Canada Blocks Sale of Space Tech Company To US 230
Dave Knott writes "The Canadian federal government has blocked the $1.3-billion sale of the space technology division of MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates to Alliant Techsystems, a major US defense contractor. Industry Minister Jim Prentice is quoted as saying he is 'not satisfied' the sale will be a net benefit for Canada. MDA is Canada's leading developer of space-based technology, including the famous CanadArm and the recently installed space station robot Dextre."
Ha ha ha! (Score:5, Funny)
Now we have maple syrup, caribou, ice hockey AND SPACE TECHNOLOGY!!
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Re:Ha ha ha! (Score:5, Funny)
Damnit, why didn't you guys try this hard to keep Celine Dion, too?
Oh, wait, I know why...
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Ok (Score:2, Insightful)
Why does Canada need to maintain sovereignty over a private company, in an era of free trade? Why not let the owners cash their chips in?
The US doesn't block this kind of thing on sovereignty grounds -- although to be fair it may be because the current administration doesn't understand that US sovereignty has any geographic limits...
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s/sovereignty/national security/
The US blocks a hell of a lot more than you think.
Re:Ok (Score:5, Informative)
I call bullshit. See what would happen if Lockheed Martin tried to build their new fighter planes in a different country. Or sell off their satellite division to another country. It would go over like a lead balloon in a wind storm. Of course that wouldn't happen, the U.S. would never let companies sell off that kind of technology to another country.
Note that there is a historic sensitivity in Canada to selling off to other countries or otherwise dismantling high tech companies [wikipedia.org]. Especially when said companies that could place the country in a very competitive place, economically and in a technical sense. Canada severely shot itself in the foot before... the pain just subsided over the past decade or so.
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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/mar2008/boei-m27.shtml [wsws.org]
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I'm just glad that the Canadian government was smart enough not to believe a foreign company that said they were going to keep the operations in Canada. One something is controlled by a company that is based in a country, there's precious little the government can stop them from moving jobs
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In any case a lot of US defense content is sourced overseas; if LM wanted to sell itself to Airbus, and divested itself of a few sensitive bits, I don't think it would be all that different from what we have now.
The parts of LM that would be sensitive are, for practical purposes, quasi-governmental. They take money from the government to do projects that are directed
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The company is a croporate citizen, and the government has sovereignty over all citizens.
Because that goes against the country's long-term interests, maybe?
You think so? Wait until China (or, heaven forbid, France) tries to buy Lockheed or Boeing...
Re:Ok (Score:4, Informative)
Considering that it`s the little friendly nation next door with a small military and tons of resources, yer damn right we should be worried about our sovereignty; we`re subject to a flood of media, business purchases, and political pressure by the elephant to the south. USA farts, we notice.
One of the biggest threats to our sovereignty right now is surveillance by your institutional conspiracy theorists, the spooks. Selling off our surveillance tech won`t help.
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oh ya?: snort [slashdot.org]
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I'm not saying one reason is better than the others. But it's more specific to say, "this sale won't go forward because it undermines national security," and another to say "this sale won't go forward because it is not in the national interest."
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Net benefit? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Net benefit? (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't feel bad. We can make the same claim, like this:
How is the sale of an American company to Chinese interests ever a net benefit for the U.S.? I've lost track of the companies that used to be U.S.-owned, even a part of America's national identity, that have been sold off to make a penny.
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One possible reason: because they paid a lot of money to US shareholders for that wasn't worth that much? I.E. Net inflow of cash exceeds the value of what was purchased.
Now the proceeds from the sale can be used to invest in other interests.
Or in the case of mergers: the merging was presumably done because it was in the companies' shareholders best interests.
There are shareholders are in the US. Increased profits to shareholders is a benefit to the US-based shareholders. And to the US govern
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How is that relevant. Why should it matter what someone with a 1% stake in the company thinks? If enough people have controlling shares of the company and they vote to do something, that's what gets done. Kinda like our elections. The candidate with the most votes gets elected. (Yeah, queue Bush jokes and Florida jokes).
What business
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The directors are supposed to act in the best interests of ALL the shareholders, not just their buddies who stand to make money from all sorts of fees.
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Put two people in a room and eventually you'll have a disagreement. When a lot of people disagree, the board holds vote--and people vote with their shares. People vote with how much money they have invested in the company. Then the board goes with whatever the majority of stockholders wants.
Now that's not how it always works--but if you feel you've be
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Put a box on the counter with candy bars and a sign "take a candy bar, leave a dollar". It works fine-- the candy bars are cheaper-- someone doesn't have to be physically present to sell them-- until the culture breaks down.
