BinzyBoi

joined 1 week ago
 

I have my doubts this will actually lead to anything, but I figured a number of people here would be interested in signing this.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 10 points 5 hours ago

This is the issue with the Heritage Fund. When Peter Lougheed established it and started funding it, the funds were supposed to be put towards investments in other sectors of the provincial economy so that we didn't have to rely on the boom-bust oil cycle.

Premier after premier has failed to address the issue of the fund. We just hit $30 billion in the fund last year when the value in 1985 was $14 billion. We have done fuck all to diversify the economy here, it's been all talk, with the only action being backwards investments like a new AI data centre that'll end up costing more money than it's worth.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 6 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Counter-point, council meetings and open events not being a part of politics radicalises people and further exacerbates the issues we see with political extremism since people become more prone to the thought that politicians aren't working for them, something that could actually potentially happen when politicians don't meet with constituents face-to-face.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 1 points 5 hours ago

Ordinary Sausage lookin' ass.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 21 points 1 day ago (1 children)

If he can talk about the issues of American hegemony at Davos, he can hold true to that word in a statement like this.

Oh no, the U.S. is gonna negatively affect trade with us... as if Trump isn't literally out there threatening to abandon CUSMA, a deal that he made in his first term to replace NAFTA.

If their word never seems to matter, why should we hold ourselves to their standards?

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I don't know if Australia is facing the opioid crisis the same way Canada is, but if these public washrooms are going to be accessible to the public, the government needs to take drug addiction seriously and properly address it with the money and laws that it deserves.

I recently moved back to Edmonton briefly before coming back to Calgary, and where I remember public washrooms being accessible, they were all closed off, or too monitored to make me comfortable. Washrooms that used to be public in bus terminals and downtown pedways were always conveniently "out of service", and the open ones I did come across offered by the city had two security guards sitting directly outside them.

People wash their clothes in these washrooms, inject and snort drugs, and sleep in these washrooms. Here in Calgary the Exeloos are a running jokes because they cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, and they're never available because they don't want people dealing with addictions abusing them.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 8 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I don't drink a lot of alcohol, but a while ago I wanted to experiment with using whisky as a vanilla extract substitute for baking.

Maybe the experience is different in Alberta from the rest of the country since there's no public liquor store, but while I was able to find Canadian-made whisky with ease, it was weirdly difficult finding any that were Canadian owned.

Like you take a look at the companies that own these brands and they're based in the U.S., U.K., Japan for some odd reason... You look online and can find locally-owned brands, but the trouble is finding them on store shelves.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 10 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

If it helps garner any hope, there are former MPs and MLAs on the fediverse, and two candidates in the NDP leadership election have made accounts there and regularly post.

The leader of the BC Green party, I believe her name was Emily Lowan, also has an account.

Elbows Up Digital has a tracker and campaign to get politicians onto the fediverse: https://elbowsupdigital.ca/

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Wonder why they're closing. Have lab-grown diamonds become that viable of a replacement?

Or is it because the new generation of consumers have changed their shopping habits, either because they can't afford something as expensive as a diamond, or are bucking the idea that love is something that needs to be shown with extravagance?

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 17 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (2 children)

This just reminds me of Tanille Johnston's remark during the NDP debate, where she was talking about the removal of interprovincial trade barriers, and how she was waiting for agriculture to be mentioned.

Part of the reason food prices are so expensive isn't just because of inflation, but also because of lack of consumer knowledge paired with a lack of proper domestic production and transportation of food.

For example, many recipes online will call for olive oil as a healthy food option, but the cost of olive oil is insane. Consumers need to be informed by the government that Canadian-produced sunflower seed and canola oil are just as effective in these recipes.

Another example is sugar. If people want to remove political tensions between urban and rural areas and help loosen the Conservative grip on rural communities, you need to appeal to and support farmers. Alberta has the only sugar production plant that works with domestic sugar in Taber. All other sugar production plants import sugar cane from abroad, which costs money in shipping, uses more resources, is environmentally damaging in the harvest process, and has a lower sugar yield per kilogram than domestic sugar beets. A Domestic Sugar Policy would benefit farmers, and lower the end cost of a pantry staple to Canadian shelves. It could also help us produce our own pantry essentials that we don't currently produce domestically, such as molasses which is often imported from Guatemala, a country currently in a political crisis with María Consuelo Porras.

Why are we making and buying peanut butter when we hardly grow peanuts, importing most of them from a country actively tariffing us, when we grow sunflower seeds and can make sunflower seed butter a pantry staple with ease? It'd support domestic farmers, dropping production costs we see with peanut butter. Why is it that when I go to Dollarama, they sell beans imported from China and Turkey when we're the world's largest producer of pulses?

Inflation is an issue, but this is also a failure of domestic policy when it comes to feeding ourselves and keeping money in our own economy. By investing in domestic food production and getting domestically-produced food on grocery shelves, we keep money in the Canadian economy, lessen political divides, reduce the cost of groceries at the till, and create a food landscape that further distinguishes ourselves as different from our American counterparts.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 4 points 4 days ago

To think that we could have more progressive councillors if the more progressive types didn't misread the moment and run as a municipal party.

The success of certain candidates was largely because of a rejection on the new municipal party system the provincial government put in place, and independent candidates faired much better than those aligned with a party.

Genuinely think had it not been for the terrible arena deal that Gondek would likely still be mayor. Farkas may not be the best, but honestly I'm just glad he seems to be a genuine guy and that we avoided Sonya Sharp.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

It's easy to shit on the healthcare system here, but literally just using Ctrl+F in the article reveals this:

Increased interest from American nurses was also confirmed by nursing associations in Ontario and Alberta, as well as by the nationwide Canadian Nurses Association.

[–] BinzyBoi@piefed.ca 2 points 5 days ago

Christofascist politicians.

Like Heather McPherson, Corey Hogan, Mel Hurtig, the current prime minister...

Need I go on?

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