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Who do you intend to vote for in the next Federal General Election?

Liberals
33
13%
Conservatives
72
29%
NDP
73
29%
Bloc Quebecois
15
6%
Greens
11
4%
PPC
13
5%
None of the above (please explain why in the thread)
34
14%
 
Total votes : 251

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Luziyca
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Founded: Nov 13, 2011
Civil Rights Lovefest

Postby Luziyca » Tue May 30, 2023 10:37 am

Shrillland wrote:CBC just did the same....NDP put up a hell of a fight though, particularly in Calgary, and they made some gains.

They did: the NDP gained ten or eleven more seats than they had coming into this election, and I think assuming the NDP plays their cards right, they will be poised to win again in 2027 (although I'm not sure if Rachel Notley will be leading the Alberta NDP by then given she's already leading the NDP for nearly a decade now).
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Shrillland
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Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Shrillland » Tue May 30, 2023 3:37 pm

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Luziyca
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Civil Rights Lovefest

Postby Luziyca » Tue May 30, 2023 5:24 pm


Damn: I hope my aunts who live out there are doing alright.

As for the supply and confidence agreement between the federal NDP and the Liberals (or as many of my compatriots call it, the Liberal-NDP coalition), Singh will be keeping the agreement as is "until confidence in the electoral system is restored" and would not support forcing a federal election.
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Kubra
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Posts: 17203
Founded: Apr 15, 2006
Father Knows Best State

Postby Kubra » Tue May 30, 2023 6:47 pm

Nilokeras wrote:
Bahrimontagn wrote:
Just champagne socialist things


I mean, not even champagne socialist - the party was trumpeting a commitment to keeping corporate taxes low on twitter, if that gives any indication of their tenor. The best way to understand the Alberta NDP and its tactics in this election is that they're essentially just small l-liberals who have a profound aesthetic revulsion towards the UCP and want to bring back Sensible Government by Serious People.

And sometimes that works - it got the BC NDP a razor thin majority in 2017 that they successfully maneuvered into a larger majority on the back of a desperately out of touch BC Liberal government. It worked for the federal Liberals in 2015 in the face of a Harper government that was tired and made major missteps in its attempt to shift the political consensus rightward.

But I don't think Notley or the Alberta NDP has that special sauce, that combo of a minimum amount of personal charisma and a few attention-grabbing line-in-the-sand signature policies, to pull it off. To that extent it's quite similar to the 2013 election in BC, where the BC Liberals were also in a rut and the BC NDP was polling in majority territory, but when the ballots came in the BC Liberals came away with a majority because the then-leader Adrian Dix also just didn't have that special sauce. I suspect Ces is right and the Alberta NDP are going to underperform significantly when the chips go down because of it.
Yeah, ANDP watered down. They, at least by their reckoning, had to.
I mean electoral politics means you're gonna water yourself down, unless you're the liberals and only consist of water. So you approach the bluest province and figure "how the fuck am I gonna win this coming election" and the only feasible solution is to don the blue yourself (quite literally, in this case).
You know how it is, the ANDP got teased with a term of government and now they're fighting just to challenge the one-party system itself, rather than pass any particular policy with any particular conviction. Maybe they'd do better in an election or two if they sacrificed seats this one to take a more principled stand, but that's asking way too much of a party desperate for validation. Who knows, maybe the capital L Liberals will sense an opportunity after Polliviere has had a couple years in office and sweep up the ANDP in the same way Trudeau did Mulcair.

Luziyca wrote:

Damn: I hope my aunts who live out there are doing alright.