Once people think it is okay to steal the candy bars then they are $1.50, you can only buy them when someone is there (or the machine is full).
Boards of directors are like that. The board and the executive class in general used to take care of everyone to some e
Re:Net benefit? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Net benefit? (Score:5, Informative)
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Why exactly should it have to be a net benefit for anyone except McDonald, Dettwiler, and their associates (i.e. whoever the owners of the company may happen to be)? What right exactly does the government have to stop a sale like that? Is "ownership" one of those American concepts like "free speech" that the Canadians don't care for these days?
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I believe federal regulations require any sale about $295mil to foreign entities be approved. A similar mechanism is likely in place south of the border (e.g., IBM sale to Lenovo, US ports sale to Dubai Inc(?)). It would be foolish to not analyse very large sales to foreign countries.
MDA was/is heavily subsidized by the government.
MDA owns/controls RADARSAT II which surveys the north which is a contentious issue. Transferring ownership could have massive future implications for land or waterway claims esp
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Why exactly should it have to be a net benefit for anyone except McDonald, Dettwiler, and their associates (i.e. whoever the owners of the company may happen to be)? What right exactly does the government have to stop a sale like that? Is "ownership" one of those American concepts like "free speech" that the Canadians don't care for these days?
Sorry to disappoint you, but the rights of our government are not limited by the American Constitution.
First of all, "free speech" in the American sense of the word has never existed here. Second, the Canadian government, being much more socialist than the American, has long taken an active hand in influencing the economy, and despite your retorical question, it has every right to do so.
I realize to you these are likely huge reasons to think Canada is an awful place, but we are a democracy and its wha
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there have been companys sold the the US in the past decade and a half that through either their history or targeted marketing had become part of our national identity; Molson....Tim Hortons and the Montreal Canadians are just a few of them.
Please tell me you have your tongue planted firmly in your cheek when you say that a beer brewery, a donut shop chain and a hockey team are part of Canada's national identity.
If it weren't for the XM radio comedy channel that features recordings from Canadian comedy clubs, I'd never know that Tim Horton's was a donut chain - that is until one opened up about fifteen miles from my home.
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Please tell me you have your tongue planted firmly in your cheek when you say that a beer brewery, a donut shop chain and a hockey team are part of Canada's national identity.
I wish that were true, especially in light of the fact that some of the companies I mentioned became part of our "national identity" basically through telling us that they were. Here's a break down...
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If I were asked what I thought made up a large part of the USA's national identity I would immediately think of sugared fizzy water and a fast food vendor whose main product is named after a city in northern Germany.
Well, hey - isn't that what the world REALLY wants - hamburgers and fried chicken from old guy in Kentucky?
Screw the freedom stuff - give 'em something to EAT!
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Re:Net benefit? (Score:5, Funny)
Depends on the province. The ROC (Rest of Canada) would probably vote to sell Quebec to the US, but the US already has too many people who "refuse to speak english like God intended them to." Besides, Americans are still pissed off about our tricking them into taking Celine Dion.
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Real Reason (Score:5, Insightful)
We at Canada have a policy of selling any weapons to rogue states. That is why when everyone was busy selling arms to states at war we Canada stayed at the fringes. Now, we believe the actions of the US government and its policies are detrimental to the democratic progress. We believe they could either lead to external aggression (most likely) and internal repression. Thus the Canadian government has decided not to sell the space technology to the United States.
P.S: US please dont take this seriously, we still love you, eh.
Pfft... rogue state (Score:3, Funny)
You show me a country with those qualifications and I'll show you a rogue state!
-1 flamebait, +2 insightful, +1 funny... take that mod!
Re:Real Reason (Score:5, Funny)
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I would say the regulatory folks in Canada are afraid of losing something of irreplacable tactical value to the country. A company developing valuable space technology.
Canadians' fears are probably well-founded that they may lose both the company and access to the technology if they allow the company to sell itself. The company's HQ will probably move to the US, their technology will be made secret/classified, and their target market will become: the US government, instead of the former market wh
Why Canada Should Develop Nuclear Arms (Score:2)
Extraction wasn't economical for a long while, but with the high price of oil lately, it has become extremely economical. There's such an economic boom going on that high school boys are dropping out of school to drive trucks in the oil fields.
You might claim I'm trolling, but I'm not. I'm absolutely serious.
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Re:Real Reason (Score:5, Interesting)
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The part Canadians like to forget is that Toronto also got torched.
Well, it was called York at the time, but yeah. Something to keep in mind though is that everyone outside of Toronto, hates it [letsallhateto.com].
