Canada socioeconomic politics: Difference between revisions

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From http://network.nationalpost.com/NP/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2010/03/13/407147.aspx
{{AAType
|Image=Roberutsu.jpg
|Home page=http://roberutsu.com
|Location=Winnipeg
|Type=Person
|Arts=Visual Arts
}}
Roberutsu is a photographer and art director from the Canadian Prairies. His work has been produced for venues such as the Toronto International Film Festival and the National Screening Institute of Canada. His photography pursuits began in 2004 after he won, to his surprise, the Audience Choice award during the Alberto Europeean Snapshot Fashion Challenge (in which he entered to impress a potential employer. However, he did not get that job).  


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Following an internship in 2009 in Los Angeles with his idol and world-renowned artist-photographer-director David Lachapelle, Roberutsu continues to pursue personal artistic endeavours and collaborations with friends.  
How easy it is to forget the confederation principles Canada was founded upon.


Other than perhaps the last 30-35 years, all those out west need to consider which way the money was originally flowing?
Currently, he works as a broadcast designer for one of Canada's largest national advertising companies and is the arts editor for ''Branch Magazine'' [http://branchmagazine.com]. He lives and works in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
 
Before the oil crisis of the 1970's, who originally built and paid for the west? Who paid for your ports, your trains, your roads, your schools and all your infrastructure? - In fact, who built the original transcanada pipeline to Central Canada?
 
For all those out west, bashing the transfer payments they pay out what happens when Ontario starts buying their natural gas from Pennsylvania?
 
What happens when Quebec starts producing gas from their recently discovered shale desposits?
 
How about when Newfoundland and Nova Scotia ramp up their oil production and their local jobs are in demand for skilled workers, where will you get your workers from?
 
Alberta already did an about face on royalties and scared away business, what happens when your dedicated customers (Central and Eastern Canada) finally start going elsewhere?
 
Or think longer term? What happens when technology changes and oil and gas get stiff competition from other energy sources, or there is peace in the middle east, and Iraqi oil fields come onstream and/or when and if oil drops down to $20 a barrel again?
 
Which way will the money be flowing then?
 
On the topic of all those soft-separatists whether in Quebec or Alberta, who keep claiming how they get ruled by outsiders thousands of miles away, to you I say go ahead and separate.
 
Lets see how land-locked Alberta exports their oil and gas without providing royalty revenues to Canada or the US.
 
With the comments like this from the general voting public its no wonder our politicians have such a short-term narrow minded approach to solving our issues. We're asking for it.
 
Read more: http://network.nationalpost.com/NP/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2010/03/13/407147.aspx#ixzz0ipCWA0hR
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== Quebec ==
 
Quebec's population is 7,560,592. Quebec has a GDP just over $300B and paid over $30B in various taxes to Ottawa. Quebec receives 60% of federal transfer payments.

Latest revision as of 19:40, 11 April 2010

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Canada socioeconomic politics


Location

Winnipeg



Roberutsu is a photographer and art director from the Canadian Prairies. His work has been produced for venues such as the Toronto International Film Festival and the National Screening Institute of Canada. His photography pursuits began in 2004 after he won, to his surprise, the Audience Choice award during the Alberto Europeean Snapshot Fashion Challenge (in which he entered to impress a potential employer. However, he did not get that job).

Following an internship in 2009 in Los Angeles with his idol and world-renowned artist-photographer-director David Lachapelle, Roberutsu continues to pursue personal artistic endeavours and collaborations with friends.

Currently, he works as a broadcast designer for one of Canada's largest national advertising companies and is the arts editor for Branch Magazine [1]. He lives and works in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.