Well do you want functioning hospitals, a social safety net, things like that? Those take actual money, current account balance, exports. You also happen to think healthcare should be a human right I would assume?
I think Canadian oil is landlocked and the greater good should prioritize, so we can fund things like health transfers. Because I care about Canadians in aggregate, not a tiny selection of them who want to maximize rent seeking.
If it was a rich persons land who bought it off the indigenous would you be saying the same thing, would you respect land rights then if it meant denying a safety net for the poor?
I just have to say, I really appreciate you on this forum and thank you for standing up to ignorant people like them as regularly as you do. It is refreshing to see. :)
I showed we had the slowest growth in the OECD due to this same bureaucracy, you’re hurting those you think you are helping, these things fund our safety net.
When we hit a recession you won’t be able to blame greedy corporations for our ills, it will have been those putting up barricades for growth. We have food bank usage rising extremely quickly, people living in rest stops, and we haven’t even hit a recession yet.
I showed we had the slowest growth in the OECD due to this same bureaucracy, you’re hurting those you think you are helping, these things fund our safety net.
When we hit a recession you won’t be able to blame greedy corporations for our ills, it will have been those putting up barricades for growth. We have food bank usage rising extremely quickly, people living in rest stops, and we haven’t even hit a recession yet.
By every metric Canada is not hurting as much as you want to pretend. We can do much better, but this narrative of a broken Canada is populist nonsense.
Use your brain and realize “Record food bank usage” isn’t ideal, but it is great to know that the safety net has provided food to those who needed it when they needed it.
This is happening globally and we do not need people like you stoking fires. If you want to shit on policy have your own alternatives to back it up or sit down and let the adults talk.
When housing double in less than a decade while wages remained stagnant I’d call that a massive problem. But go ahead and gas light me that its not, given its peoples single largest cost.
Under Harper rents rose slower what wages, so I also don’t need whataboutisms.
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Well do you want functioning hospitals, a social safety net, things like that? Those take actual money, current account balance, exports. You also happen to think healthcare should be a human right I would assume?
deleted by creator
I think Canadian oil is landlocked and the greater good should prioritize, so we can fund things like health transfers. Because I care about Canadians in aggregate, not a tiny selection of them who want to maximize rent seeking.
If it was a rich persons land who bought it off the indigenous would you be saying the same thing, would you respect land rights then if it meant denying a safety net for the poor?
deleted by creator
I just have to say, I really appreciate you on this forum and thank you for standing up to ignorant people like them as regularly as you do. It is refreshing to see. :)
I showed we had the slowest growth in the OECD due to this same bureaucracy, you’re hurting those you think you are helping, these things fund our safety net.
When we hit a recession you won’t be able to blame greedy corporations for our ills, it will have been those putting up barricades for growth. We have food bank usage rising extremely quickly, people living in rest stops, and we haven’t even hit a recession yet.
By every metric Canada is not hurting as much as you want to pretend. We can do much better, but this narrative of a broken Canada is populist nonsense.
Use your brain and realize “Record food bank usage” isn’t ideal, but it is great to know that the safety net has provided food to those who needed it when they needed it.
This is happening globally and we do not need people like you stoking fires. If you want to shit on policy have your own alternatives to back it up or sit down and let the adults talk.
Look at home prices and tell me its not broken.
When housing double in less than a decade while wages remained stagnant I’d call that a massive problem. But go ahead and gas light me that its not, given its peoples single largest cost.
Under Harper rents rose slower what wages, so I also don’t need whataboutisms.