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Seriously?!?!
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Last post: May 13, 2024, 10:23:35 PM
Re: Seriously?!?! by Lokmar

Justin Troodo

Started by Obvious Li, October 07, 2012, 06:47:47 PM

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Herman

We all know how bad it has gotten for Canadians after 9 years of Justin Trudeau.

Canada is on track for its worst decline in living standards in 40 years.
Canada has had the worst growth in income per person of any Prime Minister since the 1930s.

9 in 10 middle-class families pay more in income tax.

Canada has had the slowest GDP per capita growth in the G7 since 2015.

Now, if things couldn't get any worse, Trudeau is hiking taxes on homebuilding during a housing shortage.

He is raising taxes on doctors during a doctor shortage.

He's hiking taxes again on farmers during a food cost crisis.

And he's hiking taxes on small business while Canadians' paycheques are shrinking.

Herman

Justine's activist environment minister is the king of the carbon tax coverup. He LIED to Canadians about the true cost of the Liberal carbon tax. He even tried to hide the numbers.

But now the truth is out. Stephen Guilbeault covered up $30 BILLION in economic damages from the carbon tax.

Trudeau and his Liberal government hid this information from Canadians for years.

The Parliamentary Budget Officer tried to tell the truth, but Trudeau's Liberals placed a GAG ORDER on him, and Stephen Guilbeault verbally attacked him.

Enough is enough.

This activist Liberal minister can no longer be trusted.

Herman

Election day in the riding is Monday. Goddamn I hope the riding flips from red to Tory blue.

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/politics/toronto-byelection-mirrors-choice-for-voters-in-next-federal-vote-trudeau/ar-BB1oBokv?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591&cvid=0cbc506fba1140cb906c374b111e4f17&ei=25
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the choice facing voters in a Toronto federal byelection will "mirror" the one they will face in the next federal election.

Toronto-St. Paul's has long been considered a Liberal stronghold, but the vote scheduled for next Monday is shaping up to be more competitive, and as national-level polling suggests, voters across the country are eager for change.

But Ipsos polling done exclusively for Global News show if an election were held tomorrow, Conservatives would secure 42 per cent of the decided vote.

Toronto-St. Paul's has remained red for nearly three decades. Longtime Liberal staffer Leslie Church is running to replace former MP Carolyn Bennet, who held the seat for 26 years.

The Conservatives have nominated financial professional Don Stewart as their candidate.

If a riding that has stayed red for 30 years switches blue, Trudeau could face pressure from within his own party, ahead of the general election.

Ipsos says Trudeau's waning popularity appears to be "dragging" the Liberals' fortunes down.

A majority of voters (68 per cent) want him to step down, with Ipsos CEO Darrell Bricker describing the numbers as "close to rock bottom," while Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is gaining ground.

Herman

Former Liberal strategist Warren Kinsella says Justine will not lead the party into the next election.

Kinsella says Justine has given Dominic Leblanc permission to discreetly pursue the leadership, which he is in fact doing. He wouldn't have given him permission if you weren't leaving.

Brent

Trudeau is hellbent on censoring Canadians and having total control over what you see, say and hear online.

His radical censorship laws, C-11 and C-18, have manufactured chaos and eliminated local news from your social media feeds.

But he's not done.

With his new law C-63, he wants to create a NEW bloated digital censorship bureau, spend more on bureaucracy, and give massive new censorship powers to the Canadian Human Rights Commission.

Brent

If Trudeau keeps spending our money on studies of how to tax our homes, they must be planning on gouging us more.


I hope he does not do this before next year's election.

Brent

Generational fairness. That is the kind of bullcrap language Trudeau will use to make Canadians even poorer than he already has.

Thiel

Quote from: Brent on July 07, 2024, 12:56:38 PMIf Trudeau keeps spending our money on studies of how to tax our homes, they must be planning on gouging us more.


I hope he does not do this before next year's election.
It will have to be before the next election.

If one dissects all the polls, Trudeau is facing a historic crushing defeat. He knows it too.

Trudeau is already forciing through some of the most draconian legilsation one could imagine. Think of Bill C-59. More is on the way. He knows Singh will give him carte blanche.

It will be a tough year for Canadians.
gay, conservative and proud

Shen Li

Quote from: Brent on July 07, 2024, 12:56:38 PMIf Trudeau keeps spending our money on studies of how to tax our homes, they must be planning on gouging us more.


