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Red Deer Chamber Hears Energy Industry Update

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img_2964 (Chris Montgomery – Manager, E & P, Communications and Outreach – Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers)

By Sheldon Spackman

With many in Central Alberta wondering when things are going to turn around in the Oilpatch, the Red Deer Chamber of Commerce received an update on the current state of the industry during their monthly luncheon on Tuesday.

The Chamber’s Guest speaker was Chris Montgomery, President of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers or CAPP. Montgomery says the bottom line is they’re not sure just yet when things are going to turn around. Montgomery says certain conditions need to be in place for that to happen, with many factors involved.

He says the first being prices and cost structures to be right, making sure government has the right policy environment and most importantly, making sure the industry can move it’s product to other markets, aside from the U.S., which is not only the Canadian Energy Industry’s biggest customer but also it’s biggest competitor.

Montgomery says it’s extremely important for Canada to get it’s products to other foreign markets like Asia for example and shipped from the shores of our country. Right now, Canadian energy products have to go through the U.S. before getting shipped elsewhere. However, with the U.S. increasing it’s supply of Oil and Natural Gas, Montgomery says it now makes even less sense for us to rely on the States to ship our products.

Montgomery says there are three pipeline projects that could address this issue. The Northern Gateway Pipeline that would ship Alberta oil to Kitimat, B.C., the existing Kinder Morgan Pipeline that goes through Burnaby, B.C. and the Energy East Pipeline that would ship Alberta crude to St. John, New Brunswick. He says the fates of those projects could be determined by the Federal government over the course of the next few months.

Over the last three years, Montgomery says there has been a 62 percent reduction in Capital Investment in Canada’s Oil and Natural Gas Industry, a roughly $50 billion dollar drop to $31 billion dollars.

As for drilling activity, the industry forecast anticipates 3,562 wells to be drilled in Western Canada this year, roughly a third of what was drilled two years ago.

Alberta’s provincial government also has a carbon levy planned for the new year as part of it’s efforts to help fight climate change. Montgomery says he would like to see that get done the right way as well, particularily when it comes to methane emissions. He says the government’s policies in that regard can’t impact a company’s ability to operate.

Montgomery says there is some positive news though, saying there is roughly $30 billion dollars in private capital ready to be invested into Canada’s Oil and Natural Gas Industry, once we can get those products to other foreign markets from our shores.

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Carney’s European pivot could quietly reshape Canada’s sovereignty

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This articleĀ supplied byĀ Troy Media.

Troy Media ByĀ Isidoros Karderinis

Canadians must consider how closer EU ties could erode national control and economic sovereignty

As Prime Minister Mark Carney attempts to deepen Canada’s relationship with the European Union and other supranational institutions, Canadians should be asking a hard question: how much of our national independence are we prepared to give away? If you want a glimpse of what happens when a country loses control over its currency, trade and democratic accountability, you need only look to Bulgaria.

On June 8, 2025, thousands of Bulgarians took to the streets in front of the country’s National Bank. Their message was clear: they want to keep the lev and stop the forced adoption of the euro, scheduled for Jan. 1, 2026.

Bulgaria, a southeastern European country and EU member since 2007, is preparing to join the eurozone—a bloc of 20 countries that share the euro as a common currency. The move would bind Bulgaria to the economic decisions of the European Central Bank, replacing its national currency with one managed from Brussels and Frankfurt.

The protest movement is a vivid example of the tensions that arise when national identity collides with centralized policy-making. It was organized by Vazrazdane, a nationalist, eurosceptic political party that has gained support by opposing what it sees as the erosion of Bulgarian sovereignty through European integration. Similar demonstrations took place in cities across the country.

At the heart of the unrest is a call for democratic accountability. Vazrazdane leader Konstantin Kostadinov appealed directly to EU leaders, arguing that Bulgarians should not be forced into the eurozone without a public vote. He noted that in Italy, referendums on the euro were allowed with support from less than one per cent of citizens, while in Bulgaria, more than 10 per cent calling for a referendum have been ignored.

Protesters warned that abandoning the lev without a public vote would amount to a betrayal of democracy. ā€œIf there is no lev, there is no Bulgaria,ā€ some chanted. For them, the lev is not just a currency: it is a symbol of national independence.

Their fears are not unfounded. Across the eurozone, several countries have experienced higher prices and reduced purchasing power after adopting the euro. The loss of domestic control over monetary policy has led to economic decisions being dictated from afar. Inflation, declining living standards and external dependency are real concerns.

Canada is not Bulgaria. But it is not immune to the same dynamics. Through trade agreements, regulatory convergence and global commitments, Canada has already surrendered meaningful control over its economy and borders. Canadians rarely debate these trade-offs publicly, and almost never vote on them directly.

Carney, a former central banker with deep ties to global finance, has made clear his intention to align more closely with the European Union on economic and security matters. While partnership is not inherently wrong, it must come with strong democratic oversight. Canadians should not allow fundamental shifts in sovereignty to be handed off quietly to international bodies or technocratic elites.

