6 January, 2001
Alberta's barren future
Since
I finished my last degree, I have been thinking about how to best use my education:
by learning about the world and being of service to it through that learning.
I've given a lot of thought to moving to a different province.
While Alberta is not without its charm, it is blatant delusion to believe that
the flavours and cultures of the world can be experienced fully in nicely packaged
festivals in the area and at Edmonton's William Hawrelak Park. I want to expand
my frame of reference. First, I'll move to a bigger city, perhaps Vancouver, Toronto,
Seattle, San Francisco, New York, or London. (I'll save Taipei for later.)
Of course, Alberta is a fresh new land, still bursting with natural resources
and possibility and, right now, it is booming.
But that is part of the problem. All the cities I mentioned are, according
to what I have heard from people who live or have lived in them, wildly expensive
places to hang one's hat.
I have met people who came back to live in Edmonton because they could no longer
afford Vancouver, who promised me just one beer when I visited the United Kingdom
because it is far too expensive there, who enjoy Seattle because they are flagrantly
wealthy and successful… the list goes on.
Why is it so affordable to live here in Alberta? First of all, there are relatively
few people here. We do not have to share the local resources with as many people
as older, more populated cities, like Europe. There is less crime than in a lot
of other places, too. Shootings here still make the news, do they not? Of course,
that means there are fewer different people to meet, befriend, learn from, and
enjoy.
There still exists a lot of natural wealth here. Albertans are up to their
eyeballs in petrol, fertile farmland, clean water, minable terrain, forests, natural
tourist attractions, and cows. Plenitude allows for low prices.
But we are unable to enjoy these resources if nobody can harvest them. Thus
there is a lot of money in that harvest, and it appears that Alberta is focusing
almost exclusively on industry .
It feels as though we are in a period of war. Why the hurry, why the hustle
and bustle? Since the province is doing so well now, should we not relax? The
chores are done and it is time for some recreation. We are healthy and strong,
so let us get smart.
Alberta is becoming an idyllic garden of plenty where things cannot go wrong.
Thus we are becoming less and less able to cope when something does go wrong.
When the happy Albertan prosperity falters briefly and someone gets sick, health
care cannot be relied upon.
Violent crime seems to be more prevalent because human understanding is declining.
There is no money for anyone not trained towards material industry; those educated
in history, language, culture, and medicine are being forced out, leaving the
province increasingly uneducated in anything remotely human.
A place full of industrial workers and devoid of wise, learned people is a
powder keg. We understand the future to the extent we do the past. The wealthy
and wise are getting educated, then getting out, and the elderly are getting sick
and dying. On it current path Alberta will eventually be a barren desert full
of poor, disgruntled, uneducated workers looking for someone to blame and this
has historically been an easily manipulated demographic. Alberta may be affordable
now, but we reap what we sow.
You do the math.
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