As for the supply and confidence agreement between the federal NDP and the Liberals (or as many of my compatriots call it, the Liberal-NDP coalition), Singh will be keeping the agreement as is "until confidence in the electoral system is restored" and would not support forcing a federal election.
I really don't get why he simply refuses to say the actual reasons he won't back out and instead resorts to this kind of shit. This is arguably weaker.
Last edited by Kubra on Tue May 30, 2023 7:10 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Nilokeras
Senator
 
Posts: 3955
Founded: Jul 14, 2020
Ex-Nation

Postby Nilokeras » Tue May 30, 2023 8:15 pm

Kubra wrote:Yeah, ANDP watered down. They, at least by their reckoning, had to.
I mean electoral politics means you're gonna water yourself down, unless you're the liberals and only consist of water. So you approach the bluest province and figure "how the fuck am I gonna win this coming election" and the only feasible solution is to don the blue yourself (quite literally, in this case).
You know how it is, the ANDP got teased with a term of government and now they're fighting just to challenge the one-party system itself, rather than pass any particular policy with any particular conviction. Maybe they'd do better in an election or two if they sacrificed seats this one to take a more principled stand, but that's asking way too much of a party desperate for validation. Who knows, maybe the capital L Liberals will sense an opportunity after Polliviere has had a couple years in office and sweep up the ANDP in the same way Trudeau did Mulcair.


I wish the modern NDP was more conversant with its own history, because there are good examples of how to challenge a one-party monopoly out there for them to mine.

BC used to be a one-party Social Credit state like Alberta and the other prairie provinces, with a tired WAC 'Wacky' Bennett government trundling into the 1972 election on the heels of a series of gaffes and scandals. Dave Barrett, leader of the BC NDP, ran a smart campaign that contrasted his youth and Bennett's out-of-touch government with some smart technocratic policies like extracting higher royalties from resource extraction (sound familiar?) and public transit. He managed an upset victory that got him a shock majority government, the first time a non-Socred government had been in power for over 20 years. A very similar story to Notley in many ways.

After the election the BC NDP didn't try to triangulate against the Socred voters who had evidently jumped ship over to him to push his party over the edge like Notley did, though. Instead he rammed through a blitzkrieg legislative campaign, passing an average of three bills a day and created the institutions of modern BC: the Agricultural Land Reserve, our public auto insurer ICBC, BC's pharmacare program, bans on corporal punishment in schools, our human rights laws, the air ambulance service, mining royalties, you name it. He said it pretty directly - his government was 'here for a good time, not for a long time'.

He picked too many fights and lost the next election pretty definitively, but the strategy worked - many of the policies that he implemented were so popular that the following Socred government couldn't touch them, and in so doing he pushed the window of political acceptability leftward for the first time in BC political history. I don't think you would get the modern BC NDP ascendancy without his transformative premiership, even though it took decades for those transformations to catalyze the electorate's shift leftward.

It's a difficult pitch for a political consultant to make for a respectable middle class social democrat/liberal party though, compared to trying to lean on nervous UCP voters and say 'we're not so bad, we're just going to do what you want to do, but competently'. They're used to thinking in terms of swing voters and targeted messaging, not wielding power and using it to transform the political landscape at the cost of an election in the short term.
Last edited by Nilokeras on Tue May 30, 2023 8:20 pm, edited 3 times in total.

User avatar
Kubra
Post Marshal
 
Posts: 17203
Founded: Apr 15, 2006
Father Knows Best State

Postby Kubra » Wed May 31, 2023 5:56 am

Nilokeras wrote:
Kubra wrote:Yeah, ANDP watered down. They, at least by their reckoning, had to.
I mean electoral politics means you're gonna water yourself down, unless you're the liberals and only consist of water. So you approach the bluest province and figure "how the fuck am I gonna win this coming election" and the only feasible solution is to don the blue yourself (quite literally, in this case).
You know how it is, the ANDP got teased with a term of government and now they're fighting just to challenge the one-party system itself, rather than pass any particular policy with any particular conviction. Maybe they'd do better in an election or two if they sacrificed seats this one to take a more principled stand, but that's asking way too much of a party desperate for validation. Who knows, maybe the capital L Liberals will sense an opportunity after Polliviere has had a couple years in office and sweep up the ANDP in the same way Trudeau did Mulcair.


I wish the modern NDP was more conversant with its own history, because there are good examples of how to challenge a one-party monopoly out there for them to mine.

