It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query NEIL REIMER. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query NEIL REIMER. Sort by date Show all posts
Monday, May 02, 2016
THE ALBERTA NDP THE PARTY OF OIL WORKERS
THE COINCIDENTAL BIRTH OF THE NEW DEMOCRATS
AND THE OIL INDUSTRY IN
ALBERTA
Rachel Notley warned New
Democrats that adopting the LEAP manifesto which demands the end of oil
extraction from the Tar Sands as well as conventional and shale gas plays, and
NO pipelines, would put the Eastern arm of the party in direct conflict with a
party that is proudly Albertan and directly involved in the oil industry
history in the province even more so than the long ruling party the PC’s.
It was the development of oil
and energy in Alberta that created new wealth and a new industrial province
after WWII. The discovery of oil not only brought the oil industry but also the
oil and energy workers union, a small American union that had an arm in
Alberta, the Oil Chemical and Atomic Workers OCAW. In Alberta it was beginning
its organizing of workers in the field and in the new gas and chemical plants
being built between Edmonton and Fort Saskatchewan.
This was the post war boom,
the party in power was Social Credit, and while there was no NDP there was an active labour
political movement housed in the AFL and Edmonton Trades and Labour Council,
members belonged to the Communist Party, the CCF and some still belonged to the
OBU and IWW.
Edmonton had a history of
electing labour council members as Mayor, Aldermen (women), school board
trustees and Hospital Board members. Elmer Roper longtime labour activist, CCF activist and
candidate, owner of ABC Printing and publisher of Alberta Labour News would be
elected Mayor of Edmonton after the creation of the NDP by the merger of the
CCF with the newly created post war Canadian Labour Congress.
The sixties saw the growth of
the labour movement in Canada and in Alberta, including the creation of an
active movement of organizing public sector workers, provincially, municipally
and federally. The Federal Workers Union originating in Calgary would merge
with the Ontario based National Workers Union to create what we know as the
Canadian Union of Public Employees, the
Civil Service Union of Alberta would become a union known as the Alberta Union
of Provincial Employees.
But throughout the oil boom
of the fifties and sixties the union most associated with the provincial NDP
was the Oil Chemical and Atomic Energy Workers Union under the leadership of
Neil Reimer and his assistant Reg Baskin
That’s right the party was
brought to life in Alberta by Oil Workers in the provinces new Energy market.
Its first party leader was Neil Reimer, who would meet a charismatic young
politician a contemporary of Peter Lougheed and Joe Clark at the University of
Alberta, Grant Notley who would go on to become party Leader and its first
elected MLA.
Notley himself did not
represent Edmonton but his home region, the oil rich north of Alberta, the
Grand Prairie, and Peace River riding.
As it had since 1936 the
Social Credit party of Alberta held power in the province as a one party state,
under the permanent leadership of Premier Ernest Manning, Preston’s daddy. The New Democratic Party of Alberta focused
its energy not only on consolidating union power in the party as well as the
voices of the left and progressives but in challenging that Social Credit
domination of Alberta Politics.
This was also the time of the
Cold War and the Anti Communist Witch Hunts, a time being anti war, anti
nuclear war, pro labour, was considered suspect. Where union members who were
left wing were exposed to police spying, where padlock laws in Quebec had been
used to raid imprison and steal property belonging to those accused of opposing
the Duplesis regime or who were suspect of being Reds.
Duplessis ‘s party in Quebec
aligned with that provinces Federal Social Credit Party which was aligned with
Alberta’s Party as well. In both provinces the left faced one party dictatorship
which reminded many despite their democratic trappings of the forces they had
been fighting against in WWII.
As in Alberta it would be the
post war labour movement in Quebec under Louis Lebarge that would mobilize
politically as well as economically against the Old Regime, his right hand was
a young activist lawyer named Pierre Eliot Trudeau. And like Alberta they were
building a provincial and national party; the Liberals.
This then is the historical
basis for the differences between the left in Quebec and the rest of Canada and
why it took so long to breech these two solitudes, as was done in 2012 under
Jack Layton and the federal NDP.
Premier Rachel Notley, the
daughter of Grant Notley, the first NDP MLA ever elected to the Legislature,
the first opposition member elected against the Social Credit party of Ernest
Manning had this rich history as her
prologue at this week’s national NDP Convention in Edmonton where the party
adopted the LEAP manifesto which challenges the very energy economy that makes
Alberta a modern industrial state.
