This message goes out to the guy ahead of me in line at the grocery store.
The one with two bottles of rosé, two tubs of sour gummy worms and a single tall can of apricot wheat: ignore the haters, man. You do you.
Drs. Connie and Allen Eaves have been at the forefront of #cancer and #stemcell research for decades. Today, we’re proud to announce the unveiling of the newly named Eaves Stem Cell Assay Laboratory at @bccancer’s L. J. Blackmore Cancer Research Centre: https://t.co/gSenCM6Ai3
@ClareMalone You MAY have missed where he provides taped transcripts of cherry-picked quotes used to make him appear to admit things he wasn't admitting to?
He clearly doesn't come out 100 percent squeaky clean in this mess, but doubling down like this is reduces my confidence in @NewYorker
@24thminute@Luccidor@fordnation Not an expert, or an Ontario lawyer, but there's a general principle that you can't Jedi mind-trick one type of contract (say, a lease) into another type simply by writing "this is not a lease" on it. I think that's what the experts quoted in the article are saying as well.
@Luccidor@24thminute Not a loophole/legal. Only there to convince tenants they've signed away rights they can't sign away.
Pro-tip: Just because you've signed a contract, doesn't mean that the contract itself is binding/legal.
That said, clear that someone is counting on people not to know this.
This discrepancy has been the case for awhile.
International students from countries that the Government of Quebec has agreements with (like France, but also South Korea if memory serves) have paid less than out-of-province Canadians.
The answer to my (rhetorical) question seems to be that French and Belgian students are exempt. So, from next fall, a student at McGill from Ontario will pay $17,000 and one from Paris will pay $9,000. That seems fair.
@ChrissyPalace Not perfect, but I'll take it. After watching Sheff U v. Everton today, I see no reason why we won't once again be comfortably mid-table.
Thousands of residents in Yellowknife, the capital of the Northwest Territories, rushed to evacuate after a state of emergency was issued in Kelowna, British Columbia. It was the biggest mandatory evacuation so far in Canada’s summer of wildfire disasters. https://t.co/Nqi4ohthgc
Thousands of residents in Yellowknife, the capital of the Northwest Territories, rushed to evacuate after a state of emergency was issued in Kelowna, British Columbia. It was the biggest mandatory evacuation so far in Canada’s summer of wildfire disasters. https://t.co/Nqi4ohthgc