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Well, they had a tin ear for public relations... (Score:5, Insightful)
But alas, it was tin-eared in the extreme to announce this just as Dextre was being installed and everybody's nationalistic pride in the company was at a peak. We've been smiling with pride every time a shuttle image showed the flag and name on the CanadArm for 20 years or so; and Dextre, another order of magnitude more impressive a technology, had us all rubbing our hands with pride and glee.
Then the owners do their best to give everybody an image of them saying "Thanks for the free help, suckers! We're selling out and off to Brazil with your cash!" This result was then predictable.
If they'd waited a year or two, perhaps couched it in terms of allowing the company to go on to greater achievements through partnering, maybe tossed out a few promises of continued location in Canada and all Canadian jobs totally safe (promises you can always break a few years later, it's not like PR is legally binding), they could have gotten away with it.
Now, they can't wait a few years and try again because the issue's been raised and the media will hype it up again unless they wait at least 10 years. And this was, by the way, our *Conservative*, pro-business party. Any chance of a future Liberal government allowing this one is much dimmer still.
Re:Well, they had a tin ear for public relations.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Claims which the Government of the U.S. doesn't recognize. The fear is that if the technology and control of the tech is sold to a U.S. company, the U.S. government will be able to control what the Canadian Government sees - allowing, for instance, U.S. warships to use the Northwest Passage without informing the Government of Canada.
It has very little to do with nationalistic pride, and more to do with national security. Ask yourself, would the U.S. Government allow a company that developed and operates the spy-satelite network to be sold to a foreign power? It would never happen. Hell, you can't even export anything that uses encryption in the U.S. - which you can do in Canada.
Re:Well, they had a tin ear for public relations.. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Funny how they should complain about this buy out when there letting all Canadian companies get sold. It's really pathetic when you distrust your closest trading partner.
It's really pathetic when your closest trading partner keeps screwing you over (softwood lumber), ignores international court rulings in your favour (lumber again) claims your sovereignty doesn't exist (Northwest passage), tries to steal your resources under NAFTA (fresh water), etc.
Other countries typically haven't screwed us over like our alleged closest friend. What's truly pathetic is that the US brought this distrust upon themselves.
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Fear is not quite the right word...
Re:Well, they had a tin ear for public relations.. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Well, they had a tin ear for public relations.. (Score:2)
rbrander wrote: Except for the one valid complaint that the government had helped this company along with a lot of support, I don't think anybody's even pretending that this is a justified intervention in the free market.
It's far more likely they're concerned with what the said they were concerned about, the Radarsat-2. The Globe and Mail business section [reportonbusiness.com] said today In mid-March, the tide turned, and questions about whether U.S. security laws would give that country control of satellite data about Cana
Re:Well, they had a tin ear for public relations.. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is about arctic sovereignty and billions in future tax revenue. This isn't a political issue. No political party has ever turned down the prospect of future tax base.
RADARSAT II, which the americans pointedly refused to launch, is what we use to patrol our artic waters. Giving the Americans, the keys, the plans, and the ability to just delay things to death is beyond stupid from a strategic perspective.
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Nowhere in the Canadian Constitution nor Charter of Rights you will find the "right to private property".
This was purposely left out. Back in 1982, when the constitution was repatriated, it was proposed to put the "right to private property", but it was not done to insure that a croporation could NEVER use the courts to get a person's property.
Now, you yankees can boast all you want about property rights, with the eminent dom
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We don't need that kind of nonsense: we're the redcoats!!!
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Governments don't grant rights, we institute governments to secure our rights. If the Canadian government fails to do so, then the Canadian people should overthrow it.
-jcr
Assuming you're American (I shouldn't, but for sake of argument...) the current US administration has been destroying your rights under your God-almighty constitution and Bill of Rights for the last six or seven years.
We'll think about removing our government outside of democratic elections only after the US population shows the guts to use that second amendment of yours as it was intended, and do the same to your government first.
canadas on strike (Score:3)
So I guess that means (Score:3, Funny)
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Yes, but are you Buddy Guy?
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by Guy Harris (3803):
Yes, but are you Buddy Guy?
Wait, I guess you are. Dang.
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divergence of interest... (Score:5, Insightful)
Forget that Canada produced the world's first digital telecommunications satellite. Forget all the jobs and knowledge that will gradually melt south of the border. forget it.