BC used to be a one-party Social Credit state like Alberta and the other prairie provinces, with a tired WAC 'Wacky' Bennett government trundling into the 1972 election on the heels of a series of gaffes and scandals. Dave Barrett, leader of the BC NDP, ran a smart campaign that contrasted his youth and Bennett's out-of-touch government with some smart technocratic policies like extracting higher royalties from resource extraction (sound familiar?) and public transit. He managed an upset victory that got him a shock majority government, the first time a non-Socred government had been in power for over 20 years. A very similar story to Notley in many ways.

After the election the BC NDP didn't try to triangulate against the Socred voters who had evidently jumped ship over to him to push his party over the edge like Notley did, though. Instead he rammed through a blitzkrieg legislative campaign, passing an average of three bills a day and created the institutions of modern BC: the Agricultural Land Reserve, our public auto insurer ICBC, BC's pharmacare program, bans on corporal punishment in schools, our human rights laws, the air ambulance service, mining royalties, you name it. He said it pretty directly - his government was 'here for a good time, not for a long time'.

He picked too many fights and lost the next election pretty definitively, but the strategy worked - many of the policies that he implemented were so popular that the following Socred government couldn't touch them, and in so doing he pushed the window of political acceptability leftward for the first time in BC political history. I don't think you would get the modern BC NDP ascendancy without his transformative premiership, even though it took decades for those transformations to catalyze the electorate's shift leftward.

It's a difficult pitch for a political consultant to make for a respectable middle class social democrat/liberal party though, compared to trying to lean on nervous UCP voters and say 'we're not so bad, we're just going to do what you want to do, but competently'. They're used to thinking in terms of swing voters and targeted messaging, not wielding power and using it to transform the political landscape at the cost of an election in the short term.
Well you know how it is over here it was the PC's who ousted the socreds, and we both know why that didn't break the one-party state.
In any case, maybe there was a case for this approach back in 2015, but hindsight is 20/20 and it's hard to make a case now for any upset NDP victories that don't involve Lougheed cosplay, despite comrade Smith's hard work to the contrary. The plan at this point is probably just to stay relevant and "electable" in time to pick up the pieces of the next oil bust (and then be blamed for it again).
Last edited by Kubra on Wed May 31, 2023 5:58 am, edited 1 time in total.
“Atomic war is inevitable. It will destroy half of humanity: it is going to destroy immense human riches. It is very possible. The atomic war is going to provoke a true inferno on Earth. But it will not impede Communism.”
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San Lumen
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Posts: 87265
Founded: Jul 02, 2009
Liberal Democratic Socialists

Postby San Lumen » Wed May 31, 2023 9:02 am

https://www.westernstandard.news/albert ... bd60f.html

Smith to create 'council of defeated' to advise on Edmonton issues

I fail to see how this is in anyway democratic or helps the UCP. Does Smith not realize Edmonton has representatives the residents voted for in a free and fair election? Why not listen to what they have to say?
Last edited by San Lumen on Wed May 31, 2023 9:02 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Shrillland
Postmaster of the Fleet
 
Posts: 22249
Founded: Apr 12, 2010
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Shrillland » Fri Jun 02, 2023 3:31 pm

How America Came to This, by Kowani: Racialised Politics, Ideological Media Gaslighting, and What It All Means For The Future
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Port Caverton
Negotiator
 
Posts: 5210
Founded: Oct 01, 2021
Ex-Nation

Postby Port Caverton » Fri Jun 02, 2023 6:52 pm


If you change the first P by a G, the second P by an O and the C by a P you get "GOP". Coincidence? I think not!
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Kubra
Post Marshal
 
Posts: 17203
Founded: Apr 15, 2006
Father Knows Best State

Postby Kubra » Sat Jun 03, 2023 11:55 pm

San Lumen wrote:https://www.westernstandard.news/alberta/smith-to-create-council-of-defeated-to-advise-on-edmonton-issues/article_3800bec4-ff19-11ed-a538-a30c548bd60f.html

