ninthant

joined 1 year ago
[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 38 points 6 days ago (4 children)

I’m with the 58% who think it’s worth exploring. But we need a lot of time and much deeper ties before we’d jump into eu membership.

I’d love to see us adopt EU standards, to reduce our reliance on the US standards which are increasingly prone to corruption and anti-science manipulations. If a car can be sold in Germany or a drug can be sold in France let’s immediately allow those here too. If a person gets a medical degree in Spain, they can work at a hospital here with just some minimal localization.

It may also be worth exploring pegging the CAD to the euro, again for stability and commerce reasons. This also has significant risks and downsides but it also could insulate us from American chaos somewhat.

There are likely areas in defence where we could cooperate with the EU, with the health of nato being questionable at best.

After all that, let’s talk.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 10 points 2 months ago

Yes $19M is a lot of money, but to use your terminology this is money that has already been pissed. The economic term for this is “sunk cost” — we aren’t getting those dollars back no matter what we choose.

It’s important to not let sunk costs influence our best course of action is going forward, but this is a challenge because people can get emotionally attached and massively overspend just to avoid feeling like the relatively smaller amount was wasted.

So is the better choice spending billions on F-35s and being locked into a forever contract with a country that is opposed to our interests? Or do we write off $19M and do something else? My vote is the something else.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 11 points 2 months ago (2 children)

The $19M is a sunk cost.

If we have to throw that away to escape being locked into a lengthy contract with a nation who I had declared themselves to be opposed to us and our allies — that discarded money is well spent.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 7 points 10 months ago (4 children)

The article goes a bit more in-depth than that. For example they show in my home region of metro Vancouver, the wealthy suburbs tend to have much higher rates of EV registrations than the core cities of Vancouver/burnaby/tricities/richmond/surrey or the less-wealthy suburban areas.

This data implies to me that beyond just infrastructure and travel requirements, cost is a major factor, perhaps overwhelmingly so. This too wouldn’t be groundbreaking news but it’s a different narrative to your conclusions here.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 10 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

“What is Eric’s first name?” would probably suffice tbh

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 37 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Canada post should be radically expanded, with the express goal of aiding interprovincial trade.

Will it require subsidies? Sure. But facilitating commerce will have a huge trickle-down effect as it would enable smaller businesses to compete at a national scale.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 0 points 10 months ago

I am thinking of signing up to present for this, does anyone here have experience with this?

Of note I wouldn’t be representing a community, just myself. Does that even make sense in this context or would I be making a fool of myself for no benefit?

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 0 points 10 months ago

It’s unlikely that anyone would even guess if you’re American unless you’re spending money with an American card or tell someone. And if you’re spending money you’re unlikely to get a bad response, no matter who you are or where you’re from.

If you do bring up your nationality in appropriate contexts, I find it unlikely you’d get a hostile response. Like don’t just blurt it out at a grocery store for no reason but in normal conversation it’s fine.

First of all there are many republicans in Canada, they are called CPC here but effectively no difference in ideology and culture, and their support levels are 40% nationally but tend to be higher in rural areas.

And second of all, the rest of us Canadians typically understand that most urban Americans do not support Trump or his actions against us. We may be frustrated by the lack of awareness your centre and left have to what’s happening, or the lack of actions taken to stop what’s happening. But also a sense that non-republicans in the US are victims of Republican policies much as we Canadians are.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 31 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (3 children)

It’s disgusting how oil extraction has come to dominate the culture of Alberta and the CPC in general.

In reality the industry far less important than it’s credited for, and it’s incredibly mismanaged by the Albertan government. The oil extraction should be run by the province as a public benefit to enrich their population, like in Saudi Arabia or Norway.

The management should focus on maximizing long-term value and building up local industry to add value. Giving away so much of the value of an inherently limited resource is so incredibly wasteful and unnecessary.

Albertans ought to be outraged that the UPC and other right wingers have privatized what should be their fortune into the hands of few. But instead the propagandists have convinced them to be outraged their future isn’t being squandered fast enough.

The burden is on us to make this farce understood.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 2 points 11 months ago

Tbqh I think not only are you correct here but it’s the message I was mentally avoiding.

I feel like we are losing the verge of losing this battle currently, with the CPC inches away from taking a hacksaw to our existing institutions.

