Anti Oil Sands activists funded by US interests

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Fraser_Institute
In 2012, Alexis Stoymenoff of the Vancouver Observer reported that The Fraser Institute accepted $500,000 from the Koch Brothers in a four year period. She wrote:
According to U.S. tax documents, The Fraser Institute received $150,000 from the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation in 2008, $175,500 in 2009, and another $150,000 in 2010. The grants were purportedly for "research support" and "educational programs".[1]

Before 2008, The Fraser Institute received $25,000 from the Claude R. Lambe Foundation which is a subsidiary of the Koch Family Foundations[2].

Interest in Canadian oil, particularly the Keystone XL Pipeline, may be the point of interest for the Koch Brothers involvement with The Fraser Institute, according to Inside Climate News. "Inside Climate News" Reported that the [[Koch Brothers would gain significantly from increased oil imports from Canada.[3]

Despite the political repercussions of the Koch Brothers contributions to the Fraser Institute, the organization maintains its claim as "non-partisan" and "non-political".[4]
 
http://www.desmog.ca/time-audit-fraser-institute
Time to Audit the Fraser Institute

On March 25, 2012, the Compliance Division of the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) received a letter from Jensen Shawa Solomon Duguid Hawkes LLP (aka JSS Barristers). In 11 detailed pages, JSS Barristers lodged a complaint against Environmental Defence, a charity registered with the CRA, on behalf of Ezra Levant’s brainchild, the Ethical Oil Institute. A month later, on April 24, the JSS-Ethical Oil team sent the CRA a second, similar letter, this one a 44-page imputation that the David Suzuki Foundation, like Environmental Defence, was “in contravention of the CRA rules surrounding registered charities and political activity.”

According to the CRA, and as echoed in the Ethical Oil Institute’s complaints against Environmental Defence and the Suzuki Foundation, a charity may not be created for a political purpose, and it can't “take part in an illegal activity or a partisan political activity.” Specifically, the CRA states that charitable organizations must devote “substantially all” (i.e. 90%) of their resources to charitable activities, and that any political activity is “subordinate” to its stated purpose.

That's not to say that charities can't promote their work and educate the public about issues that have political implications. But in doing so they must ensure that public awareness campaigns aren't their “primary activity, and their information must be “well-reasoned.” It goes without saying that they don't connect their views to specific political parties or candidates.

As an example, the CRA states that “a purpose such as improving the environment by reducing the sulphur content of gasoline would very likely require changes in government regulations. Generally, any purpose that suggests convincing or needing people to act in a certain way and which is contingent upon a change to law or government policy (e.g., “the abolition of” or “the total suppression of animal experimentation”) is a political purpose.”

Given all of this, and given the Ethical Oil Institute’s obvious concern about registered charities flouting CRA rules — namely, engaging in partisan political activity, or spending too much time and money influencing public opinion about laws, policies, or government decisions — it’s surprising that Ethical Oil didn’t send a third letter complaining about perhaps the most politically partisan of all Canadian charities — the infamous Fraser Institute.

“The problem with political ENGOs with charitable status is that they act like political advocates, and even partisans, but they expect the tax treatment of Mother Teresa,” Levant told the Vancouver Observer recently, adding that EthicalOil.org isn’t a registered charity. “We don't pretend to be in the same moral category as feeding the hungry or housing the homeless — and so we don't get an exemption from the Income Tax Act like registered charities do.”

But the Fraser Institute does. Variously described as “conservative” and “libertarian,” Ethical Oil’s brother in arms works toward “a free and prosperous world where individuals benefit from greater choice, competitive markets, and personal responsibility.”

While such rhetoric sounds great on the surface, there’s much more to it than meets the eye. The Fraser Institute has spent approximately $100 million since its inception in the mid-1970s to sanctify the neo-liberal principles of Frederick Von Hayek and Milton Friedman.

At once maligned (by the political left) and celebrated (by the political right), the Fraser Institute represents a free-market libertarianism popularized by Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, and embraced almost wholly by Alberta’s Progressive Conservatives and the Conservative Party of Canada. Although it vehemently maintains its independence and objectivity, the Institute focuses its research on lower taxes, smaller government, less market “interference” and privatized social services — all of which benefit the corporate sector.

“The Fraser Institute is a small cog in a global wheel of reaction designed to roll back the democratic gains of the 20th century,” says Donald Gutstein, a professor at Simon Fraser University and the author of Not a Conspiracy Theory: How Business Uses Propaganda to Manipulate Us (Key Porter, 2009).