Smith to create 'council of defeated' to advise on Edmonton issues

I fail to see how this is in anyway democratic or helps the UCP. Does Smith not realize Edmonton has representatives the residents voted for in a free and fair election? Why not listen to what they have to say?
blues for the most part have given up on Edmonton. It's where they've always underperformed and this election solidified how little that's ever gonna change.
“Atomic war is inevitable. It will destroy half of humanity: it is going to destroy immense human riches. It is very possible. The atomic war is going to provoke a true inferno on Earth. But it will not impede Communism.”
Comrade J. Posadas

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Shrillland
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Founded: Apr 12, 2010
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Shrillland » Sun Jun 04, 2023 7:23 am

San Lumen wrote:https://www.westernstandard.news/alberta/smith-to-create-council-of-defeated-to-advise-on-edmonton-issues/article_3800bec4-ff19-11ed-a538-a30c548bd60f.html

Smith to create 'council of defeated' to advise on Edmonton issues

I fail to see how this is in anyway democratic or helps the UCP. Does Smith not realize Edmonton has representatives the residents voted for in a free and fair election? Why not listen to what they have to say?


Canada does this all the time. Hell, it's what the Senate's for for the most part.
How America Came to This, by Kowani: Racialised Politics, Ideological Media Gaslighting, and What It All Means For The Future
Plebiscite Plaza 2024
Confused by the names I use for House districts? Here's a primer!
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Port Caverton
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Founded: Oct 01, 2021
Ex-Nation

Postby Port Caverton » Sun Jun 04, 2023 1:27 pm

"My fellow Americans, I'm pleased to tell you today that I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes."

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Bear Stearns
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Founded: Dec 02, 2018
Capitalizt

Postby Bear Stearns » Sun Jun 04, 2023 2:25 pm

Do you all remember the convoy protest? Remember
when they honked their horns so much it was essentially terrorism and a threat to democracy.
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El Lazaro
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Posts: 6002
Founded: Oct 19, 2021
Left-wing Utopia

Postby El Lazaro » Sun Jun 04, 2023 2:41 pm

San Lumen wrote:https://www.westernstandard.news/alberta/smith-to-create-council-of-defeated-to-advise-on-edmonton-issues/article_3800bec4-ff19-11ed-a538-a30c548bd60f.html

Smith to create 'council of defeated' to advise on Edmonton issues

I fail to see how this is in anyway democratic or helps the UCP. Does Smith not realize Edmonton has representatives the residents voted for in a free and fair election? Why not listen to what they have to say?

Lumen when he learns about shadow cabinets: This is basically what Hitler did but more unfair and stupider.

Ok so, what they’re probably doing here is giving useless jobs and publicity to failed candidates so they can campaign sort of as if they had won and remain loyal to the party despite lacking actual power. It’s not a question of changing the law, but keeping party members happy and annoying the elected council. Unscrupulous and even mildly uncivil? Yes. A power grab? Pretty lame and ineffective if it is one.

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Greater Cesnica
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Left-Leaning College State

Postby Greater Cesnica » Mon Jun 05, 2023 3:59 am

Bear Stearns wrote:Do you all remember the convoy protest? Remember
when they honked their horns so much it was essentially terrorism and a threat to democracy.

Many Canadians tend to have the memory of a goldfish.
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Luziyca
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Founded: Nov 13, 2011
Civil Rights Lovefest

Postby Luziyca » Fri Jun 09, 2023 4:37 pm

Former Governor-General David Johnston has resigned as special rapporteur due to the "highly partisan atmosphere" over his ties to the Trudeaus.

Personally, I support an inquiry, especially if it examined all foreign interference in Canadian politics and not just Chinese interference.
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Shrillland
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Founded: Apr 12, 2010
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Shrillland » Wed Jun 14, 2023 1:00 pm

I forgot my cue! There's four federal byelections coming up, so here's my take on next week.