I hope he does not do this before next year's election.
We're putting our house on the market as soon amy sons come back to Singapore with me. We expected a government as broke and as out of touch as True Dope's to do something this stupid.

Shen Li

#264
It's been a week since the report detailing Liberal MPs knowingly working with hostile foreign governments was released, and what has Trudeau done? Exactly nothing.

True Dope has known about foreign interference in our elections for years and he hasn't acted. When he was informed of CSIS concerns about Liberal candidate Han Dong during the 2019 election, Trudeau did nothing, let Dong stand as a candidate and then be an active member of the Liberal caucus for nearly four years, and only removed him after media reports.

True Dope admitted at the public inquiry into foreign interference that he didn't follow up on the Dong allegations even after the election. Our PM, the only party leader with all the information, has been turning a blind eye to foreign interference and actively fighting efforts to bring this issue to the public for years now.

True Dope's desire to keep this under wraps raises questions as to why.

Is he guilty of being involved in foreign interference to assist his Liberal party? Is he simply willing to look the other way because his party has benefited? Is there evidence that Trudeau has known about this all along and failed to act?





Oliver the Second

Quote from: Shen Li on July 07, 2024, 10:14:58 PMWe're putting our house on the market as soon my sons come back to Singapore with me. We expected a government as broke and as out of touch as True Dope's to do something this stupid.


You won't be immune to what's coming. Have you picked out your hijab yet?

JOE

Quote from: Herman on June 11, 2024, 10:01:10 PMWe all know how bad it has gotten for Canadians after 9 years of Justin Trudeau.

Agreed. He should go.

If they gave Harper 10 years in office then Trudeau should leave when his 10 are up


Give someone else a turn

10 years is enough

But I hope Canadians are more civil towards each other When there's a change of government than our neighbors to the south
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DKG

Quote from: Brent on July 07, 2024, 01:05:41 PMGenerational fairness. That is the kind of bullcrap language Trudeau will use to make Canadians even poorer than he already has.

He has not hidden his interest in some kind of new sales tax on homes. He has been getting a lot bolder about that as policy lately.

If he does go ahead with it, we know Singh will vote with it even though it will be devastating to the middle class. I would hope Pollivere reverses it early in his mandate.

Shen Li

Quote from: Oliver the Second on July 07, 2024, 11:56:08 PMYou won't be immune to what's coming. Have you picked out your hijab yet?
Do you mean Muslims will become the majority in Singapore? Chinese Singaporeans are scared to death of becoming a minority. Look at the situation for Chinese next door in Malaysia. Blatant racial and religious discrimination.

DKG

The notion that the Liberals' woes can all be remedied just by jettisoning Mr. Trudeau as leader is the same quick-fix mentality that elected him.

As Prime Minister, he must of course accept a large share of the blame for the government's current odium, the more so given the near-total centralization of power in the Prime Minister's Office – by all accounts greater now than it has ever been.

But these are nevertheless decisions for which the government must be held to account, no matter who leads it:

-the fixation on distributing income, rather than growing it – an error a decade ago, a crisis today
-the runaway spending and endless deficits, long before the pandemic and ever after
the obsession with narrow questions of identity rather than the broader public interest
-the casual corruption and endemic abuse of office, from cash-for-access to SNC-Lavalin to WE Charity – as if the Liberals' moral vanity made it impossible for them to conceive of themselves doing wrong, even as they were doing it
-the broken promises, earlier in their government, on everything from deficits to electoral reform to, God save us, two billion trees.
-the multiple policy failures of the later years, from the bungling of pandemic preparation to the loss of control over immigration to the housing crisis
-the autocratic disdain for Parliament, on display in the use of such procedural weapons as omnibus bills, time allocation and prorogation – the very things for which -the Liberals had attacked the Harper government, and which they had promised to curtail
-the seeming breakdown in capacity, on matters as basic as issuing passports or appointing judges – a sense that the handful of aides in the Prime Minister's Office, having achieved a monopoly on power, were overwhelmed as a result
-the utter indifference to national security – the continuing failure to adequately supply the Armed Forces, even as war clouds gather, coupled with the strange unwillingness to confront foreign interference, if not active complicity in it
and the rest:
-the baleful trio of internet regulatory bills, each more illiberal and ill-considered than the last;
-the inertia in the face of provincial lawlessness and oppression; the mishandling of the climate change file

In all, a rare trifecta of cynicism, ideology and incompetence, for which the leader must take responsibility but which is broadly reflected in the party that elected him, the officials who assist him, and the caucus and cabinet that support him.