News:

R.I.P to the great Charlie Kirk! ~ R.I.P to our friend Caskur!


Post reply

Note: this post will not display until it has been approved by a moderator.
Other options
Verification:
Please leave this box empty:
Type the letters shown in the picture
Listen to the letters / Request another image

Type the letters shown in the picture:
spell bacon backwards with the first letter capitalized and use a number where possibe:
Is Alticus a dick sucking fairy? (answer is opposite of no):
Is the "D" in Django silent? Yes or No? (must be lower case):
Forty 2 timez 3 equals ?:
911 was an attack on what city (spell out lower case two words):
Shortcuts: ALT+S post or ALT+P preview

Topic summary

Posted by DKG
 - Today at 09:29:54 AM
Quote from: Herman on March 21, 2026, 07:28:26 PMThe CBC revealed how overpaid their useless executives are.
The Carney government is moving to block access to information like that going forward.
Posted by Herman
 - March 21, 2026, 07:28:26 PM
Quote from: DKG on March 21, 2026, 06:04:16 AMThe Bank of Canada is refusing to disclose how much it pays its top executives.

The Bank of Canada is happy to print billions of dollars out of thin air and make your life unaffordable. But it doesn't want to print out the access-to-information records showing you how much it pays its top brass.

Democracy dies in darkness.
The CBC revealed how overpaid their useless executives are.
Posted by DKG
 - March 21, 2026, 06:04:16 AM
The Bank of Canada is refusing to disclose how much it pays its top executives.

The Bank of Canada is happy to print billions of dollars out of thin air and make your life unaffordable. But it doesn't want to print out the access-to-information records showing you how much it pays its top brass.

Democracy dies in darkness.
Posted by Herman
 - March 15, 2026, 08:51:49 PM
Why are our tax dollars funding this?
Posted by Herman
 - March 10, 2026, 06:33:39 PM
Posted by DKG
 - March 08, 2026, 09:21:14 AM
Quote from: formosan on March 07, 2026, 12:39:17 PMThat is a lot of alcohol.
Carney spends more than that per hour on a flight.
Posted by Herman
 - March 07, 2026, 09:09:52 PM
Here's a truth bomb.
Posted by formosan
 - March 07, 2026, 12:39:17 PM
Quote from: DKG on March 07, 2026, 05:48:21 AMThe Canadian Taxpayer Federation caught British Columbia's Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth billing taxpayers $3,900 for a happy hour "drink reception" at a conference in Amsterdam.

The B.C. government hosted 50 people during the happy hour reception. That's about $78 per person.

They even billed taxpayers an extra $600 to buy themselves another 30 minutes of partying.

You're probably wondering what value normal British Columbians got from this steep happy hour bill.

Well, the bureaucrats partied. And taxpayers got the hangover.
That is a lot of alcohol.
Posted by DKG
 - March 07, 2026, 05:48:21 AM
The Canadian Taxpayer Federation caught British Columbia's Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth billing taxpayers $3,900 for a happy hour "drink reception" at a conference in Amsterdam.

The B.C. government hosted 50 people during the happy hour reception. That's about $78 per person.

They even billed taxpayers an extra $600 to buy themselves another 30 minutes of partying.

You're probably wondering what value normal British Columbians got from this steep happy hour bill.

Well, the bureaucrats partied. And taxpayers got the hangover.
Posted by DKG
 - February 28, 2026, 05:52:38 AM
Sir John A. Macdonald described the purpose of the Senate as being the home of "sober second thought."

You'd think that means senators need to be sober ... right?

Think again.

Senators billed you for tens of thousands on booze, plus thousands more on fine dining, disco, minigolf and escape rooms.

Individual senators jackassed up their hospitality spending 67 per cent last year. They billed you $116,100 on hospitality in one year.

And that's only half of the bill.

The Senate administration and the Senate's house officers have doubled their hospitality expenses since 2019. The higher-ups charged you $118,000 last year.

As big as the increase in hospitality expenses were, the most damning finding was what senators are billing you for.

The Senate expensed $27,000 on alcohol from the LCBO, the SAQ, wineries and the Beer Store since 2019.

Senators routinely billed you for lavish meals at high-end restaurants.

