So, I was recently asked to verify where we were getting our information about Mark Carney’s Voluntary Carbon Market (VCM) — a corporate welfare scheme parading as environmental policy — which many believe could fuel separation in Western Canada.
To avoid being blacklisted again, we’re leaving the official titles of these government programs here so you can search for them yourself directly on Canada.ca:
Official Documents to Search
Guidance for Using Carbon Pollution Pricing Proceeds to Support Canadians and Drive Climate Ambition
Carbon Pollution Pricing Proceeds Programming
These two policy frameworks are at the core of the federal government’s ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) agenda — specifically, the mechanisms designed to funnel taxpayer money into private “green” markets like the Voluntary Carbon Market.
The VCM: A Corporate Welfare Machine in Disguise
As we’ve been warning our readers, the VCM — a key player in the global ESG movement — is collapsing. And it’s collapsing for one simple reason:
Without corporate welfare from governments, the private sector can’t keep it alive.
The entire VCM concept depends on governments forcing taxpayers to subsidize “carbon credits” that large corporations can buy, sell, and trade. When Mark Carney — through his connection to Brookfield and international ESG networks — proposes federal programs to “price carbon” and “support climate ambition,” what he’s really doing is propping up a failing market with public money.
Why Alberta and Saskatchewan View ESG Differently
If you’re in Alberta, you might wonder why your provincial government sometimes appears to support ESG initiatives, while Saskatchewan stays largely silent. The answer lies in economic incentives:
- Alberta attracted large multinational corporations that want to monopolize the ESG framework.
If Carney forces taxpayers to fund the VCM, these big players can make smaller Canadian energy companies buy carbon credits from them — turning the local industry into a servant economy for global elites. - Saskatchewan, on the other hand, has not globalized its energy sector to the same extent. Participating in the VCM would only mean paying higher taxes without any tangible benefit. For Saskatchewan, the VCM is not an opportunity — it’s a burden.
The Hidden Purpose: Market Control
What the VCM and ESG frameworks actually represent is corporate welfare through price control. The end goal is to make the global energy markets controllable — not by governments, but by corporate elites and their financial partners.
By offering “cradle-to-grave” subsidies and incentives, these programs reward companies that join the ESG club while squeezing out competitors who can’t afford the extra costs. It’s not about saving the planet — it’s about consolidating power and profits.
This is why Mark Carney is trying to force Canadian taxpayers to prop up a collapsing market. The Voluntary Carbon Market can’t stand on its own, so Ottawa’s 2025 budget uses vague climate language to justify new spending that ultimately benefits Brookfield-linked entities and multinational corporations.
A Christian Reflection
Corruption disguised as compassion is one of the oldest political tricks in history. Scripture warns us in Matthew 7:15:
“Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.”
In politics, that means watching for those who use moral language — “climate action,” “equity,” “sustainability” — to cover greed and manipulation. As Christians, we must seek truth, not rhetoric.
Consider making Jesus Christ your Lord and Savior today.
Because when governments deceive and markets crumble, only faith in God provides stability and peace.