The Social Justice Price Tag in Canada is skyrocketing in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic August 2, 2020,
So yeah, here’s the thing I’d like to remind Canadians about the COVID-19 pandemic, the private sector which is the sector that pays the bills of the public sector have shrunk, so what has actually happened since the COVID-19 pandemic is the government has actually gotten bigger.
Now, while the Canadian government has gotten bigger in comparison to the private sector, socialist justice for political reasons has gotten more expensive. When there has to be an investigation into the improper force allegations in the RCMP, this costs money, there isn’t some computer button you press to investigate improper force allegations, highly paid humans have to investigate this and when it turns out that there as only 1% of cases, that’s a waste of money that could have been used elsewhere.
RCMP says improper force allegations confirmed in just 1 per cent of cases | cbc.ca
Now, as per usual Marxist organizations are working overtime to find everything WRONG with Canada. As an example, the article below attempts to point out every negative instance of Canadian history as it pertains to the black experience in Canada, which pales in comparison to what happened in America. As an example the Macleans article I point too below talks about “Jacques Crow” in which the author writes:
We share in histories of sanctioned segregation: theirs called “Jim Crow”, while ours has been referred to as “Jacques Crow”. It’s a history that extends to the internment of the Japanese, the creation of laws explicitly designed to ban Black immigration, and the discriminatory practice of redlining.
What Americans tend to get wrong about racism in Canada | macleans.ca
Notice the use of the word “Black immigration”, well, sorry Blck Lives Matter Canada, Black Americans according to historical records were brought to the United States in chains, they didn’t opt to move or migrate to the United States for a better life. This is often overlooked by the Marxist who wants to politicize the history of particular groups of people.
If a Brazilan black person is redlined in Brazil, based on the color of their skin, that’s different from a Nigerian immigrant being banned or barred from being a Brazilian citizen. I as a Canadian can’t go into Ghana and demand their government allow me to be a citizen of Ghana. Suppose Ghana doesn’t want people like me to take jobs away from its local population? suppose Ghana is going through its own social and economic struggles and needs to put the people of Ghana first? Is it racist for them to do that?
What makes the Black American experience unique in the English speaking world is that Black Americans are AMERICANS, and historically even after they were freed from slavery they were treated like second class citizens simply because of their race. In Canada, even white immigrants had problems immigrating into Canada, ask the Greeks, Jews, and the Italians, they weren’t exactly welcomed with open arms into Canadian society.
Our culture used to be rough and rugged prior to the socialists giving Canadians a false sense of economic and social security. The article below is what I would call ‘soft like tissue paper’ which is a term friends of mine used to use in Toronto use when we were growing up.
What Americans tend to get wrong about racism in Canada | macleans.ca
Americans are still, for the most part, more rough and rugged than Canadians are, they say what’s on their minds, well at least the black Americans say what’s on their minds, the whites in America are now having their freedom of speech regulated, but at the very least a large segment of white Americans are pushing back, in Canada, people like Matthew Amha who by the way proudly calls himself An African Toronto boy, makes sure that he perpetuates his Continental racial agenda.
Adding to the buffoonery of his argument he brings up a plethora of Socialist policies in Canada that result in poorer groups being targeted, when democratic socialist implement laws, the most vulnerable are the most affected.
the first reported race riot in North America is believed to have happened in Atlantic Canada. Even the institution of “stop and frisk” is presented as uniquely American, despite the fact some Canadian police departments practiced it at higher rates.
What Americans tend to get wrong about racism in Canada | macleans.ca
Well, thank your socialist governments for this Matthew Amha because once your government is as an example allowed to ban you from defending yourself, with gun control regulations as an example, well then the government can stop you and then frisk you whenever they want because those regulations equate to you being the property of the government. This is why I know Canadians are getting a horrible public school education because most of what Matthew Amha writes about is why Canadians become Conservatives.
What I will openly admit is that First Nations people in Canada were mistreated, I will not dispute that, but just because a few Canadians were illegally enslaving black people, had nothing to do with systematic racism in Canada, criminality exists because people like Matthew Amha turn a blind eye to it, while they focus on their own personal political agenda.
White people are still human, just like how Black Lives Matter defend their own people no matter what their own people do to each other, white people did the same thing, if some white people are breaking the law, some white people, turned a blind eye to it, if a black criminal breaks the law, a lot of black people will ignore or justify the act of criminality, it’s how the world has always been. It’s why people like me try to push a message of unity WITHOUT POLITICS! because you’ll always find something wrong or something you think the government needs to fix.
Hamilton school board launches probe after accusation of ‘racism and oppression’ | globalnews.ca
But back on my initial topic of discussion, there needs to be private-sector job growth in order for the Canadian dollar DOMESTICALLY to maintain it’s valued, we do a lot of importing in Canada and private companies are constrained with how much they’re willing to import because not everything that’s imported into Canada for sale will sell and if there are fewer people contributing to the domestic Canadian economy, the cost for risk and manual labour will rise.
If I work and you collect a government paycheck, there comes a time where I want a pay raise, ages in Canada are stagnant and I remind the reader that Canada has a better standard of living than America, which means that the loonie is artificially low.
Because of the relationship the Canadian government has with industry, the Canadian dollar has to remain low for particular job creators in Canada to turn a profit. Trump is the first president I’ve ever heard of that want’s to see the value of the U.S dollar decrease, the Canadian dollar has been up in recent weeks and we’re kind of in a damned if you do and damned if you don’t scenario, I’ve heard some experts saying that the Canadian dollar might fall to $0.60, meaning it will cost an American 0.60 cents USD to buy $1 Canadian dollar. Well if that happens prices for goods in Canada will rise while Canadians are not being productive.
Justin Trudeau has created an atmosphere in which it makes more sense not to work than it does to work, I personally call this “Late Stage Socialism” because COVID-19 has given people the incentive to be unproductive or at the very least less productive. The government workforce, however, will still be paid as usual, but the last point I will make is that this how private investment flees the country. If there’s little to no way for a person to find profitability in the Canadian economy, they’ll park their money elsewhere.
The article below completely ignores the Canada’s ballooning public sector debts. Canada’s public sector debts in the middle of these COVID-19 and Social Justice pandemics should be a major concern for all Canadians because social justice and COVID-19 are both attacks on Canada’s private sector, they both involve higher costs of doing business in the private sector and what’s problematic is that without government stimulus, the mortgage, the rental and the consumer debt markets would have all crashed months ago!
Five things to watch for in the Canadian business world in the coming week | ctvnews.ca
Interesting times ahead!