This province created the NDP
under the leadership of Neil Reimer, an
oil worker and oil union organizer. Neil
was the first leader of the Party, and Reg Baskin was his right hand in their
union and the party.
Neil also created the modern
Canadian Energy Workers union, Neil and
Reg first represented oil workers in the new industry in the province with the
OCAW oil chemical and atomic workers of
Canada, which had one other base of expansion; Louisiana. He and Reg made it the Canadian Energy Workers
Union, which became CEP merging with the Canadian Paper workers unions in BC,
and now has consolidated with CAW to create UNIFOR.
Neil’s daughter was Jan
Reimer two term Mayor of Edmonton during the 1990’s and while party labels are
not used in Edmonton municipal elections everyone knew that we had an NDP
mayor.
Meatpackers, a union that
disappeared in the eighties with amalgamation of the meat packing industry into
a smaller and smaller oligopoly, was a militant base of union workers and
activists including communists and socialists, that was a large base for the
party, as was Plumbers and Pipefitters Local 488.
These were the post war
unions that were the party’s base in Edmonton and across the province.
Federally the postal workers were a strong backbone for the Federal Party,
though there were two separate unions at that time, letter carriers and inside
workers, the latter being more left wing and militant with OBU IWW communist,
socialist and Trotskyist activist workers.
It was the discovery of tar
sands oil that led to the growth of the province, the union and the NDP. It was
also this discovery and its needed development during the Arab Oil Crisis of
1971 that led to the end of the Social Credit government, its movement, but not
its essence. In its place came the newest members of the Alberta Legislature
elected in 1967 for the first time, the Lougheed Progressive Conservatives.
They would be joined by Grant Notley and the NDP in opposition in 1968, when
Grant won a by-election in Spirit River.
The “Progressive” element in
the Lougheed PC’s represented the post war Liberal base among the non Anglo
ethnic communities in Edmonton and Calgary, such as the recent post war immigration
of Ukrainians, Italians, Portuguese, Greek, European, Asian, and Displaced
Peoples. The Liberals had no political existence in Alberta since they were
wiped out by the United Farmers/ Labour Party coalition in 1921.
Even Lougheed’s conservatism
was not the neo conservative Austrian school embraced by the republican lite
Preston Manning cons of today, it was classical liberal capitalism, that
progressive aspect of capitalism that sought to ameliorate through regulation
what short comings capitalism itself may suffer from despite its idealism of
being the ‘ideal’ system.
The history of the Alberta
NDP is the history of the Oil Workers and the Oil Industry in Alberta, even
more than it is for the current batch of Conservatives provincial or federal. The NDP in Alberta grew up with the oil
industry with its workers and their union. For the Alberta NDP to reject both
the LEAP manifesto and those call for the end of pipelines is natural and
should have been expected by those who know the party history in the province.
For those who fail to
understand this historic base of the party in Alberta fail to understand the social
democratic politics of the oil industry, the NDP has long supported a form of
nationalization under public ownership and increased workers control through
unionization.
This occurred in the case of
Suncor which was the earliest of the oil sands operators, before the Syncrude
conglomerate was created. In the early
seventies after the Lougheed government promoted the oil sands, Suncor began
mining operations. Neil Reimer’s new
Canadian Energy and Paperworkers union, CEP, got its birth in a long and bitter
historic strike at the Suncor operations.
CEP went on to organize refineries
in Edmonton, Sherwood Park and Fort Saskatchewan.
It tried but failed to
organize Syncrude due to its conglomerate ownership and its concerted anti
union efforts over the decade of the seventies into the eighties. Today
unionized Suncor has bought out Syncrude so this situation opens it up to
unionization decades later.
The seventies and eighties
saw massive growth in the province including growth in both private and public
union membership.
This also saw the success of
the NDP and the left in Edmonton. While Grant Notley was a lone NDP member in
Alberta Legislature, Edmonton saw a left wing U of A Prof David Leadbeater
elected alderman. Notley was joined in
the house by Ray Martin, from Edmonton.
The NDP elected Ross Harvey its
first federal MP from Alberta in the eighties from the old packing plant and
union district of Edmonton Beverly. This was at the height of the Arab Oil
Crisis of early eighties, which the Conservatives in Calgary blamed on the NDP
Liberal National Energy Plan, NEP, which included the creation of the Canadian
Publicly Owned Oil and Gas Company PetroCanada.
