Green Politics and Global Stability
O Canada or no Canada? It’s a momentous question. Canada’s oil-rich province of Alberta is poised to hold an independence referendum, perhaps in October. Similar sentiment has been bubbling in Saskatchewan. In Quebec, secession is the perennial dream of millions. Will it be another rupture in the fabric of our era, like Brexit, Donald Trump’s rise or Russia’s Ukraine invasion? Or maybe the opposite? A putative Canadian secession crisis could prove a damp squib, evidence the world is restabilizing itself in a new geopolitical age. The word rupture was recently given currency by none other than Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney , decrying Donald Trump’s effect on NATO. Never say never but history isn’t a single train rushing down a single track. In fact, a lot has changed since we last visited Albertan independence seven years ago. All the news—every bit of it—suggests Canada finding its way back to an even keel. Property values and ...