Quebec: Notre-Dame-de-Grace-Westmount, a Montreal seat with one of two major Anglophone cells(Beaconsfield on the southern part of the island is the other) is a Liberal stronghold whose seat is empty after former Foreign Minister Marc Garneau's retirement. The Liberals will easily hold it with Former Party President Anna Gainey being elected, but given the Liberals slump in the polls, she won't get an absolute majority.

Ontario: Oxford's up for a vote following Conservative Dave McKenzie's retirement. He's been the only MP for 20 years, and it did have Liberal leanings before him, but I do think National Conservative Outreach Chair Arpan Khanna will take the seat with a good swing his way as well.

Manitoba: Two ridings up here, and arguably the ones to watch on Monday. First, Winnipeg South Centre is open after former Liberal Minister Jim Carr died of cancer in December. Given the past results and the national trends, I think this will be a closer race than some might expect. Ben Carr, the former MP's son, is running for the Liberals while air traffic controller and RCAF reservist Damir Stipanovic is running for the Conservatives and Julia Riddell is making a second run for the NDP. It'll come down to Carr against Stipanovic, and there's a chance Stipanovic will take the seat, though I'm still leaning towards Carr squeaking out a win.

Over to Portage-Lisgar. Conservative MP and former Interim Leader Candice Bergen's resigning, and her former campaign manager, Branden Leslie, is set to win. It's still one to watch, however, as this was, in 2021, the People's Party's best performing seat, coming in second with 21% of the vote, and PPC Leader Maxime Bernier's swooped in to take advantage of it. If he can keep a respectable second next week, he'll still be around to make hay for a few more years to come.
How America Came to This, by Kowani: Racialised Politics, Ideological Media Gaslighting, and What It All Means For The Future
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Confused by the names I use for House districts? Here's a primer!
In 1963, Doctor Who taught us all we need to know about politics when a cave woman said, "Old men see no further than tomorrow's meat".

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San Lumen
Post Kaiser
 
Posts: 87265
Founded: Jul 02, 2009
Liberal Democratic Socialists

Postby San Lumen » Wed Jun 14, 2023 4:22 pm

Bear Stearns wrote:Do you all remember the convoy protest? Remember
when they honked their horns so much it was essentially terrorism and a threat to democracy.


They were also shutting down the capital. I would have hooked up tow trucks and dragged their semis away.

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San Lumen
Post Kaiser
 
Posts: 87265
Founded: Jul 02, 2009
Liberal Democratic Socialists

Postby San Lumen » Wed Jun 14, 2023 4:23 pm

El Lazaro wrote:
San Lumen wrote:https://www.westernstandard.news/alberta/smith-to-create-council-of-defeated-to-advise-on-edmonton-issues/article_3800bec4-ff19-11ed-a538-a30c548bd60f.html

Smith to create 'council of defeated' to advise on Edmonton issues

I fail to see how this is in anyway democratic or helps the UCP. Does Smith not realize Edmonton has representatives the residents voted for in a free and fair election? Why not listen to what they have to say?

Lumen when he learns about shadow cabinets: This is basically what Hitler did but more unfair and stupider.

Ok so, what they’re probably doing here is giving useless jobs and publicity to failed candidates so they can campaign sort of as if they had won and remain loyal to the party despite lacking actual power. It’s not a question of changing the law, but keeping party members happy and annoying the elected council. Unscrupulous and even mildly uncivil? Yes. A power grab? Pretty lame and ineffective if it is one.


How can they campaign as is if they won? Why not listen to who the people of the capital elected to represent them?

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Luziyca
Post Czar
 
Posts: 38283
Founded: Nov 13, 2011
Civil Rights Lovefest

Postby Luziyca » Wed Jun 14, 2023 9:26 pm

In Saskatchewan news, the NDP has selected the third of its three candidates for the upcoming by-elections in the Regina area (two in Regina itself, and one in a rural riding close to Regina).