It's much more basic than that. There is a long-time border dispute with the americans, we think the waters between arctic islands are Canadian waters, the US claims they aren't. The Americans have nuclear submarines, we don't. Now with the ice melting, http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=8df15e06-e40d-42da-b42e-61c0d0713260 [canada.com]
there is a navigable channel shaping up that could take weeks off the time to ship from asia to europe. and there's oil up there, http://cernigsnewshog.blogspot.com/2006/01/arctic-circle-canadas-not-kidding.html [blogspot.com]
too.
One of the main uses of RADARSAT for Canada is to replace aerial reconnaissance for Ice forecasting. they can, I imagine, spot submarines as well, since the Americans, supposedly our closest ally, refused to launch them. So they were launched on Russian vehicles.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20071025164751AAOF6Ur [yahoo.com]
http://www.studentsonice.com/blog/?p=79 [studentsonice.com]
We like our arctic, it is ours. We'd like the tax revenue from any oil that is pumped out of there. we'd like the revenue from a major shipping lane, so declaring it international waters is a problem for us. We can't afford to build nuclear submarines...
So it would be pretty @#%$@^%@ stupid to sell this company to a US arms manufacturer, which is, at the very least, clearly beholden to the US government for contracting.
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Oh yes we can buy some... 20 years ago, Canada went shopping for nuclear subs. Trouble is, the only possible choices were american, with strings attached (every US-made weapon system comes with strings attached), british (US license with US strings attached) and french, the latest without any strings attached (every french-made weapon system comes with no strings attached, hence the extreme popularity of french weapons. Ask the Royal Navy how the like Exocet
Canadians don't hate the French (Score:2)
You have got to be kidding me. The British have a long history of hating the French; the Americans seem to think that even speaking the language a mark against a candidate for president. But Canadians? Meh. Rude jokes about French manliness, courage, etc. don't fly here they way they do in other English-speaking countries. We don't care a whole lot about France one way or the other. (That inclu
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You appear to be misinformed. The Exocet missiles took out a British ship. Thatcher then called up Mitterrand and asked for the electronic "keys" to disable the Exocets. Mitterrand at first refused. Thatcher replied that Britain was going to win the war, and without the keys, the only way would be to go nuclear. Mitterrand had a choice: give Britain the keys or have Britain use nuclear weapons....
That is why the Exocets n
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We're already responsible for all snow and cold winds that comes your way... Clearly we've got Weather of Mass Destruction.
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RadarsatII does bathymetry, but it also expressly does 'ship detection' and even, amazingly 'ship classification'.
If I was looking for ships (and classifying them) with a satellite that can generate 3m bathymetry, wave fields and IR data, I'd being using at least those 3 techniques in conjunction.
It's not over yet (Score:5, Informative)
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Well, given the reign of silence surrounding the sale of the Hudson's Bay Company, Alcan, and quite a few other high-profile Canadian businesses, I don't think anybody would have been surprised to see this buried on the back pages somewhere. I could be wrong, but I think it was Terry Malefski of the CBC who made a big deal of this. Initially, none of the Sun papers, the Globe and Mail or Global wanted anything to do with it.
And by the way, the allegations by the CEO that they won't be able to get major
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Heck, Google and DoubleClick needed approval from both US and EU Regulatory authorities before they could merge. That's because even though they are US based countries, they operate all around the world.
Re:If they want to sell and cant? (Score:5, Informative)
No, it's not the company's choice. They've received a LOT of funding from the Canadian government, as did their predecessor.
It's the same as the sale of US ports to outsiders.
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In other words, the government has the last say ... same as CanadArm and Dextre.
Too bad they didn;t name the new robot Dexter after this show [wikipedia.org] instead.
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I would tell the employees "Be suspicious - be VERY suspicious." How would a sale to the US change the order book? The short answer - it won't. Either they're producing something needed, or they're not. This BS about "you're doomed if we don't sell out" ignores this simple fact.
1. Their jobs won't be any more (and probably less) secure if it's sold to US conc
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With the high Canadian dollar, it's actually cheaper to hire people in the US (thanks to the housing crash, you can also buy a house in the US for less than Canada - one of my friends just bought a house in Florida for under $130k that was selling, 2 years ago, for $279k.).
Also, we don't generally go on wars of aggression, try to assasinate leaders of other countries, or otherwise act without cooperation from the
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We did, but we sold them to the Chinese.
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Canada's gone through this before with the Avro Arrow anyway, and is learning hard from the past exactly what happens on top of it.
If people want to emigrate so be it, on the other side if you do develop something in your home nation and the government pitches in large sums of money an
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/02/AR2005080200404.html [washingtonpost.com]
So all American Oil companies should move North!
Great! There's lots of Free office space in
Montreal freed by lumber companies that have
trouble selling into the US market... something
about 50% tarriffs... Free market RULES!
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