Hey @MarkJCarney , hear me out! If the @BlueJays win this game tonight, can we make tomorrow a holiday? It’s gonna be late here on the east coast when the game finishes!!! Work’s gonna be tough tomorrow!!! 🇨🇦 ⚾️ ❤️
@HowThingsWork_ There is nothing “insane” about this except people considering this “insane.” It’s like comparing “Go Fish” to poker. Limited skill required.
@CJPDoyle I was taking a rugby team to BC during this last year. We landed at Pearson exactly when all this went down and we got delayed. I’m still asking my players if they have any gold they wish to lend me!!
“Emptying people’s minds of the ability, or even the desire, to gain access to cultural resources — that’s a tremendous victory for the system.” Chomsky
For anyone interested there are some solid facts in here to help understand the carbon tax. It’s a better way to form an opinion than quoting a catchy slogan.
It’s very disappointing when you intentionally mislead people. You’re not lying but you are misleading. You intentionally make it sound like a 23% increase is on current cost but you know that’s not correct. Tonight gas will probably go down 4 cents and on Monday the carbon tax will increase it roughly 4 cents. So even. But I agree prices will still go up. Greed
Thanks for sharing this chart. The gasoline cost looks credible but the home heating chart is incorrect (to my knowledge). There is a pause on home heating oil for three years so there is no increase for people who use oil to heat their homes. So I have to question this chart. Where did you find it? Cheers
@CJPDoyle@CONDESCENDANT@PierrePoilievre@TonyWakehamNL I’ve been spending much more time than I should be trying to understand this tax increase. I dislike that conservative politicians are using the 23% increase number as that is not a real value. I want to know a real number. For example if I buy 50L of gas, what’s the extra cost?