This exchange has me thinking about the NDP's roots.  What were they really?  
Was it farm or factory?  When I was a kid in Saskatchewan in the 1930s, it was 
definitely farm.  Just as factory workers were trying to form unions, farmers 
were trying to form co-ops to give them a better chance in dealing with 
powerful corporate grain buyers.  And religion played a strong role in what was 
happening.  Tommy Douglas was a Baptist Minister; J.S. Woodsworth a Minister as 
well (Presbyterian, I think).

Ed

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tom Walker 
  To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION 
  Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2012 1:02 AM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] NDP loses touch with its roots


  Perhaps. But there is also the matter of the stereotype of "working class" 
that the actual working class have also "strayed from." I too listen to and 
read diverse voices but when those "voices" are mouthpieces, I feel no 
compulsion to affect false reverence. Levant should stick to barking for a 
carnival sideshow. 


  On Sat, May 5, 2012 at 6:30 PM, Arthur Cordell <[email protected]> wrote:

    Perhaps the NDP has strayed from its working class roots. 


    Arthur



    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Tom Walker
    Sent: Saturday, May 05, 2012 3:56 PM
    To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
    Cc: [email protected]
    Subject: Re: [Futurework] NDP loses touch with its roots



    Ezra Levant will never lose touch with his rooting for Exxon-Mobil 
truffles.  

    On Sat, May 5, 2012 at 12:20 PM, Arthur Cordell <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    NDP loses touch with its roots
    Read Later by Ezra Levant  •  May 6, 2012 




    Canada’s Oil: For Sale to the Highest Bidder
    from The Progressive Economics Forum by Jim Stanford

    Want to know why Canada’s currency is sky-high despite our sluggish 
recovery, our large and persistent current account deficit, and our lousy 
export performance?

    Check out this fascinating story in Friday’s National Post, by Yadullah 
Hussain, on why Canada’s oil reserves are such a uniquely hot commodity in the 
eyes of global oil corporations.

    The story explains how private petroleum giants (like Exxon-Mobil) are 
having a hard time replacing the reserves they produce.  Over 80 percent of 
known oil reserves in the world are controlled by state-owned companies.  Most 
major oil producing countries (sensibly, in my view) have decided that 
management and ownership of this strategic, non-renewable resource should be 
conducted through government enterprise, presumably in the interests of the 
citizens who — after all — own the stuff in the first place.  [Of course, 
democracy is a pre-requisite for ensuring that public ownership translates into 
public benefit.]

    That means less than 20 percent of known oil reserves are available for 
exploitation by private companies.  Incredibly, well over half of those 
privately exploitable reserves are in Canada.  Without Canada, private firms 
like Exxon can tap into only 7 percent of known world reserves.

    There is a striking chart that accompanied the print version of the story 
(but which I can’t find in the on-line version) that listed the countries with 
the ten largest oil reserves.  Canada was the only one of those ten where the 
oil industry is not dominated by state-owned firms.  (Canada doesn’t even have 
a state-owned oil company.)

    The article cited Reynold Tetzlaff, energy expert with Price Waterhouse 
Coopers, as follows: “If you look at the top … countries … for oil reserves, 
Canada is the only one that does not have a national oil company. We are the 
only one open for business.”

    Given sky-high oil prices and oil profits, and the relentless decline of 
their existing reserves, the global petroleum industry has their sights set 
firmly on Canada as a key solution to their long-run reserves replacement 
problem.  Indeed, even foreign state-owned companies (from Norway’s Statoil to 
China’s CNPC) are getting in on Alberta’s bitumen action in a big way.  It 
seems especially ironic that foreign public corporations see value in investing 
in Canadian oil, yet Canadians presently have no public capacity to do the same 
thing.

    “These large companies need to continue to look for replacement reserves,” 
Mr. Tetzlaff added.  In other words, Canada will be the hottest target for 
private oil investment for decades to come.

    All that drooling on the part of global petroleum companies over Canada’s 
oil (which is uniquely accessible to private capital) is the key structural 
reason why our currency has so closely tracked the price of oil over the past 
decade.  Our petroleum exports are important, but still constitute just 18% of 
total exports (including natural gas).  It is not that the world wants more of 
what Canada produces: if that was true, Canada would not have the enormous 
trade and current account deficits that we now experience (despite the 
unsustainable windfall of petroleum exports).  Rather, it’s that global 
companies hunger for the right to own what’s buried under our feet.  This is 
reflected in high valuations for Canadian assets (especially anything related 
to petroleum), and (to a lesser extent) in strong inflows of real foreign 
investment as our oil resources are steadily sold off to the highest bidder.  
This asset market effect, driving our currency far above its fair or 
sustainable value, is underming our national capacity to produce and sell real 
stuff to the rest of the world.

    As I have argued before, a good way to break this damaging link between oil 
prices and our currency (the 25% overvaluation of which which continues to 
devastate all non-resource export industries, including manufacturing, tourism, 
and tradable services) is to take down the “For Sale” sign currently hanging on 
our oil reserves.

    Following the lead of the vast majority of other global oil exporters, 
control over the pace and nature of development should be taken back into the 
hands of Canadians.  The non-renewable wealth embodied in those reserves should 
be owned and controlled by Canadians, developed in a manner consistent with the 
public interest — taking into account factors (like environmental 
sustainability, and spillover Dutch-disease effects on the rest of the national 
economy) that do not enter the cost-benefit calculations of the private giants 
hungering for Canadian oil.






    -- 
    Cheers,

    Tom Walker (Sandwichman)


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  -- 
  Cheers,

  Tom Walker (Sandwichman)



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