Chris
banner
skipischris.bsky.social
Chris
@skipischris.bsky.social
THE FOLLOWING TIMELINE CONTAINS COARSE LANGUAGE AND DUE TO ITS CONTENT SHOULD NOT BE VIEWED BY ANYONE. GO OILERS.
♈☀️♈🌙♊↗️ LET'S SMILE WHEN WE MEET.
This is awesome.
October 19, 2025 at 5:47 AM
So while they haven’t said the words Notwithstanding Clause, they’ve described the only scenario where it applies. That’s the quiet part.
October 19, 2025 at 5:27 AM
Great question. The “threat” isn’t in a press release — it’s in the legal logic.

When Finance Minister Horner floated back-to-work legislation on Oct. 15, he implicitly floated Section 33. You can’t override Charter-protected collective bargaining (Section 2(d)) without it.

(cont.)
October 19, 2025 at 5:27 AM
And let’s be honest — there’s nothing strong and free about that.

Thank you for your time.

#ableg #abed #abpoli #cdnpoli
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
If you believe in democracy, this is your line in the sand.
Call or write your MLA. Talk to your friends and neighbours. Show up at rallies.
Because the moment we accept that rights can be negotiated away for political convenience, we lose more than a contract.
We lose the Canada we were promised.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
The Premier swore an oath to uphold the law, not suspend it.
The Finance Minister swore to protect the public purse, not weaponize it.
And the Education Minister swore to serve students, not sacrifice them.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
This is not strong leadership. It’s cowardice dressed as resolve. It’s the act of a government that knows it’s lost the moral argument and is trying to rewrite the rules instead.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
So yes, you all need to be fucking mad as hell right now.
Because if Alberta opens this door, no one in Canada gets to close it.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
This isn’t about a paycheque. It’s about whether your child’s classroom still functions in five years.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
Let’s also stop pretending this is about kids being out of school.
Teachers are locked out because they’re fighting for class-size limits, proper supports, and respect — the very things that make learning possible.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
And once that precedent is set, the Charter stops being a shield. It becomes a suggestion.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
If Smith crosses this line, it opens a Pandora’s box that can’t be closed. Every province watching will see that they can do the same. Every federal politician who’s ever mused about “getting tough” will see that the cost of trampling rights is zero.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
You don’t have to be vulnerable now to be vulnerable next.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
Today it’s teachers.
Tomorrow it could be nurses, journalists, or public-sector workers.
And one day, it could be you.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
Because this isn’t about teachers anymore. It’s about the idea that any government can wake up one morning, decide that a group of citizens is too loud, too inconvenient, too organized — and flick their rights off like a light switch.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
And that should terrify you.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
To even threaten it during negotiations tells every Albertan exactly what this government thinks of the Charter: that it’s optional. That rights are conditional. That democracy is only valuable when it’s obedient.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
It was designed as a provincial safety valve, to be used only in the rarest and most extraordinary of circumstances — not as a partisan crowbar to pry rights away from workers.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
Let’s be crystal clear about what that means.
The Notwithstanding Clause was never meant to be a convenient button governments press when democracy gets messy.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
If that doesn’t make your blood boil, it should.
Because this wouldn’t just be unprecedented in Alberta — it would be the first time in Canadian history that a government used Section 33 to silence a labour group in the middle of bargaining.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM
The Alberta government is now openly floating the use of the Notwithstanding Clause — Section 33 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms — as a way to force teachers back to work and strip away their right to bargain for the most basic classroom conditions.
October 19, 2025 at 3:15 AM