Facticity
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Facticity67 karma
Bitumen spills happen occasionally up here in Alberta. They are cleaned up without much issue.
I think some of the debate is regarding benzene, a dilutant added to bitumen to make it flow through pipelines easier. If a buried pipeline leaks than the benzene can't escape into the atmosphere and enters the soil. This is more difficult to clean up than simple oil.
EDIT: Read /u/cptcitrus comment below.
Facticity47 karma
As a Canadian from the woods, I'd say that you have a chance of finding yourself equal to the *latitude you do your woods-ing at. Unless you die, that can also happen.
EDIT: I fucked up my 'tudes.
Facticity38 karma
I can understand why it's popular. You get paid to to spend a day reading something you like. And if you're a fan of the work, how cool is it that you're now the voice behind it? Plus it's just great PR.
Facticity33 karma
The Canadian First Nations consider themselves nations within a civic state (similar to Quebec). "The Stoney Nation" "The Blackfoot Nation" etc. They're the nations that lived on this land first, thus they are the First Nations. I believe that's the logic behind it. Most First Nations people prefer to be referred to by their nation name as far as I can tell, eg. "I am Stoney" "I am Blackfoot" etc.
The other poster has the right explanation for the use of "aboriginal" here, it's basically become a legal term encompassing all of the pre-Colombian peoples that lived here. The Inuit do not identify as First Nations, and the Métis are a funny case, they're a group that originated in Manitoba when French voyageurs and traders started marrying local native women. The resultant "mixed-race" offspring didn't identify with either of their parents heritage and are the Métis.
Facticity311 karma
This is the funniest thing I've seen today. Good God.
Mike definitely says "WTF" on live television at 2:18
$36 fucking dollars for a plastic coated paper bag...
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