Liberal Leader Mark Carney admitted that he did not publicly disclose that U.S. President Donald Trump discussed Canada becoming part of the United States in a March 28 call that Carney previously described as respectful towards Canada’s sovereignty. https://t.co/3ZF26Hrg72
The Prime Minister's own top advisors are predicting doom for Canada if we continue on our current path of Liberal policy.
Here is the report:
https://t.co/T2mjLMmPb9
Before you vote, please think about this advice and what it means for you and your children.
Carney says he will balance the budget in 3 years...
If that sounds familiar, it's because that's EXACTLY what Trudeau in 2015. 2 years of "modest" deficits then back to balance in year 3.
The Liberals NEVER balanced the books, they ran 10 straight deficits & doubled the debt.
Breaking news, the Governor General approved $40.3 billion in spending while the government is shutdown. CBC gets $178 million and CSIS gets $127 million.
Unbelievable, given we are in an election, knowing the last three elections had foreign interference.
Here is a clip from last night's Poilievre's rally that CBC News isn't showing today because their survival depends on creating the false illusion that Carney can control Trump
"Almost every country in the world got a pause on American tariffs, but not us."
"Almost every country in the world got a pause on American tariffs, but not us. He said that he had made progress with the President. What progress?"
"And no one can control this president."
" Carney is running his entire campaign on a false promise that he can control the President through magical, masterful negotiating techniques. Well, we know now that that is not true."
"Carney would ask you to overlook an entire decade of rising costs and crime and falling economy that is under the thumb of the Americans simply because he promises that somehow he's a master negotiator."
"What we are deciding in this election is can we afford a fourth liberal term of rising costs and crime and a weakened economy?" @PierrePoilievre
We have just been slaughtered with bad management. It's, it's so depressing to look at the numbers. They don't lie. This isn't emotional. We actually only grew 1.4% in a decade. Not per year, in the whole decade. No one has ever done that, ever before, to Canada. Why would anybody want more of that? I just don't understand it.
Trudeau is an empty suit. He was the idiot king. It's so unfortunate for Canada. Butts did all the policy, along with Telfer. And so they're still there. Butts is hell-bent on turning Canada into a green utopia. No energy, no pipelines, no development of resources. I don't see Canada surviving as an economy with these policies amped up.
@DanielaCambone
BREAKING
More TAX DODGING from Carney.
Carney registered a $5B fund in the Cayman Islands & at least $30B in funds between Bermuda and the Cayman Islands.
All to AVOID paying Canadian taxes.
Carney must COME CLEAN & reveal how much money he has in OFFSHORE TAX HAVENS.
INFORMATION & MEET THE COACHES NIGHT
Monday, June 26 @ 8 pm
Genesis Arena - Rotary Room
Check out for more info and to RSVP: https://t.co/5NGc8cHZkj
Josh Waitzkin was a chess prodigy.
He won the U.S. Junior Chess Championship at age 11. He became an International Master at age 16. And his life was made into a movie (“Searching for Bobby Fischer”) at 17.
But then, around the age of 18, Waitzkin quit playing chess because…
He got a new coach.
“I was a naturally creative, aggressive chess player,” Waitzkin explained.
But the new coach forced Waitzkin to play like the great chess players Anatoly Karpov and Tigran Petrosian—“the most positional, conservative chess players.”
When he was forced to play in a way that didn’t align with his natural proclivities, Waitzkin said, “I lost my love for the game.”
So he quit.
He later took up martial arts, and after just 2 years of training, he won his first national championship in martial arts.
Asked if he took anything from chess into the martial arts, Waitzkin said he leaned into his unique physical and mental traits:
“And in my observation of competitors in any discipline, this a really fundamental idea. Those who succeed at the highest level, I think, basically manifest their unique character through their discipline.”
Takeaway 1:
Waitzkin said he was at his best (as a chess player then a martial artist) when his style aligned with his personality.
This is known in economics as “match quality”—the degree of alignment between the traits of a profession and the traits of a person.
The NBA executive turned venture capitalist, Sam Hinkie, was asked how he thought about shaping his career path.
Essentially, Hinkie said he tried to optimize for match quality.
“By nature,” Hinkie explained, “I think in decades, and I have a steady temperament.”
So, Hinkie thought, “Can you get to a place where there is leverage on that kind of thinking, where that kind of steady temperament is rewarded?”
Takeaway 2:
Waitzkin writes in his book, “The Art of Learning,” that “one of the most critical factors in becoming a high performer is the degree to which your relationship to your pursuit stays in harmony with your unique disposition.”
The music producer Rick Rubin is a good example of this.
Rubin is a voracious consumer of art. He’s constantly listening to music, reading a book, watching a movie, at a museum, or driving around just to look at beautiful architecture.
“It’s all I do,” Rubin told screenwriter Brian Koppelman. “But not because it’s my job. It’s like, my job is my job because the person that I am loves to do those things.”
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“It seems to me that each of us expressing our own originality is the essence of our art and professionalism.” — Jim Henson
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