One of the strongest points of consensus in Alberta isn't what the answers are—it's who gets to decide them. We agree Ottawa shouldn't dictate our future, but we disagree on plenty else. Separation wouldn't settle what kind of country we want to build. thehub.ca/2026/06/16/the-myt…
The United Nations will ensure a separate Alberta gets its new pipeline to tidewater.
Or... will it?
Chatted with @faliceemo about how much a separatist Alberta that wouldn't be part of the UN can rely on the UN, and what other landlocked countries can serve as an example in a path forward.
podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcas…
The UN Law of the Sea is not a geopolitical cheat code for Alberta separatism. UNCLOS discusses transit rights for landlocked states. It does not compel B.C. or Canada to approve ANYTHING. South China Sea, Bolivia, Ethiopia... All examples of limits.
thehub.ca/2026/06/09/no-the-…
Not all mines are created equal. Here we try to assess the graphite/copper/tungsten/nickel projects before the Major Projects Office. thehub.ca/podcast/audio/grad…
Exciting to be on @TheHubCanada today speaking about all the announcements coming out of Ottawa to support Canada's energy export ambitions. We are on a good track but there is more road ahead to prove our investment worthiness. My thanks to @faliceemoyoutube.com/watch?v=5x0iZG-H…
Regardless of partisan affiliation I'm glad my cousin @coreyhoganyyc is out there making the pro-federalist case for Alberta staying in Canada.
I thought his video could use a little something extra, so I made a West Wing version.
Let Hogan be Hogan.
youtu.be/m_XACJwwCYA?si=kcU-…
The controversy over Ottawa’s proposed new cattle traceability regs has all the ingredients of a uniquely Canadian policy fight: disease prevention, rural distrust of gov., ag-tech innovation, privacy fears & a regulatory system struggling to keep up thehub.ca/2026/05/14/what-th…
Alberta separatism is creating some strange political alliances. @jkenney@coreyhoganyyc 's pro-Canada event drew in Liberal organizers, yes. But also oilpatch execs, venture capitalists, nonprofit leaders, academics and others. thehub.ca/2026/05/12/frenemi…
Two seemingly unrelated energy merger deals are unfolding in Canada that, on the surface, seem to be about natural gas development and LNG exports. In reality, they could hold the key to something far bigger: the next phase of oilsands growth.
thehub.ca/2026/05/07/what-2-…
Unlike the Quebec separatist movement, the one in Alberta lacks the formal backing of a major political party and the institutional discipline that comes with it. Yet in the language of persecution, they are sounding more and more like their Quebec counterparts.