Rex Murphy - Newfoundland and Labrador's Mano'Words stings critics of the Oil Sands while ignoring the elephant in the room. From there - Rex proceeds to demonstrate why he needs to come home more often and talk to the impacted people, their families, and their communities.
Below is an excerpt from Rex's Column in the National Post. Oil sands are a triumph for the human 'environment'.
In my view, this is the first and deepest justification for Fort Mac
and the oil industry. Jobs are essential for the human environment — for
a woman’s or a man’s sense of self-reliance and independence. By this, I
mean the right to be able to obtain what you need for yourself and your
family from what you have honestly earned. Being able, because you are
employed, to stay off welfare, to turn aside from handouts — this is
good for the environment of human dignity.
It mightn’t have the smug appeal of a panda face, and you will not
see it on the vivid posters of the Sierra Club or Greenpeace, but having
a job and earning a living is a great thing. Those who have been out of
work know what a cruel “environment” that is — an emotional and
psychological assault of frightful power. So we should celebrate some of
the contributions that the oil sands have already made to the
fundamental human environments of so many Canadians.
I have thought, and thought again, of my own province of
Newfoundland, caught in the great calamity of the fisheries’ close-down
in the 1990s, and how providential it was that “out West,” an oil
economy was booming at the same time. Many Newfoundlanders (and
Maritimers) migrated there in a time of real need.
Great social misery was averted because of the oil boom and
Newfoundland’s related offshore developments: Thousands of divorces
never happened, thousands of families didn’t break up, thousands of men
and women didn’t fall into the trap of depression and worse, which so
often attends long-term unemployment — because there was a great oil
industry that allowed them the wherewithal to feed their families. It is
a great story of modern Confederation: How Alberta, in particular,
modified and mitigated the misery of Newfoundland — and other places.
__________________________________________________________________
Let's start this way Rex - jobs at all costs is one of the main reasons your homeland has suffered. It is the reason we delivered raw resources to other provinces in Canada - while no secondary processing occurred.
Next Rex - your idea that human 'environment' consists primarily of the ability to get a job - be self-reliant - and stay off welfare is ignorance at its finest. Bring on the asbestos right Rex? There are concerns of the human 'environment' - Rex - that include our children's right to clean water, air, and a safe food supply. When our parents are gluttonous of resources regardless of how they are extracted, developed, or utilized so we as the children can guarantee that our family has income - does come at a price. Newfoundlanders and Labradorians who were 'employed' during the development of the Upper Churchill were happily employed, self-reliant and off welfare - yet left 100 years of misery in its wake. If developed, utilized, and contracted properly - your homies would be enjoying an additional $Billion a year - but hey it was great that we employed a few while it was being built.
Finally Rex - the fisheries example you use on our collective back - is the one that takes your entire argument and destroys it. You say the Oil Sands have been a savior to Newfoundland and Labrador after the shut-down of the fisheries in the 1990's. You use the worst man-made environmental disaster on our planet (the loss of the ground stocks) to show how great it is that we have yet another environment to potentially destroy. Perfect Rex - that is very sound judgement.
On this issue of the Oil Sands preventing thousands of divorces, thousands of family break-ups, thousands of people suffering from depression, and worse outcomes - here you are most ignorant.
There have been too many divorces - thousands of family break-ups, significant cases of depression and worse because they had to move away from Newfoundland and Labrador. Rex - people had to leave their homes - now worthless - as the community essentially died - people left their aging parents to the life of a private or public care home as they were not here to care for them (as is the rural way), children had one parent as many could not afford to move the family, and yes oh yes there was and is depression abound. That's not to mention how many of our people have lost their young lives tragically either on the job or on the great Canadian highway on their way to the job. These children who have left with their parents are lost to us as is their employable futures and the tax base.
As we enter into an aging demographic and retiring Newfoundlanders and Labradorians migrate home to live out their lives - they leave all their productive tax in Alberta.
Maybe it's time to move home Rex - get assimilated - and then rewrite this column.
Now that you have found the oil sands - keep looking to find the tar sands.
When listening to the radio, watching television or reading the newspapers about events in this province, there seems to be a missing link. One that bridges all that information together and provides a way for people to contribute, express or lobby their concerns in their own time. After-all, this is our home and everyone cannot fit in Lukie's boat and paddle their way to Upper Canada, nor should we!
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Rex Murphy Blows It in the National Post
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1 comment:
Rex is just laying the groundwork for the next wave. It is well know that Alberta and BC will need thousand's more workers over the next decades to develop their resources. What better way to get them than to get rid of the fishing fleet separation policy, remove the potential for rural communities to benefit from their own adjacent fishing resources and FREE UP more Newfoundlanders for work in the oil sands. Maurice E. Adams, Paradise
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