Danielle Smith turns her back on Canada...

Shaquille Oatmeal

Well-known member
Jun 2, 2023
4,922
4,934
113
How hot was it in medieval times?


The Medieval Warm Period (MWP) was a time of warm climate from about 900–1300 AD, when global temperatures were somewhat warmer than at present. Tempera- tures in the GISP2 ice core were about 2°F (1°C) warmer than modern temperatures
See the chart.
The medieval warm period was "Regional". (per the chart).
Current climate science talks about global average temperatures.
Overall, our conclusions are:
  1. Globally temperatures are warmer than they have been during the last 2,000 years;
  2. Both warmth and cold seem to have occurred at times in the last 2000 years but only on a regional and non-synchronous basis.
  3. the causes of Medieval warming are not the same as those causing late 20th century warming.
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
29,729
7,689
113
DumbBell Smith's dangerous Sabotage of Team Canada:

Trudeau and other premiers adopted a united response to Trump’s tariffs. Alberta opted out


If Alberta Premier Danielle Smith intends to defy an all-party, all-province, national consensus on how to respond to Donald Trump’s tariff threats, she should call a provincial election and get a mandate to do so.

After all, notwithstanding the disproportionate number of MAGA ideologues and Alberta separatists in her United Conservative Party caucus and cabinet, most Albertans are loyal Canadians who put their country first.

We Albertans have been learning to live with Oppositional Defiant Disorder as a form of government ever since Smith became premier in 2022. The trouble is that it isn’t funny anymore now that she’s become a serious national problem.

We need a government in Alberta with a clear mandate if we are to step outside the national consensus in what is potentially the gravest economic crisis our country has faced since the Great Depression.

Smith petulantly refusing to join the other premiers in a joint statement on how to protect Canadians from Trump’s planned sanctions, in the form of high U.S. tariffs on all Canadian exports, “is one of the most irresponsible and selfish acts of a government in Canadian history.” (To borrow a phrase from something Smith said about another politician just the other day.)

Nevertheless, she said Wednesday in an official statement insultingly posted on Trump ally Elon Musk’s X social media platform, “Federal government officials continue to publicly and privately float the idea of cutting off energy supply to the U.S. and imposing export tariffs on Alberta energy and other products to the United States.”

“Until these threats cease, Alberta will not be able to fully support the federal government’s plan in dealing with the threatened tariffs,” she stated.

Needless to say, Canada can hardly defend itself without making some threats. So Smith’s position is obviously a gift to Trump.

Smith and her UCP government have not just become a liability to Canada in this crisis precipitated by Trump’s election victory in November. If you happen to be one of the many Albertans who hope Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives will win the next Canadian federal election, she has become a liability to you as well. After all, like it or not, in politics, guilt by association is a thing.

Smith may not be a traitor, but she is sure acting like a virtual quisling, more loyal to Trump and his MAGA-fied United States than to Canada.

Thanks to behaviour like Wednesday’s refusal to play ball with Team Canada from her holiday redoubt in Panama, a small country that is ironically another of Trump’s chosen victims, Smith increasingly risks being seen by the public in Alberta and elsewhere as disloyal to the country. At this rate, she may be the only Canadian premier not to be in line for an Order of Canada!

Despite having raced to Florida to pay obeisance to Trump, she couldn’t even be bothered to come to Ottawa to let her fellow Conservative premiers try to persuade her to do the right thing.

In her absence, Ontario Conservative Premier Doug Ford didn’t quite call her a turncoat, but he sailed close in a statesmanlike way. “That’s her choice,” Ford said of Smith’s focus on protecting the oil patch at the expense of everything and everybody else. “I have a little different theory: protect your jurisdiction but country comes first. Canada’s the priority.”

Trump “is going full tilt at Canadians. We need to be united. United we stand, divided we fall,” Ford said after the premiers and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau got together in Ottawa.

For crying out loud, even former Conservative prime minister, UCP éminence grise and Trump White House visitor Stephen Harper is complaining about what the U.S. president-elect has been getting up to.

“I have a real problem with some of the things Donald Trump is saying,” he told the Toronto Star on Monday. “It doesn’t sound to me like the pronouncements of somebody who’s a friend, a partner, and an ally — which is what I’ve always thought the United States is for our country.”

At least Ford and Harper, by the sound of it, can tell which way the wind is blowing.

