Monday, December 5, 2011

Are you concerned about Canada's growing income gap?

The gap in earnings between rich and poor in Canada is the widest it's been in 30 years, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development says.

In a report released Monday, the OECD said the average income of the richest 10 per cent in its 34 member nations is nine times the average income of the poorest 10 per cent. That 9-to-1 ratio is the largest gap in a generation, the agency says.

The gap in Canada is even wider: 10 to 1. The average income of the top 10 per cent of Canadians in 2008 was $103,500 -- 10 times higher than that of the lowest 10 per cent, who earned an average of $10,260. The ratio was 8 to 1 in the early 1990s.

The gap is also 10 to 1 in Italy, Japan, Korea and the United Kingdom. In Israel, Turkey and the United States, it's 14 to 1.



Wealth gap widens to 30-year high



Economic Emotion: How do you feel about the economy?

Cautious? Anxious? Helpless? Secure? Optimistic?

How you feel about the state of the economy?




Remember When Canada Was an Environmental Leader?

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/tzeporah-berman/canada-kyoto-protocol_b_1120793.html?ref=canada-politics&ref=canada

Canada Slammed At Durban Climate Talks


TWITTER REACTS TO NEWS CANADA MAY WITHDRAW FROM KYOTO:

Elizabeth May MP

Outrageous news of Canada's sneaky plan to pull out of Kyoto after Durban talks (Dec 23 so ppl will be busy with families) hits Durban COP.

Make Poverty History Canada

http://www.facebook.com/makepovertyhistorycanada


Canada Income Inequality: Which Provinces Have The Widest Income Gap?

When it comes to the income inequality, Canada's provinces are, well, unequal.




OECD report finds income inequality rising in Canada




Saturday, December 3, 2011

BioWar: Elite develop genetically engineered weapons to eliminate ethnic groups

Admitted government projects relating to genetically engineered weapons that could be used to eliminate entire ethnic groups.





Related articles:

  1. Concerns Are Raised About Genetically Engineered Mosquitoes
  2. Genetically engineered salmon under FDA consideration
  3. FDA nears approval of genetically engineered salmon
  4. NYPD spy unit found to be targeting ethnic groups
  5. A New Breed of Genetically Engineered Vaccines Will Take Control of Our DNA and Minds
  6. Genetically engineered Merck Cancer Vaccine Made Mandatory For Immigrants
  7. State Dept. Aggressively Pushed Genetically-Modified Crops to Help Agribusiness Giants
  8. Bolshevik Revolution Was Engineered by Freemasons, Financed by Banking Elite
  9. Genetically modified maize lowers fertility in mice, study finds
  10. Glowing proteins genetically engineered from jellyfish win Nobel Prize
  11. Mutant mosquitoes: Malaysia release of genetically modified insects sparks fears of uncontrollable new species
  12. Now Bernanke Wants To Eliminate Reserve Requirements Completely


Canada May Miss $6.7 Billion Carbon Offset Bill by Exiting Kyoto Protocol

Bloomberg
December 3, 2011

Canada, the country furthest from meeting its commitment to cut carbon emissions under the Kyoto Protocol, may save as much as $6.7 billion by exiting the global climate change agreement and not paying for offset credits.

The country’s greenhouse-gas emissions are almost a third higher than 1990 levels, and it has a 6 percent CO2 reduction target for the end of 2012. If it couldn’t meet its goal, Canada would have to buy carbon credits, under the rules of the legally binding treaty.

Canada, which has the world’s third-largest proven oil reserves, would be the first of 191 signatories to the Kyoto Protocol to annul its emission-reduction obligations. While Environment Minister Peter Kent declined to confirm Nov. 28 that Canada is preparing to pull out of Kyoto, which may ease the burden for oil-sands producers and coal-burning utilities, he said the government wouldn’t make further commitments to it.

[...]

Canadian delegates, including Kent, are in Durban, South Africa for United Nations climate talks. Negotiators are struggling to agree to a successor to Kyoto, which expires at the end of 2012 and is also opposed by Japan and Russia.


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-02/canada-may-escape-6-7-billion-bill-by-exiting-kyoto-protocol.html



U.S.-Canadian Border Deal to Streamline GMO Approval: Confirmed

Canada-U.S. Regulatory Co-operation Council under border deal coverage would put Canada under draconian Food Safety Modernization Act, fast track GMO approval.

Our report sounding the alarm that Obama and Harper’s secretive border deal, due to be signed next week, would be used to fast track GMO acceptance has been confirmed. The details have been kept under wraps, but recent reports revealed that the ‘Beyond Borders’ security and law enforcement deal would also seek to ‘harmonize’ U.S. and Canadian regulatory standards for food, auto and other trade sectors.

The Globe and Mail confirms that the North American Union security perimeter initiative, sold to the public as new security measures at the border, has a second major component– the Canada-U.S. Regulatory Co-operation Council.

Mr. Harper… said there are two issues on the joint security and economic agenda of the two countries. One, he said, is the border and perimeter initiative, and the other is Canada-U.S. Regulatory Co-operation Council.

“We are seeking ways of ensuring security in North America while at the same time making sure that we continue strong Canadian access to the American market,” Mr. Harper told reporters.

This will encompass far more than just the terms under which food can cross the border– it will put approval for biotechnology on a fast track in both countries and impose FDA and other regulations on both countries.

