This is the stupidest article I have ever read on Canada - and with all the rubbish Canada’s overcompensated tenured Grauniadofcom establishment (Laurentian) comes up with (e.g., Coyne, Cohen, Delacourt, Frum, Walkom, Olive, Benzie, the whole 習B習, etc.) that’s saying something.
> Mark Carney is the greatest prime minister Canada has ever seen.
What absolute bollox. Governor Carney 省長 is basically Justin without the crazy cat boomer hormone stimulation. Apparently he was no good as an actual bank governor either, as opposed to a wannabe Chinese provincial governor.
> All it takes is one more prime minister [you mean MP] willing to cross the floor — to rise above tribal politics.
So long as the Liberals keep on grovelling to Quebec separatists, both open and closeted, “rise above tribal politics”, albeit absurd, is not-that-funny a joke.
> and Canada finally sheds its minority mindset. When you speak with so much clarity that your opponent starts nodding instead of shouting, that’s real power.
And how do you project that power? By raiding military museums? By screwing around procurement contracts? By DEI?
> Take the Alberta pipeline issue.
A proper discussion, sure, unburdened by rubbish about “climate”.
> Carney knows it likely won’t get built. He knows it probably doesn’t make economic or environmental sense in the long run.
Mind-bogglingly bollox. It reminds me of all the leaders all over the world SCREAMING for Canadian LNG while Justin “Ibn Fidel” assured the world that there was no “business (could he even SPELL “business”?) case (probably couldn’t spell that either) for Canadian LNG”.
> But Alberta is in a dangerous place right now — politically, culturally, emotionally — and leaving them isolated is how nations fracture.
Yes. And so long as tribes, including the Quebec tribe, have a veto over Alberta’s development and marketing of its OWN energy (a provincial resource) Alberta has every right to be VERY angry.
> So he says yes. He says your oil still matters — because it does. He (pretends to) acknowledge(s) Alberta, instead of crudely lecturing it.
So he should throw the whole weight of the federal government behind building every single pipeline NOW, using the notwithstanding clause to overrule the tribes, both French and Indian, and their sycophants on the Supreme Court.
This is what Canadian exceptionalism actually amounts to: the stubborn insistence that we’re entitled to our dreams no matter how hard reality smacks us in the face.
> And in doing so, he begins to dismantle the ideology that’s hardening there.
Imagine what’s going to happen when Alberta discovers it’s been double-crossed YET AGAIN. Hardening? Y’ain’t seen nothing yet.
> He brings Alberta back into the fold instead of pushing it further out.
What sort of moronic rubbish are you pushing here??? Unless concrete steps are taken to build the pipelines, and tangible progress is seen, Alberta WILL be pushed further out, likely irrevocably.
> Meanwhile, May and the left in B.C. will explain
May and the BC left are too thick to “explain” anything, and, even if they try, it’ll be incoherent rubbish. Tell them they have to take one for the team for a change.
> exactly why the pipelines have GOT to happen — and they’ll be right too.
Over their irrelevant objections.
> Public perception will shift. Better solutions will emerge. Solutions that actually work for everyone.
Yes. One perception that is shifting is away from EV’s and back to gasoline - a REAL counterrevolution.
> Managing people.
Sometimes idiots have to be utterly crushed.
> Holding the whole country together long enough for the right answer to appear.
I notice you didn’t mention Quebec at all, which reduces the “value” of your piece even further.
Blah Blah Blah Blah Blah!
This is the stupidest article I have ever read on Canada - and with all the rubbish Canada’s overcompensated tenured Grauniadofcom establishment (Laurentian) comes up with (e.g., Coyne, Cohen, Delacourt, Frum, Walkom, Olive, Benzie, the whole 習B習, etc.) that’s saying something.
> Mark Carney is the greatest prime minister Canada has ever seen.
What absolute bollox. Governor Carney 省長 is basically Justin without the crazy cat boomer hormone stimulation. Apparently he was no good as an actual bank governor either, as opposed to a wannabe Chinese provincial governor.
> All it takes is one more prime minister [you mean MP] willing to cross the floor — to rise above tribal politics.
So long as the Liberals keep on grovelling to Quebec separatists, both open and closeted, “rise above tribal politics”, albeit absurd, is not-that-funny a joke.
> and Canada finally sheds its minority mindset. When you speak with so much clarity that your opponent starts nodding instead of shouting, that’s real power.
And how do you project that power? By raiding military museums? By screwing around procurement contracts? By DEI?
> Take the Alberta pipeline issue.
A proper discussion, sure, unburdened by rubbish about “climate”.
> Carney knows it likely won’t get built. He knows it probably doesn’t make economic or environmental sense in the long run.
Mind-bogglingly bollox. It reminds me of all the leaders all over the world SCREAMING for Canadian LNG while Justin “Ibn Fidel” assured the world that there was no “business (could he even SPELL “business”?) case (probably couldn’t spell that either) for Canadian LNG”.
> But Alberta is in a dangerous place right now — politically, culturally, emotionally — and leaving them isolated is how nations fracture.
Yes. And so long as tribes, including the Quebec tribe, have a veto over Alberta’s development and marketing of its OWN energy (a provincial resource) Alberta has every right to be VERY angry.
> So he says yes. He says your oil still matters — because it does. He (pretends to) acknowledge(s) Alberta, instead of crudely lecturing it.
So he should throw the whole weight of the federal government behind building every single pipeline NOW, using the notwithstanding clause to overrule the tribes, both French and Indian, and their sycophants on the Supreme Court.
This is what Canadian exceptionalism actually amounts to: the stubborn insistence that we’re entitled to our dreams no matter how hard reality smacks us in the face.
> And in doing so, he begins to dismantle the ideology that’s hardening there.
Imagine what’s going to happen when Alberta discovers it’s been double-crossed YET AGAIN. Hardening? Y’ain’t seen nothing yet.
> He brings Alberta back into the fold instead of pushing it further out.
What sort of moronic rubbish are you pushing here??? Unless concrete steps are taken to build the pipelines, and tangible progress is seen, Alberta WILL be pushed further out, likely irrevocably.
> Meanwhile, May and the left in B.C. will explain
May and the BC left are too thick to “explain” anything, and, even if they try, it’ll be incoherent rubbish. Tell them they have to take one for the team for a change.
> exactly why the pipelines have GOT to happen — and they’ll be right too.
Over their irrelevant objections.
> Public perception will shift. Better solutions will emerge. Solutions that actually work for everyone.
Yes. One perception that is shifting is away from EV’s and back to gasoline - a REAL counterrevolution.
> Managing people.
Sometimes idiots have to be utterly crushed.
> Holding the whole country together long enough for the right answer to appear.
I notice you didn’t mention Quebec at all, which reduces the “value” of your piece even further.
Oh, strewth ….. to be expanded later …