| Map of Canada > Canada Locator Map • Ottawa Locator Map | ||||
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![]() Map of Canada, featuring Canada's major cities, roads, lakes and rivers. Canada is a federation of ten Provinces and three Territories. The four Maritime Provinces of New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island are influenced by their relationships with the North Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. Quebec and Ontario are the most populous Provinces in Canada, while Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta occupy Canada's central prairie heartland. British Columbia, the westernmost Province in Canada, lies between the Rocky Mountains and the North Pacific Ocean. Canada's Territories, consisting of Nunavut, Yukon, and the Northwest Territories, lie to the far north. They have no inherent jurisdiction, and only exercise powers that are delegated to them by Canada's federal government. BBC News - Canada offers an excellent news and information profile of Canada. Other Maps of Canada
Canada Travel InformationCanada's capital city is Ottawa, Ontario. Other major cities in Canada include Toronto, Montreal, Calgary and Vancouver. Popular Canadian travel destinations include Niagara Falls in the east and the Canadian Rockies in the west, as well as the coastal Maritime Provinces and historic Quebec City. The principal languages spoken in Canada are English and French.For additional Canadian travel and tourism information, visit Travel Canada, sponsored by the Canadian Tourism Commission. For information about Canada's National Parks, visit Parks Canada. For Canadian rail travel schedules, see VIA Rail Canada. Major Canadian airports include Ottawa International Airport in Ottawa, Montreal-Trudeau International Airport in Quebec, Toronto Pearson Airport in Ontario, Calgary International Airport in Alberta, and Vancouver International Airport in British Columbia.
Canada News
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Canada Map
| Map of Canada > Canada Locator Map • Ottawa Locator Map | ||||
| |
![]() Map of Canada, featuring Canada's major cities, roads, lakes and rivers. Canada is a federation of ten Provinces and three Territories. The four Maritime Provinces of New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island are influenced by their relationships with the North Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. Quebec and Ontario are the most populous Provinces in Canada, while Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta occupy Canada's central prairie heartland. British Columbia, the westernmost Province in Canada, lies between the Rocky Mountains and the North Pacific Ocean. Canada's Territories, consisting of Nunavut, Yukon, and the Northwest Territories, lie to the far north. They have no inherent jurisdiction, and only exercise powers that are delegated to them by Canada's federal government. BBC News - Canada offers an excellent news and information profile of Canada. Other Maps of Canada
Canada Travel InformationCanada's capital city is Ottawa, Ontario. Other major cities in Canada include Toronto, Montreal, Calgary and Vancouver. Popular Canadian travel destinations include Niagara Falls in the east and the Canadian Rockies in the west, as well as the coastal Maritime Provinces and historic Quebec City. The principal languages spoken in Canada are English and French.For additional Canadian travel and tourism information, visit Travel Canada, sponsored by the Canadian Tourism Commission. For information about Canada's National Parks, visit Parks Canada. For Canadian rail travel schedules, see VIA Rail Canada. Major Canadian airports include Ottawa International Airport in Ottawa, Montreal-Trudeau International Airport in Quebec, Toronto Pearson Airport in Ontario, Calgary International Airport in Alberta, and Vancouver International Airport in British Columbia.
Canada News
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Getting Paid to Promote on Any Website
- Get paid to promote at any website.
- Accepting surf, PTP, search , PTR, popup, exchange, game, music, blog (any content website).
- Exception to websites containing illegal contents.
- $0.1 minimum payment via Paypal or Webmoney.
- 10% from direct referrals and 5% from level 2 referrals.
- $4 CPM for visits from United States, Canada, Australia, United Kingdom, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, and Spain.
- $2 CPM for visits from other countries.
To start making money:
- Create your FREE Account, Fill the form here.
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The HTML codes
How much you can earn from the program? The table is the earning projection you might earn from 1 website or blog.
| Daily Views | Daily Earning | Weekly Earning | Monthly Earning | Yearly Earning |
| 250 | $1.00 | $7.00 | $30.00 | $360.00 |
| 500 | $2.00 | $14.00 | $60.00 | $720.00 |
| 1000 | $4.00 | $28.00 | $120.00 | $1,440.00 |
| 2500 | $10.00 | $70.00 | $300.00 | $3,600.00 |
| 7500 | $30.00 | $210.00 | $900.00 | $10,800.00 |
| 10000 | $40.00 | $280.00 | $1,200.00 | $14,400.00 |
| 25000 | $100.00 | $700.00 | $3,000.00 | $36,000.00 |
| 50000 | $200.00 | $1,400.00 | $6,000.00 | $72,000.00 |
| 100000 | $400.00 | $2,800.00 | $12,000.00 | $144,000.00 |
paid-to-promote.net
| paid-to-promote.net- Detailansicht alles 3 Monate 1 Monat | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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CAMPAIGNER
THE ZEALOT
She’s also participating in the event. And reporting on it with the zeal of a campaigner. We’re not even inclined to say it’s not a good cause. We’re sure they mean well, despite occasionally succumbing to the temptation to use fear to raise funds. But good cause or not, it’s a cause. And it seems Fyfe and the newspaper employing her is fully embracing this lobby group, without fear and with plenty of favour.
