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1.6k Topics 11.6k Posts
  • 22 Votes
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  • 22 Votes
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    This guy just sounds like a fucking dumb ass. Bro you went up backcountry roads with a fucked up cavalier.
  • Linking immigration to services and infrastructure!?

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    Definitely. That’s just as true now as it was in the 1990s.
  • Carney says a U.S. trade deal without some tariffs is unlikely

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  • 110 Votes
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    You misunderstand my post. I am not in any way asking for a perfect democracy, I am clearly stating that a ‘perfect democracy’ is undefinable in a herd species. Humans are just not neurologically, evolutionarily, and hormonally suited for ‘pure democracy’. What a person wants, and what is best for them, are often contradictory. Any species that can suffer from addiction will never form a workable ‘perfect democracy’. Nor can it work effectively and efficiently in any species that the personality trait of narcissism can be expressed in the population . However, one of the best examples of a workable ‘consensus governing structure’ historically is the Iroquois Confederacy.
  • 109 Votes
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    Helping constituents navigate federal agencies and processes is a core function of Senator Hassan’s office. …He’s not a constituent though he’s a greencard holder.
  • 25 Votes
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    I mean, had more people voted with their convictions rather than trying to beat the conservatives, we would still have ended up with a very weak minority conservative government with a stronger NDP, which wouldn’t have been that bad. The Liberals and the NDP would’ve had to form a coalition and the NDP would’ve had a much stronger influence. They could have worked together to pass bills that improve our society and empower the middle-class, whether the Conservatives like it or not. OR, if the Liberals had aligned with the Conservatives, then you would have seen an uproar, especially because of the current geopolitical context. But we definitely need to give the NDP and the Greens more space. I hope people will remember that in the next elections. I certainly am very disappointed in Carney’s government, but I’m not surprised at all. I knew this would happen and I don’t know what people expected out of an actual establishment world banker.
  • 38 Votes
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    Maybe this wouldn’t happen if they made more vehicles that don’t need fuel pumps?
  • Boo Hoo Hoo, Rentseekers Cry The Blues

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    This, exactly. I am all for universal housing but frankly the cost of a house in materials alone is beyond the ability of many people to afford (tiny homes don’t really work out for people with they are going to have children, and children are the foundation of our future economy. I think the government has a place in providing housing for those in need, but landlords also have a role. When people trash rental units or skip out on rent and abuse process - regardless of whether the landlord does their duties - it does not encourage small scale landlords to assume the risk. However, it’s a rounding error to Blackrock. Industrial scale financialisation of housing is not good for anyone.
  • 31 Votes
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    Avid AmoebaA
    On a Jan. 8, 2025 episode of Two Nice Jewish Boys, he said “the Gazans” should rule Gaza, and continued: “What they want is to survive like cockroaches. In other words, ‘you can’t destroy us,’ which is true, and they say cockroaches will even survive a nuclear war. But they have not done anything for themselves.” “They’re not a productive people […] Whatever they have, they will weaponize.” It’s like copy-pasta from the writings of European colonizers of North America on indigenous people, but worse.
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    Canada just needs to ban the word ‘climate’ from all gov documents and programs. Then and the problem goes away!
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    Feels light
  • Awesome!

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    Like a … taxi company or something.
  • Trump threatens 35% tariffs on Canada starting Aug. 1

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    No — the current housing troubles go back a long way. Back to at least the early 90s. A housing crisis like we’re seeing doesn’t happen overnight. It’s been going on for a long, long time. But just like climate change people ignored it when it was a more superficial problem until we got to a point where it is close to intractable. The early 90s was about when the NIMBYs took over in full force. Construction companies had by this time stopped building starter homes, and virtually nobody was building apartment buildings. Condos were suddenly where all of the vertical construction was going in Canada’s biggest cities. The big problem here is that big projects like these take time — and the lack of focus in the 90s on these types of housing really started to manifest itself around 10 years later. If you lived in one of Canada’s big cities at the time complaints about how hard it was getting to buy a home weren’t a lot different than today (smaller centres didn’t quite have the same problem, although it slowly started to spill over into them as people moved to the peripheries to avoid the soaring costs in the major centres). Projects that can take 10 years from start to finish in the “missing middle” had been ignored, and you can’t go back in time to correct that. It isn’t as if we didn’t have immigration before. In fact, the previous record number of immigrants into Canada was in 1921, at 22.3%. And the record highest per capita immigration rate Canada ever saw was in 1913, when Canada (with a population of only 7.6 million people) let in 400 900 newcomers — or nearly 5.3% of our population. It didn’t cause Canada to collapse. It may feel like the Feds just decided to bring in all these people and dump the problem on the Provinces to deal with, but that’s not how the system works. Here is what Chris Alexander, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration under Prime Minister Steven Harper says about the process: Under Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA), as adopted in 2001 and amended and updated regularly by successive governments ever since, the federal government must consult with its provincial counterparts on three issues: the number of permanent residents to be admitted in a given year; their “distribution in Canada taking into account regional economic and demographic requirements”; and what we call settlement issues, namely “the measures to be undertaken to facilitate their integration into Canadian society.” In concrete terms, this means federal and provincial officials are in touch constantly, with the minister meeting his or her provincial and territorial counterparts regularly, as well as many other groups with an abiding interest in immigration. So it isn’t as if the Provinces didn’t know and weren’t part of the conversation, and didn’t help come up with the numbers. The Feds numbers are typically the summation of what the Provinces want/need (all except Quebec have their own Provincial Nomination Programmes). But by and large, the Provinces still did fuck all about housing, even after asking for all these new immigrants (including international students).
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  • 100 Votes
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    it was either him or PP.
  • And queue Uber shutting down tomorrow only in Canada

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    And queue Uber shutting down tomorrow only in Canada
  • Uber thought they were going to 1.

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    I’m sure we will ban robotaxi’s as well once they’re fully developed. Cant have anyone benefit from a cheaper price when it could go to a corporation.
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    We lost to Manitoba?!? That’s depressing.
  • 24 Votes
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    Fair point.