The group includes Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialists Christina Koch and Canadian Jeremy Hansen, together with their Canadian capcom (capsule communicator) Jenni Gibbons.
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Big thanks to the Artemis II crew who touched down at the Canadian Museum of Nature today to give us a quick tour of the moon — no space suit required.
— Mark Carney (@mark-carney.bsky.social) May 13, 2026 at 3:12 PM
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Wexit petition process declared illegal due to lack of prior First Nations consultations
The Globe and Mail explains the ruling:
...Justice Shaina Leonard of the Court of King’s Bench concluded that the province’s chief electoral officer was wrong to approve the separatist petition last year because it should have triggered First Nations consultations. The judge said such consultations must happen before starting a process that could trigger a binding referendum.The CBC panel concludes that Alberta cannot vote on separation until its legality is decided: With any luck, the Wexit push will fade away. There's talk today that Carney and Smith have a pipeline deal - I hope so. Prospective Canadians who are Trans are getting their citizenship cases handled faster
“As a matter of logic and common sense, there can be no doubt that Alberta’s secession from Canada will have an impact on Treaties 7 and 8,” the judge wrote in her decision.
“A requirement to implement secession without prior involvement of [First Nations] has the potential to adversely affect Treaty rights.”
Alberta government lawyers and pro-independence leader Jeffrey Rath, who is also a lawyer, argued in hearings earlier this year that the electoral officer was correct in his decision to approve the petition.
Government lawyers disputed the idea that a vote on independence would infringe treaty rights, arguing that there were numerous “off-ramps” through the referendum process to ensure treaties were respected. They also argued that consultations could happen after a referendum.
Mr. Rath described the notion that independence would violate treaties as “pure speculation.”
During her news conference on Wednesday, Ms. Smith questioned the judge’s conclusion that the government must consult with First Nations before separation can be put to the electorate.
“I think that the duty to consult is an obligation on government specifically when we’re talking about the impact on treaty rights over hunting, fishing, trapping and when we’re dealing with particular projects,” she said. “I think that that part of the law is very clear. This is pretty murky. That’s why we think it may be incorrect.”...
Justice Leonard is the second judge in the past six months to rule First Nations must be considered in the decision to call a referendum on provincial independence.
In December, Court of King’s Bench Justice Colin Feasby ruled that Alberta independence would contravene treaty rights. In that decision, he wrote: “First Nations, as founding partners in the creation of Alberta, cannot be ignored or bypassed as Alberta contemplates its future whether that is as part of Canada or not.”
Kevin Hille, counsel for Athabasca Chipewyan, the First Nation that brought the lawsuit, said Ms. Smith’s government is required to consult with First Nations if it wants to put independence on a referendum ballot.
“The government has to take ownership of this and engage with First Nations,” Mr. Hille said in an interview...
This is such great news:
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Trump doesn't get the royal treatment in China
No, this isn't good news relly, but it did serve him right:
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I don’t know exactly how Trump will embarrass our country in China, but I think we can count on it happening.
— Steven Beschloss (@stevenbeschloss.bsky.social) May 13, 2026 at 7:10 PM
I thought this was an interesting interview with one of the Two Michaels: And this was hilarious. China expert Brett Bruen, who was a diplomat in the Obama administration, posted a tweet that there were no China experts on the Trump plane to China. This was the mature, measured and authoritative response from the White House Director of Communications:
You have no idea what you’re talking about you slope-brained, mouth breathing moron. Stop calling yourself an expert in anything, aside from sucking. Anyone that hires you (not many!) should get an immediate refund and payment for wasting their time. https://t.co/gVPr2EUjFM
— Steven Cheung (@StevenCheung47) May 12, 2026




4 comments:
Smith's pretence of neutrality collapsed when she called Justice Leonard's decision "antidemocratic." A truly disinterested premier would simply have accepted the decision.
But you know what's "antidemocratic," Dani? Allowing the residents of one province to decide the territorial integrity of the entire nation.
Yes that's a great point.
The thing about the idea of a pipeline deal is, it's trading a hypothetical political gain (we give Alberta the pipeline it's whining for, and Alberta shuts the f up for a while) for an economic loss.
Economically, a pipeline makes no sense. This right here right now is the last oil boom. It is not going to last long enough to get a new pipeline built. Imagining that Carney successfully rides roughshod over all planning and evaluation requirements and legal challenges and protests, and that shaves, I dunno, 3 years off the building process, that's like 7 years to build it, which takes us to 2033. Demand for crude will be in irreversible decline by 2033. Prices will be low. The Alberta tar sands patch will be dying by 2033. The pipeline will sit there empty, a $50 billion white elephant. And I'm not seeing any signs that the oil companies want to pay for this thing, so that means we're talking about most of those $50 billion coming from Canadian taxpayers.
So the question is, will the political gain be worth it? Well, going on the evidence from last time Canada ponied up for a pipeline for Alberta, no, not at all. We did not get one word of thanks and they pivoted to squealing about lots of other BS long before the damn thing was even finished. Why would we expect different this time? These are not real political grievances, they're just the age-old sport of fed bashing, distracting the electorate by pointing to an outside enemy, except massively amplified by tons of US-owned oil company money. The political convenience of the kind of propaganda that got us to this point is not reduced by giving in to it.
Alberta and Saskatchewan don't want to admit that oil could ever be a declining asset so we blame the feds for it.
I have long believed that 21st century federal governments are trying to get Canada's oil out of the ground and sold before the world's energy users switch to renewables - at which point everyone will realize their investments in pipelines have become pointless because our oil is valueless.
So we might already have dithered for too long, because I'm afraid everyone is waking up to reality.
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