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Justin Trudeau is Doing a Great Job


revrnd

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2 minutes ago, 02sled said:

Simple... the Saudi's don't need Canada and there is only one person to blame.... Trudope for his incessant attempts to stick his nose where it doesn't belong. Trying to interfere in the internal policies and laws of a foreign country.

 

I know in the last decade we have been used to just leaving jailed people in other countries there,  I don't see a problem with getting someone released that was jailed for nothing more than speaking out loud.

the OIL giants get a free pass from you and the far RIGHT

but you can back Saudi's on this until a change in government comes here, then back to gushing over them

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1 minute ago, 02sled said:

Wrong Again Fail... you can't keep driving the boat or the car.

I've been busy working. When I'm getting paid to do a job I actually do the job and give them what they are paying for.

Yes you can as your drivers license is suspended something not needed to drive a boat or e-bike.

Look it up also look up when you are charged in a canoe, you can canoe all you want but can't drive

 

 

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Great job.

 

 

 

 

Quote

 

Kinder Morgan originally estimated that the project, formally approved by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet in November 2016, would cost $4.1 billion. In recent months, this estimate has risen to $7.4 billion, until the new documents this week estimated that the cost could be as high as $9.3 billion until construction is expected to be completed in 2021.

This total would not include the $4.5 billion offer from the federal government to buy the project, which would mean that taxpayers are now on the hook for spending up to $13.8 billion, with no other investors attempting to take on the risky project.

 

Allan, a former chief executive at the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia, said this cost would likely be even higher since the company is only doing pre-construction work right now, and has yet to sign construction contracts needed to install the pipeline in the ground.

She has estimated the pipeline and tanker expansion could wind up costing up to $20 billion to complete.

“It appears as though (the federal government) deliberately withheld information about the costs because it would have shocked Canadians at the time,” Allan said in an interview with National Observer. “If they didn’t know, they should have known.”

 

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13 minutes ago, 04nightfire said:

on another personal day

Four days ago the Vancouver Pride Parade was much more important than the international relationships of Canada.

Today

Montréal, Quebec

11:00 a.m. The Prime Minister will attend the funeral of Paul Gérin-Lajoie.

Cathédrale Marie-Reine-du-Monde
1085, rue de la Cathédrale

Notes for media:

    • Pooled coverage
    • Media should arrive no later than 10:45 a.m.

2:20 p.m. The Prime Minister will tour MDA Corporation.

MDA Corporation
21025 Trans-Canada Highway

Notes for media:

    • Photo opportunity
    • Media should arrive no later than 1:30 p.m.

3:35 p.m. The Prime Minister will tour the Côte-Vertu construction site.

1501, boulevard Marcel-Laurin

Note for media:

    • Due to safety and security measures, this will be a restricted pooled photo opportunity.

7:00 p.m. The Prime Minister will attend the Montréal Italian Week Festival and deliver remarks.

Parc Wilfrid-Bastien
8400, boulevard Lacordaire

Notes for media:

    • Open coverage
    • Media should arrive no later than 6:15 p.m.
Edited by 02sled
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The Saudis are saying that the current diplomatic rift won't affect oil sales.

The feds should tell them to get stuffed. It's not like we don't have our own oil.

Premier Moe of SK has already said we should stop buying Saudi oil, just build the Energy East pipeline to serve the east.

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How about we just stay out of foreign countries internal policies. There was a dialogue about this on the radio this morning. Diplomatic situations are typically done by ambassadors in person. Not public tweets.

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38 minutes ago, revrnd said:

The Saudis are saying that the current diplomatic rift won't affect oil sales.

The feds should tell them to get stuffed. It's not like we don't have our own oil.

Premier Moe of SK has already said we should stop buying Saudi oil, just build the Energy East pipeline to serve the east.

That'd be a good idea.  Good luck with that pipeline though.  You'd probably get more support to go to bicycles.

2 minutes ago, 02sled said:

How about we just stay out of foreign countries internal policies. There was a dialogue about this on the radio this morning. Diplomatic situations are typically done by ambassadors in person. Not public tweets.

Whew....words of advice we call all agree on.  Well, most all.  Well, some anyway.  

@revkevsdi  AKA RevBetaCuck....what are you thoughts here?

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42 minutes ago, 02sled said:

How about we just stay out of foreign countries internal policies. There was a dialogue about this on the radio this morning. Diplomatic situations are typically done by ambassadors in person. Not public tweets.

