Paul Hinman once again brings people together to ‘’Send a Message to Ottawa ‘’.

Joined October 2022
205 Photos and videos
Another place to get lawn signs and facts about Alberta independence. corymorgan.com/?fbclid=IwZnR…

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Friends: Alberta's Premier Smith wants a 'Sovereign Province in a united country' that is committed to the Liberals Carbon Net Zero Fantasies. The @WildroseLC is committed to working tirelessly to create the Sovereign Country of Alberta! Unknown photo credit.
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A website for seniors to check out. seniorsforindependence.org

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Of course it’s unfinanceable. What customers are going to buy from us when right next door is the USA. A trillion or more of investment has fled to the USA during the liberal over 10 year reign.
Cenovus CEO says proposed pipeline to Canada's west coast currently 'unfinanceable' "McKenzie, who heads one of ​Canada's largest ​oil sands companies, said at ‌the ⁠Global Energy Show in Calgary that the country's industrial ​carbon ​pricing ⁠system makes Canadian oil uncompetitive ​and inhibits ​the ⁠production growth required to fill the ⁠proposed ​pipeline." reuters.com/business/energy/…
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Yes Marty, This is a great poster to say what we want.
To Canada's leaders who keep calling for "national unity" (i.e. Pierre Poilievre) Unity isn't something you demand. It's something you earn. If you're serious about keeping Canada together, put your money where your mouth is. Address the concerns that millions of Albertans have been raising for decades: • End equalization wealth redistribution • Give Alberta fair representation in the House of Commons • Reform the Senate and make it elected • Respect provincial jurisdiction over health care, resources, and taxation • Give provinces greater control over immigration A stronger Canada is built on fairness, respect, and autonomy... not on expecting one region to simply accept the status quo.
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Love the billboards. Big and blue.
Billboard ads are running. The TPA is rocking.
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Wildrose Loyalty Coalition retweeted
There are costs to Alberta independence. Fair enough. But federal services are already funded in part by Alberta tax dollars. Add Alberta’s ~$25B annual net contribution to Ottawa & ~$26.5B in lost energy opportunity, and the question becomes: What’s the cost of staying?
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This is another good speaker @echipiuk Have a look!

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Please take a look.

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Mark your calendar October 19, 2026
Ordinary Albertans vs Politicians There are more of us than them. 🙂 Mark your calendar: Oct 19, 2026!
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Listen to this.

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Wildrose Loyalty Coalition retweeted
Replying to @RiseOfAlberta
.@ikwilson is correct: Alberta has been kneeling on the doorstep of confederation with our hat in our hands and their hands in our pockets for too long. Time to take Ted Byfields advice: 'Tell them you ae leaving and mean it!' 2026: Now we have and we do! 🙂 @WildroseLC @StayFreeAlberta
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First order of business under a Wildrose Loyalty Coalition government will be to create an Alberta taxation agency. Collect taxes here in Alberta by Albertans for Albertans. That’s not a promise that’s a policy. wildroseloyaltycoalition.com

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Blue mile slow roll. It’s an awesome site to see. Planting seeds.

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This is an excellent written post about the Stay Free Alberta petition.
Today’s ruling by Justice Leonard essentially found that the citizen-led independence petition process cannot proceed because the government did not fulfill certain constitutional responsibilities owed to First Nations. But here is the important point: the Alberta government did not initiate this petition process. Citizens did, through a lawful statutory mechanism created by the Legislature itself. So how does a court conclude that the government failed to fulfill duties that had not yet even arisen or been carried out, particularly when the government itself had not initiated the referendum process? It is also important to understand that the Alberta government has always had the ability to call a referendum on independence at any time if it chose to do so. That is not in dispute, and it was not the legal question before the Court in this case. Nothing in today’s ruling prevents the Alberta government from calling the very same referendum itself tomorrow. So think about that carefully. A citizen-led democratic process established by law is effectively halted, not because citizens failed to follow the legislated process, but because of obligations assigned to government itself. Yet the government retains the full ability to ask the same question directly. Courts and those in government must always have regard to the overall interests of justice, including democratic participation, the integrity of legislated statutory processes, and public confidence in lawful democratic frameworks established by the Legislature. I figured it would be appropriate to reflect on a few words from the Supreme Court of Canada: “…liberal democracy demands the free expression of political opinion” and political speech lies at the core of the Charter’s guarantee of freedom of expression. The Court further affirmed that freedom of expression includes “the right to attempt to persuade through peaceful interchange.” — Harper v. Canada The Supreme Court of Canada has also held that: “…the right of each citizen to participate in the political life of the country is one that is of fundamental importance in a free and democratic society.” — Figueroa v. Canada And in the Reference re Secession of Quebec, the Supreme Court of Canada recognized that democracy is grounded in the participation and democratic will of the people, and that a clear expression of the will of citizens carries constitutional and political significance that cannot simply be ignored. Specifically, the Court confirmed: “The democratic principle identified above would demand that considerable weight be given to a clear expression by the people of Quebec of their will to secede from Canada…” — Reference re Secession of Quebec So how does any of this truly reconcile with a situation where government itself can ask citizens a question through a referendum process, but a group of citizens following a lawful statutory process established by the Legislature is not permitted to ask the question? What message does that send when citizens engage in lawful democratic participation, comply with the very process created by government, and yet their voices are disregarded or treated as something to be feared? Democracy is not strengthened when lawful citizen participation is restrained or silenced. In this case, it was not government stopping the process, but the Court. That reality raises profound questions about the role institutions play in democratic participation and how citizen engagement is treated when it touches controversial political issues. After all, citizens do not hold institutional power. Their power is their voice. And if even that voice can be restrained after citizens lawfully engage in the exact democratic process created for them, what meaningful role are citizens truly left with in shaping the political future of their province and country? What do you think? Should lawful citizen participation be encouraged, even when institutions disagree with the message?
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