What’s happening in Bulgaria is not just about the euro—it’s about a people demanding the right to chart their own course. Canadians should take note. Sovereignty is not lost in one dramatic act. It erodes incrementally: through treaties we don’t read, agreements we don’t question, and decisions made without our consent.

If democracy and national control still matter to Canadians, they would do well to pay attention.

Isidoros Karderinis was born in Athens, Greece. He is a journalist, foreign press correspondent, economist, novelist and poet. He is accredited by the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs as a foreign press correspondent and has built a distinguished career in journalism and literature.

Troy Media empowers Canadian community news outlets by providing independent, insightful analysis and commentary. Our mission is to support local media in helping Canadians stay informed and engaged by delivering reliable content that strengthens community connections and deepens understanding across the country.

 

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EU investigates major pornographic site over failure to protect children

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From LifeSiteNews

By Jonathon Van Maren

Pornhub has taken down 91% of its images and videos and a huge portion of the last 9% will be gone by June 30 because it never verified the age or consent of those in the videos.

Despite anĀ aggressive PR operation to persuade lawmakersĀ that they have reformed, Pornhub is having a very bad year.

On May 29, it wasĀ reported that the European Commission is investigating the pornography giant and three other sites for failing to verify the ages of users.

The investigation, which comes after a letter sent to the companies last June asking what measures they have taken to protect minors, is being carried out under the Digital Services Act. The DSA came into effect in November 2022 and directs platforms to ensure ā€œappropriate and proportionate measures to ensure a high level of privacy, safety, and security of minors, on their serviceā€ and implement ā€œtargeted measures to protect the rights of the child, including age verification and parental control tools, tools aimed at helping minors signal abuse or obtain support, as appropriate.ā€

According toĀ France24: ā€œThe commission, the EU’s tech regulator, accused the platforms of not having ā€˜appropriate; age verification tools to prevent children from being exposed to pornography. An AFP correspondent only had to click a button on Tuesday stating they were older than 18 without any further checks to gain access to each of the four platforms.ā€

Indeed, Pornhub’s alleged safety mechanisms are a sick joke, and Pornhub executives have often revealed the real reason behind their opposition to safeguards: ItĀ limits their traffic.

Meanwhile, Pornhub — and other sites owned by parent company Aylo — are blocking their content in France in response to a new age verification law that came into effect on June 7. Solomon Friedman, Aylo’s point man in the Pornhub propaganda war,Ā statedĀ that the French law was ā€œpotentially privacy infringingā€ and ā€œdangerous,ā€ earning a scathing rebuke from France’s deputy minister for digital technology Clara Chappaz.

ā€œWe’re not stigmatizing adults who want to consume this content, but we mustn’t do so at the expense of protecting our children,ā€ sheĀ said, adding later, ā€œLying when one does not want to comply with the law and holding others hostage is unacceptable. If Aylo would rather leave France than apply our law, they are free to do so.ā€ According to the French media regulator Arcom, 2.3 million French minors visit pornographic sites every month.

Incidentally, anti-Pornhub activist Laila Mickelwait reported another major breakthrough on June 7. ā€œP*rnhub is deleting much of what’s left of the of the site by June 30,ā€ sheĀ wrote on X. ā€œTogether we have collectively forced this sex trafficking and rape crime scene to take down 91% of the entire site, totaling 50+ million videos and images. Now a significant portion of the remaining 9% will be GONE this month in what will be the second biggest takedown of P*rnhub content since December 2020.ā€

ā€œThe reason for the mass deletion is that they never verified the age or consent of the individuals depicted in the images and videos, and therefore the site is still awash with real sexual crime,ā€ sheĀ added. ā€œSince the fight began in 2020, 91% of P*rnhub has been taken down — over 50 million images and videos. Now a huge portion of the last 9% will be gone by June 30 because P*rnhub never verified the age or consent of those in the videos and the site is a crime scene.ā€

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Jonathon’s writings have been translated into more than six languages and in addition to LifeSiteNews, has been published in theĀ National Post,Ā National Review,Ā First Things, The Federalist, The American Conservative, The Stream, theĀ Jewish Independent,Ā theĀ Hamilton Spectator,Ā Reformed Perspective Magazine, and LifeNews, among others. He is a contributing editor to The European Conservative.

His insights have been featured on CTV, Global News, and the CBC, as well as over twenty radio stations. He regularly speaks on a variety of social issues at universities, high schools, churches, and other functions in Canada, the United States, and Europe.

He is the author ofĀ The Culture War,Ā Seeing is Believing: Why Our Culture Must Face the Victims of Abortion,Ā Patriots: The Untold Story of Ireland’s Pro-Life Movement,Ā Prairie Lion: The Life and Times of Ted Byfield, and co-author ofĀ A Guide to Discussing Assisted SuicideĀ with Blaise Alleyne.

Jonathon serves as the communications director for the Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform.

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