PetroCanada was a success and
saved Calgary and the Lougheed Government during this oil crisis, it was able
to buy up, nationalize, American oil companies like Gulf Mobile, Texaco,
Chevron, as well as smaller Canadian and
American oil companies that were going broke or bailing out of Calgary heading
back to Dallas and Huston.
And CEP was there to unionize
it. Today PetroCanada is no more the Liberals privatized during the Austerity
crisis of the Nineties, and Paul Martins Liberal Government sold off the last
of our shares prior to the 2006 election.
Ironically it is Suncor that
bought them and then bought up PetroCan and absorbed it., just as it has done
with its competitor Syncrude.
It would be during the late
eighties and early nineties that under Ray Martin the NDP would gain a record
number of seats, going from 2 to 23 and status of official opposition. But by
the time of the middle of nineties and the Austerity panic of debt and deficit
hysteria and the birth of the neo conservative movement that two city Mayors,
Ralph Klein of Calgary and Lawrence Decore of Edmonton would battle it out for
Premier of the Province, Klein for the PC’s and Decore for the Liberals. Both
ran on Austerity budgets, one promised massive cuts the other brutal cuts. It
was a close election the losers were the NDP who were wiped out as a third
party.
In Edmonton we had a new NDP
mayor to replace Decore, Neil’s daughter Jan Reimer, joined by another leftist
alderman the bus driver Brian Mason. The NDP centred itself in Edmonton at this
time and got elected the enormously popular
team of Pam Barrett and Raj Pannu.
The CEP was critical in
supporting the NDP at this time, including having its past president Reg
Basking become leader of the Party.
After the shocking early
death of party leader Pam Barrett, former alderman Brian Mason ran in her
riding, Highlands, which also covers the Federal riding of Beverly that Ross
Harvey once represented and won her seat in the house. Raj Pannu became the
first Indo Canadian leader of an NDP party in Canada. After he stepped down Brian Mason became the
leader of the party.
The party went from four
seats to two to four until Brian stepped down and the party elected Grant
Notley’s daughter, Rachel Notley, who had sat in the house with Brian through
all those ups and downs in electoral success.
The party base is the labour
movement and left across the province and no less important unions such as CEP,
IBEW, Carpenters and UA488 all involved in the oil sands and the petrochemical
industry in Alberta.
So why are the various wags
and pundits surprised when the Alberta NDP does not LEAP off the edge of a
cliff named STOP PIPELINES, STOP DIRTY OIL.
In the finest of social
democratic traditions, the Alberta NDP will do no such thing nor should it be
expected to. It will ameliorate the worst of the environmental damages that the
fossil fuel industry has and can be expected to cause. They will create a green
plan, and expand the carbon fuel tax the PC’s brought in.
It will do what the conservatives would not do,
and that is eliminating Alberta’s Socred PC dirty energy economic backbone:
coal. And that is the real dirty energy in Alberta, coal fired utility plants.
These plants are evenly divided between private ownership, with state support
from the ruling Socreds and PC’s, TransAlta Utilities, and publicly owned
municipal utilities EPCOR and ENMAX. TransAlta is the original P3 funded by
taxpayers under the Socred and spun off to become a private company where
government cabinet members retire to the board of.
Even Lougheed was tied to the
coal industry representing his old employer Mannix Inc, as a board member of
Luscar Coal, which during the nineties created a major controversy with its
efforts to mine outside of Jasper National Park.
Contrary to Greenpeace and
other environmentalists who claim oil sands are the dirtiest energy the real
dirty energy on the Palliser Plains of Alberta and Saskatchewan is coal.
Coal is the dirtiest fossil
fuel that needs to be kept in the ground. There is no such thing as clean coal!
There is however clean
petrochemical fuels, that is the nature of refining, creating finer and finer
grades of hydrocarbons; ethenes, benzenes, oil and gas for plastic production, diesel
etc.
That is the reason for both
the Joffre and Scotford massive refining projects and the plan for the
heartland refining project, which would allow the province to crack and refine bitumen
into secondary and tertiary hydrocarbons.
That is what the future of
the energy is in Alberta, stopping the use of coal, refining hydrocarbons and
shipping them south, east, and west.
Why would the NDP limit the
provinces ability to ship what it processes.
As I have pointed out the
pipeline west will probably go through the Peace River Athabasca highway route
to Prince Rupert, which coincides with BC Site C dam development and its LNG pipeline development, giving pipeline
companies an alternative to going to Kitimat via the BC Sacred Bear Rainforest.
