LoveCanada

joined 4 months ago
[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca -5 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Unless you somehow think sex between consenting adults becomes abuse once they take the $4000?

No its just soul crushing and degrading that's all. $40 or $4000 doesnt matter, its still giving up one's dignity and autonomy and allowing oneself to be used for money. If its so rewarding why aren't those call girls advertising their great life to the world? Because they're not proud of what they do, and neither are their parents, that's why. Yes, it matters.

Find me the pre teen girl that woke up one morning and said, 'Id really love to be a call girl when I grow up'. They dont. But I would bet you that you WOULD find about 99% of them have been used and abused before they got into that lifestyle. I have literally had a young prostitute say to me, "Well, I'm going to be used anyway, I may as well get paid for it" Does that sound like someone who's happy in their 'chosen profession'?

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca -4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The difference between McDonalds and sex work is that the employee isnt giving up their dignity and their body autonomy for someone else's use (and often abuse). HUGE difference and equating the two is really quite disingenuous. 'I'll flip burgers for minimum wage' is nothing like 'I'll suck your dick for $50'

There are loads of workers content with their jobs? Really? I'd believe you that they were if they actually would say that but you know why they won't? Because they don't want people to know what they do. They aren't proud of the work they do and they know that exposing their work will more than likely cut off the opportunity to do any other regular job in the future. Because inherently, everyone knows that selling your body is soul crushing and demeaning despite the porn industry's attempt to make it look lucrative and enjoyable. Not surprisingly, its almost always the young and vulnerable who get drawn into it and either right away or after a few bad experiences, they end up leaving. Because its not what its portrayed to be.

I'd be fine with banning porn if that's were an option. The world wouldn't be WORSE off without it. Pretty sure a few thousands generations of people figured out how to have sex and enjoy it before porn came along. Porn sets up false expectations, especially in youth who have no idea that what their watching is not real life and not how women respond. eg. No women has ever groaned in ecstasy cause some dude is jizzing on her stomach for example. Just unrealistic versions of what orgasmic sex is like for a woman because its all made for men by men. Just recently read a report that said that near asphyxiations are become far more common as people come in to emerg units - guess where THAT idea came from? And young people, especially young girls who dont know better think that's "normal" - its not. Its not normal, and its downright dangerous.

Yes, people dont just like sex they LOVE it. And Im no prude, I have a great sex life with an amazing wife. But that doesnt mean we make it easier for people, especially women, and vulnerable young people to get into 'sex work' Theres nothing good that comes with it and like all other vices, people who argue 'well we cant stop it so we may as well legalize it' aren't usually the people who have to clean up the mess and suffer the consequences when we finally realize we have a big problem with gambling and drug use and drinking and prostitution. Making it legal doesnt solve anything, it just puts a nice veneer on something so we can pretend its not as harmful as it really is.

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

It always astounds me when we've known the harmful effects of a vice for a HUNDRED YEARS and have banned it because we knew those effects would bankrupt people, destroy marriages, cause thefts and suicides... but NO, let's forget everything that we know because there's money to be made! Woohoo!

Just insane to make it legal and THIS easy to do online.

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca 0 points 2 weeks ago

Just read a long post about many shop spaces in a shopping center in Kona, Hawaii being empty. Rents have gone up, parking has gone astronomical ($14/hr!) when it used to be free, and now tourist numbers are dropping.

Really sucks for Hawaii cause there isn't a lot of other industry besides tourism and I'm sure they'd love to go back to being a self governing sovereign country if they could.

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca 0 points 2 weeks ago

Condensation is not "pollution" thus the quotes.

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca -1 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Well, that picture is a power plant and almost everything coming out of those stacks is water vapor.

If you're going to write an article about 'carbon emissions' at least get the picture right. Just because its visible doesnt mean its "pollution".

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca -2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

These changes are long overdue and despite the description as a "gift" to corporate landlords they will be hugely helpful to 'mom and pop' landlords and to fix the very broken Landlord Tenant Board.

The proposed law shortens the rent arrears eviction notice period from 14 days to 7 days and limits tenants’ legal defenses against eviction in these cases.

If they're not paying rent, why does a tenant need 14 days for an eviction notice? In AB, we can give notice the day after rent is due, although they still have 14 days to pay after that.

LTB adjudicators will no longer be permitted to allow tenants to raise disrepair issues at eviction hearings unless tenants have notified the LTB in advance and only if they have paid off 50 per cent of the rent monies the landlord claims they owe before the day of the hearing.

Good. Because raising "repair issues" AFTER notice for non payment of rent has just been used as a delaying tactic in ON. If they have been raised BEFORE the notice they are likely legit complaints. And paying 50% of rent owing shows they are trying to catch up. Its fair.

Another one of the new measures proposes to explicitly define the circumstances under which landlords can evict tenants for persistent late rent payments.

The article doesnt state what those circumstances are but it definitely needs clarification. Being late once or twice on rent is generally not cause for eviction, but if its constant it definitely presents a problem.

Beyond countering tenant organizing, the legislation’s most drastic proposal was to open the door to eliminating security of tenure altogether. In Ontario, tenancy agreements automatically renew at the end of their term — landlords can’t increase unit turnover rates by signing tenants to expiring leases.

That one is a bit more controversial. In AB, a fixed term lease just ends on the last day of the lease, there is no tenure. If both sides are happy with the last lease, they usually make an arrangement a month or two ahead of the end date and just sign a new lease. If either party is unhappy, the lease expires and its done, no eviction needed its just over. Tenure works fine when everything is going well, but it also locks in the lease rate to whatever the gov allows.

These changes do seem to be more in favor of landlords but that's not a bad thing when the ON Landlord Tenant Board is extremely broken - tenants in ON have dragged out evictions for months and months knowing that there are several ways to game the system and ultimately no one wants to build more rental housing if they cant at least get rents paid so it ultimately hurts tenants by decreasing supply.

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca -4 points 3 weeks ago

I agree with only allowing national and provincial flags in front of government buildings. We dont have a flag put up for every cause, not sure why the pride flag deserves more recognition than an indigenous flag or Metis flags, or the Israeli or Palestinian flag or the Human Rights flag or the Ukrainian flag or any other minority group. Its Canada. If we dont want to show prejudice for or against just fly the national or provincial flag, thats it.

[–] LoveCanada@lemmy.ca 16 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

Its not just casual tourists staying home. I follow real estate prices like condos in the touristy parts of Florida and the market is flooded with sellers and prices are dropping significantly. Realtors are saying they have had condos on the market for four months without a single inquiry because the market is saturated with sellers and no one's coming down to buy. Canadians are fleeing their vacation homes.

 

Burry’s fund, Scion Asset Management, disclosed on Monday that it bought puts — bets that share prices will fall — on two stars of the AI wave: Nvidia and Palantir. Scion bought roughly US$187.6 million in puts on Nvidia and $912 million in puts on Palantir, according to Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

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