renhogan

joined 1 month ago
 
 

From everything to anything, what are your go to spots?

 

There are several new fines for violations that do not currently carry financial penalties, including:

  • Illegal and unsafe use: $1,000 for high-risk activities, such as discharging fireworks inside a building or near flammable substances.
  • Prohibited timing or location: $500 for setting off consumer fireworks during restricted times or on prohibited property.
  • Roads and marinas: $1,000 for the use of fireworks on public roads or the possession and use of fireworks in marinas.
  • Debris: $500 for failing to clear casings and debris after use.
  • City parks: $500 for a first offence, $750 for a second, and $1,000 for a third.
  • Roman candles: $1,000 for the possession or use of the devices.

The new system also targets the sale of fireworks with an escalating penalty structure.

If passed by council, fireworks would formally be banned at parks, golf courses, municipal cemeteries and marinas (where possession would also be prohibited).

 

from article:

“What I can say right now is that we’ve accounted for the individuals that are supposed to be in the residence. They’re out of the country right now,” Const. Tyler Bell said early Tuesday evening.

“So right now, we’ve got the difficult task of trying to ascertain who is the individual.”

The fire, which also resulted in an explosion, broke out at around 10:40 p.m. on Monday at a house on Select Court which is just west of McLaughlin Road and north of Eglinton Avenue West.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 59 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Yep.

Sad part is labelling things as ‘War crimes’ is meaningless. There’s no accountability in this World anymore.

It’s like “that’s a war crime!”

… “so anyways… what’s for dinner?”

Sad World our ancestors fought and died for all those years ago.

 

" The recent news of the city’s plans to demolish the building has left many community members feeling discouraged. However, it is so important that the public voice their concerns about this incredibly short sighted project. Rather than demolish the building to build a conference centre and hotel, we should instead revitalize this space - update the building and facilities rather than tear it all down. The upgrades to the building were quoted at $120 million, which is  significantly less than the 2 billion proposed into building new facilities which don’t have the same commitment to the arts in the community. "

 

I recently moved here from the west coast for /job opportunity reasons, I already regret it.

What do you do for fun in this City? It seems so cold, boring, and theres just seemingly too many people. It's like living in a bit city downtown with no benefits of being in a big city. Half the time is spent at intersections or in the car.

Anyone have any recommendations that are actually fun? Any hidden gems?

 

Only in Mississauga I find this disgusting behaviour.

Why are people just openly littering. It never used to be like this. What happened ?

 
 

Why does NO ONE drive the 70km/hr posted speed limit. What's with the average speed of 50-60 km/hr on this road. It drives me INSANE.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago)

The War on Drugs absolutely caused serious harm and disproportionately impacted minority communities. That’s widely documented. But acknowledging that doesn’t make it equivalent to governments intentionally killing civilians. Harmful policy and discriminatory enforcement are not the same thing as deliberate mass slaughter. Conflating those two things is exactly the kind of false equivalence that derails serious discussion.

Are you actually arguing that the War on Drugs is equivalent to governments intentionally slaughtering their own civilians?

Because acknowledging that the policy caused harm and was discriminatory doesn’t make it the same category of wrongdoing as deliberate mass killing.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

Harmful policy and deliberate mass killing are not the same thing.

The War on Drugs has caused real damage, but comparing incarceration and social harm to governments intentionally slaughtering civilians is exactly the kind of false equivalence that makes serious discussions impossible.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

You need to understand both of these things are bad. they aren't mutually exclusive.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

You have to see the bigger picture in this context though, this is unprecedented. Iran obtaining and securing enriched Uranium and having Nuclear capable missiles will be a threat to the World.

This is bigger than sticking to a morale compass. This is why Humanity is the true plague of this Planet and why there will never be Peace on Earth.

I don't want more people to die, as many others don't. But to just sit back and let Iran become untouchable and thinking everything will continue to be OK is naive.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 0 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

I don’t think anyone here is celebrating bombing or war. Military action is always a terrible outcome.

The concern many people have is what happens if nothing is done and WHEN Iran eventually acquires nuclear weapons. Once a regime that already sponsors militant groups and represses its own population has nuclear-capable warheads, the ability to prevent escalation becomes far more limited.

At that point, the world isn’t choosing between diplomacy and intervention anymore, it’s choosing between living with a nuclear-armed regime like that or risking a much larger conflict later. That’s the dilemma people are talking about.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (3 children)

You’re putting words in people’s mouths. No one said they’re “fine with” deaths in the U.S. Those are serious issues and they absolutely deserve attention and policy solutions.

The point being made was simply that domestic social problems and state-directed violence or terrorism are different categories under international law. Acknowledging that distinction doesn’t mean someone doesn’t care about both.

Both can be bad at the same time. Recognizing that isn’t controversial.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 weeks ago (3 children)

Those are serious domestic policy failures and they absolutely deserve criticism. But they’re still not the same thing as a government deliberately carrying out mass violence against civilians or supporting armed groups abroad.

Recognizing that distinction isn’t “normalizing” loss of life, it’s acknowledging that different problems require different responses.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (4 children)

You're comparing social crises to state-directed mass killing. Those aren’t equivalent under international law or humanitarian doctrine. The threshold people talk about for intervention is typically genocide, ethnic cleansing, or large-scale state violence against civilians.

Social problems like drug overdoses and gun violence are not the same as a government slaughtering civilians. Conflating the two is a false equivalence.

[–] renhogan@lemmy.ca 0 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago)

I didn’t choose the military as my line of work. If I had and was sent somewhere to intervene, I would accept that responsibility.

I support intervention when humanitarian law is being severely violated, but I don’t make the decisions on where those interventions happen.

I chose healthcare instead, and I help Canadians every day.

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