And that makes it inherently a political organization, writes David Climenhaga, an author, teacher, trade union communicator and former journalist with the Globe and Mail and the Calgary Herald.

“The Fraser Institute strives to change Canadians' political attitudes so they will place far-right political parties like Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives in power, and keep them there. It works relentlessly to restructure our political architecture in ways that will make it difficult for citizens to seize back their own country. And it fields an army of ‘former researchers — Danielle Smith, leader of the far-right Wildrose Party here in Alberta is a prominent example — who play an overtly political role.”

As Climenhaga notes, its annual report reads like a who’s who of former conservative politicians, prominent businessmen, and pro-free market academics. Not surprisingly, the energy sector is well represented. Gwyn Morgan, former president and CEO of EnCana, is a long-serving supporter and member of the board of trustees. So are Steve Snyder, president and CEO of Transalta; W. W. Siebens, president and CEO of Candor Investments Ltd. and a Petro-Canada director since 1986, and John Hagg, former chairman and CEO of Northstar Energy Corporation and principal of Tristone Capital Inc — to name but a few.

Senior fellows have included prolific Calgary Herald op-ed contributor Barry Cooper and the University of Calgary's Tom Flanagan, Stephen Harper’s former chief advisor and a key part of the Wildrose Party’s recent ascendance. Academic and former Alberta MLA Ted Morton was also a Fraser Institute fellow before he took office (and may end up back there given his loss in the recent Alberta election). Preston Manning was there, too, as was King Ralph Klein himself.

Even Ezra Levant, the political right’s unapologetic mouthpiece, cut his teeth with the Fraser Institute, writing Youthquake (a treatise arguing for smaller government, including privatization of the Canada Pension Plan) while a student intern in 1995.

Given these connections, it’s not surprising the Fraser Institute held its 30th anniversary gala at Calgary’s Hyatt Regency Imperial Ballroom, where then-Alberta premier Klein told 1,200 adoring libertarians and conservatives that, “The Government of Alberta is proud to adhere to the public policy direction of the Fraser Institute.”

But what of its purported political activity? Does the work of the Fraser Institute, a registered charity, contravene the Income Tax Act or CRA policy?

A few examples will suffice to make a case at least as compelling as Ethical Oil’s attack on Environmental Defence and the Suzuki Foundation.

First, it would seem that the Fraser Institute explicitly communicates to the public calls for laws and policies to be changed. The Fraser Institute’s recent report, Follow Indiana’s Lead: Canadian Provinces Should Give Workers Choice[PDF], urged Canadians to adopt “right-to-work” laws typical of those U.S. states south of the Mason-Dixon Line.

Once Stephen Harper’s Conservative Party had won its long-sought majority, the Fraser Institute jumped into the fray to demand that he change Canada's election spending laws to “abolish” all per-vote subsidies for political parties.

Earlier this May, the Fraser Institute’s Mark Milke wrote (apparently without irony) that “Canada’s cartel-like supply management boards should be abolished,” because “they cement an undesirable nexus between politics and money,” among other reasons.

What about government policy about the Canada Pension Plan? The Fraser Institute says, change it! The Harper government obliged, increasing the age of eligibility for Old Age Security from 65 to 67, but that wasn't good enough for the Fraser Institute, which demands yet more clawbacks.

What of Bill C-323, which would allow people anywhere in the world to use the Canadian courts to hear civil cases against, say, Canadian mining companies who violate international laws or treaties to which Canada is party? The Fraser Institute says bury it, because this “reckless” bill would leave Canadian firms vulnerable to huge risks and costs (if they are found to have violated the law).

There's also the little matter of offering “well-reasoned” positions, which the CRA defines as “factual information that is methodically, objectively, fully, and fairly analyzed.” To cite just one example, the Fraser Institute's research on environmental issues appears to leave much to be desired. For instance, the Fraser Institute's annual Environmental Indicators report analyzes environmental trends, routinely concluding that “contrary to public opinion, in most instances objectives for protecting human health and the environment are being met, pollution and wastes are being controlled, and resources and land are being sustainably and effectively managed.”

...continued below...
 
