

The CEO openly admitting he didn’t have any plans in place for if the workers went on strike because he figured the government wouldn’t allow them to is mind blowing.
The CEO openly admitting he didn’t have any plans in place for if the workers went on strike because he figured the government wouldn’t allow them to is mind blowing.
the council voted to put the flag back up, alongside China’s, in a bid to stay neutral in the geopolitical dispute.
I don’t think they get it, but their heart is in the right place.
This sucks. Poilievre went around shaking hands with union members and it was a big part of his surge in popularity. He’s absolutely not going to do anything to help them, but union members who voted Liberal might be swayed into voting Conservative. It’s like how people didn’t like Harris’ take on Isreal-Palestine so they voted for Trump. I unfortunately think Poilievre will be replacing Carney soon enough, and for all the wrong reasons.
I had to read the article to make sense of it. The “gaming” market in Japan has tripled in size, but the amount of PC gamers has dropped. So essentially, not only do most people buy consoles, a lot of PC gamers have also Switch 2 consoles.
Lots of conflicting opinions in this article, but it is written by a Toronto Star columnist.
Carney should take a firm stance with the US:
During the election, Carney won on promises of an “elbows up” defence of Canadian sovereignty.
And if that offends Donald Trump? “So be it.”
However, Canada would immediately fall to US aggression (so dont piss off Trump?):
McQuaig is critical of Carney’s strategy, and is alarmed by the suggestion that he plans to defend the Canadian border against the U.S. military. “We will never win,” she said.
Carney needs to put money into public projects:
Canada’s most urgent problems will not be solved by investing in the military, she said. Solutions to the housing crisis, cost of living, food insecurity, and the erosion of health and long-term care are more likely to be found through increased public investment.
However, pushing through megaprojects is bad:
“I’m concerned about all this fast-tracking of projects if it is going to compromise aspects of our democracy that are important, such as consultation with Indigenous people, giving them a fair voice, and various climate and environmental considerations.” “Preserving our democratic process is more important than any megaproject,” she said.
Carney needs to be more diplomatic:
"The answer is more international diplomacy, more cooperation, more understanding.”
However, Carney should arrest the leader of Isreal:
McQuaig went further and said Canada should assist the International Criminal Court (ICC) in apprehending Benjamin Netanyahu and placing him under arrest.
Are you telling me the channel cannot afford a fancy new Samsung NVME 5.0 drive to install just Bazzite on for benchmarking/funsies???
That part confuses me too. Does this tech YouTuber only have one computer? He couldn’t do a clean install on computer for testing purposes? Isn’t that what these channels normally do?
I always see those videos where people give kids a walkman or a rotary phone and ask them to figure out what it is or how it works. I’m imagining some medieval merchant handing me an abacus and laughing because I can’t figure it out.
Easy to say until an American writes you a huge cheque check.
Yes. Courts ruled the government would be violating section 7, “Life, liberty and security of the person”. Section 33 is the notwithstanding clause which allows governments to ignore section 7, among many others.
Section 33, Notwithstanding clause:
Parliament or the legislature of a province may expressly declare in an Act of Parliament or of the legislature, as the case may be, that the Act or a provision thereof shall operate notwithstanding a provision included in section 2 or sections 7 to 15 of this Charter.
If you’re curious about which rights the government is allowed to ignore:
Section 2(a) – Freedom of religion
Section 2(b) – Freedom of expression
Section 2© – Freedom of peaceful assembly
Section 2(d) – Freedom of association
Section 7 – Life, liberty and security of the person
Section 8 – Search and seizure
Section 9 – Arbitrary detention
Section 10(a) – Right to be informed of reasons for detention or arrest
Section 10(b) – Right to counsel
Section 10© – Habeas corpus
Section 11(a) – Right to be informed without unreasonable delay of the specific offence charged
Section 11(b) – Trial within a reasonable time
Section 11© – Protection against testimonial compulsion
Section 11(d) – Presumption of innocence
Section 11(e) – Right not to be denied reasonable bail without just cause
Section 11(f) – Trial by jury
Section 11(g) – Retroactive offences
Section 11(h) – Protection against double jeopardy
Section 11(i) – Lesser punishment
Section 12 – Cruel and unusual treatment or punishment
Section 13 – Protection against self-incrimination
Section 14 – Right to an interpreter
Section 15 – Equality rights
Hot take: anyone who hospitalizes someone else with life threatening injuries should be required to defend that action in court. “I was defending myself” is a valid argument, but one that should be heard by a judge at trial. Nobody should be allowed to skip trial entirely just by claiming self defence.