Hey you old fart (JK) don't you know it's 2018?

Seriously, Twitter should not be used by anyone (please block Trump's account!) when anything serious is concerned. His tweets passing on his condolences about any & all tragedies is pretty shallow IMO.

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2 hours ago, revrnd said:

The Saudis are saying that the current diplomatic rift won't affect oil sales.

The feds should tell them to get stuffed. It's not like we don't have our own oil.

Premier Moe of SK has already said we should stop buying Saudi oil, just build the Energy East pipeline to serve the east.

Also sending Military equipment there isn't affected.

 

this is nothing more than a smoke show - it will go away just like it did with other countries 

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2 hours ago, Zambroski said:

That'd be a good idea.  Good luck with that pipeline though.  You'd probably get more support to go to bicycles.

 

Its been approved by the FEDs but building it will take a decade of protests (this is expected) 

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46 minutes ago, 1trailmaker said:

Also sending Military equipment there isn't affected.

 

this is nothing more than a smoke show - it will go away just like it did with other countries 

Saudis were late to dump their Cadadian stocks.:lol:

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Deal with Mexico is coming along nicely. Autoworkers and farmers must be taken care of or there will be no deal. New President of Mexico has been an absolute gentleman. Canada must wait. Their Tariffs and Trade Barriers are far too high. Will tax cars if we can’t make a deal!

 

The game continues as Donny tries to wine and dine the new guy :lol:  

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9 hours ago, 1trailmaker said:

sunny ways

The overall July increase in jobs pushed the unemployment rate back to its four-decade low of 5.8 per cent, down from six per cent the previous month, Statistics Canada’s latest labour force survey said Friday.

Closer look.

 

https://business.financialpost.com/news/economy/newsalert-canada-adds-54100-jobs-in-july-unemployment-rate-falls-to-5-8-2

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1 hour ago, ArcticCrusher said:

We need the Conservatives to come back with their solid 8% :lol:  those were some good times

 

not a peep back then, best in G7, admired worldwide - said Harper 

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11 hours ago, 1trailmaker said:

sunny ways

The overall July increase in jobs pushed the unemployment rate back to its four-decade low of 5.8 per cent, down from six per cent the previous month, Statistics Canada’s latest labour force survey said Friday.

I guess you missed the news last night where they talked about the number of full time jobs lost and that the vast majority of new jobs were part time and the majority of those jobs were in the public sector.... just what we don't need. More government employees to draw on the fewer private sector employees.

Keep on ignoring the details Fail. It's what you do best.

Capture1.JPG.f038712af8dd0941a3b08b5bacf0bf68.JPG

The economy generated 54,100 net new jobs last month and saw its unemployment rate fall -- but the headline improvements overshadowed weaker details: a rush of new part-time, public sector positions and a drop in full-time work.

But a closer look at the numbers revealed that the country gained 82,000 less desirable, part-time positions last month -- and it lost 28,000 full-time jobs. The public sector made the biggest contribution to the July increase with 49,600 new jobs, while the private sector added 5,200 positions

Keep on cheering Fail. One day maybe but not likely you will actually pay attention to the detail. I know you never will when it doesn't suit your agenda.

Edited by 02sled
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5 minutes ago, 02sled said:

I guess you missed the news last night where they talked about the number of full time jobs lost and that the vast majority of new jobs were part time and the majority of those jobs were in the public sector.... just what we don't need. More government employees to draw on the fewer private sector employees.

Keep on ignoring the details Fail. It's what you do best.

Capture1.JPG.f038712af8dd0941a3b08b5bacf0bf68.JPG

The economy generated 54,100 net new jobs last month and saw its unemployment rate fall -- but the headline improvements overshadowed weaker details: a rush of new part-time, public sector positions and a drop in full-time work.

But a closer look at the numbers revealed that the country gained 82,000 less desirable, part-time positions last month -- and it lost 28,000 full-time jobs. The public sector made the biggest contribution to the July increase with 49,600 new jobs, while the private sector added 5,200 positions

Keep on cheering Fail. One day maybe but not likely you will actually pay attention to the detail. I know you never will when it doesn't suit your agenda.

Compared with a year earlier, overall employment was up 1.3 per cent following the addition of 245,900 jobs for an increase driven by 210,500 new full-time positions.

Look at the big picture 02sledless - GAINS GAINS GAINS promise made promise kept :lol: 

being negative about Canada doesn't change the facts - best economy in decades is bad 

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