I promise I am not joking...
This is Canada's spaceport.
Last month, the federal government paid $200 million to a company called Maritime Launch Services to lease it for 10 years.
For more than 100 years, we Albertans wanted in.
We didn’t want to leave Canada.
We wanted to be part of it.
We wanted to be equal partners in Confederation.
We wanted our voices respected.
We wanted a fair share of the prosperity we helped build.
But over time it became clearer and clearer that the system wasn’t built that way.
Canada’s political and economic system was designed around the priorities of the Laurentian elite. Decisions affecting the West are routinely made thousands of miles away by people who neither understand nor respect the realities of life in Alberta.
Still, we Albertans tried to make it work.
Even in 2022 during the trucker convoy, we were proudly waving Canadian flags.
We weren’t rejecting Canada.
We were trying to save it.
We were asking for things we believed were guaranteed in a free country:
• Freedom to work
• Freedom to speak
• Freedom of religion
• An end to censorship
• The right to make personal medical decisions
Millions of Canadians loudly agreed!
But what happened instead?
Peaceful protesters were called extremists.
Truckers were jailed.
Bank accounts were frozen.
And many Canadians began to realize something uncomfortable:
In Canada, our rights are not absolute.
The very first clause of the Charter says:
“The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.”
— Section 1, Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
In other words, politicians can limit what we call rights when those things become inconvenient.
Which means they are really privileges.
For many Albertans, that moment was a turning point.
We realized something important.
We had spent a century trying to make Canada work.
Now we have the opportunity to build something better.
Not through violence.
Not through chaos.
But through the same peaceful civic actions that defined the convoy, and through:
Democracy.
Petitions.
Referendums.
Constitutional change.
Alberta can build a country where freedoms are inalienable.
Where free speech cannot be silenced.
Where bodily autonomy is respected.
Where government power is tightly limited.
A country built with freedom by design.
And ironically, by doing that, Alberta may end up helping Canada too.
Because when people see a society that is freer, more prosperous, and more accountable, it inspires change.
In that sense, Alberta independence isn’t about abandoning Canada.
It might actually be the thing that forces Canada to become better.
In 2022 we carried the Canadian flag because we wanted to save Canada.
Today we carry the Alberta flag because we are ready to build something freer.
And if we succeed…
The rest of Canada might finally see
what freedom actually looks like.
@finalfantasyvii Journalist mode. How many years until these options become mandatory and you must pay for dlc for hard mode?
Sorry, shouldn't give you guys ideas how to disappoint us further.
Microsoft banned Jeffrey Epstein from Xbox Live in 2013 for “harassment, threats, and/or abuse of other players” that was “severe, repeated, and/or excessive.”