I'm really looking forward to seeing how things pan out when the by-elections are called (which I suspect will be sooner rather than later) because I do think that the NDP will gain a couple of seats in Regina (i.e. Regina Walsh Acres and Regina Coronation Park), and probably increase their vote share in Lumsden-Morse, even if the SaskParty does keep the seat.
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Bear Stearns
Postmaster-General
 
Posts: 11831
Founded: Dec 02, 2018
Capitalizt

Postby Bear Stearns » Fri Jun 16, 2023 1:20 pm

San Lumen wrote:
Bear Stearns wrote:Do you all remember the convoy protest? Remember
when they honked their horns so much it was essentially terrorism and a threat to democracy.


They were also shutting down the capital. I would have hooked up tow trucks and dragged their semis away.


parking trucks and honking horns is terrorism
The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. is a New York-based global investment bank, securities trading and brokerage firm. Its main business areas are capital markets, investment banking, wealth management and global clearing services. Bear Stearns was founded as an equity trading house on May Day 1923 by Joseph Ainslie Bear, Robert B. Stearns and Harold C. Mayer with $500,000 in capital.
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Senkaku
Postmaster of the Fleet
 
Posts: 26709
Founded: Sep 01, 2012
Corrupt Dictatorship

Postby Senkaku » Fri Jun 16, 2023 1:47 pm

https://biv.com/article/2023/06/arny-wise-city-vancouver-owes-public-answers-over-senakw-deal?amp
https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2023/04/21/Housing-Cost-Trudeau-Next-Election/
https://www.cbc.ca/newsinteractives/features/land-back-podcast-episode-5-senakw-development

Where are Canadian posters at on the Sen̓áḵw development being built by Vancouver and the Squamish Nation? It’s been getting a lot of play in urbanist/lefty circles down in the States often as an example of the kind of visionary large-scale development we’d like to see American cities building to alleviate the housing and climate crises (as well as trying to mend fences with indigenous nations), but I know it’s also faced a lot of pushback from nearby residents, and seems to have also drawn the ire of at least some of the city’s business and real estate establishment. I wish Seattle would work with some of the tribes whose reservations are inside its suburban periphery on similar projects, but it can’t even build a two-mile light-rail extension in under 20 years, so I don’t have much hope.
Last edited by Senkaku on Fri Jun 16, 2023 1:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Bahrimontagn
Diplomat
 
Posts: 505
Founded: Jan 20, 2023
Ex-Nation

Postby Bahrimontagn » Sat Jun 17, 2023 9:02 am

Bear Stearns wrote:Do you all remember the convoy protest? Remember
when they honked their horns so much it was essentially terrorism and a threat to democracy.


Are you joking lol
"The last person to enter parliament with honest intentions was Guy Fawkes"

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El Lazaro
Negotiator
 
Posts: 6002
Founded: Oct 19, 2021
Left-wing Utopia

Postby El Lazaro » Sun Jun 18, 2023 8:18 am

Greater Miami Shores 3 are tories actually commies?

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Greater Miami Shores 3
Negotiator
 
Posts: 5295
Founded: Jul 24, 2021
Ex-Nation

Postby Greater Miami Shores 3 » Sun Jun 18, 2023 8:32 am

El Lazaro wrote:Greater Miami Shores 3 are tories actually commies?

GMS: Communists too you, Canadian Nationalist Patriots too me, I strongly support Black Jamaican, Canadian Leslyn Lewis as a future Prime Minister of Canada and first Lady Prime Minister of Canada, I will honor her on my real world based nation of NS Ottawa Canada.

I once visited Canada's Niagara Falls as a tourist, with a large group of family, at least 2 of our family was not allowed to enter Canada, because they did not have the proper legal papers to enter Canada and they had to stay on the New York side of the falls in the USA.

There is a fence on the Canada USA Border to keep illegal migrants out.

This is an old link and of course laws change from time to time depending on the governments in power: http://www.neverhome.ca/deportation/

I actually have Cuban relatives in Canada, the head of the family is a doctor, who immigrated legally to Canada the right way.
Last edited by Greater Miami Shores 3 on Sun Jun 18, 2023 9:30 am, edited 7 times in total.

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