• CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      8 months ago

      Man, I wish you could just go out and buy a small amount of crude. Our whole world is built on the stuff but I’ve never even seen it.

      • Uncle
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        8 months ago

        I seem to remember coming across some crude as a kid, not like in the wild, but when I was with my dad on deliveries. This would have been back when the tar sands were still un/starting to be developed. The shit stinks like crazy if I remember right, and its gross to touch. Think I seen crude, tar sands, and refined oil all in the same place, point in time. Cant remember the context around why I was able to get that close to it, so, hell its so fuzzy, it might have even been a dream at this point

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          8 months ago

          Smelly sounds about right. The Canadian stuff (or at least the tar sands stuff) is really high in sulpher, too, to the point where we’re a pretty big exporter of it as a refining byproduct. A big part of the reason they don’t give crude to just anybody is that it occasionally belches out a potentially toxic amount of hydrogen sulphide (H2S).

  • remotedev
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    8 months ago

    Anyone else upset they didn’t post the pictures everyone drew?

    • rgb3x3@beehaw.org
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      8 months ago

      It annoys me to no end when an article talks about images or a video and doesn’t post the images or video.

  • grteOP
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    8 months ago

    Of course, the stereotype is mostly a product of marketing. Fewer than 100,000 of the ~2 million workers in Alberta are employed in oil and gas. Whereas 1.5 million of them are employed in services of some sort. 81% of Alberta is urban, which is in line with the Canadian average. The average Albertan is pretty much the same as the average Canadian, an underpaid urban service worker. With a small, well paid minority of workers who really mess up the stats.

    • Funderpants
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      8 months ago

      I was in a bar stateside once and met another Canadian, we got to talking about our most and least favourite cities and I mentioned that I find Calgary to be my least favourite major city. She asked why and I told her I find it to be a bit fake, among other things. She asked me what I meant by fake and I told her, ‘In Calgary the Realtors wear cowboy hats on their billboard ads, have you ever seen a Realtor in Halifax wearing a Sou’Wester?’

      Anyway, this is just to agree that the perception is not unearned, their governments and local marketers chose to present them this way.

    • baconisaveg
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      8 months ago

      The number of lifted pickup trucks I see driving around 'berta seems to defy that ratio though. Well, that and bald tires.

      • grteOP
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        8 months ago

        Lots of Albertans buy into the marketing even if an actual assessment of their circumstances would show they aren’t living it.

  • Uncle
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    8 months ago

    Windy, and needing a jacket. yeah, on point