Jaydee 1,719 Posted Tuesday at 06:58 PM Author Report Share Posted Tuesday at 06:58 PM 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted Wednesday at 11:43 AM Author Report Share Posted Wednesday at 11:43 AM 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted Thursday at 11:22 AM Author Report Share Posted Thursday at 11:22 AM Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted Thursday at 07:44 PM Author Report Share Posted Thursday at 07:44 PM (edited) Why is Canada’s resident IDIOT wearing a MASK in a Virtual meeting????? Edited Thursday at 07:45 PM by Jaydee 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Kargokings 40 Posted Thursday at 07:47 PM Report Share Posted Thursday at 07:47 PM 1 hour ago, Jaydee said: Why is Canada’s resident IDIOT wearing a MASK in a Virtual meeting????? Showing solidarity or maybe just because there were other people with our PM as the video in the following article shows. Trudeau Salutes ‘Sorely Missed’ U.S. Leadership In 1st Meeting With Biden | HuffPost Canada (huffingtonpost.ca) Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted Thursday at 07:54 PM Author Report Share Posted Thursday at 07:54 PM 4 minutes ago, Kargokings said: Showing solidarity or maybe just because there where other people with our PM as the video in the following article shows. Let’s remember who we are talking about here. This is the FLAKE Canada has entrusted for their safety 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Kargokings 40 Posted Thursday at 08:48 PM Report Share Posted Thursday at 08:48 PM 50 minutes ago, Jaydee said: Let’s remember who we are talking about here. This is the FLAKE Canada has entrusted for their safety You are avoiding my reply, what you posted was Fake News re why would he be wearing a mask. Nothing to do with anything else he did or didnot do. I hope to see him gone after the next election but as there are no serious opponents and as long as he is giving out $$$$$$$$ , I suspect we will see him stay around for a number of more years. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted Thursday at 09:06 PM Author Report Share Posted Thursday at 09:06 PM (edited) COVID guidance has always been a 6’ separation. He has gone massless for almost a year in his sermons from the cottage. His aides could easily have separated themselves far enough away from their master for this meeting. I would bet $$$, closed door meetings in his private office out of the public eye are held at a comfortable distance, without masks, IMO, Trudeau wearing a mask for this meeting was purely a PC photo op for the cameras. Edited Thursday at 09:11 PM by Jaydee Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Kargokings 40 Posted Thursday at 10:04 PM Report Share Posted Thursday at 10:04 PM 1 hour ago, Jaydee said: COVID guidance has always been a 6’ separation. He has gone massless for almost a year in his sermons from the cottage. His aides could easily have separated themselves far enough away from their master for this meeting. I would bet $$$, closed door meetings in his private office out of the public eye are held at a comfortable distance, without masks, IMO, Trudeau wearing a mask for this meeting was purely a PC photo op for the cameras. So I guess you say the same about the POTUS and his associates.... Lots of room for separation.. Re private meetings, here are the rules for the House of Commons.... Use of masks and extension of preventative measures at the House of Commons (ourcommons.ca) Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted 23 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 23 hours ago T Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted 23 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 23 hours ago 2 hours ago, Kargokings said: So I guess you say the same about the POTUS and his associates.... Lots of room for separation Totally photo op territory for both sides Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted 22 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 22 hours ago Trust is earned': New defence chief vowed to get tough on sexual misconduct, hours later he stepped down Chief Admiral Art McDonald sent a message Wednesday to all Canadian Forces personnel to come forward and speak up about alleged misconduct. https://nationalpost.com/news/national/defence-watch/hours-before-stepping-down-from-top-military-job-defence-chief-vowed-to-get-tough-on-sexual-misconduct/wcm/4dffbd4a-794b-4a88-aa3d-0f07c8aa7a92?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR10d_r2P0LQadRrcWVRiEBXOizT-ovQij4FmFT-4eN2pnhGowUdyppIc_I#Echobox=1614303774 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted 22 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 22 hours ago And this **bleep** show continues.. If the Liberals didn't do a political hatchet job on Mark Norman he would have stepped up when Vance stepped down. Now Trudeau's pick is under investigation. Every Canadian institution under this Liberal "Government" has been soured. The Attorney Generals office, the GG, Military Command and our House of Commons.” Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted 12 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 12 hours ago Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jaydee 1,719 Posted 11 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 11 hours ago Trudeau's Canada: Low achievement, high self-esteem Philip Cross: We feel very good about ourselves — but for no apparent reason Tristin Hopper’s weekend article in the National Post asked why Canada can’t get things done anymore, from procuring vaccines to renovating 24 Sussex Drive. Malaise about Canada’s performance is entirely justified as our pampered public sector fails to deliver and few Canadian brands dominate in the global marketplace. Canada’s image was not always so dim. As the resource boom started in 2003, The Economist featured a cover story about “Cool Canada,” featuring a moose wearing hipster shades. With oil and gas prices soaring, Prime Minister Stephen Harper trumpeted Canada as an “energy superpower.” Our technology sector hit a home run with the Blackberry cellphone. The Great Financial Crisis further boosted our international stature, showcasing the world’s soundest banking system. Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney parlayed this into becoming the first foreign-born head of the Bank of England. It seemed Canada understood banking better than anyone else. With Trump gone, Canada becomes easy to ignore Even our public sector seemed admirable by international standards. The 2009 Obamacare debate in the U.S. was filled with envious references to our health-care system, while obtaining a university education here required much less student debt. The World Bank touted “the Canadian Pension Model” to the world. By 2012, the National Post’s Joe O’Connor could write that “Canada got its swagger.” Justin Trudeau’s election in 2015 briefly made him a global hero to progressives before images of blackface, accusations of scandal, and a failure to deliver results dulled his allure. The boast that “the world needs more Canada” reached peak popularity with our 150th anniversary in 2017, although for many outside Canada it really meant “the world wants less Trump.” With Trump gone, Canada becomes easy to ignore. Canada’s public sector is clearly underperforming these days. Our vaunted health-care system is inoculating Canadians slower than some Third World countries. The insolvency of Laurentian University highlights a vulnerability in the funding model developed by many universities, which rely heavily on high fees for foreign students who are now staying home because of the pandemic. The Canadian Pension Model turned out to be based on unrealistic assumptions about rates of return as interest rates plunged. Even more worrisome is that Canada is good at starting companies but not at nurturing them to global stature. Global leadership in key industries has disappeared. Canada claims just one of the Financial Times’ 100 leading global firms: Shopify. Smaller countries like Denmark, Sweden, Spain, and South Korea all have at least two companies on this list. Nor have we been able to build on our strengths in banking, energy, or technology. Attempts to capitalize on our reputation by creating an institute for banking stability in Toronto came to nothing. Canada’s major contribution to global finance today is to serve “as an ATM and safe deposit box for money laundering” from China, according to Jonathan Manthorpe’s The Claws of the Panda. Our assumed technological prowess in everything from artificial intelligence to aerospace has not produced a successor on a global scale to Nortel or Blackberry. Canada’s superpower status in energy is undermined, as Tristan Hopper noted, by an inability to build pipelines or new hydro dams. In sum, Canada has the same problem as many of our children: high self-esteem without high levels of achievement. We feel very good about ourselves — but for no apparent reason. Before becoming Governor of the Bank of Canada, Tiff Macklem co-authored an op-ed arguing that more companies should embrace “Brand Canada.” He questioned why business people shrink from the concept of brands for countries while embracing brands wholeheartedly in the corporate world. Canadian firms evidently do not share Macklem’s confidence in “Brand Canada.” All our major banks have stripped any homeland reference from their names, replacing Canada, Toronto, Montreal and Nova Scotia with meaningless initials. This seemed misplaced during the financial crisis but turns out to have been prescient as the glow has faded from Canada’s image. Macklem easily could have asked why companies should adopt Brand Canada when Canada does not embrace them? In his 2017 book Canadian Failures, Alex Benay, previously Chief Information Officer of Canada, wrote that “the United States’ identity is as much defined by Ford and Apple as it is by Abraham Lincoln and Mark Twain.” But rather than treating our companies as national symbols, Canadians are more inclined to identify with public programs like Medicare. We seem embarrassed by resource industries such as the oilsands, when they should be seen as symbols of Canadian innovation and technical know-how. Ignoring commercial success has long-term consequences. Michael Bliss, Canada’s leading business historian, said “the one prescription for the eventual failure of the Canadian experiment in nationality would be to create an ever-widening gap in standards of living between the two North American democracies.” Nations need to figure out which parts of their identities function well and don’t need changing and which parts are no longer working and do need changing. In today’s Canada, a lot is not working well and needs changing, starting with an expensive yet oftentimes inept public sector and a widespread indifference to the importance of private sector efficiency and innovation. Britain in the late 1970s showed that countries can pull themselves out of a prolonged tailspin. Unless Canada makes an equivalent turnaround in its current slide into mediocrity, others will soon be labelling us with the tag often applied to Brazil: “the country of the future — and always will be.” Potential is not enough. If you want to be a player on the global stage, at some point you have to prove your worth by actually delivering results. Philip Cross is a senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute. https://financialpost.com/opinion/trudeaus-canada-low-achievement-high-self-esteem Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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