“We are not running out of time. We already ran out. The only question now is whether we have the courage to build something in the ashes.”
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Making the Case for a Youth Climate Corps to Canada’s MPs
Let’s Drop the Politeness Act
Canada likes to believe it’s a calm nation—polite, rational, incremental, allergic to big swings. But politeness doesn’t put out wildfires, and incrementalism doesn’t rebuild collapsed economies.
So let’s say the quiet part louder than your average Ottawa comms director would ever dare:
We have hundreds of thousands of unemployed young people.
We have hundreds of thousands of dead, desiccated, lightning-ready trees carpeting the land after every hurricane-remnant and every freak windstorm.
And every summer, those two trends collide to create a fire season that looks—and smells—like the end of the world.
This is not a coincidence.
This is an equation.
And countries across the globe are solving it the wrong damn way.
Canada, Are You Ready for Your Own New Deal—or Still Debating the Committee Mandate?
Enter Prime Minister Mark Carney.
Former central banker. Climate hawk.
A man who has already stared down the collapse of global markets and lived to lecture about it.
And now he proposes something that Canada hasn’t dared touch in decades:
A Youth Climate Corps.
Let’s be honest: This is the boldest, most economically literate idea a Canadian leader has offered in a generation. And yet the political class is already twitching.
Because a Youth Climate Corps breaks all the unwritten Canadian rules:
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It’s big.
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It’s national.
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It’s disruptive.
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It forces the country to admit the crisis is real.
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And it invests in young people rather than treating them as a “cost pressure.”
That alone is enough to terrify Bay Street, a third of Parliament, and every consultant paid six figures to write timid reports about “stakeholder alignment.”
But history doesn’t wait for people who prefer consensus memos.
FDR Didn’t Ask Permission Either
Let’s take the gloves off.
When Franklin Delano Roosevelt launched the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933, the United States was broken:
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Industrial production down 47%.
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Unemployment at 25%.
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Environmental devastation from the Dust Bowl.
FDR looked at the twin catastrophes—economic collapse + ecological collapse—and did not say:
“Let’s strike a working group to prepare options for a long-term strategy to consider phased actions pending further consultation.”
He said:
Put young people to work.
Heal the land.
Rebuild the country.
Move. Now.
The CCC planted 3 billion trees, built dams, saved farmland, restored waterways, created refuges, and stitched together a nation that had been psychologically torched.
It wasn’t delicate.
It wasn’t moderate.
It wasn’t incremental.
It was transformative.
Welcome to 2025: Canada’s Crisis Makes 1933 Look… Manageable
What do we have today?
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A melting Arctic opening new geopolitical fault lines.
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Wildfire seasons breaking records with machine-like regularity.
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Alberta and the Prairies choking under cyclical drought.
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British Columbia swinging between flood and fire like a pendulum.
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Canada’s highest youth unemployment rate in nearly 25 years.
This is not a passing problem.
This is structural failure.
And here’s the part politicians won’t say out loud:
Canada’s forests are dying faster than we can count, and every dead tree is a fuse waiting for a spark.
Storm after storm leaves behind mountains of fallen timber—perfect wildfire fodder.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Canadians aged 18–30 can’t find stable work.
If this were a math class, the teacher would have already thrown the chalk at us:
Unemployed workforce + combustible landscape = predictable national disaster.
So why pretend the solution is complicated?
The Climate Corps Isn’t Radical. The Status Quo Is.
Canada’s Youth Climate Corps could:
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Train young people in wildfire prevention, reforestation, flood mitigation, and renewable energy.
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Support transitioning fossil fuel communities into stable, better-paying green jobs.
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Strengthen rural economies abandoned by globalization.
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Reinforce climate infrastructure that is collapsing faster than government reports can be edited.
And unlike the U.S.’s New Deal-era corps, Canada’s version can—and must—be inclusive from the ground up:
women, Indigenous youth, racialized communities, newcomers, rural towns, union apprentices, everyone.
This is not a “nice-to-have.”
This is survival architecture.
Let’s Talk Economics, Not Fairy Tales
Carney says he wants to spend less and invest more.
Good. Because climate denial is expensive, and climate delay is catastrophic.
The American Climate Corps returns $17 for every $1 invested in some programs. That isn’t a cost—it's a profit machine disguised as environmental stewardship.
Canada could exceed that if it has the guts.
Because when you put young people to work:
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You boost the economy.
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You cut long-term climate damage.
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You prepare the workforce for the jobs that actually exist.
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You rebuild communities already on the front lines of collapse.
This is macroeconomics 101.
It is also common sense 101.
Which is why governments struggle with it.
This Is Personal—For All of Us
Canada’s boreal forests, lakes, rivers, and snow-peaked ranges shaped my childhood. They shaped my politics. They shaped my life.
They taught me that patriotism isn’t flags and anthems—it’s stewardship.
And right now, Canada is failing its own land.
A Youth Climate Corps won’t fix everything.
But it will do something far more important:
It will prove that Canada still remembers how to build.
A Final Warning—and a Final Chance
If Canada doesn’t seize this FDR moment, the country will be left with:
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Worse fires
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Worse floods
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Worse droughts
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A generation of underemployed young people
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A hollowed-out economy
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And a climate bill so large it will make austerity politicians faint on the spot
But if Canada moves—really moves—then this could be the beginning of a new era.
A century ago, the U.S. built its way out of collapse.
Now it’s Canada’s turn.
And for once, the formula is simple:
Hundreds of thousands of unemployed young people.
Hundreds of thousands of fallen trees.
A country on the brink.
A planet on the line.
A government finally willing to pick up the tools.
The only question left is the one FDR faced:
Will we act like a country worth saving? Or one too timid to try?
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide
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