But you’re right, this is the battle we need to fight. I shouldn’t look for some shortcut to avoid the hard work.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 2 points 11 months ago

This isn’t a case where it needed to be sold, it was just short-term selfish thinking.

However you are perhaps correct that for a systemic problem, a systemic solution is needed not some cheap workaround as with what I was suggesting.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 0 points 11 months ago (2 children)

You do realize that 40% of the country just voted for the right-wing? That many provinces are governed by right-wingers.

How would you ban this, short of an authoritarian state?

 

My outlook lately has been so positive lately that’s difficult to put into words.

If you told me six months ago I’d be packed into a convention centre room with several thousand people, where an unapologetic policy nerd delivers lines such as “I’m a pragmatist” and getting roaring applause as the reception… I’d have told you to stop taking the crazy pills.

It’s beyond even just simple cliches like “am I dreaming” because I just could not comprehend the remote possibility of something like this. Not even in the wildest dreams.

Could not imagine that we’d get a Liberal party leader who thinks in terms of market realism but not blind worship of the free market, who is both an insider who understands how the world economy works but also how it has failed people. Someone who is focused on results and not process, someone thoughtful and intelligent. Someone who has said the things that I’ve been screaming into the void for a decade — but saying it better.

And not just that, but that Canadians are responding with passion, engagement, and enthusiasm. Many on the right want their ideas expressed by an adult who has experience and shows true leadership, and isn’t preoccupied with the bully tactics of the American culture war or empty populist slogans.

Many on the left are willing to throw their hat in for a guy who worked for hedge funds and central banks all his life — despite the many severe failings of neoliberalism — because he wants to make markets works for people. It’s absolutely wild seeing a group of left-leaning people cheer on the idea of having the strongest economy in the G7 and expanded free trade within Canada and with Europe, Mexico, and other allies around the world.

And the craziest thing of all is that we’re going to win. By a lot. Because I see the polls showing it, I see people like me out there volunteering. I see my own city’s record-breaking turnout numbers for a by-election that doesn’t even change the balance of power on the council, despite unheard-of queues. People aren’t going to stay home because it’s a blowout, they are gonna be at the polls in droves to register their participation in the process.

And we see real progress outside federal politics too. It’s wonderul to see how a leftist firebrand like Charlie Angus has blown up in on social media and on the success of his cross canada tour. I see folks like Wab Kinew in Manitoba pushing hard on leftist changes and getting a great reception for it. I see Americans on their streets fighting for their country en masse, and folks like AOC and Bernie Sanders rallying huge crowds.

Four months ago I would have given this a probability of 0.0% — but here we are. Smug cynics like me have said things like “this is the worst timeline” and felt like we had no chance against the apathy in the modern age. But we do have a chance.

I’ve always repeated that the cliche of “may you live in interesting times” was actually a curse. But now that the interesting times are here… it feels like a goddamn blessing. I’m here for it.

 

I’m looking for opinions from people about their personal preferences on the best Linux phones available today — both software and the phone hardware to accompany it.

My leading contenders right now are postmarketos running on a used Pixel or sailfishos running on jolla or Sony Xperia.

My priorities:

  • commitment to FOSS, no lock-in
  • Premium-tier phone hardware (camera, screen, battery)
  • performant Android emulation or performant web app integration
  • ongoing organization or community support
  • few/no dependencies on American companies or products

Subjective and biased opinions are welcome; I’m really trying to get a feel of how the earliest adopters are thinking.

 
 

I’m looking to avoid American-made goods and American companies as much as possible and this relatively challenging when it comes to computers.

From my research so far it seems very difficult to find computer hardware that isn’t using American company microprocessors. CPUs available to non-industrial uses tend to be AMD, Intel, or recently some Qualcomm — all US companies. Even Raspberry Pi uses a Broadcom chip, and the other up-and-coming ARM chips I’ve researched seem to be American as well.

I’d appreciate any insights in this area, either companies with existing products or up and coming companies to watch. If I had a blind spot in my research and I’m missing something obvious please tell me.

 

Your Premier has delivered an "ultimatum" to Canada. Let's chat about what that means, and what your paths are going forward.

