Our Positions
Six essays making the case for Alberta sovereignty and examining the federal record — equalization, energy policy, civil liberties, speech law, immigration capacity, and climate policy.
The Case for Alberta Sovereignty
Equalization, federal energy policy, and Western alienation — the core argument for why Alberta should pursue sovereignty, up to and including independence.
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Five Bills, One Pattern
Bills C-11, C-18, C-21, C-59, and C-63 reviewed as a pattern of federal overreach into Canadians' expression, information access, and privacy.
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COVID, the Charter & Government Overreach
Canada's COVID-era emergency powers, including the Emergencies Act invocation later ruled unconstitutional, examined against the Charter.
Read the essay →Online Speech Law: Bill C-9 & C-34
The Combatting Hate Act and Safe Social Media Act, and the case that they overreach into protected expression while outsourcing censorship to platforms.
Read the essay →Immigration Levels & Infrastructure Capacity
A capacity-and-consent argument: federal immigration targets outpacing housing, healthcare, and school capacity, with sourced data.
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Climate Policy: A Costly, Divisive Path
Why current climate policy — subsidies, carbon pricing, and net-zero mandates — delivers poor value and divides more than it helps.
Read the essay →A note on these essays. Each opinion piece on this site is written from a personal point of view and funded by the Alberta Freedom Foundation. They are advocacy, not neutral analysis, and are presented as one side of an actively contested public debate. See our Transparency & Disclosures page for details.