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Topic summary

Posted by Brent
 - August 05, 2025, 12:10:14 PM
Quote from: Herman on August 04, 2025, 03:35:46 PMA very large portion of this crisis is the fault of the Liberal Party of Canada. That's not a talking point—it's a fact. It's a fact backed by years of missed opportunities, ideological sabotage, and deliberate inaction by two successive Liberal regimes. And now the consequences have arrived, right on schedule.

one hundred percent
Posted by Herman
 - August 04, 2025, 03:35:46 PM
A very large portion of this crisis is the fault of the Liberal Party of Canada. That's not a talking point—it's a fact. It's a fact backed by years of missed opportunities, ideological sabotage, and deliberate inaction by two successive Liberal regimes. And now the consequences have arrived, right on schedule.
Posted by Herman
 - August 04, 2025, 03:29:45 PM
The answer of every liberal when confronted with their incompetence: "Not my job!"
Posted by Herman
 - August 03, 2025, 02:51:19 PM
Carney was elected to do one thing, and it took him four months on the job to FAIL!
Posted by Herman
 - August 03, 2025, 02:49:58 PM
Posted by Herman
 - August 01, 2025, 04:44:45 PM
Conman Carney has already FAILED at the job he was elected to do.
Posted by Herman
 - July 28, 2025, 02:26:29 PM
Conman Carney aint even doing the negotiating with Trump. His elbows must be broken already. He has an ambassador doing it for him. But despite that, still no budget, no transparency and Canadians are still in in the dark. No wonder his ratings are dropping.
Posted by Herman
 - July 27, 2025, 02:45:30 PM
What happened to all that "fast-tracking" that Conman Carney said he'd do?

Posted by Herman
 - July 27, 2025, 02:42:29 PM
Despite what Conman Carney says, he's not building anything with steel.
Posted by Herman
 - July 25, 2025, 03:23:02 PM
None zero zilch nada one
Posted by Herman
 - July 25, 2025, 03:21:48 PM
Where are those elbows?
Posted by DKG
 - July 23, 2025, 09:33:43 AM
Quote from: . on July 23, 2025, 07:31:29 AMThey are catching up a bit I've noticed. An example might be the recent election promise by their Labor party to draw down the immigration numbers, numbers which have spiked tremendously in the post election months. Or you might care to look at the amount of times the "think of the children" trope gets trotted out to move a piece of legislation which ends up doing bugger all to protect the kiddies, yet seems to always favour the pockets of the ruling political elite. Right now they are attempting to force Google and Microsoft to further their ambitions for a digital identity for all Australians under the auspices of curtailing a minor's access to pornography. And the professed aim is as laudable as it is unrealistic, but they're pushing it anyway as it does get them the digital identity which is the actual prize which will ultimately be used to screw political dissenters to the wall.

Most Australians are too invested in treating politics like a football match to see the truth. The end result has been a succession of offices throughout the decades that are exceptionally adept at sleepwalking the public into a never ending parade of yielding the freedom for more authoritarian governance from globalist interests than you would think possible.

I'm waiting for the inevitable overreach. I'm waiting to see another Pauline Hanson take the stage there. Like Ross Perot, Pauline represented the first hint that a third party option might just be able to make the difference the population were clamouring for. If Australia gets a Trump analog, we might see some real change in that neck of the woods, along with all the drama that comes with it.

Not holding my breath for it mind you, but I will cheer for them if and when it happens, just as loudly as I would cheer for Alberta and Saskatchewan if they should get out from under the boot of the kiddie diddling pigfuckers who are milking them dry. The truth however is that Australia isn't that much of a prize as it was decades ago. Too much of it has been sold off to foreign interests and its people beaten and cowed into slavering obeisance for their jailers who really couldn't give a fuck about them, past what they can steal from the poor stupid bastards.
Thanks for that. It is is interesting to learn about politics in a country similar to Canada and how they both seem to be following the same trajectory.
Posted by .
 - July 23, 2025, 07:31:29 AM
Quote from: DKG on July 18, 2025, 10:11:20 AMI don't know enough about the internal politics in Australia. Caskur posts about it once in a while. But, I would assume it is not all that much different than Canada. Just not as blatantly corrupt like you said.
They are catching up a bit I've noticed. An example might be the recent election promise by their Labor party to draw down the immigration numbers, numbers which have spiked tremendously in the post election months. Or you might care to look at the amount of times the "think of the children" trope gets trotted out to move a piece of legislation which ends up doing bugger all to protect the kiddies, yet seems to always favour the pockets of the ruling political elite. Right now they are attempting to force Google and Microsoft to further their ambitions for a digital identity for all Australians under the auspices of curtailing a minor's access to pornography. And the professed aim is as laudable as it is unrealistic, but they're pushing it anyway as it does get them the digital identity which is the actual prize which will ultimately be used to screw political dissenters to the wall.

Most Australians are too invested in treating politics like a football match to see the truth. The end result has been a succession of offices throughout the decades that are exceptionally adept at sleepwalking the public into a never ending parade of yielding the freedom for more authoritarian governance from globalist interests than you would think possible.

I'm waiting for the inevitable overreach. I'm waiting to see another Pauline Hanson take the stage there. Like Ross Perot, Pauline represented the first hint that a third party option might just be able to make the difference the population were clamouring for. If Australia gets a Trump analog, we might see some real change in that neck of the woods, along with all the drama that comes with it.

Not holding my breath for it mind you, but I will cheer for them if and when it happens, just as loudly as I would cheer for Alberta and Saskatchewan if they should get out from under the boot of the kiddie diddling pigfuckers who are milking them dry. The truth however is that Australia isn't that much of a prize as it was decades ago. Too much of it has been sold off to foreign interests and its people beaten and cowed into slavering obeisance for their jailers who really couldn't give a fuck about them, past what they can steal from the poor stupid bastards.
Posted by Herman
 - July 20, 2025, 02:44:15 PM
Posted by DKG
 - July 20, 2025, 09:59:11 AM
As Canadians attempt to make sense of the latest negotiation salvo from south of the border, the Liberal government's continued inaction on the oil and gas sector remains nothing short of self-sabotage.

The looming threat of a 35% tariff on Canadian goods exported to the United States — our largest trading partner by a country mile — underscores the urgent need for bold, decisive action. Yet, while the stakes couldn't be higher, Mark Carney and his insider interests seem content with proclamations over putting pen to paper, and waiting until fall to really kickstart Canada's recovery after a lost Liberal decade.

It's time for Carney's unearned summer vacation to end, and for the Liberals to truly get serious about unleashing Canada's energy potential to secure our economic future.