04 December 2012

Big businesses win with new property tax cut in NB


The Alward regime reaffirmed its commitment to eliminate its deficit by 2014-15, with a budget including public sector wages freezes, the tightening of expenditures in K-12 and post-secondary education, etc. Indeed, K-12 schools have been told to operate on a 70-75% budget this year (to see what happens?). In the meantime, Minister Fitch announced that his administration would relinquish an estimated $49 million in property taxes for businesses, farms, rental properties and cottages. As we all know, NB is awash with cash.

"Program expenditure restraint is necessary to balance the budget on target because the government projects significantly slower revenue growth in the future than was the case in the recent past." RBC, "New Brunswick Budget 2012," March 28, 2012. <www.rbc.com/economics/market/pdf/nbbud2012.pdf> accessed Dec. 4, 2012.

Voilà! Now, it makes a lot more sense. The government needed to make savings somewhere in the budget to pay for its Christmas presents to Irving Oil and Paper, PCS potash, Point Lepreau, the Malls, NB Power, Costco, Home Depot, etc.

Watch, as this plan further milks dry the 99%, and the economic conditions become increasingly dire, they'll say that NB needs more economic stimuli to create jobs, like corporate tax cuts and fracking.

26 October 2011

NB Media Co-op: Call for Participation and Support

NBmediacoop

NB Media Co-op: Independent Media BY and FOR New Brunswickers
Call for Support and Participation
Tired of one-sided media run by its advertisers? Opposed to corporate media consolidation? Don’t sit by -- participate in making the news!
The NB Media Co-op relies on participation from readers like you! A small group of people are currently keeping the NB Media Co-op going. We are seeking community supporters to actively involve themselves in the organization. Please consider committing your time to ensure the sustainability of independent media in New Brunswick’s public interest.
           Gain valuable experience working for a non-profit progressive media organization
           Develop your research, writing, editing and journalistic skills
           Join a collective of folks concerned about social justice and marginalized voices in NB
           Participate in changing the media landscape
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There are many ways to get involved!
Distribute The Brief! We would like to increase distribution of The Brief, our monthly broadsheet publication that can be found ‘for free’ in coffee shops, libraries and doctors’ offices around the province. Please contact us at info@nbmediacoop.org if you can distribute copies or have suggestion of a location to place The Brief.
Join our Organizing / Story Meetings! Meetings are currently held in Fredericton, but it’s easy to attend from a distance by phone or Skype. What stories, events, people, and issues are not being covered in New Brunswick?  What struggles and voices are being marginalized in the corporate press?  Bring your grassroots story ideas! Email info@nbmediacoop.org for more information.
Volunteer editing, copy editing, and fact-checking! Are you a style and grammar geek? Obsessive about getting the facts right? Passionate about editing, writing and the news? Do you have experience working on an editorial collective? We need your help! Email editors@nbmediacoop.org to get involved.
Write for the NB Media Co-op! We are always seeking submissions in French and English (news, opinion pieces, letters to the editor, event listings, reviews, photography, audio and video media). Whether you are an experienced writer or not, we encourage you to make a contribution today! Submit your article at editors@nbmediacoop.org. Contributor guidelines are available on our website.
Become a sustaining member! We depend on individuals like you to provide us with the financial support we need to maintain an independent media voice in New Brunswick. Donations would allow us to continue to publish The Brief (our primary expense). We would also like to pay for certain written contributions, and hire a staff person / editor. Already a sustaining member? Ask your family, friends, and local organizations to consider joining the N.B. Media Co-op. Please make all checks payable to NB Media Co-op, and mail to: 180 St. John St., Fredericton, NB E3B 4A9

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NB Media Co-op
180 St. John St.,
Fredericton, NB
E3B 4A9

Taeyon's take on Occupy

Published by the NB Media Coop


Why I went to Occupy Fredericton

“Knowing what is enough is true wealth.” The Tao Te Ching

As we prepared to head out to Occupy Fredericton’s rally, I asked my 9-year-old if he understood what the whole occupation movement was about. Nope.

Ok. I drew a circle and shaded in a small segment. “Oh!” He looked excited. He’d seen this before in his math class, and before I could explain, he said, “I know, I know, it’s a pie!”

Yes. Ok. Imagine you’re at a birthday party and there are ten kids. One kid gets this whole big piece, and the rest of the nine kids have to split what’s left. Is that fair? He looked offended, “No way.”

Any kid can understand this. We take so much pains to nurture sharing and fairness in our children. But then, when we send them off into the big wide world, suddenly they’re confronted with a system where sharing is suspect and fairness is naive. If you want to get ahead and “succeed” in this system, otherwise known as capitalism, then you’d better unlearn the values you learned as a child.

But in that birthday cake scenario, our family would probably have gotten a pretty decent piece of that cake, though not as much as that 1% kid. We would probably have enough. Because within the 99%, some of us are still better off than others, some of us still have a job, a home, and a decent income. So if we’re doing so well, why did I go to the Occupy Fredericton rally?

Call me naive and my motives suspect, but I still hold to those values I grew up with as a child: sharing and fairness. Only now, as an adult, I call them equity and justice. Any movement for justice must rely on more than self-interest. It must tap into the conscience of those who are not directly suffering to recognize that we cannot live a moral life while others suffer because of us.

For years, we didn’t see how people in other parts of the world suffered at our expense. Because of our foreign policies fashioned by multinational corporations, because of our insatiable desire for cheap consumer goods, because of our careless destruction of the environment and overuse of natural resources, because of our banks and financial institutions that impoverished entire nations.

But capitalism must always grow. So now that the third world has been sucked dry, the system is coming home to do the same to us. We’re only beginning to see what others in the rest of the world have experienced for years: the amassing of wealth among the few at the top, the dismantling of social programs and the impoverishment of the masses.

Now that we are the ones suffering, we finally realize what this system does to people.

Most importantly, our system is driving us all towards ultimate annihilation. As far as capitalism is concerned, everything, including our air, our water, our natural world, is a commodity from which to make money. As long as money can be made, be it from drilling for oil or fracking for gas, the consequences don’t matter. Even if it means making it impossible for the earth to sustain life.

This is how New Brunswick’s ongoing struggle against shale gas connects with the Occupy movement. We took our anti-fracking signs with us, as did others. Some people found that confusing. It may look like the message of the movement is unfocused and too diverse, but that’s because today’s attacks on the environment, labour rights, education, social security, democracy, peace, etc. can all be traced back to our capitalist system.

This movement is urgent. It is no less than a matter of life and death, for our species and for all life on earth. Chances are, you are part of the 99%. Join us.

27 May 2011

Congress 2011 of the Humanities and Social Sciences



I should point out that this sign was installed specifically for the hosting of Congress 2011, the "premiere destination for Canada’s scholarly community."
A French crash course will be offered on the rez-de-chaussée (or 1er étage) of this building.