Re: Keep date in mind
in response to
by
posted on
Jan 25, 2013 01:35PM
CUU own 25% Schaft Creek: proven/probable min. reserves/940.8m tonnes = 0.27% copper, 0.19 g/t gold, 0.018% moly and 1.72 g/t silver containing: 5.6b lbs copper, 5.8m ounces gold, 363.5m lbs moly and 51.7m ounces silver; (Recoverable CuEq 0.46%)
Here's just a few reasons why the NDP are nothing short of a pack of liars who will do anything to get power. There are also going right back to where they came from and tried to conceal that agenda. If you think for a minute they won't wipe out the Province you simply refuse to read or you don't know you should be looking. The NDP has been caught red handed preparring to do a repeat of the policies that destroyed mining in BC. The stupid thing here is that 10 seconds on google reveals what they are up to but it's not shocking to me that no one in BC cares enough to spent 2 minutes on it.
It’s a balancing act. In one breath Mr. Dix speaks of fiscal realities, labour productivity and the need for more business investment in his province. But his immediate agenda, if his party takes power in May and he becomes premier, involves corporate tax hikes and the elimination of balanced budget legislation.
Mr. Dix has never governed. But he was a key administrative figure during the B.C. NDP’s tumultuous reign in the 1990s, serving for three years as chief of staff to then-premier Glen Clark. He resigned his post in 1999, after admitting to having crafted a false memo relating to a casino licence application.
AND
Unions across B.C. are in “extensive” pre-election talks with the NDP, and the party’s labour platform is being developed with the B.C. Federation of Labour, according to a document obtained Thursday by The Province.
The labour organization also poured money and staff time into two recent by-elections, the document says, though the NDP candidates in both by-elections did not list the B.C. Federation of Labour as a donor in campaign-finance reports.
It all has the rival Liberals slamming “heavy handed” union influence in the NDP backrooms, and questioning whether the New Democrats properly disclosed campaign donations from the province’s largest labour organization.
“Adrian Dix tried to fool people that he was a moderate with a modest agenda,” Liberal campaign director Mike McDonald said of the NDP leader.
“He just got busted.”
The 11-page document was prepared for the executive of the B.C. Federation of Labour and distributed at its recent convention. It details the organization’s top priorities and its work with the NDP to achieve them.
“Labour platform is being developed with the B.C. NDP,” the document says.
“This includes extensive affiliate discussions on key issues including the B.C. Labour Code, Workers Compensation Board, trades training and employment standards.”
The document had the Liberals seeing red and on the attack.
“It spells out how big labour is working hand-in-hand with the NDP to develop their policies for them,” said Liberal cabinet minister Mary Polak.
She said business should worry about an NDP government bringing in pro-union labour laws and workplace regulations that will raise their costs and deflate investor confidence.
“It’s clear from the document that this is the same old NDP of the 1970s and 1990s and it could hurt our economy,” she said.