They spent a combined $20,500 on nine excursions to Le St-Estèphe, an upscale restaurant that serves French cuisine. The venue has a "top-notch wine cellar" and a "lounge [that] welcomes cigar smokers."

Canada's home of "sober second thought" billed you $790 to hire bartenders for a single event.

It even held three disco dance parties that cost a combined $2,100.
 
Senators also spent $645 playing mini-golf and $210 trying to find their way out of an escape room.

And the Canadian Taxpayers Federation is keeping track of the senate's biggest spenders. 

Senator Yvonne Boyer, the senate's biggest individual spender over the last six years, spent $8,000 on "gifts," $340 at the Keg for a "business meeting" with four people and $100 at a wine bar for another "business meeting" with two people.
 
Senator Marilou McPhedran expensed $377 on a single meal at Château Laurier. McPhedran also spent $625 for a "business meeting" with 10 people at an unusual location – the Aga Khan Museum.
 
Senator David Wells spent $550 on multiple trips to Mallard's Cottage, a 300-year-old venue in St. John's that serves delicacies like cod tongues and $16 Brussels sprouts.
 
Senator Mohamed-Iqbal Ravalia spent $1,100 on a single "business meeting" at the India Gate Restaurant that included 20 people. He also spent $260 on flowers.

Senator Bernadette Clement spent $3,300 on gifts alone.
 
Unelected senators also take pay raises every year and receive taxpayer-funded pensions.

A senator's current base salary is $184,800 and will climb to an estimated $193,600 after this year's April 1 pay raise.
Posted by Herman
 - February 16, 2026, 06:16:18 PM
Posted by Shen Li
 - February 13, 2026, 10:25:30 PM
Mark Carney billed Canadians $300,000 for his airplane food during his first year in office. 


It's hard to believe anyone could rack up higher travel bills than former prime minister Justin Trudeau.

But...

Prime Minister Mark Carney spent more than $21,000 on airplane food on a three-hour roundtrip to Washington, D.C. in May.

That means Carney and his entourage chewed through $7,000 of airplane food every hour.

And the flight wasn't even during a mealtime. They flew to Washington between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m., where Carney and the gang immediately attended a dinner reception. They flew back at 4 p.m. the next day.

A 1.5 hour long flight, about the time it takes to fly from Calgary to Vancouver, is barely enough time to watch a whole movie, let alone chomp through thousands of dollars of food. And they spent $7,000 per hour on airplane food.

Air Canada and WestJet don't bother serving hot food on flights that short because who can't wait a few minutes to get a real meal when they land?

Two weeks after the D.C. trip, Carney went to Italy. The prime minister and his entourage spent nearly $94,000 on airplane food. That's about $5,200 an hour.

For context, that kind of money could cover the grocery bill of about five Canadian families for an entire year.

And you know Carney is wasting too much money on airplane food when he's wasting more money than Trudeau.

Trudeau also went to Italy while he was in office. He spent $43,000 on airplane food in 2024.
Posted by Herman
 - February 02, 2026, 08:54:23 PM
The Governor General's salary jumped by $15,800 this year, pushing her pay to nearly $394,000, all on your dime.

That raise was automatic. No review. No vote. Just a guaranteed pay bump, even though she already earns about five times more than the average Canadian.

While you are struggling with higher grocery bills, housing costs and interest rates, Ottawa's ceremonial figurehead keeps cashing in.

And the salary is only the beginning. On top of nearly $400,000 a year, the Governor General also gets a taxpayer-funded mansion, full staff, luxury travel, a six-figure clothing allowance and a lifetime expense account.

Conman Carney says he wants to cut program spending. If he is serious, the first cut should be obvious: the Governor General's pay and perks at Rideau Hall.
Posted by DKG
 - January 31, 2026, 10:18:12 AM
Just because you represent the King, doesn't mean you should live like one at Canadian taxpayers' expense.

But Governor General Mary Simon is living a taxpayer-funded life that would make even Louis XIV blush.

We just caught Simon taking another pay raise bringing her salary to nearly $400,000.

Plus, 98 per cent of Ottawa's government executives billed you for a bonus last year while their departments barely met half their own targets.

Welcome to Ottawa where failure is rewarded with your tax dollars.
Posted by Herman
 - January 25, 2026, 06:30:02 PM
What a waste of time and money.