Canadian Unrest

#52
#52
Makes sense. The Prairies have oil and agriculture, but a lack of year-round seaborne shipping could make exports to anyone other than their former countrymen and the US costly or complicated.
You think?

This is like Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, the Dakotas, and Nebraska creating a new country.

Good luck.
 
#53
#53
Starting to see why they offer assisted suicide ...

From the article:

Canada’s publicly provided health care system actually requires rationing in order to contain costs. Because services are offered at no monetary price, demand exceeds the available supply of doctors, equipment, and facilities. If the different provinces (which operate most health care services) wanted to meet the full demand, each would have to raise taxes significantly to fund services. To keep expenditures down (managing the imbalance from public provision) and thus taxes as well, the system relies on rationing through wait times rather than prices.

To illustrate the magnitude of rationing (and the trend), one can examine the evolution of the median number of weeks between referral by a general practitioner and receipt of treatment from 1993 to 2024. In most provinces (except one), the median wait time in 1993 was less than 12 weeks. Today, all provinces are close or exceed 30 weeks. In two provinces, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, the median wait times exceed 69 weeks. For some procedures, such as neurosurgery, the wait time (for all provinces) exceeds 46 weeks.


 
#54
#54
You think?

This is like Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, the Dakotas, and Nebraska creating a new country.

Good luck.

That was my point, if I am understanding your post. They're landlocked (except for Manitoba's coastline on the Hudson Bay), so year-round exports past Canada and the US would be challenging unless they're shipping in icebreakers, haha.
 
#55
#55
That was my point, if I am understanding your post. They're landlocked (except for Manitoba's coastline on the Hudson Bay), so year-round exports past Canada and the US would be challenging unless they're shipping in icebreakers, haha.
They need to get British Columbia to join them
 
#59
#59
Wow..so Carney was governor of Bank of England..

and Liberal Party is proposing a home equity tax..😮


Before you know it they'll start having your local jurisdiction tax you based on an annually assessed value of your house.

Crazy azz Canucks
 
#60
#60
Before you know it they'll start having your local jurisdiction tax you based on the assessed value of your house.

Crazy azz Canucks
sounds like you support Another Tax.Why should anyone be Penalized for paying off a loan..

Not only crazy, it is stupid.
 
#61
#61
sounds like you support Another Tax.
Strawman. I don't care for taxes on unrealizeds. It creates a huge accounting mess and having to use outside cashflow means some serious unintended consequences. All for income and gains taxation as our main vehicle to realizing revenues to support the country.

Just pointing out this is one of the oldest forms of taxation in the great ole US of A.
 
#62
#62
Yep, it shows the hypocrisy of the left, one of many of the left's hypocrisies. You honestly think those leaders are going to alter their lifestyle or give any true sacrifice?. They'll continue to receive money from the oil companies etc etc. While they'll tax the crap out of Canadians.
It's like AOC and Bernie, who are millionaires, making anti-america, anti-capitalistic speeches to a bunch of emotionally charged and logically ignorant babies.
That's the history of socialism. You never see a socialist leader being poor or suffering. They're the ones who have multiple houses and unlimited money and unlimited comforts. It continues to amaze me how gullible and stupid people are when they support the socialistic platform
 
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#64
#64
Starting to see why they offer assisted suicide ...

From the article:

Canada’s publicly provided health care system actually requires rationing in order to contain costs. Because services are offered at no monetary price, demand exceeds the available supply of doctors, equipment, and facilities. If the different provinces (which operate most health care services) wanted to meet the full demand, each would have to raise taxes significantly to fund services. To keep expenditures down (managing the imbalance from public provision) and thus taxes as well, the system relies on rationing through wait times rather than prices.

To illustrate the magnitude of rationing (and the trend), one can examine the evolution of the median number of weeks between referral by a general practitioner and receipt of treatment from 1993 to 2024. In most provinces (except one), the median wait time in 1993 was less than 12 weeks. Today, all provinces are close or exceed 30 weeks. In two provinces, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, the median wait times exceed 69 weeks. For some procedures, such as neurosurgery, the wait time (for all provinces) exceeds 46 weeks.


This is all just fake. Ask the boards liberals, they are the professionals and all aspects of government
 
#65
#65

I was curious how population in Quebec was doing..sure enough..straightfrom liberal playbook.


Google AI

No, Quebec is not losing population; in fact, it is experiencing population growth, largely due to international migration. The province's population reached 8.98 million on January 1, 2024, after increasing by 218,000 in 2023. This growth is primarily driven by temporary immigration, which was more than three times higher than permanent immigration
 
#67
#67
In Canada, the government sector is responsible for 46.7 per cent of total job growth from 2019-203 compared to 16.1 per cent in the United States.


goodness..why not just have erryone work for the gov, there is a term for it that escapes me, and pay them a gazillon dollars.

And Carney is supposedly left on Trude….Canada is screwed,
 
#68
#68
As long as they keep the beer and the Tim Hortons coffee flowing, I guess they can do whatever they want
 

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