The agenda of the Canada-U.S. Regulatory Co-operation Council was quietly announced in February 2011, putting explicit focus on the implementation of theU.S. Food Safety Modernization Act requirements under the larger Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness agenda. That nightmarish legislation was heavily criticized for new authority it grants the U.S. government over the right to grow, trade and transport foods of any kind.

In other words, it is poised to boost the reach of Big Agra and biotech firms at the expense of small farmers and ordinary people.

Now, under the new Obama-Harper deal, Canada, too, would accept this tyranny over food.

Specifically, the Canada-U.S. Regulatory Cooperative Council (under “free” trade) would establish a joint review process for pre-market GMO approval, establish a policy for the acceptance and export of LLPs (Low-Level Presence contamination of genetically modified foods bans in country of export) and recommends eliminating mandatory country of origin labeling, and more.

From the report:

Biotechnology

Establish a joint review process or a Mutual Recognition Agreement for biotechnology product approvals to facilitate synchronized approvals.

Establish a common policy for dealing with low level presence (LLP) of unapproved biotechnology products (e.g., harmonized risk assessments and acceptance of LLP already commercially available in the other country).

A 2004 symposium on Canada-U.S. Regulatory Co-operation even recommends outright acceptance of U.S. food standards: The Health Products and Food Branch is now considering a risk-based approach to regulatory co-operation, which might entail accepting or referencing decisions made by the US Food and Drug Administration and other regulators for low-risk products.

With U.S. regulatory agencies filled with revolving door stooges like FDA Deputy Commissioner for Foods Michael R. Taylor, formerly a Vice President at Monsanto and long a go-between for biotech and government regulations, there is little doubt what direction such a “harmonization” of food regulations, including FDA recommendations, would mean under the ‘Beyond Borders’ deal.

President Obama and Prime Minister Stephen Harper are scheduled to meet one-on-one next Wednesday to discuss and sign the deal… then its details will finally be revealed to the world.

—-

Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness: Regulatory Cooperation – A Report on the Consultations on Regulatory Cooperation Between Canada and the United States

Read PDF here or web version here. Excerpt from p. 25

Appendix 2: Specific Proposals by Sector
Agriculture and Food
Food Safety Systems

Develop common approaches to food safety requirements and policies, aligning new regulations and guidance—specifically, implementation of the U.S. Food Safety Modernization Act requirements.

Mutually recognize food safety systems.

Improve the effectiveness of meat-safety-system equivalency agreements (i.e., eliminate or minimize re-inspections of product and microbial testing at the border).

Accept industry-led standards and programs that are based on international standards (e.g., the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point, or HACCP).

Harmonize approvals for food-safety-enhancing products and technology used in processing (e.g., packaging materials, anti-microbial interventions, testing methodologies and processes, sanitation, and maintenance chemicals and equipment).

Biotechnology

Establish a joint review process or a Mutual Recognition Agreement for biotechnology product approvals to facilitate synchronized approvals.

Establish a common policy for dealing with low level presence (LLP) of unapproved biotechnology products (e.g., harmonized risk assessments and acceptance of LLP already commercially available in the other country).
Agricultural Inputs

Building on significant collaboration to date, align pre-market approval processes and data requirements for crop protection products (i.e., pesticides, seed treatments) to facilitate joint reviews and assessments and improve re-evaluation and re-registration processes.

Resolve discrepancies in maximum residue limits for crop protection products.

Modify the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) notice-of-arrival process to remove the advance notification requirement for products that are already EPA-registered.

Harmonize the approval process for veterinary drugs, including the establishment of maximum residue limits.

Labelling, Packaging and Product Content

Align nutritional labelling formats and content (e.g., nutrient definitions, required values, daily recommended intakes).

Harmonize approaches to allowed health claims.

Align standards for discretionary fortification of foods.

Develop uniform labelling requirements (e.g., quality specifications, method of production claims, glycemic index labelling).

Adopt a common approach to the nomenclature of meat cuts.

Eliminate or amend U.S. mandatory country-of-origin labelling requirements.

Align container size requirements (infant food, bottled and canned goods).

——-

RELATED: Secret U.S.-Canada Border Deal Hides GMO Takeover
RELATED: Canadian officials ‘secretive’ on North American perimeter security agreement



Friday, December 2, 2011

Canada is changing

Obnoxious Militarism Pervades Canadian Sports
Under this PM, the state is everywhere



'Harper Government' Not 'Government Of Canada': Why Did Tories Pursue 'Harperization'?



Durban fossil award from the 'uninformed': Kent



Memos Anticipate Religious Freedom Office Sensitivities


Communications lines drafted by the bureaucracy about the government's plan to establish an Office of Religious Freedom reveal a deep-seated nervousness about how the venture will be perceived by the public.


During the election campaign last spring the Conservatives promised the office would become a key pillar of Canadian foreign policy.

But documents obtained through access to information laws suggest the government is worried about the perception that the office would be used to curry favour with religious and ethnic groups in Canada. And it shows nervousness about the office being seen as an attempt to blur the line between church and state.


Who monitors our new religious freedom monitor?



Canada's Housing Market More Overvalued Than U.S. At Its Peak, The Economist Says



Canada Income Inequality: Living In Unequal Cities A Health Risk To Rich And Poor, Study Finds


Canada Wages Not Keeping Up With Inflation: Statscan