Her Twitter feed, advertised every week in the newspaper, contains many dozens of links promoting “Run4SafeClimate”. They’ve been several articles and blog posts too. She feels a real sense of ownership over the lobby group fundraiser too.
AWARD-WINNING MEL
She modestly explains:
The route the runners are taking is loosely based on an award-winning climate change series I did in 2005 with photographer Simon O’Dwyer for The Age.
Not many writers describe themselves as award-winning, an omission that VEXNEWS contributors will be asked to carefully consider on a case-by-case basis.
Media industry critics have told VEXNEWS Fyfe’s approach to reporting on this and many other issues related to the environment and state politics crosses the line from reporting to campaigning “in the most shameless way.”
NOT OBJECTIVE
They cite regular puff pieces on Greens political party politicians and a sustained attack on the coal industry as examples of an extremist and excessive approach on these issues. In one piece recently she wrote about what she called “state’s dirty brown coal.” An undergraduate approach, to be sure.
It’s that ideological fervour that has led her to promote the environmental lobby group fundraiser.
It’s a cute idea, drawing on a couple of dozen emergency services personnel to assert that the planet needs to saved from imminent disaster. They work on saving the world from emergencies so their views on climate change are therefore determinative. Or something like that.
It’s clever PR meets Apocalypse Now.
It’s clever PR meets Apocalypse Now.
There’s nothing wrong with honestly promoting your beliefs but it is unusual for a journalist at a major metropolitan newspaper to so actively push a cause in this way.
The last time The Age newspaper editorial management got caught up in such a campaign EarthWatch, even the left-leaning newsroom was concerned they’d crossed a line from reporting to barracking and promotion. It became quite the scandal.
PRODUCT FOR ALL
Born to run Melissa Fyfe – whose use of hairspray and grooming products is said to itself represent a clear and present danger to the ozone layer – is very, very proud of her environmental campaigning credentials:
These days, Fyfe is much more comfortable in her role as the newspaper’s environment reporter. And it shows. The 29-year-old has had a stellar year, with her five-part series Story of a Tree earning her a United Nations Association of Australia World Environment Day award. She picked up two high commendations in the Melbourne Press Club’s Quill awards for her reports on fox tail bounties and Point Nepean. 2004 Melissa won a UN Association of Australia World Environment Day award for her series ‘Story of a Tree’.
NO NEED FOR BALANCE
She explained in a profile piece for the internal staff newsletter that:
Reporting environmental issues is something that Fyfe relishes… But it is also a difficult balancing act. “I have always been interested in the environment,” she says. “But actually having to report on the environment is a tricky thing for an Age journalist. Some readers expect us to be advocates for the environment but we’re also expected to be balanced. Trying to get that balance is something dear to my heart because I am a journalist first.”
So she concedes that she was expected to be and was willing to be an “advocate for the environment” or really an advocate for environmental left policies. While being balanced. There really hasn’t been much sign of being balanced at all.
NOT NOTICED ON SPRING STREET
She has since moved on from being the “environment reporter” to the Sunday Age where she is their state political reporter. She didn’t leave her environmental baggage behind either. One of her colleagues in the state press gallery told VEXNEWS:
She’s not seen as a heavy-hitter around Spring Street partly because there is an environmental activist element to what she writes. It does get a bit monotonous doesn’t it?
Fyfe makes no apologies for her views and presumably her superiors think her passion adds something to the occasionally dreary Sunday Age. Her views on climate change don’t allow for giving those who question the claims of the scientific left much credit:
She nominates climate change and sustainability as two of the big issues. She worries that the global warming issue has been distorted in some sections of the media. In the pursuit of balance, climate change sceptics are so often approached for comment it seems like there is a 50-50 split of scientific opinion. In fact, there are a handful of sceptics and thousands of scientists around the world who are not, she says.