So what possessed Alberta’s premier to ensure that Canada appears to be divided as it pivots to defending itself from Trump when he’s sworn in as U.S. president on Monday?

“Smith has a cabinet and caucus full of Trumpkins,” Mount Royal University political scientist Keith Brownsey explained Wednesday. “She is in a difficult situation. Her position within Canada is becoming increasingly untenable, but she may face a caucus revolt if she doesn’t follow the Trump line. This is one reason she visited Mar-a-Lago.”

“She is profoundly parochial,” he added. “She has no conception of Canada as a nation.”

This is something for traditional Conservatives, if there are any left in the UCP cabinet and caucus, to think about. If they continue to support Smith, history — and voters — will remember. If they value Canada, now might be a good time to resign their cabinet posts and consider sitting as Independents.

Alberta voters will certainly take note when corporate headquarters start to quietly abandon Calgary for Canadian cities in other provinces. This has happened before.

Brownsey noted that while the management of natural resources is assigned by the Constitution Act 1867 to provinces, something Smith talks about a lot, Parliament retains the right to make laws concerning the export of non-renewable natural resources, and when the laws of Parliament and those of a provincial legislature are in conflict, the law of Parliament prevails.

An unconstitutional Sovereignty Act doesn’t change that.

 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
29,729
7,689
113
How hot was it in medieval times?


The Medieval Warm Period (MWP) was a time of warm climate from about 900–1300 AD, when global temperatures were somewhat warmer than at present. Tempera- tures in the GISP2 ice core were about 2°F (1°C) warmer than modern temperatures
Firstly, increasing evidence suggests that the Medieval Warm Period may have been warmer than today in parts of the globe such as in the North Atlantic. The warming thereby allowed Vikings to travel further north than had been previously possible because of reductions in sea ice and land ice in the Arctic. However, evidence also suggests that some places were much cooler than today, including the tropical Pacific. All in all, when the warm places are averaged out with the cool places, it becomes clear that the overall warmth was likely similar to early to mid 20th Century warming.

Since that early 20th Century warming, global temperatures have risen well beyond those reached during the Medieval Warm Period. The National Academy of Sciences released a report on climate reconstructions in 2006. In the Overview Chapters the authors stated it was 'likely' that current temperatures are hotter than during the Medieval Warm Period, saying the following:

"Presently available proxy evidence indicates that temperatures at many, but not all, individual locations were higher during the past 25 years than during any period of comparable length since A.D. 900".
Further evidence obtained since 2006 suggests that even in the Northern Hemisphere, temperatures have now gone well beyond those experienced during Medieval times. This was also confirmed by a major paper from 78 scientists representing 60 scientific institutions around the world in 2013.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,008
17,066
113
Yet he said we had the lowest covid rates thanks to the lockdowns. ,
You really suffer COVID PTSD don't you? Did you have your bank account frozen, were you one of those chaps trying to annex Ottawa? Perhaps you had your rig confiscated by Dougie? OR I know, they burst your bouncy castle, that's it! LOL Seriously Covid is over yet it's all you seem to constantly harp on.

ps...get your shot and wear your mask, please and thank you.

PSS. Danielle Smith is a traitor scumbag bitch who should be sent off to live in the US, we don't want her.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Shaquille Oatmeal

The Oracle

Pronouns: Who/Cares
Mar 8, 2004
27,662
55,442
113
On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
Firstly, increasing evidence suggests that the Medieval Warm Period may have been warmer than today in parts of the globe such as in the North Atlantic.
Yeah okay..LOL...It certainly busts your narrative though doesn't it?

You still drive a car?..You can just answer yes or no.
 

roddermac

Well-known member
Sep 17, 2023
1,783
1,472
113
You really suffer COVID PTSD don't you? Did you have your bank account frozen, were you one of those chaps trying to annex Ottawa? Perhaps you had your rig confiscated by Dougie? OR I know, they burst your bouncy castle, that's it! LOL Seriously Covid is over yet it's all you seem to constantly harp on.

ps...get your shot and wear your mask, please and thank you.

PSS. Danielle Smith is a traitor scumbag bitch who should be sent off to live in the US, we don't want her.
Unvaxxed so I don't suffer from covid long covid or the brain fog that you suffer from taking your boosters.
 

nottyboi

Well-known member
May 14, 2008
24,101
2,389
113
In 2023, Canada exported $124-billion of oil. $124-billion. Ninety-seven per cent of it went to the United States. Nearly all of it came from Alberta.

