SamuelRJankis

joined 5 months ago

This is a bad news source.

I'm not saying the article is inaccurate but Postmedia isn't even worth fact checking. Therefore not worth reading.

[–] SamuelRJankis@sh.itjust.works 10 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Freeland is a awful politician. If they're going to try to stir shit up could they at least pretend to be educated on the topic.

Freeland adds she is “surprised” that BC Ferries does not have a mandate for an “appropriate level” of Canadian content in the procurement given the value of the contract, although the dollar figure hasn’t been made public.

https://www.ctvnews.ca/vancouver/article/eby-wont-stop-bc-ferries-from-building-new-ships-in-china-but-says-its-not-ideal/

No Canadian companies placed a bid to build the ferries. B.C.’s main shipbuilder Seaspan said it’s currently too busy building for the military, and even when it has time down the line, the company argued last September, it won’t be able to compete with countries that pay lower wages and have lower safety standards.

[–] SamuelRJankis@sh.itjust.works 1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Just to point out the website and OP is pretty far out there. People can find better things to back up their point or read about the problems of the the bill.

The site pretends to be free speech absolutist except for the instances the right wing does it, then it's silence. For anyone else any type of regulation is tyranny.

It's a 6 minute video for anyone wondering and it's a mostly bad one that lacks context and nuance.

For example the Income tax cut they start with. It was a very prominent campaign item as it was for essentially every party during the election. In fact the Liberals had one of the smaller ones and the Green party had the largest income that cut by far.

Then portraying the military spending targets as appeasing Trump. It's been thing long before Trump, it's a owed obligation as part of NATO and if it's for Trump it ain't in a good way.

And this

https://halifax.citynews.ca/2025/06/17/canada-pledges-4-3b-in-support-for-ukraine-as-carney-zelenskyy-meet-at-g7/

The Prime Minister’s Office said that sum includes $2 billion for the purchase and donation of weapons and materiel like drones, ammunition and armoured vehicles — funding that Canada will count toward its NATO defence spending target.

[–] SamuelRJankis@sh.itjust.works 20 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The hard on crime Conservatives is real quiet these days.

[–] SamuelRJankis@sh.itjust.works 17 points 1 week ago (1 children)

John Rustad does a podcast with Peterson loses the BC Provincial election

Pierre Pollievre does a podcast with Peterson loses the Canadian Federal elections.

For a dude who's credibility hinges on being popular he really ain't doing much for people around him.

Amazing.

the IIU said it reviewed audio from the patrol vehicle where the person and two officers were travelling.

During the recording, someone is heard saying, "You're a neechie that's why," to which the person responded, "What the f--k, did you just really say that, that I'm a neechie?"

The IIU said it "cannot condone such language as appropriate or necessary" but it is not possible to attribute the initial comment to anyone specifically.

For anyone who doesn't know the backstory these 2 MLA's was to nutty even for the BC Conservative's which as a whole is further right than the federal Conservatives.

Two former members of the B.C. Conservatives who have been sitting as Independents for months say they are launching a new provincial political party.

The product is good and the company is fine for the most part. Although customer service is noticeably worse in the last few years even for whatever they call the highest tier customers.

I found the whole Build Canada(bunch of c-suite guys lobbying for lower taxes, deregulation and reduction of government services) thing to be very off putting.

https://thewalrus.ca/are-a-handful-of-wealthy-tech-bros-bringing-doge-to-canada/

Americans didn't learn from the American events. Neither the first term or even this term with Trump's approval rates going up since late April.

The notion that that people possess the capability to learn as long as they witness it first hand is very overstated. For example there's more anti vaxxers then ever AFTER a pandemic.

[–] SamuelRJankis@sh.itjust.works 12 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Misinformation at the current time is likely the highest risk crisis for example misinformed people fundamentally deteriorates democracy. Societies that do nothing about will likely face some extreme problems.

The recent election result was only a reprieve. Canada’s sovereignty, democracy and well-being are still at risk, and disinformation, economic inequality and climate change are the interrelated crises fuelling these risks.

After voting reform. Probably around the same time we internally do something about housing.

 

Who and how much:

Consider an annual tax on the net wealth of families with rates of one per cent above $10 million, two per cent above $50 million and three per cent above $100 million.

