Game Moderator
Mod Boss
7845
Jan 31st 2012, 0:01:02
as h4 said. In any case unenforceable laws end up being irrelevant. Regarding that particular piece of legislation, two provinces refuse to put up the money required to enforce it and the feds won't pay so ummm gl with that.
Ironically, the party in favor of mass decentralization has gotten burned by decentralization here. The provinces of Ontario and Quebec run their own policing and can effectively control how/if criminal laws are enforced in spite of the fact that constitutionally they don't have that power. Yes, the federal government can in turn bolster the RCMP and send them in too, but they don't want to spend money on that sooo...
As a funnier example Ontario runs it's own railways which they shouldn't be doing either and yet Ontario now has the leverage to blackmail CN rail and effectively halt federal rail projects they don't like. In fact, the province effectively has the power to put a halt of all east-west trade now which is not something they are supposed to be able to do. I don't think this will ever happen but it's kind of sad that it's even doable. Sadly because the law of the land says the *federal* government is responsible, it's the federal government that would get sued.
Put up or shut up:)
It's also kind of funny that the province of BC can effectively stop alberta from exporting oil west should they really feel stupid about it. The port/export is federal. The pipeline is federal. But "environmental assessment" and utilities are provincial meaning that legally BC can stop the pipeline from ever getting built simply by drowining it in bureaucracy and there's no legal recourse... For all you americans clammering for more decentralization, be careful what you ask for.
you are all special in the eyes of fluff
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RUN IT IS A KILLER BUNNY!!!