Most of us know by now that legalized abortion came to our
society through a concerted campaign of deception
and fraud.
Because too many of us were complacent, gullible and spiritually weak, the father
of lies won out and now we—or I should say over 100,000 little children yearly
in Canada—pay the piper.
Obviously, the consequences of believing and following a lie
can be enormous for us as well as for our families—and for generations to come.
Ezra
Levant, a champion of free speech and the truth, illustrated my point in spades
today, in a letter
to the editor which was published today in The Telegram. Let me say simply,
this is why I support Ezra Levant in every practical way, including
financially.
Perhaps Syd Peters will show up or perhaps he will not. It
doesn’t really change very much. Ezra’s exposé sets the record straight and
truth always makes for a brighter future.
The Telegram (St. John’s)
Fracking
and fiction
BY EZRA LEVANT Ezra Levant is a political columnist. His book
“Groundswell: The Case for Fracking” will be published by Random House in
spring 2014.
On Tuesday, The Telegram published a letter to the editor entitled “Some
truth about fracking wouldn’t hurt,” written by an oil and gas engineer
from Calgary named Syd Peters.
It was a devastating personal confession by a fracking industry insider
who said he had spent 28 years polluting the environment across the U.S. and
Western Canada, and then “coercing landowners” and “silencing” towns to keep
the industry’s dirty secrets. “This is what is coming to Newfoundland if
fracking is allowed,” he wrote.
Except there is no oil and gas engineer from Calgary named Syd Peters.
APEGA, Alberta’s professional association of engineers, has no record of him.
He’s not in the Calgary phone book. His stories were fake, just like he is.
On Wednesday, The Telegram acknowledged they did not follow standard
editorial procedures and could not verify the author.
But the identity of “Syd” as an evil oilman was essential to the whole
letter. If anyone else — say, a professional environmental protester — had made
the shocking allegations in the column, he would have been asked for proof. By
creating “Syd,” that credibility problem was solved: it was his personal
confession. It was like that “60 Minutes” bombshell from the 1990s where
Jeffrey Wigand, an executive with the Brown & Williamson cigarette company,
“switched sides” and dished dirt on the industry. The story was so compelling
it was turned into a movie starring Al Pacino and Russell Crowe. But Wigand was
real. “Syd” is fake. “Syd” said fracking leaks into “your source of drinking water”
and “people are sick from the contamination and the chemicals.” But what does
someone real say — a real expert, like Lisa Jackson, the director of the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) during Barack Obama’s first term?
She was called before Congress and asked, point-blank, if fracking can
contaminate ground water. “I am not aware of any proven case where the fracking
process itself affected water,” was her answer.
More than one million oil and gas wells have been fracked in the United
States since the 1940s, and hundreds of thousands more in Canada. But the EPA,
and its state counterparts, have not found a single case, despite countless
investigations.
“Syd” also claimed that fracking makes life unbearable — “flares, truck
traffic, 24-hour noise, the smell of methane.”
Except that fracking is just a very short stage in the life of a well —
typically three to 10 days. And methane doesn’t have a smell — that odour is
added by the gas company, to help us detect leaks in our homes. “Syd” really
doesn’t know a lot about fracking. But those details added to the hoax.
“Syd” claimed “fracking involves a lot fewer jobs” than other kinds of
oil and gas. Back in reality, four of the five fastest-growing cities in the
United States are fracking cities — two in North Dakota and two in Texas. North
Dakota, which fracks for both oil and gas, has an unemployment rate of just 2.7
per cent. In the past 10 years, fracking has tripled the average income in the
state from less than $25,000 a year to $78,000. The average salary in oil and
gas is over $100,000.
But The Telegram’s readers already know all this. Because thousands of
young men and women from the Atlantic region work in fracking right now. They
just do it in places like Alberta and B.C.
Fracking in the Atlantic provinces could bring those young men and
women back home to work. But not if liars like “Syd” carry the day.
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