The terrible business of having to include the other side of an argument clearly troubles Fyfe. She clearly has a personal struggle with the requirements of her job. She is a passionate crusader, some believe to be keen on a career in the Greens political party in the fast approaching time when The Age stops slaying trees and joins the ranks of The Argus on the list of defunct Melbourne newspapers.
ANTI-COAL FANATIC
And certainly that’s been a hallmark of Fyfe’s micro-blogging reporting this week from the fun-run for doom-boosting. She’s particularly obsessed with shutting down Australia’s coal industry which is Australia’s largest export and provides much of the country with electricity. Tens of thousands of workers would be put to the sword if she had her way.
She’s clearly quite disapproving of coal in all its forms:
And the coal train just went past. Huge. Some of the 187 million tonnes of Queensland black coal on its way to port this year.
That dirty coal that powers the nation is such an inconvenience:
On side of road waiting for a coal train
The inner-city Melbourne lass doesn’t think much of the vulgar locals either:
Blogging in a Rockhampton park. Looks like the local alcohol appreciation society is having a meeting at the next picnic table.
We can at least be grateful she wasn’t racially specific.
The very serious, usually well-coiffed newshound/poodle hasn’t been entirely scowly and humourless though during her week on the run:
One runner said the other day that sharing a van with 5 men on a high protein diet is certainly not a safe climate. Probably quite true.
Beyond the most recent fundraising for lobby groups, Fyfe’s Twitter feed gives an intriguing insight into her opinions. They’re stereotypical inner-city lefty views, as you’d expect.
DOESN’T LIKE LOBBYISTS BUT SILENT ON THE ONES HER COMPANY USES
She wrote in critical terms of tenderers for state government work who’d engaged lobbyists to assist them understand what government priorities were. She thought it all very sleazy, offering sarcastically:
The Sunday Age this week looks at lobbyists who helped get the recent big tender bids over the line. They don’t lobby, of course, just help.
Her article attacked professional government relations people as being inherently dastardly in an article headlined:
In the murky world of lobbying, mateship is king
The article argued the state government ought to regulate lobbyists – a position long supported by us – so the public knows who they are and who they’re working for and can – in the event of some form of misconduct – shut them down. That’s exactly what the government is doing despite seeming to drag its feet on the issue for a while.
For all the faux piety, Fyfe forgets or didn’t know that The Age also notoriously uses well-connected Labor aligned lobbyists to try to influence government decision-making about advertising spend.
And that’s the problem with Fyfe’s journalism ultimately. One of her frenemies in journalism told us this week “A lot of front but not much behind. She either blocks out facts that don’t suit her narrative or didn’t know them in the first place and couldn’t be bothered going further. Her advocacy journalism isn’t thorough, isn’t careful and isn’t internally consistent. She’s going nowhere fast.”
At least she’ll have those ‘dirty’ coal trains to blame.
Get paid to promote your business
News
This is where you'll find information on upcoming events, appearances and previous Business Bootcamp newsletters.
Get paid to promote your business

I'm currently writing this sitting on a plane from Brisbane back to Sydney after speaking at the National Small Business Summit. It was a great event run by COSBOA (Council of Small Business Associations of Australia) and Kochie's Business Builders. This has been part of a hectic week where I also facilitated a seminar on "How to build your dream team of business advisors" for the Let's Talk Business series held by the City of Sydney.Last week, I was also a panellist at the launch of "Winning Business Online", launched by the Federal Minister for Small Business Craig Emerson, where the Sydney Writers' Centre features as one of the video case studies on how to use online strategies to build your business.
You can check out the video here.
Get paid to promote your business
Presentations and speaking gigs are not only an excellent additional revenue stream, they are also ideal channels to promote your business. But how do you get them? How do you get people to pay you to speak about a topic you love? In a sense, they are actually paying you to promote your business. What a great situation to be in!Well, you can be a top expert in your area – but if no one knows about it, that doesn’t matter. One of the most effective and efficient ways to showcase what you do is to build your profile online. It costs nothing – or next to nothing – and it’s quick to distribute your message.
I must admit, when I first started to experiment with online strategies to showcase my expertise and build the profile of the Sydney Writers’ Centre,
I didn’t know whether it would work. But I can unequivocally say that this
has been the key strategy for our success.
I’ll tell you a secret
In fact, I discovered the power and reach of online video and marketing by accident. I’ll tell you a secret. Regular readers will know that I love my furry babies – cats Rex and Rocky, and my little dog Rambo.Rex was the first one to enter my life four and a half years ago. I was so madly in love with him that I used to take little videos, just like any obsessed parent. But, I confess, I secretly wanted Rex to be a star. (Rex’s mother is on a Hallmark card, his sister is on the Aldi cat food tins, and Rocky’s aunty is the Fancy Feast kitty. I wanted Rex to follow in their footsteps.) So, being a true stage mother, I decided to manage his career by making videos and posting them on Youtube.
