The Globe and Mail is now running opinion pieces about cutting elderly benefits because Canada faces “crippling debt.”
Perfect.
Not cut bureaucracy.
Not cut consultants.
Not cut foreign aid.
Not cut corporate welfare.
Not cut the Liberal spending machine.
Not cut the political class that created the debt bomb.
No.
Cut grandma.
That is how this always works.
Trudeau, Freeland, Carney, and the Liberal Party help bury Canada under debt.
Then the establishment media starts preparing Canadians for the “unpopular” solution.
The people who built the mess never pay.
The elderly get handed the invoice.
Canada was robbed by incompetence.
Now seniors are being told to sacrifice.
Brilliant system.
Iran has just been nominated to preside over the UN Committee for the protection of women's rights, human rights, and the prevention of terrorism.
YES, IRAN. And it was supported by the United Kingdom, Spain, and France.
This is not a joke. It's real.
- @isaacrrr7
TD report on CANADA's BRAIN DRAIN is really interesting.
Canada is quietly losing its top talent to the United States in what economists call a silent brain drain. While Canada does a strong job educating highly skilled workers in STEM, engineering, and entrepreneurship, it struggles to keep them due to higher taxes that kick in at much lower income levels, limited opportunities to scale companies, weaker commercialization of ideas, and much better pay and growth potential south of the border.
-> Talent leaves mainly through temporary US work visas rather than permanent moves
-> Outflows are heavily concentrated among the highest skilled, especially in tech and advanced degrees
-> Onward migration is worst among immigrants and top university graduates
-> Canada has a missing middle of medium sized firms, relying instead on many tiny businesses and a few large ones
-> Personal tax rates often exceed 50 percent in major provinces and apply at much lower thresholds than in the US
-> Complex corporate tax rules push entrepreneurs toward tax planning instead of growth
All of this weakens productivity, innovation, and domestic returns on education, making Canada a feeder system for the US economy
REPORT: https://t.co/fA0VzaJDSm
(1/2) All G7, Five Eye partners and most EU countries have lawful access frameworks that include technical obligations for electronic service providers.