One is a path that your Premier wants to take you down. She wants to remove any and all restrictions on policies to help reduce carbon emissions. This path would boost profits for oil and gas industries, and it would be a boon to jobs in the oil and gas sectors. But at the same time, it's the opposite way that the developed world is moving. Europe and even China are moving quickly away from this. While gaining short-term benefits for some, it will have negative effects for the medium and long term.

The path of this ultimatum is a referendum to secede from Canada. This can go one of three ways.

  1. The referendum fails, and Alberta stays inside Canada. Like with Quebec's attempt to secede in the 90s, this will cause lasting harm to the business interests of Alberta as companies move their HQs away because of the uncertainty and chaos.

  2. Alberta joins the USA, based on DS's orange spraytanned pal's ongoing threat. But the USA does not let their states and territories retain oil and mineral rights, like Canada does. Their threat to take us over was never some magnanimous offer -- their naked self-interest should be more than apparent to any observer -- it's an attempt for them to claim your resources. And they will not give Albertans the right to vote, because even though Alberta is considered a right-wing province in Canada you'd be a danger to become a dreaded "blue" state. They don't even let current US citizens in Puerto Rico or Washington DC vote, it's farcical to think Albertans would be granted that. So in this path you would you would lose the rights to your resources granted to you by Canada, and the right to vote. But at least industry would be richer.

  3. Alberta goes it alone. Screw Canada, screw Europe, screw everyone. Throw an Eric Cartman-like fit and make your own country. The way this plays out is that you get treated with hostility by all parties. The Americans have no loyalty to anyone but themselves, and they will use economic leverage to extract concessions and utterly dominate you. Canada will not extend an olive branch to help your landlocked country export goods, we will extract fees and levies to your exports that will be far more significant than anything that exists now.

Frankly, all of these outcomes fucking suck.

But here's the other path: You expel Danielle Smith and her ilk, and reject the toxic propaganda spewing across the border. Re-orient yourselves around Canada, and become a superpower within Canada and part of the new adventure that all Canadians are embarking on in this new post-American era. Oil and gas and the other natural resources in Alberta will continue to be a lucrative industry even if we slow the rate we extract them. We can and we will build rails and roads and pipelines east and west and north. The businesses you create in Alberta can buy and sell goods with the new trading alliances we are forging with Europe and Mexico and beyond.

Donald Trump has extended an offer to white South Africans to join America. With her contacts and friendships in place there, she can petition her orange bud to extend that offer to Canadians and herself as well. However many want to go, Canada can accept equal numbers of skilled tradespeople and doctors and scientists from America in return. This isn't some jokey suggestion made tongue in cheek -- Republicans want white MAGA loyalists to immigrate and the 10% of Canadians who support America would go a long way towards helping that goal. And it would help us too, and get DS the green card she's always wanted so badly.

So yes, Albertans. We need to choose the paths that we walk down. I'd much rather you choose the path where we walk together, the one that doesn't end miserably for the people of your province. But the choice is yours.--

 

It is easy to point at the Americans and the negative effects they have incurred from abandoning their treaty commitments. We see the boycotts and the burning of Teslas lots and the protests and feel the anger felt by people all over the world. We can see this because we are the wronged party, and this crystalizes the transgression being made by basing tariffs on obvious lies.

But can we look at the mirror and say that we are fundamentally smarter? Because Canada has signed on to climate treaties such as the 2015 Paris Climate Accord, and while progress has been made we are lagging behind significantly on our goals.

Three months ago, polls indicated that Canadians were ready to elect the CPC into power, with their stated primary objective being to "axe the tax" and replace it with... nothing. They said they would not withdraw from Paris commitments, but this was an obvious lie. The CPC propaganda successfully poisoned public sentiment in Canada against our effective market-based tool to manage emissions -- the so called "carbon tax" -- to the point where even the centre and left had to admit it was politically untenable.

Today, thanks to a remarkable series of events that very few if any predicted, the landscape looks very different. With the Americans threatening to invade us and doing extremely stupid and self-destructive actions, even some conservative-minded voters have taken a closer look at the CPC and have re-evaluated their choices based on what they see.

Despite being forced to kill the "carbon tax", Mark Carney will implement a new system of directly levying the primary industrial emitters. And to no one's surprise, the MAGA PP and his CPC and the treasonous Danielle Smith are opposing this vociferously as well. But we will do it anyhow, both because it's the right thing to do but also because we must in order to establish that we have honour and we are reliable.

