Wednesday, November 27, 2024

'Twas the night before Christmas

'Twas the night before Christmas                                                    

and all through the land

corporate farming was here.

It was grand! It was grand!


Hogs were raised.


Waste was spread.


The future looked bright.


The salvation of farming


now seemed in sight.


More factories were built.


The money rolled in.


If you were an investor


you wore a big grin.


But clouds started gathering


on this happy scene.


Neighbors were calling


the big barns - obscene!


The air in the country 


which had been so pure,


was now permeated


with the stench of manure.


The rivers and streams


that had been pristine


were now choked with algae


just like a latrine.


But the good folk of the country 


fought back.


Instead of retreating


they launched an attack.


"Bigger is not better"


they cried!


And together they worked 


to turn back the tide.


So into the future


when Christmas rolls 'round,


will the powers that be


move to limit the harm?


Or will they stand idly by


and not give a darn


as the lifeblood is drained from 


the family farm?


Larry Powell - 

SHOAL LK MB


Meet the groups spending the most on social media ads attacking the carbon tax

The Investigative Journalism Foundation

Despite its claims of being grassroots, Energy United has links to the largest fossil fuel industry advocacy group in the country. It's spending big on social media ads denouncing federal carbon pricing. Story here.

Drugs, hormones and excrement: the polluting pig mega-farms supplying pork to the world

THE GUARDIAN

The stink of excrement was the first thing the residents of Sitilpech noticed when the farm opened in 2017. It hung over the colourful one-storey homes and kitchen gardens in the Maya town in YucatƔn, and has never left. Next, the trees stopped bearing fruit, their leaves instead covered with black spots. Then, the water from the vast, porous aquifer emerged from the well with a horrible, overwhelming stench. Story here.

Saturday, November 23, 2024

Pierre Poilievre regularly met with directors of oil industry association he deemed a ‘money-sucking lobby group’

The Investigative Journalism Foundation                                                                    Poilievre has met with such groups at multiple fundraising events in the past two years. Story here.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Canadian activist Tzeporah Berman named among TIME's top climate leaders

CANADA’S NATIONAL OBSERVER

One of Canada’s most prominent environmental crusaders is being named among TIME’s Top 100 most influential climate leaders worldwide. Story here.  


Sunday, November 10, 2024

Mazier’s fact-free attacks miss mark

THE BRANDON SUN 

 It’s the role of opposition members of Parliament to oppose the actions of the 

government, ask questions about issues and suggest solutions. Story here.


Thursday, November 7, 2024

THE COMMANDER-IN-THIEF RETURNS

How sad it must be - believing that scientists, scholars, historians, 

economists and journalists have devoted their entire lives to 

deceiving you - while a lying, racist, misogynistic, perverted 

traitor is your only beacon of truth and honesty. 

(Neil deGrasse Tyson, paraphrased.)

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Climate Change. It’s never been about data. It’s about anger, and anger sells.

 

Good morning,   

There was a moment, as I entered adulthood in the early 2000s, when the zeitgeist among people concerned over the climate crisis went something like this: the world may not support drastic action on climate change yet because we don’t understand the danger we’re facing — but when disasters start rolling in, we’ll unite under a common cause and fix this thing

Well, the disasters keep rolling in. Since the start of the century, the 10 deadliest climate-related disasters alone have killed more than half a million people worldwide. Climate change has cost us $2.8 trillion over that same period. As Natasha Bulowski reported this week, climate disaster survivors are trying to raise the alarm and show us — physically show us — what happens when extreme weather comes for our homes and communities. But, at least among the most powerful, the response is often the opposite of unity. Instead, we get blame, division, paranoia and lies. 

Take for instance the bickering between Alberta and Ottawa. Danielle Smith, the premier of Alberta — a place that lost one of its most iconic parks to fire over the summer and half the province is still grappling with drought — is facing a leadership review this week. So, Smith went back to the metaphorical well (which isn't running dry) and picked yet another fight with Ottawa over the carbon tax. It’s a tried-and-tested technique for firing up the base. In this case, Smith’s base are the rural Albertans whose fields are dry and homes vulnerable to fire; Canadians most in need of immediate climate action. Instead, they get tossed some red meat.

In Ontario, Doug Ford is pandering to suburban commuters by pledging to rip out bike lanesthrowing out a modest yet effective climate solution in the hopes of riling up the drivers of Etobicoke and Brampton enough that they’ll reward him with his third majority government. Forget that bike lanes have been shown to benefit drivers as well as cyclists — not to mention boosting business traffic and sales — it’s never been about data. It’s about anger, and anger sells.

The climate-skeptic games extend outside the public realm and into industry spaces, too. John Woodside reported this week that the head of the Canadian Gas Association (CGA) called the energy transition “cult-like” in a rage-baiting eight-minute speech to a far-right think tank audience. The association and its members, it appears, would rather people direct their skepticism to the bare possibility of averting climate disaster by transitioning off their products, than have them think too hard about how, for instance, exporting LNG has recently been found to be even worse for the climate than burning coal. It’s a smart strategy, especially when you consider that CGA member FortisBC is working hard behind the scenes to reverse Vancouver’s gas ban for new builds —  there’s no reason FortisBC shouldn’t lose out on any of its customer base when the energy transition is just a cult, right?  

South of the border, this kind of rhetorical whataboutism, finger-pointing, misdirection, pandering and rage could be about to get so much worse. Another Trump victory, following a campaign fuelled in part by climate conspiracy theories, would effectively kill American involvement in the green transition. Worse, a second administration led by a famously climate-denying Trump would double down on oil and gas, throw out environmental regulations, and kneecap the growth of the green energy industry.

I’m reflecting on all of this, not because it’s therapeutic (although maybe it is a little bit), but because based on what we’re seeing today, it doesn’t look like humanity is going to organically coalesce around solutions anytime soon. If that’s the case, we must find a way to demand those solutions from our leaders, no matter how deeply flawed and cynical the leadership class may be. We’ll have to fight disinformation with all the tools we have at our disposal, from inoculation to counter-messaging. First, let’s hold liars accountable. 

If you’re reading this newsletter, you understand the position we’re in. That’s a start. 

— Jimmy, managing editor

Canadian pipeline giant TC Energy closely connected with incoming Trump administration

Investigative Journalism Foundation Family members, former colleagues among connections unearthed by IJF investigation. Story here.