Energy East will be built and
the NDP will promote as it did in the eighties, the idea that Alberta energy
for a fair price should go east. What occurred instead was it was shipped to
refineris in Ontario and Quebec at discounted prices where it was refined and
sold to the US while oil was imported from the Middle East.
This was the original idea of
the NEP that the NDP and Liberals promoted to Lougheed, and he agreed to! And
like the NDP this was his vision for Alberta oil before he died.
While the LEAP manifesto is
suitably left wing green etc, even shudder, anti capitalist ( read anti
corporations) it is not something either the labour movement or NDP in Alberta
will agree to do much more about than debate. Debate will be welcome, dictat
not so much.
LEAP like most
environmentalism today fails to take into consideration that even if workers
had control of publicly owned energy companies, we would still be producing
hydrocarbons, and will be even after the glorious Socialist Revolution.
The dirtiest energy causing
climate change is not oil sands in Alberta or Venezuela it is coal and wood
burning worldwide. That is the challenge
we face to shut down coal, and wood burning, not to accept the myth of Clean Coal, and to make sure we ameliorate environmental damage caused through
hydrocarbon production.
You want to keep something in
the ground its coal, and the biggest fight back in Alberta today is the utility
lobbies who oppose the Alberta NDP Government ending of coal fired utilities.
In Alberta the NDP is the
party of oil and oil workers. Never forget it. The old Social Credit of Preston
Manning’s daddy’s day and the PC’s of Lougheed Klein were both parties of coal.
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
UCP MODELS ITSELF AFTER THE GOP
Canadian Lobbyists Accuse Netflix’s ‘Bigfoot Family’ Of ‘Peddling Lies’ About Oil And Gas
By ALEX DUDOK DE WIT | 03/16/2021 1
Canadian Lobbyists Accuse Netflix's 'Bigfoot Family' Of 'Peddling Lies' About Oil And Gas (cartoonbrew.com)
In its ongoing campaign to quash “misinformation” about the fossil fuel industry, the Canadian Energy Centre (CEC) has set its sights on Netflix. The organization, which is backed by the government of Alberta, has specifically taken issue with the cg feature Bigfoot Family.
The family film puts a spin on the legend of Bigfoot. The story pits the creature and his son against Xtract, a fictional energy company which has designs on Alaska’s oil reserves. While protesting against the company, Bigfoot goes missing.
The CEC has slammed the film in a petition titled “Tell the truth Netflix!” Addressed to Lindsey Scully, Netflix Canada’s head of communications, it calls on the streamer “to tell the true story of Canada’s peerless oil and gas industry, and not contribute to misinformation targeting your youngest, most vulnerable and impressionable viewers.” It does not make more specific requests.
The petition is hosted on a site called Support Canadian Energy, which is described as “a Canadian Energy Centre project.” Text accompanying the petition adds that the film “peddles lies about the energy sector,” singling out a scene in which oil is extracted “by blowing up a valley using glowing red bombs.”
At the time of writing, more than 2,900 people have signed. CEC CEO Tom Olsen told CBC News that a concerned parent drew the organization’s attention to the film. He said more than 1,000 Canadians have sent emails to Netflix Canada to show their concern. CBC requested comment from Netflix Canada, which did not immediately respond.
The CEC was set up in 2019 by Alberta premier Jason Kenney, leader of the United Conservative Party, with the mandate to promote the country’s energy production. Nicknamed the Energy War Room, it launched with a budget of CAD$30 millino (USD$24.1), which was subsequently trimmed during the pandemic.
Bigfoot Family is a Belgian-French co-production directed by Ben Stassen and Jeremy Degruson. The film, which played at Annecy Festival last year, ranked #1 on Netflix’s movie list in territories including the U.S. and Canada after launching last month. It is a sequel to 2017’s box-office hit The Son of Bigfoot.
Alberta energy minister defends 'war room' petition against children's Bigfoot movie
EDMONTON — Alberta’s energy minister is defending her government’s attack on a children’s movie about Bigfoot that she says is "quite offensive" and carries an inaccurate anti-oil message.
IT'S ABOUT ALASKA NOT ALBERTA!
THE WAR ROOM NEEDS A GEOGRAPHY LESSON
© Provided by The Canadian Press
Sonya Savage also says it’s critical the government push back constantly against what it sees as false narratives that cast Alberta’s wellspring industry in a negative light.
“Not everybody is going to agree with every single tactic of the Canadian Energy Centre. I don’t either,” Savage told a committee examining the Energy Department's budget on Tuesday.