Hilda McKenzie and William Rees (an award-winning ecologist at the University of British Columbia) were suspicious of such claims, so they vetted the 1997, 1998, 2002 and 2004 editions of Environmental Indicators. In “Analysis of a Brownlash Report,” a 2007 paper in the journal Ecological Economics, McKenzie and Rees concluded the reports were fraught with errors, including “a narrow scope,” and “various problematic omissions” and “distortions,” which allowed the authors to draw overly optimistic conclusions and report recommendations that fit the Institute's small government, less regulation philosophy.

Lauded in the mainstream press for presenting “good news” about the environment, and for bucking the trend of “finding environmental gloom under every rock,” such disingenuous “brownlash” analyses provide the public with incomplete or downright erroneous information, hindering, rather than helping, citizens and policymakers make sound, long-term decisions about how to balance economic activity and environmental protection.

Does the Fraser Institute deserve an audit? I’m no lawyer, but if JSS Barristers feel there’s a strong enough case to be made for an audit of Environmental Defence and the Suzuki Foundation, then the evidence seems to indicate similar treatment for the Fraser Institute.

Given the Harper government’s handling of the F-35 stealth fighter fiasco, and its relentless attack on environmental groups, a little transparency would go a long way. So why not throw the Fraser Institute on the CRA Black List too?
 
https://www.fraserinstitute.org/author.aspx?id=14768&txID=2670
Tom Flanagan
In 2001-02, he worked for Stephen Harper, managing Mr. Harper's campaigns for the leadership of the Canadian Alliance (2002) and of the Conservative Party of Canada (2004), as well as the Conservative Party's national election campaign in 2004. During the 2005-06 election, he worked as senior communications adviser for the Conservative Party. He has since returned to teaching at the University of Calgary.
 
My concern is US money affecting the outcome of Canadian elections right down to the municipal level

Are you concerned about this?
[ezsQqptQOq0]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezsQqptQOq0
 
Wow.

14 Consecutive posts over 2 hours.

You really got into that one, AgentAnonymous.


thankfully someones able to keep up with all the bullsh*t going on out there due to less than honest people in positions of power. and with the rate it's happening you could probably fill up a whole forum quickly with what doesn't even get reported.
thxs for keeping us informed agentaqua!
 
thankfully someones able to keep up with all the bullsh*t going on out there due to less than honest people in positions of power. And with the rate it's happening you could probably fill up a whole forum quickly with what doesn't even get reported.
Thxs for keeping us informed agentaqua!

x2 :) ....
 
More on the connections between the Koch brothers and the so-called "Think Tanks" - including as we have seen in previous posts on this thread - the Fraser Institute. Thanks Charlie and bigdogeh for the support.
<iframe width="854" height="510" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/UaPxa0SUneE" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
KOCH brothers threaten Rachel Maddow. "F.U."
 
"Anti- Oilsands Activists Funded By U.S. Interests"

Pretty simple - U.S. foundations representing U.S. interests actively fund groups in Canada which campaign against Canadian industry.

You have yet to show anything which counters that point.
 
Actually, CK - the point about "undue influence" of foreign corporations (esp. US-based oil interests like the Koch brothers) is well taken - and I have spent some time and effort here linking those dots for you. Those dots that are leading from the Koch brothers to the Fraser Institute (as but one example).

The Fraser Institute is never listed by Krause as one of those "evil" foreign devils meddling in Canadian affairs, but if the rationale for looking any groups activities is a question about the "charitable" nature of their activities - as you suggested - it should be "investigated", as you say. BUT...the Fraser Institute failed to file Schedule 7, Political Activities - and was allowed to have this happen - even though only 10% of their activities should be "political". That may be the reason they didn't fill that form out.

YET - a number of their founders and affiliates are either actively involved in politics and/or are listed on the registry of lobbyists - as I previously posted and given you and everyone else on this forum the CRA government links to the Registration of Lobbyists. I am sure that given Krauses's investigative ability - I would expect that she would be well aware of all of these issues. However, the Fraser Institute appears to sing the song she wishes to sing about big oil.

Big oil has funded Krause. Groups known to have paid payed Krause speaker’s fees include the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association, the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, the Association for Mineral Exploration and the Vancouver Board of Trade.

This isn't about where any group locates their head office as an argument - as I previously stated. It's about control of the media and utilizing whatever fear-based messaging that works in order to try to control public approval. Until Krause goes after the people that provide her paycheck - those foreign "devils" that don't fill out their tax forms - like, um.. the Fraser Institute and their backers big oil - she has no credibility nor validity to her argument. You don't need to feel the need to protect her because she used the same argument to try to defend your industry. C'mon CK - you're smarter than that.
 