This means the first $10 million of any family’s wealth is entirely unaffected by the wealth tax. Based on modelling of the first year of this wealth tax, the bottom 99.4 per cent of Canadians would pay nothing, while only the richest 0.6 per cent would pay any amount. This means that only about 100,000 families across the country would pay any amount under the wealth tax, with 10,000 wealthy enough to fall into the second-highest bracket and 3,700 in the highest bracket.

This narrow tax on the wealthiest few would raise an estimated $39 billion in its first year, $62 billion by its 10th year and $495 billion cumulatively over a 10-year window.

How:

an effective wealth tax must make use of extensive third-party reporting of assets, particularly from financial institutions, rather than relying too heavily on self-reporting as in the case of some older wealth taxes.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/64597842

 

The long story short is that in nine years, over the lifetime of the Trudeau government, federal subsidies to business more than doubled through the introduction of over 100 new programs. Every Canadian went from paying just over $310 to businesses large and small to over $800 per year in 2023/24.

 

The 160 page report: https://infopost.ca/wp-c/u/2025/05/canada-post-iic-report-2025.pdf

Report key findings: https://infopost.ca/wp-c/u/2025/05/f1-iic-key-findings.pdf

  1. Amend the Postal Charter. It cannot continue to require impossible-to-meet delivery standards. Daily door-to-door letter mail delivery for individual addresses should be phased out and community mailboxes established wherever practicable. Daily delivery to businesses should be maintained.

  2. The moratoriums on rural post office closures and community mailbox conversions should be lifted. There is no persuasive case for a moratorium on closure of once rural, now urban, post offices. Canada Post already has the Delivery Accommodation Program in place for Canadians who cannot access community mailboxes. It should be reviewed and, if need be, enhanced, and it should continue.

  3. Include in the two collective agreements all items agreed to in collective bargaining prior to the labour dispute. Parties should attempt to narrow differences in all partially agreed-upon items. New collective agreements should include and reflect tentative agreements (subject to agreement as a whole) reached in Commission-facilitated mediation (RSMC and STDP).

  4. Negotiate changes to the collective agreements. Canada Post must have the flexibility to hire part-time employees working part-time hours to deliver parcels on the weekend and to assist with volume during the week. These employees should be paid the same rates and be subject to the same terms and conditions as regular employees, including access to pro rata benefits, or payments in lieu, and pension. Priority for these positions should be given to existing employees.

  5. Negotiate changes to the Urban collective agreement. There is no justification for collective agreement provisions that preclude an employer from assigning work for hours already paid (except by voluntary overtime).

  6. Negotiate changes to the collective agreements. Pilot and then introduce dynamic routing. Canada Post must also be able to change routes daily to reflect volumes to avoid trapped time and overtime.

  7. Amend the time-consuming approval process for postage increases

 

Carney: Pierre you're incompetent Pierre: You have the wrong socks and haircut

 

Carney: Pierre you're incompetent

Pierre: You have the wrong socks and haircut

 

Summary that brought us to the amazing quotes above.

http://archive.today/2025.03.29-204249/https://nationalpost.com/news/mark-carney-plagiarism-accusations

  • Mar 28th National Post broke a exclusive story where Mark Carney apparently plagiarized his 1995 Oxford doctoral thesis
  • There's only a single person of significance providing anything worth discussing which is some overlapping phrases in the 300 page thesis but does not substantiate the plagiarism.
  • Mark Carney's doctoral supervisor responds:

Margaret Meyer, Official Fellow of Economics at Nuffield College, in the provided statement. “Mark’s thesis was evaluated and approved by a faculty committee that saw his work for what it is: an impressive and thoroughly researched analysis that set him apart from his peers,” added Meyer.

Which bring us to this from CTV (infamous for far right pandering as well last week) on Apr 1st: https://files.catbox.moe/h2ze4b.mp4

Reporter asking if Carney will continue to attack them when he doesn't like their work.

NP ends up squeezing like 4 articles out of this crap. Only to have this gem of a quote drop.

Professor A: Carney straight up copy pasta'd his Thesis

Professor B: This is the "most sophisticated plagiarism" he's seen.

http://archive.today/2025.04.01-210130/https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/federal_election/carney-responds-to-plagiarism-allegations-im-pleased-that-theres-such-interest-in-my-doctoral-thesis

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