“But I did find that the comments that I’ve heard in that cartoon were quite offensive. And the comments have to be countered somewhere.
“And there’s no question whatsoever that we have to find a way to counter the kinds of campaigns and the kind of narrative and the significant misinformation that is targeted at our energy sector.”
Savage was referring to a petition campaign recently launched by the energy centre, informally called the war room, against the animated movie “Bigfoot Family," which can be viewed on the streaming giant Netflix.
The film features talking animals and a domesticated Bigfoot character battling an oil magnate who is seeking to blow up an Alaskan wildlife preserve to gain easier access to petroleum.
The war room is urging followers to send Netflix messages that say the movie is “brainwashing our kids with anti-oil and gas propaganda.”
The Sasquatch debate spilled onto the floor during question period.
Opposition NDP Leader Rachel Notley said the United Conservative government is making the province a laughingstock. Premier Jason Kenney accused Notley of supporting those who would deride Alberta’s big-ticket industry.
“Which investors in Zurich do you think were swayed by your brave stand against a child’s cartoon character?” Notley asked Kenney.
“I know the NDP hates oil and gas. They’ve always despised this province’s largest industry and I’m sure they’re cheering on the propaganda in that Netflix story, but we’re correcting the record as we should,” Kenney countered.
Sonya Savage also says it’s critical the government push back constantly against what it sees as false narratives that cast Alberta’s wellspring industry in a negative light.
“Not everybody is going to agree with every single tactic of the Canadian Energy Centre. I don’t either,” Savage told a committee examining the Energy Department's budget on Tuesday.
“But I did find that the comments that I’ve heard in that cartoon were quite offensive. And the comments have to be countered somewhere.
“And there’s no question whatsoever that we have to find a way to counter the kinds of campaigns and the kind of narrative and the significant misinformation that is targeted at our energy sector.”
Savage was referring to a petition campaign recently launched by the energy centre, informally called the war room, against the animated movie “Bigfoot Family," which can be viewed on the streaming giant Netflix.
The film features talking animals and a domesticated Bigfoot character battling an oil magnate who is seeking to blow up an Alaskan wildlife preserve to gain easier access to petroleum.
The war room is urging followers to send Netflix messages that say the movie is “brainwashing our kids with anti-oil and gas propaganda.”
The Sasquatch debate spilled onto the floor during question period.
Opposition NDP Leader Rachel Notley said the United Conservative government is making the province a laughingstock. Premier Jason Kenney accused Notley of supporting those who would deride Alberta’s big-ticket industry.
“Which investors in Zurich do you think were swayed by your brave stand against a child’s cartoon character?” Notley asked Kenney.
“I know the NDP hates oil and gas. They’ve always despised this province’s largest industry and I’m sure they’re cheering on the propaganda in that Netflix story, but we’re correcting the record as we should,” Kenney countered.
HERE IS THE RECORD CORRECTED THE NDP IN ALBERTA WAS STARTED BY OIL CHEMICAL AND ATOMIC WORKERS UNION ORGANIZER NEIL REIMER
Notley replied: “More people laughing at you is not a win.”
The fuss over the film has prompted a renewed debate between the UCP and the NDP over the war room's goals and purpose.
The centre was started in late 2019 to fulfil a campaign promise by Kenney to challenge what he called misleading and inaccurate statements designed to put the energy sector in a critical light and thereby buttress public support against megaprojects such as pipelines.
The war room was given a $30-million annual budget and immediately stumbled into several high-profile gaffes. It was found to be using another company’s logo and its staff had referred to themselves as reporters when speaking with sources.
It also attacked, and later apologized, for a series of tweets about the New York Times, saying the newspaper had been “called out for anti-Semitism countless times” and had a “very dodgy” track record.
The war room's budget was cut last year as the COVID-19 pandemic took a wrecking ball to the economy. The centre's budget for the current fiscal year is $10 million and is forecast to be $12 million next year.
The NDP has repeatedly criticized the war room as a high-profile embarrassment and a waste of tax dollars.
NDP energy critic Kathleen Ganley, noting the popularity of the Bigfoot movie is rising, renewed that argument with Savage before the committee on Tuesday.
“It was getting very little notice, in fact, until such time as the war room came along and suddenly it shot up to be on the list of Top-10, viewed-in-Canada movies on Netflix,” said Ganley.
“The war room seems to be having what I would argue is the opposite effect of the effect that it is intended to have.”