Let's pause and reflect on what they want. PP and DS and their MAGA goons want Canada -- in this time of international crisis -- to fully abandon our agreements made with the very same countries that we are going to depend on for trade and defense in this new post-American era. They want zero restrictions, no caps or levies or controls of any kind. What they want to do is no less stupid than are the Americans who threw sand in their faces by putting Trump in office. Because if they get their ways this will lead to our further isolation.

So I reject the hypothesis that we Canadians are so smart and they are so dumb. We were willing to jump off the same cliff, and the only reason we aren't right now is that an unchained chaos monkey with a fresh coat of orange spraypaint can't stop threatening to invade our country every other day. Had Harris won, it would be our country going rogue and isolating itself from the world by violating our obligations.

So this is our chance, Canada, and we'd better fucking seize it. This election is happening soon and we must reject the CPC. Canada must honour our commitments and stand side-by-side with the partners who will be the backbone for our new economy as we forge new alliances and strengthen old ones.

For that to happen Canadians need to act, to volunteer and participate in the political process like we've never done before. To get out of our comfort zones, to get out there and convince each and everyone who isn't paying attention to soundly get out the ballot box and reject the stupidity and help forge this new future we are going to build. We're going to win, because we have to win, and because you're going to help me.

Elbows up

 

Sunday at 3:30 PM Location: Arbutus Greenway at 41st Avenue (Intersection of 41st and West Boulevard)

This Sunday, join neighbours in the Vancouver-Quilchena riding to stand up for kindness and honour survivors who have shared the truth of the impacts of the residential school system.

MLA Brodie was kicked out of the Conservative Party Caucus on March 7th after mocking the testimony of residential school survivors. This harmful behaviour would be unacceptable for anyone in Canada and is inexcusable for an elected official. Now that Brodie is an Independent MLA, she cannot effectively represent the interests of our riding. We did not vote for her as an Independent. She should resign so a by-election can be held.

There are moments when we must look around and ask who will speak up. The answer is, we will! We should all speak up when politicians use issues like this to rewrite history for their own benefit and distract from other issues that require attention.

 

This is a message of doomerism but also optimism and hope for the future.

The Stick

The world has changed, and in my opinion if you are a Canadian living in the US you ought to start making plans to come back home or go elsewhere. Not for our sake, but for yours. Perhaps for people living in America there is be a sense of normalcy and complacency. Let's fire up r/murderedbywords with some clever remark and turn on Jon Stewart and get a good laugh in about how dumb Republicans are and how smart you are. Four more years and we'll get 'em. Oh I'm so embarrassed about what my country is doing, I'm so sorry.

But on the outside we are seeing a different picture. We see an America in a sharp decline and in hasty retreat from anything positive they may have once stood for. There is an unbridled fury at America for allying with murderous dictators, threatening and betraying its allies, and leveraging its economic strengths to bully for short-term gains. There is a smaller but not dissimilar rage against the American left for standing idly by while their country and it's democratic institutions are dismantled piece by piece.

There are worldwide boycotts against American goods and services, and these are picking up steam. The American media you consume may not reflect how just regular everyday Canadians are taking time to studiously check labels and reject things made in American or by American-owned companies. To cancel American-based subscriptions, to move to alternative services that don't funnel money into America. It is shockingly easy to do this thanks in part to globalization, when you realize that so many "American" products are actually made in China or China and the American bits are just some branding and repackaging.

And if you're a Canadian living in the US right now, this affects you in a practical way. Because you have enjoyed special treatment for decades, and you have become used to expecting that special treatment. Sure, when a Muslim or Mexican enters the US they may be treated with indignity and without human rights -- but not Canadians. You got the white glove treatment, and it was nice. You could pretend that the injustices and indignities weren't happening because they weren't happening to you. I know this because I was an ex-pat and this was me too.

But, no more special treatment for Canadians. Now Canadians who make clerical mistakes at the border are getting the same treatment that you'd expect someone from Haiti to get. No benefit of the doubt, no get-out-of-jail-free card, you get thrown in literal chains and held for weeks in barbaric for-profit prisons. Yes, even conventionally attractive, white Canadians. It can't happen to you, I'm sure part of your gut is telling you. But reality is telling you that it can.

