The episode of The Gravity Well podcast features fellow Alberta activist Chelsea Barnowich (also known as “Chelsea Loves the Moon”), focusing on organizing against separatism in Alberta and broader threats to democracy and public institutions. We begin by outlining an Alberta-wide day of action in Calgary, including a noon event at MLA Mickey Amery’s office, a memorial walk, a march from City Hall to McDougall Centre (with Handmaid’s Tale costumes), and an evening gathering at Riley Park featuring music, biking, booths, and speakers to showcase the province‑wide movement for unity.



Chelsea then explains her current federal petition (E‑7340), originally rooted in Section 35 treaty rights but now focused on asking the federal government to investigate the Alberta Prosperity Project for foreign interference and links to U.S. actors, including Trump‑aligned officials. The petition quickly gained about 10,000 signatures in its first 72 hours and has since surpassed 15,000, with 25 days left at the time of recording, and Chelsea emphasizes that large signature counts make it harder for Parliament to ignore.
Chelsea and I argue that Premier Danielle Smith and the UCP are effectively aligned with separatist forces, citing Smith’s trips to the U.S., her mixed messaging on separatism, and the use of a “firewall letter” strategy attributed to Stephen Harper that seeks to isolate Alberta economically and leverage separatist sentiment to force federal concessions such as Senate reform. They warn that this approach is “playing with fire,” drawing parallels to Brexit and suggesting that even a partial separatist vote could be used by Donald Trump to claim Albertans want “liberation,” especially given Alberta’s large oil reserves and Trump’s openly stated ambitions. I situate this within a broader “MAGA and separatist sandwich,” linking Alberta politics to Project 2025 and a wider right‑wing agenda aimed at dismantling public institutions, entrenching a billionaire class, and promoting a supremacist order.
The conversation also highlights a long list of grievances against the Alberta government: attacks on workers’ rights, attempts to mine the Rocky Mountains, gerrymandering, creation of a provincial police force, underfunding education, benefiting from war‑driven windfall profits, stoking separatism, cutting disability benefits, threatening pensions and CPP, restricting books and critical thinking in schools, and undermining ecological stability, which they argue is essential for any functioning economy. They stress the centrality of treaties as law, not optional policy, and note that Premier Smith has recently spoken about rewriting treaty law, which they see as part of a revisionist and ongoing attack on Indigenous rights.
Chelsea draws on her previous House of Commons petitions on Gaza—one of which gathered 30,000 signatures in 30 days and was followed by a symbolic airdrop of aid—to show that petitions can influence federal discourse and action, even if responses are often limited to explanatory letters. She argues that legal victories, such as recent First Nations court wins on Section 35 and treaty rights, are crucial but insufficient when facing actors like Donald Trump who, in her view, disregard international law, as illustrated by his role in the kidnapping of Venezuela’s president. Her core fear is that a separatist referendum, even with modest support, could be used as a pretext for U.S. intervention in Alberta.
We call for escalating but non‑violent disruption modeled on successful right‑wing tactics, such as highway slow‑rolls and occupations, while repurposing them for the public good. Chelsea advocates repeating the message that “THE UCP IS THE SEPARATIST PARTY” to reach moderates and notes that separatist supporters have been flooding UCP memberships and online spaces. We cite examples such as MLA Jason Stephan’s resignation after pro‑separatist writings, Rob Anderson’s involvement in separatist meetings, polling showing UCP supporters as the strongest base for separatism, and a committee process on the Forever Canadian petition that was allegedly pre‑empted by a pro‑UCP press release, demonstrating democratic erosion.
The episode closes by promoting multiple ongoing and upcoming efforts: other federal petitions (including E-7269 on limiting the notwithstanding clause,
banning AI data centers, [House of Commons petition # e-7427]
and a forthcoming petition about the U.S. ambassador’s use of voter lists), and a June 27 multi‑city, now multi‑provincial rally under the banner “Albertans for United Canada in solidarity with Treaty 6, 7 and 8,” coordinated through Chelsea’s emerging “United Alberta Collection” and website unitedab.ca. That rally aims to bring together Indigenous speakers, recall activists, labour groups, Palestinian protesters, and other movements in Calgary, Edmonton, and Victoria, emphasizing unity, relationship‑building, and mutual encouragement as a way to “charge batteries” and make it harder for the government to ignore public opposition. Chelsea ends by framing the current moment as a “war for our democracy,” urging people to show up in large numbers this summer, occupy the legislature if necessary, and ensure Alberta does not become the “51st state,” while I stress that petitions and street actions can be both effective and joyful forms of civil resistance.