That amount contributes a good amount to the tax base which helps funds healthcare, defence..and so on and so on..
As I said before AB is 15% of Canadas GDP so yeah every bit helps Ontario exports 224B 2023 Canadian exports were 768B.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,008
17,066
113
How many shots have you had so far?...I'm looking forward to this answer.
I believe 3 to be honest but that doesn't mean you righties shouldn't be getting one every 3 months. It will clean out your systems and God knows that would be a good thing.
 

roddermac

Well-known member
Sep 17, 2023
1,783
1,472
113
How many shots have you had so far?...I'm looking forward to this answer.
Please be more specific when it comes to squeezy. Are you referring to covid shots or shots to the head. After all both do cause neurological problems which it's obvious squeezy suffers from.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: The Oracle

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,008
17,066
113
Unvaxxed so I don't suffer from covid long covid or the brain fog that you suffer from taking your boosters.
That is the problem. Unvaxxed, you probably got COVID when bouncing in the castle with one of your non vaxxed buds and now you suffer PTSD. That is ok Rod, nothing a good old fashion jab won't cure.
 

The Oracle

Pronouns: Who/Cares
Mar 8, 2004
27,662
55,442
113
On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
I believe 3 to be honest but that doesn't mean you righties shouldn't be getting one every 3 months. It will clean out your systems and God knows that would be a good thing.
Only 3?..!!!!...After all you posturing and condescension on here and you only had 3 shots?

That's just crazy...At least your truthful though but still how hypocritical.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,008
17,066
113
Only 3?..!!!!...After all you posturing and condescension on here and you only had 3 shots?

That's just crazy...At least your truthful though but still how hypocritical.
Why, only 2 were required to receive your vaccine pass and I had an extra one for good measures. I did my part, unlike you and Rod. Now please, change the topic. I don't want Rod to snap. You know how he gets when COVID is brought up. Shhhhhhh
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
29,729
7,689
113
Yeah okay..LOL...It certainly busts your narrative though doesn't it?

You still drive a car?..You can just answer yes or no.
As usual oracle takes everything out of context. So once again read and comprehend for once oracle:

"Presently available proxy evidence indicates that temperatures at many, but not all, individual locations were higher during the past 25 years than during any period of comparable length since A.D. 900".
Further evidence obtained since 2006 suggests that even in the Northern Hemisphere, temperatures have now gone well beyond those experienced during Medieval times. This was also confirmed by a major paper from 78 scientists representing 60 scientific institutions around the world in 2013.
 
  • Like
Reactions: squeezer

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
29,729
7,689
113
It does.
What are you talking about?
I think we have to try and contact oracle's primary school teacher to try and make him comprehend the charts as well as data that was posted!!
 

Shaquille Oatmeal

Well-known member
Jun 2, 2023
4,922
4,934
113
I think we have to try and contact oracle's primary school teacher to try and make him comprehend the charts as well as data that was posted!!
I dont know.
He probably homeschools and doesn't believe in schools either because they are liberal indoctrinators or something along those lines. lmao.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bver_hunter

JohnLarue

Well-known member
Jan 19, 2005
18,203
3,699
113
How can you blame Trudeau for cancelling energy east? :
TransCanada Pipelines filed its formal project application with the National Energy Board. At the same time a number of groups announced their intention to oppose the pipeline.[2] The project was cancelled on October 5, 2017 by TransCanada.[3]
once again you put your ignorance of what you speak on full display

Trudeau regulated that pipeline to death
Part of the Gerald butts plan

the straw that likely broke the camel’s back was the National Energy Board (NEB) announcing it would add an “upstream/downstream” emission test to its project reviews. As I wrote elsewhere, the upstream/downstream test could seriously reduce the profitability of pipeline projects that would have to, in some way, internalize the costs of the greenhouse emissions resulting from the production and consumption of the oil they transport, not simply those caused by the act of transporting the oil.
While telling people that they understand the importance of the oilsands, Notley and Trudeau, with assistance from Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard and environmental activists, piled regulatory brick upon regulatory brick on the back of an industry already weakened by a soft world oil price. Watch for crocodile tears over the death of these pipeline projects by the regulators and politicians who made them economically unviable.
do not pretend Trudeau and Butts did not set out to destroy the Canadian oil and Gas industry
 
Last edited:
Toronto Escorts