As the world rejects and unites against the US, your status as an outsider will likely make you a target for the fury and hatred of the fascist administration and their many enthusiastic followers. The history of the world has shown that these types of governments have been very successful and manipulating their populations, and there is no reason to believe in American exceptionalism for this. When boycotts global cripple industry, will Americans blame their government for causing this, or will they bend to the propaganda and ally with the "strong man" who tells them they are blameless -- or will they blame the foreigners who are more directly hurting them? And YOU are a foreigner, the domestic face of what will be the next scapegoat.

Maybe my doomerism here is wrong. Maybe you can just coast for 4 years and things will magically get better. Maybe someone in America will act against what's happening. That sure would be nice, and I sincerely hope that's the case. But it's far from certain or even in my opinion likely. Your neighbours got a taste of this last time and got a clear roadmap for what would come, and decided that this is the America they wanted.

The Carrot

The case for Canada right now is a complete inversion of all this. Canadians are united with each other and with the broader world in a way that has never happened in my lifetime. There is an uplifting and deeply positive palpable energy to work more closely with Europe, Mexico, Australia, NZ, UK, and other allies around the world. We are building a new economy and a new future, and while uncertain it is also exciting with the possibilities.

Our country is poised for an election, widely expected to take place on Sunday. The current Prime Minister, Mark Carney, is a brilliant man with an amazing resume and has a sharp focus on getting results. He is both an insider who understands how business and the world economy functions, having led the Bank of Canada and Bank of England through crises as well as previously working at Goldman Sachs -- but also has an intellectual rejection of unrestricted free markets and the blind faith in markets that has led the western world into the tragic state of wealth inequality we find ourselves in now. Don't take my word for it, read his book, and I expect you to be as amazed as I am about how unique the opportunity is today with a man like this leading our country. And polls indicate that he will handily win this election.

But the country is bigger than one person and one party, and the likely outcome of this election will have further consequences. Canada's leading leftist party which has stagnated over the past decade will likely go up for leadership review post-election, and by holding a new leadership contest in this environment of unholy rage and optimism I have real faith that we have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to nominate a leftist of the likes of Tommy Douglas, or Jack Layton, or Bernie Sanders, or a firebrand like Jasmine Crockett or AOC or Charlie Angus. The country is hungry for this in a way that we never have been before.

And Canada will also reject the smarmy MAGA weasel who leads Canada's Conservative Party, because thanks to the threats pointed at us by America even most of our right wing has seen the consequences of going down the same path. This gives that party also an opportunity to select a new leader who can represent the conservative vision of Canada going forward. They can do some reflection and find someone who has inner strength, intelligence and experience, who doesn't get pleasure from punching down on vulnerable minorities, and who doesn't huff American propaganda. Because we all deserve this too.

You don't have to take my word for this. These are my predictions and you can see them play out or not in the coming weeks and months.

Canada's economy has been weakened tremendously by the trade war, there's no downplaying that. As the old proverb/curse says: may you live in interesting times. And the interesting times are here. But with upheaval there is opportunity. Because ending our dependence on America means that we must take some difficult steps to reorganize our way of doing things. It has been easy and convenient to ship our raw materials to the US for them to process in their industries, because the wages and taxes were lower and the regulations less stringent. The inertia from this export-oriented industry was significant, as any disruption would harm workers and companies involved with only an uncertain future benefit.

But now that disruption has arrived and we have no choice but to act, and we are acting. Canada has a tremendous availability of energy and raw materials and an educated population-- and we need new industries to leverage them. We need new retailers to distribute and sell them. We need new importers and exporters to get products to and from our new trading partners. We need new defense contractors, new tradespeople, new media producers, new goddamn everything.

And speaking specifically to my technically inclined friends, we also need non-US versions of the dominant American platforms. The network effect has long kept upstarts from being successful, so this is a likely-rare opportunity to disrupt incumbents such as YouTube, Reddit, Facebook, X, WhatsApp, Visa/Mastercard, Google, Apple, Netflix, and more. Because it's not just Canada who want this -- the services you build will also be welcomed in Europe and beyond. So all that expertise you developed working for these massive American companies and their billionaires to get even richer -- you can use those to found your own companies here or elsewhere abroad.

So this is not a doomerism future, not for us. Our elbows are up, we are fighting for ourselves and for the world. And you, my Canadian ex-pat friends, have an opportunity to be part of that.

