In this 2021 book Value(s): Building A Better World For All, Carney tried to persuade us to believe in the free market—not just its merits, but its capacity to self-regulate, to be persuaded to do the right thing, to adopt “enlightened values,” to develop a kinder and gentler capitalism to meet a brutal moment.

This is the same Carney who played a key role in bailing out Canada’s banks during the global financial crisis.

The move ushered in more than a decade of cheap money, which in turn helped fuel a long-term, record-setting growth in the wealth gap while giving rise to financial bubbles and dodgy investments, driving up household debt, and exacerbating the housing crisis.

The asset-management firm Carney chaired, Brookfield, is another clear example of the fundamental inconsistency in believing the free market—perhaps led by the gentlest of hands by the state—is the way forward on climate.

The firm is a dirty-energy behemoth, investing billions in fossil fuels.

It has “one of the biggest portfolios of dirty energy in the world,” says climate finance activist Jason Mogus, who worked with the Sunrise Project. “And they continue to expand it.”

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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      2 hours ago

      This time around we’ll have to extend it for another four years. The NDP is currently polling at under 12% and 13 seats and it’s on a downward trajectory:

      • Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca
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        59 minutes ago

        If NDP ends up with less seats than BQ I really hope that finally triggers a new leadership vote for NDP, Singh just isn’t cutting it.

    • snarky_carpenter@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      id rather go with the devil i know than pp. just recently that fella advocated for guard towers on the border, except i’ve drive along it for a long ways across mb, sk and ab. much of the time the border is ‘the field on that side of the street’, or ‘just past those trees’.