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Air Canada T.AC

Alternate Symbol(s):  ACDVF

Air Canada is an airline company. The Company is a provider of scheduled passenger services in the Canadian market, the Canada-United States (U.S.) transborder market and the international market to and from Canada. It provides scheduled service directly to more than 180 airports in Canada, the United States and internationally on six continents. The Company’s Aeroplan program is Canada's premier travel loyalty program, where members can earn or redeem points on the airline partner network of 45 airlines, plus through a range of merchandise, hotel and car rental rewards. Its freight division, Air Canada Cargo, provides air freight lift and connectivity to hundreds of destinations across six continents using its passenger and freighter aircraft. Its Air Canada Vacations is a tour operator, which is engaged in developing, marketing, and distributing vacation travel packages in the outbound/inbound leisure travel market. Air Canada Rouge is Air Canada's leisure carrier.


TSX:AC - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Comment by joemanon Sep 23, 2020 10:35am
216 Views
Post# 31603755

RE:GREAT DIVIDE BETWEEN EDMONTON AND OTTAWA

RE:GREAT DIVIDE BETWEEN EDMONTON AND OTTAWALightoil123, about 40 years too late to take action.  Tesla just announced the petrol killing battery , one thousand one hundred horsepower Tesla Model S is going to tear up Nurburgring in germany breaking records at 320 kmh , 0-60mph in 2.1 seconds.  Demand for oil has dropped significantly during the pandemic and by the time it picks back up again there will be no more shortage of next gen batteries and automobiles and trucks to put them into.  Alberta has a massive liability on its hands and we keep pourring federal dollars into failed pipeline projects.  Who is going to pay to clean up the tailings ponds? who is going to pay to clean up lake athabasca, who is going to pay to clean up abandonned oil and gas wells?  who is going to pay to cleanup the abandonned oil refineries?  Alberta currently spending money as it another oil boom was going to happen , OIL BOOMS ARE OVER WITH, IT IS OVER, NO MORE OIL BOOMS, JUST OIL BUST FROM HERE ON IN.  40 years too late buddy, sorry but Alberta is doomed.
Lightoil123 wrote: Ted Morton: The great divide between Edmonton and Ottawa The distance between Alberta and Ottawa is not just geographic Author of the article: Special to National Post & Ted Morton Publishing date: Sep 23, 2020 Last Updated 1 hour ago 4 minute read PHOTO BY GOOGLE MAPS Article Sidebar Share TRENDING with Video Article content Alberta wants a fair deal from Canada, but cant seem to get one. Should it build a firewall? Stop trying? Separate? This is one of a series of opinion pieces adapted from the new book, Moment of Truth: How to Think About Albertas Future, in which some of Canadas most respected thinkers on the subject debate what the best next steps are for Alberta and for Canada. The distance between Alberta and Ottawa is not just geographic. It is also linguistic. An Albertan visiting the national capital quickly discovers that the locals speak a different language. And if you ever get the opportunity to work in Ottawa, as I did in 2000, you discover that the gap between yourself and most of the civil servants is more than just geographic and linguistic. It is ideological. And its one more example of how what was a minor annoyance 30 years ago, today is yet another barrier for Albertan and Western Canadian concerns to get a fair hearing. Advertisement STORY CONTINUES BELOW This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Article content continued When former prime minister Pierre Trudeau introduced official bilingualism in the civil service, it was sold as a language proficiency test. In practice it has meant much more. As Trudeaus biographer Richard Gwyn observed in 1981, Bilingualism in truth was nothing less than a social revolution. But no one in authority in Ottawa in the late 1960s let on that massive change was about to happen. Gwyn understood that bilingualism was not just about language, but an ideology and a new mission statement for the federal government. Its immediate effect has been to benefit the 16 per cent of Canadians who are bilingual, two-thirds of them francophones and nearly all from Central Canada. Indeed, Canada has the most centralized civil service of all the English-speaking democracies. Over 40 per cent live in or near Ottawa. Forty-five years ago before official bilingualism it was only about 25 per cent. Geography is only half the story. Official bilingualism has enhanced the influence of a small and unrepresentative demographic of Canadians francophones, anglophones who chose to remain in Quebec (a small minority) and the more educated, upper middle classes of Ontario. Not coincidentally, each of these groups is shrinking as a proportion of Canadas increasingly diverse and more Western population. This class becomes increasingly isolated, and increasingly convinced it is the guardian of true Canadian values. Advertisement STORY CONTINUES BELOW This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Article content continued Nevertheless, the larger the government becomes, the more influential this group becomes. This trend is found in all modern welfare states. As the state grows, so too does the permanent bureaucracy. This new class is powerful because it has what elected politicians dont have: job security and policy expertise. Elected politicians come and go. Bureaucrats dont. This is the new permanent government that is eroding democratic accountability in all contemporary welfare states. Predictably, it creates policies and shapes institutions in ways that benefit its own interests. Since the adoption of official bilingualism, the size and scope of the federal government has expanded from a budget of $15 billion in 1970 to over $355 billion today. Over this same time period, the size the civil service has increased 50 per cent from just under 200,000 in 1970 to 290,000 today. Almost half 43 per cent are designated as bilingual. At the senior levels, this figure is higher, but not publicly available. But bilingualism is about more than just proficiency in French and geography. It entrenches the belief that a central priority of the federal government is to pre-empt the separatist threat by giving Quebecers a disproportionate presence and influence in the national government. Francophone civil servants are the immediate beneficiaries of this policy. Anglophone civil servants who manage to survive the governments multi-year bilingualism training program emerge with this deeply entrenched belief. Advertisement STORY CONTINUES BELOW This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Article content continued As a result, the bureaucracys advice to cabinet ministers as well as administrative decisions are made through an ideological lens that prioritizes national unity, and national unity is understood as keeping Quebecers happy. The concerns of Western Canada (and Atlantic Canada) are decidedly secondary. As Donald Savoie observes: The votes for winning power in Ottawa are in Ontario and Quebec, the senior bureaucracy straddles the Ontario-Quebec border and the national media speak from these two provinces. In other words, official bilingualism was never just about language. It was and is about the ideology of a Quebec-centric national unity and its promotion by a powerful and permanent bureaucracy. This means that for Albertans and Western Canadians more generally, our concerns and priorities will always be secondary to those of Central Canada and the Laurentian elites. Since this is not going to change anytime soon, I have become a strong advocate for reforms that will increase Albertans ability to be self-governing by taking over programs that are currently administered by Ottawa: policing, pensions and tax-collection. So I am encouraged by the Fair Deal Panels report, and Alberta Premier Jason Kenneys response to develop these options over the next several years. At this point in Albertas history, they are our best choice. Decisions made in Edmonton may not always be right, but at least they will be made by people who speak the same language, live in our neighbourhoods, share our concerns and will have to live with the consequences of their decisions. National Post Adapted from Moment of Truth: How to Think about Albertas Future, now available from Sutherland House. MORE ON THIS TOPIC


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