 

I get an impression that when hearing an accusation of someone being "fascist", some people interpret this is simply a bad word. Like we're kids on a playground, and one kid doesn't like that other kid after sand got in our eyes so they call him a poopyhead. "Ooh, Singh called America's President a fascist, how scandalous! Can you believe he said that?" "Oh, the long haired dude protesting outside the Tesla showroom has a sign that says Musk is a fascist? Such a hysterical drama queen. Kids are so naive."

This idea that fascist is a bad word is not the worst possible interpretation -- fascists were pretty bad, after all. Growing up we studied WWII and the rise of fascism in Europe, the horrors they inflicted on millions of people and the scars they left on the world, lots of bad there. The genocide they inflicted was bad, and the fascists did that because they were racist which is also bad, and so they were all around pretty bad. All of this is true. Cool dudes like Indiana Jones punched those silly nazis in the face, because he was the hero and the nazis were the bad guys who wanted to do bad things.

But this interpretation of what fascist means -- to simply conflate fascists with "bad people we really don't like" is a serious failing to learn from history. Because one thing that gets missed from the history books we read was is why was fascism. (Or, it was there and it never sunk in.) Sure, we covered the societal dissatisfaction emerging from the aftermath of WWI, but that doesn't really get to why the outcome of that was fascism. The people back then could have responded any number of ways, why did that fascism take hold?

What we failed to internalize was that the fascism of the 1930s was probably a pretty fun time for the people participating in it. It would have provided a sense of community, a nationally unified response to what could reasonably be seen as a country in decline. The fascist leaders told their people that their race and their nationality were special, and gave them easy answers and scapegoats to explain away all the problems of a complex and changing world -- this was probably reassuring. The people were told their future would be full of riches, and that the world was filled with villains and that the spoils the great leader would provide would be theirs for the taking -- this was probably inspiring. When the propagandists told them that what they were doing was good and right, and the scapegoat was up to no good, it was probably pretty neat that everyone all had the same take.

The grandiose rallies where they gathered to chant mantras and demonstrate their loyalty would have been engaging community events with audio and visual stimulation that got the blood pumping. You and your neighbours (your true neighbours, not the evil opposition lurking just behind every corner) were all in on this bold adventure together, you were working together with a common goal. You all had the same answer to the problems, there we no debates or confusion about what the truth was. The truth was what the leader said, and everyone who was anyone repeated it -- or they wouldn't be anyone anymore. No complexities, no thinking required. Young men with too much testosterone in their veins probably had a grand time beating up whoever the great leader said to scapegoat that week to help explain all the problems in their lives and to quiet their doubts.

Because what we missed and didn't sink it's way into our souls is that the Germans and Italians in those times were just people. They were farmers and factory workers and weavers and students and salespeople and scientists and teachers and tailors and bakers and longshoremen and everything in between. They were normal people, with the exact same ape brains we still have today. That when we read the pages of history we are not just reading about a record of things that happened, we are reading a script about what people do and events that could easily happen again. That we are not exceptional and our cultural differences with the people we are reading about in history books is dwarfed by the fact that we are the same people now that they were then.

So when we say fascist, it's not simply an insult. It's a cry of desperate warning, to sound an alarm that we have seen this before. We seen how this poison affects people and we have seen how it goes from here. We see it not just in the 1930s Europe but even today in very similar forms in authoritarian China and Russia, and it's been successful there too. And yes indeed, fascism has reared it's ugly head in America -- and the American people are the same flesh and blood as the people who have succumbed to this before. People with an exceptionalist mindset think it can't be happening there. Their friends and neighbours can't be fascists because fascists are the bad guys and obviously their neighbours aren't the bad guys. Their neighbours would never stand by when we lose access to ballots and scapegoats get sent to gas chambers and everyone's kids march off to die in foolish wars -- only bad guys would do that. Our neighbours are normal people, not bad guys.

Because we read the textbooks and we passed our multiple choice tests, but we didn't learn. History is an account of what normal people did.

 

OTTAWA, March 17 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump must stop making “disrespectful” comments about Canada before the two countries can start serious talks about future ties, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Monday.

"We've called out those comments. They're disrespectful, they're not helpful, and they ... will have to stop before we sit down and have a conversation about our broader partnership with the United States," Carney told reporters in London.

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