UCP member Peter Guthrie, also on the committee, said the Netflix bump could be interpreted as testimony to the reach and effectiveness of the war room.
“They (opponents) claim that the CEC doesn’t work. But next they highlight that the CEC had the ability to take obscure movies created to present misinformation about the energy sector and boost these obscure movies to the top of the charts,” said Guthrie.
“I think that’s pretty awesome if they have that kind of ability.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 16, 2021.
Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press
Notley replied: “More people laughing at you is not a win.”
The fuss over the film has prompted a renewed debate between the UCP and the NDP over the war room's goals and purpose.
The centre was started in late 2019 to fulfil a campaign promise by Kenney to challenge what he called misleading and inaccurate statements designed to put the energy sector in a critical light and thereby buttress public support against megaprojects such as pipelines.
The war room was given a $30-million annual budget and immediately stumbled into several high-profile gaffes. It was found to be using another company’s logo and its staff had referred to themselves as reporters when speaking with sources.
It also attacked, and later apologized, for a series of tweets about the New York Times, saying the newspaper had been “called out for anti-Semitism countless times” and had a “very dodgy” track record.
The war room's budget was cut last year as the COVID-19 pandemic took a wrecking ball to the economy. The centre's budget for the current fiscal year is $10 million and is forecast to be $12 million next year.
The NDP has repeatedly criticized the war room as a high-profile embarrassment and a waste of tax dollars.
NDP energy critic Kathleen Ganley, noting the popularity of the Bigfoot movie is rising, renewed that argument with Savage before the committee on Tuesday.
“It was getting very little notice, in fact, until such time as the war room came along and suddenly it shot up to be on the list of Top-10, viewed-in-Canada movies on Netflix,” said Ganley.
“The war room seems to be having what I would argue is the opposite effect of the effect that it is intended to have.”
UCP member Peter Guthrie, also on the committee, said the Netflix bump could be interpreted as testimony to the reach and effectiveness of the war room.
“They (opponents) claim that the CEC doesn’t work. But next they highlight that the CEC had the ability to take obscure movies created to present misinformation about the energy sector and boost these obscure movies to the top of the charts,” said Guthrie.
“I think that’s pretty awesome if they have that kind of ability.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 16, 2021.
Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press
Canadian Lobbyists Accuse Netflix’s ‘Bigfoot Family’ Of ‘Peddling Lies’ About Oil And Gas
By ALEX DUDOK DE WIT | 03/16/2021 1
Canadian Lobbyists Accuse Netflix's 'Bigfoot Family' Of 'Peddling Lies' About Oil And Gas (cartoonbrew.com)
In its ongoing campaign to quash “misinformation” about the fossil fuel industry, the Canadian Energy Centre (CEC) has set its sights on Netflix. The organization, which is backed by the government of Alberta, has specifically taken issue with the cg feature Bigfoot Family.
The family film puts a spin on the legend of Bigfoot. The story pits the creature and his son against Xtract, a fictional energy company which has designs on Alaska’s oil reserves. While protesting against the company, Bigfoot goes missing.
The CEC has slammed the film in a petition titled “Tell the truth Netflix!” Addressed to Lindsey Scully, Netflix Canada’s head of communications, it calls on the streamer “to tell the true story of Canada’s peerless oil and gas industry, and not contribute to misinformation targeting your youngest, most vulnerable and impressionable viewers.” It does not make more specific requests.
The petition is hosted on a site called Support Canadian Energy, which is described as “a Canadian Energy Centre project.” Text accompanying the petition adds that the film “peddles lies about the energy sector,” singling out a scene in which oil is extracted “by blowing up a valley using glowing red bombs.”
At the time of writing, more than 2,900 people have signed. CEC CEO Tom Olsen told CBC News that a concerned parent drew the organization’s attention to the film. He said more than 1,000 Canadians have sent emails to Netflix Canada to show their concern. CBC requested comment from Netflix Canada, which did not immediately respond.
The CEC was set up in 2019 by Alberta premier Jason Kenney, leader of the United Conservative Party, with the mandate to promote the country’s energy production. Nicknamed the Energy War Room, it launched with a budget of CAD$30 millino (USD$24.1), which was subsequently trimmed during the pandemic.
Bigfoot Family is a Belgian-French co-production directed by Ben Stassen and Jeremy Degruson. The film, which played at Annecy Festival last year, ranked #1 on Netflix’s movie list in territories including the U.S. and Canada after launching last month. It is a sequel to 2017’s box-office hit The Son of Bigfoot.
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