- 3 Posts
- 34 Comments
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canadian Bill S-209 to implement age verification federally has advanced forward.
2·1 day agoUmmm, you mean the country that tries to protect their youth from being morally corrupted yet allowing school massacres to run rampant? Almost one school shooting per day.
Porn corrupts, but guns kill.
https://intellisee.com/nearly-one-school-shooting-a-day-in-america/
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canadian Bill S-209 to implement age verification federally has advanced forward.
1·1 day agoEnforced individual rights will eventually always cede to enforced collective responsibility. Those who supply services will be forced to collectively ensure their responsibility to protect the rights of the individual.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canadian Bill S-209 to implement age verification federally has advanced forward.
4·3 days agoNow let us find out if indeed they can and will enforce it.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Carney’s Liberals Are Governing like Conservatives—Just More Politely | The Walrus
7·13 days agoThe difference between social policy and fiscal policy. They are not the same kettle.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•North America's 1st electrochemical lithium refining facility opens in B.C.
25·14 days agoThat facility, it said, would be able to supply 500,000 electric vehicles annually.
That is a lot of batteries.
It is actually probably a GOOD thing this was not done ten years ago. Back then, it would have been bought out by an American firm in short order. Now, there is little stomach for selling out to the Americans. Today, this has a really good chance of remaining Canadian,
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Michael Kovrig slams Canada-China EV deal as a national security threat
161·15 days agoMichael Kovrig, when he was arrested by the Chinese, was working for all intenents and purposes under the auspices of the American State Department, for American (not Canadian) interests. One might suggest that he had sold out to America. I suggest that he was more American than Canadian in his ‘politics’. It still seems that he is spouting American State Department propaganda when it comes to his comments on Canada’s relationship with China.
Canada needs a foreign policy stance that reflects Canada’s interests, not the American State Department.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ford defends jail expansion plan to address overcrowding issues
2·18 days agoJails are expensive. A new one with 375 beds under construction in Thunder Bay, Ont., comes with a price tag of $1.2 billion.
That’s $3,200,000 per inmate.
Maybe we SHOULD build hotels for low-risk inmates instead of these prison cells. A 40 story hotel. How are they going to escape from the 20th floor? That is a very long knotted bed sheet rope. Link 4 together, as a horizontal evacuation route, in case of fire or such. No need to evacuate down to ground level.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canadian PM under scrutiny for forced labor imports
13·25 days agoI am permanently for defending the truth. I can quote very similar examples of American firms operating in Africa and subjecting the workers to similar or worse, and that is in their own country. There have been convictions in Canada where farm labor using immigrants has been subjected to similar conditions. Labor investigators have found similar situations in the construction industry in Canada using immigrant labor fro Eastern European countries. The American news is constantly describing similar conditions among undocumented laborers. Is that ‘forced labor’ or ‘abused labor’ or just plain ‘taking advantage of the disadvantaged’? Without unions, such conditions, even though illegal, would be a lot more common in Canada and America. In Brazil, there are currently 169 other companies in the same blacklist. Bear in mind, the abuses at this construction site, if it in fact they actually happened, were done right under the watch of the Brazilian government. And there is no reliable evidence that this activity, if it actually occurred, was sanctioned by the executives of the company itself, in China. Once BYD was informed of the conditions, it severed its relation with the contractor. And how about all of those American apparel firms that contracted production to firms in Pakistan and Bangladesh that used far worse labor conditions - none of them were ‘locked out’ of the American market.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canadian PM under scrutiny for forced labor imports
2·25 days agoThere is a strong faction within China that has definitely strongly right wing. China is a ‘no party’ system, where factions of all positions form the ruling government. This is very evident in the ruling bodies of many of the provinces, where many ‘Communist party’ governance bodies are very right-wing in many aspects. But overall, the general push in China is to more leisure time and a better work-life balance in the major high wealth cities. Forced labor does not make sense in a country with more workers than jobs available.
But please, explain exactly what your notion is of ‘forced labor’ in China? How is it different from, say, the labor practices of the ‘right to work’ States like Alabama, where the wages in a lot of workplaces are basically poverty-level, there is no State limit on hours worked or State minimum wage, and you have to work to survive? I really do not believe that those shouting ‘forced labor’ really have any concept of what it is, and generally apply the term as a general ‘talking point’ against the opposition. ‘Forced labor’ and ‘poor working conditions’ are not the same. Unions think ALL non-union non-management jobs are ‘forced labor’, because the worker has no say in the working conditions.
In Alabama, if there were no federal labor law, there would be no law at all. https://labor.alabama.gov/Wage_and_Hour_Info.pdf
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canadian PM under scrutiny for forced labor imports
5·26 days agoWhat about countries where, if you do not work, you do not live unless you either beg, or are a criminal, or you are in a family that can support you (i.e., without a job you are impoverished without a social safety net and starve to death)? Is that ‘forced labor’? Like the typical right-wing talking point “You lazy indigent, either work or starve”? If you are paid, is it ‘forced labor’? Otherwise, it is just ‘slavery’, not ‘forced labor’.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•54% Of Canadians Agree With Banning IDF Service: Poll
6·26 days agoThere have been many instances of Canadians serving with the American armed forces.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•54% Of Canadians Agree With Banning IDF Service: Poll
6·26 days agoThat applies to the recruiter while in Canada, that does not pertain to the one being recruited.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canada in the European Union? Poll suggests broad openness to the idea
5·26 days agoThe BNA act that formed the political entity called Canada was an Act of the British Parliament. It was so up until Trudeau Sr. brought the constitution back to Canada. Parts of what is now called Canada was founded originally by the French, other parts by the British, some allegedly by the Vikings, another part by the Knights Templar and even the Spaniards (if you follow such things as the Curse of Oak Island), but mostly it was the indigenous peoples that first populated Canada.
But nevertheless France and Spain are also part of the EU.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canada in the European Union? Poll suggests broad openness to the idea
1·26 days agoActually, the benefit of it was that our ‘constitution’ was governed by the British in the BNA act, and it formed the basis of English-French (Quebec) debate, up until Trudeau Sr. brought the constitution back to Canada. THAT era made for some lively some political intrigue. Until then, Quebec could only seek ‘constitutional’ change through an Act of the British Parliament.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canada in the European Union? Poll suggests broad openness to the idea
6·27 days agoAfter all, Canada started as a British colony. The European roots go deep.
Interestingly, if this was the early 1900’s, Canada could have been caught up in the entire Brexit thing. As went Britain, so went Canada, at the time.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canada in the European Union? Poll suggests broad openness to the idea
2·27 days agoOur entire first 100 years as a nation was European based. Please recall, up until the last few decades of our insistence, we were essentially a British colony.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.caOPto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Solar power in Africa is heating up — thanks in part to chili peppers
3·27 days agoIf Africa can keep the American hands off the country, it will happen. Africa gets mega-huge amounts of sunlight, the perfect place for solar farms.
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canada in the European Union? Poll suggests broad openness to the idea
21·27 days agoCanada using the Euro as its international trading currency? I wonder if the Americans will take it ‘at par’?
ProudCanadianCitizen@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Chinese Embassy in Canada Exploits Michael Ma comments to deny forced-labour - DisinfoWatch
2·1 month agoThe name says it all - Disinformation.
At least they warn you in their name that what you are about to read is complete disinformation.
Imagine that - a news media who’s purpose is to counter facts with disinformation.

So is Trump. What exactly is the issue?