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http://burnabypipelinewatch.ca/cont...-fund-fraser-institute-why-fraser-institute-0

U.S. Republican Koch oil billionaires help fund the Fraser Institute. Why the Fraser Institute?
date: Saturday, April 27, 2013
Author: Jenny Uechi

U.S. libertarian oil billionaire brothers David and Charles Koch have poured at least half a million dollars into The Fraser Institute over the last few years. In case you haven't been following their trail, here's a bit about them:

If the Koch brothers didn't exist, the left would have to invent them. They're the plutocrats from central casting – oil-and-gas billionaires ready to buy any congressman, fund any lie, fight any law, bust any union, despoil any landscape, or shirk any (tax) burden to push their free-market religion and pump up their profits.

-- Rolling Stone Magazine

The Koch brothers are the funders of the Americans for Prosperity group that just launched a $6.1 million television ad targeting President Barack Obama in eight states. Based in Witchita, Kansas, they own the second largest privately held company in America. Their father, Fred Koch, was a member of the radical right-wing John Birch Society.

“Charitable” Fraser Institute accepted $500k in foreign funding from Koch oil billionaires
Fraser Institute co-founder confirms 'years and years' of U.S. oil billionaires' funding

According to The New Yorker, "The Kochs operate oil refineries in Alaska, Texas, and Minnesota, and control some four thousand miles of pipeline. Koch Industries owns Brawny paper towels, Dixie cups, Georgia-Pacific lumber, Stainmaster carpet, and Lycra, among other products. Forbes ranks it as the second-largest private company in the country, after Cargill, and its consistent profitability has made David and Charles Koch—who, years ago, bought out two other brothers—among the richest men in America. Their combined fortune of thirty-five billion dollars is exceeded only by those of Bill Gates and Warren Buffett."

Republican commentator Glenn Beck has attended their private retreats, where U.S. Supreme Court Justices and a host of congressmen and political back-roomers mingle to strategize about moving America further right. They are widely suspected of having funded Herman Cain's failed Republican presidential bid.

Both in their seventies, the Kochs have given tens of millions of dollars to Republican candidates. They fund projects that help undermine climate change, fight taxes, trade unions and battle Obama's health care reforms.

"Most organisations which benefit from the Kochs' largesse have one thing in common: they help advance an unflinching brand of libertarian conservatism," writes Guy Adams in The Independent. "Some lobby against environmental regulation, or seek to undermine public perception of the threat of climate change, others battle taxes, trade unions and Barack Obama's health care reforms."
So why are the Koch brothers in Canada and why have they selected the Fraser Institute to be the repository of their generosity? A trip to The Fraser Institute's website offers clues, if not answers.

Fraser Institute Branding: Freedom, Prosperity, Choice

Fraser's website and Facebook page boldly promote a conservative political agenda. And although the Fraser Institute claims to be “independent” and “non-partisan”, the institute has been a connecting point for many leading conservatives in Canada.

On the front page of the Fraser Institute's website, a bold headline reads: "Canada among the world's biggest spenders on health care.”

Other articles include “Electricity prices soar when governments subsidize green energy,” and “The BC roots of Albertan conservatism”. The institute's research topics are varied, ranging from "aboriginal issues" to energy to urban issues. But reports are completely consistent with a the right-wing, free-market agenda: in the health section, every study in the past several years is a critique of public health care, its long wait lines and high costs. On the energy front, studies call for reduced red tape on Albertan oil sands, and on education, private schools are praised while public schools are strongly criticized.

As a registered charity, the Fraser Institute is only allowed to devote a small part of its resources to political activity, and can never be partisan. Yet the institute has played a significant role in shaping the conservative movement and tone of political discourse in Canada today.

Fraser Institute All-Stars

Some famous figures include Ezra Levant, a Sun media columnist and author of Ethical Oil, who came to intern at the Fraser Institute after a fellowship with the Koch Foundation. Kathryn Marshall, political commentator and former Ethical Oil spokesperson, was also a development associate at the Fraser Institute. Wildrose leader Danielle Smith took on an internship with the Fraser Institute during her twenties that “imbued her with a passion for Ayn Rand and charter schools”, according to a recent Walrus article. She became an intern with the encouragement of Tom Flanagan, a Fraser Institute senior fellow and Stephen Harper mentor. Vancouver Sun editorial pages editor and columnist Fazil Milhar is the former regulatory studies director at the Fraser Institute.

...continued below...
 
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