    You have just got to Love this Country!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      ColevilleH2S: I am saying no such thing. All I'm saying is that the products like Roundup are not the 'miracle' products that will revolutionize agriculture and there are hazards involved in their constant use. Roundup has certainly been of advantage and I don't know how no-till would work without it or an equivalent product. However we can just as easily hit a brick wall when too many weeds become tolerant to Roundup and no-till doesn't produce the desired benefit.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I'm glad you saw through the PC Advantage baloney and realized what they were up too. I haven't made up my mind about the Wild Rose Party but will not vote PC for sure. They have lost their way since Lougheed governed IMHO.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Thank the lord for the entrepreneurial spirit. The multinational or some brilliant individual or something/one in between will come across something to make glyphosate (RU) obsolete thereby, once again, continuing to reduce the starvation curve (not the numbers but the % of people in the world). Another option would be to stifle this spirit with the likes of over-regulation or socialism and then watch the curve go up....but then radical socialists ie. communists could regulate population growth using their past unsavory methods. This could only happen if one believes that history repeats itself?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Interesting how biotechnology always comes back to herbicide tolerance/use of a specific product. Not really highlighted all that much in the original article.

                            A weird question but is plant breeding and the new varieties keeping up with mechanization and the technology in equipment farmers are using? When you compare our seed genetics and plant breeding investment, is Canada keeping up or falling behind other crop producing regions?

                            Comment


                              #15
                              After 40 years of Socred rule our parents took a chance on change.

                              Comment

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