Now you have to understand that these weren’t silly little videos of Rex playing with a ball of string or hiding in boxes. I figured I needed Rex to stand out from the crowd. So we made videos of Rex against the background of (real) world news. (What can I say? I’m a journalist.)
It was simple – try it
All this was edited on my little laptop using free software (either Windows Movie Maker or Apple’s imovie) and uploaded free to Youtube. We (Rex and I, of course) started a Rex blog and Flickr account. Meanwhile, my friends would alternately tell me that I was either:(a) nuts
(b) had too much time on my hands.
While both may have been a little bit true, the reality was that it didn’t take long before this little cat was getting emails from people all around the world – I kid you not. They were engaging with him on his blog, leaving comments on his Flickr photos, and I knew something was really taking hold when I was in a pub and saw someone show their friend Rex’s blog through their mobile phone browser. True story.
I figured if this can happen by spending a little time tapping away at my laptop on a Saturday afternoon, imagine what could happen if I put some effort into promoting a real business and human beings!
Build your online profile
That’s when I started to embrace the power of building a profile online. So my efforts turned away from helping Rex with his online presence (yes, he’s a bit dirty about it but there are only so many hours in a day) and towards building the online presence of the Sydney Writers’ Centre and myself.Without a doubt, this has contributed to the growth of the business, additional revenue channels, paid speaking opportunities and more.
In fact here is another example. It’s a video, currently on Youtube, but which I saw on the big screen yesterday when I went to the Dell booth at the National Small Business Summit. I came face to face with ... myself! This is a video made by Dell about how I use the Dell Latitude Z, the very computer I’m
typing this message on while sitting on the plane.
If you can’t see the video embedded above, you can view it here:
How you can do it

If you are a speaker, trainer, coach, author, wannabe author or business owner, you’re nuts if you don’t take advantage of the simple online tools that can help you build your profile.
As literary agent Nathan Bransford said ‘Every writer [and speaker, trainer, coach] should have some sort of Googlable web presence so that when someone sees your work or hears about you they have a way to contact you.’
Our 5-week course – run by the online savvy Tristan Bancks – could be just what you need to get you started.
Minneapolis Economic Development Association (MEDA) representative obstructs Black FrLinkee Press

"MEDA: You can't guide everything your direction."
“White Privilege rules again in Minneapolis when a Black US Civil Rights director appears on the scene – had enough yet? We have.”
by Donald W.R. Allen, II – Editor in Chief/IBNN NEWS and USA Radical Black
Minneapolis, MN. (IBNN NEWS Breaking Report/December 4, 2010)..Less than an hour (11:02 a.m.) ago at the Millennium Hotel in downtown Minneapolis, a group of invited guests, including IBNN NEWS and the National Research Institute, MnDOT’s Mary Prescott, Met Councils Wanda Kirkpatrick and others were schedule to sit in on a meeting with USDOT Civil Rights director Camille Hazeur as she discussed a variety of items with local representatives from construction companies and board members of the National Association of Minority Contractors-UM.
At approximately 11:02 p.m. MEDA employee and NAMC board member Timothy Kennedy approached IBNN NEWS and said the following:
Tim: “Hey, you know this is a private meeting?”
Don: “I was invited by the NAMC president.”
Tim: “No, Camille wants to talk to the big-boys and I want her to feel secure.”
Don: “What are you saying?”
Tim: “You have to go.”
Don: “What about the Minnesota Open Meeting Law?”
Tim: “That doesn’t apply here. This was put on by all private funds. I probably know more about that law than you do.”
Racism, obstruction and over-all bigotry was the flavor of the day for Mr. Kennedy. If the Big Boy’s are all White contractors that Mr. Kennedy feels comfortable with, we have a huge problem in the Twin Cities.
IBNN NEWS and the National Research Institute is now officially requesting information on “what funds” were used for this “private event” that we attest falls under an invitational public meeting, which we were invited to.
These “random” violations of Civil Rights by White men in Minneapolis will not be tolerated any longer. If you want the to play with the “Big Boys,” now you have your chance.
Today at 4 p.m. on BlogTalkRadio’s ON POINT Radio Show, co-hosts Ronald A. Edwards and Don Allen go into a detail history on MEDA.


