It's a New Day for Canada

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maple leaf
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by maple leaf »

Atomoa wrote:Justin Trudeau called Obama today and told him we're pulling out of Iraq and Syria.

Day one.

Canada's back.


After talking to Obama he said he will pull out responsibly,what ever that means.The door is wide open for him to be sucked in by world leaders.This will be a telling sign of how things are going to go with him.
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The Green Barbarian
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by The Green Barbarian »

Captain Awesome wrote:
That's awesome, but it's not done yet. But it will be awesome if he actually does it.


The bombing missions were due to end in March 2016, so it's not that big of a deal. And he didn't say that Canada was pulling out. Just that it was going to stop doing bombing missions, at some point, who knows when. Probably March 2016.
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by I Think »

Amazing................. why don't we just stop squabbling, and work together with our new PM to try and make Canada a better place.
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maryjane48
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by maryjane48 »

he said he was pulling the cf18 and fight isil in a responsable way ..harper would have kept them there . now that russia is involved theres no point to our presence thrre now that usa and russia are on point .
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by The Green Barbarian »

Here's an American take on the election (I disagree with a lot of it, and he's got a few things completely factually incorrect):

Justin Trudeau victory in Canada is bad news for U.S. conservatives
By Sean Kennedy
Updated 9:37 PM ET, Tue October 20, 2015 | Video Source: CNN


(CNN)—According to the Reputation Institute, it is the "most admired" nation on earth. Immigrants flock there from all over the world -- for the most part politely standing in line for the opportunity.

Taxes seem to get lower every year and the government runs a surplus. Burdensome regulations have been slashed and the tax code's been rewritten to encourage business investment and pro-family policies. Abroad, it's taking the fight to ISIS with a reinvigorated military, standing side by side with Israel and against aggression from the mullahs of Iran and Vladimir Putin's Russia.

No, it's not three years into the Marco Rubio administration -- it's present-day Canada, and its courageous leader just got booted out of office after nine years of steadily maneuvering the ship of state.

Justin Trudeau, Liberals win clear majority in Canada elections

The Conservative Party's loss is to the detriment of its neighbors to the south and the world at large, since the Tory leader, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, was defeated by the unprepared, gaffe-prone but well-coiffed son of a former prime minister, Justin Trudeau.

Harper's fate is all the more shocking when you consider how well Canada weathered the 2008-2009 financial crisis under his watch. He didn't bail out anyone (except the U.S.-based auto industry), no financial institutions failed and the Canadian economy hummed along.

How Trudeau won over Canada

Part of Harper's success -- and doom -- lies in the commodity markets. With sky-high oil prices and other resources reaching record highs, Canada got rich as other industrial powers paid top dollar (or top loonie, if you will) for the raw materials they needed to grow. As oil prices fell off a cliff, the Canadian economy slowed, even briefly dipping into recession this year. But Harper made the necessary cuts and kept taxes low. Amazingly, he balanced the budget ahead of schedule as the commodity markets nosedived.

The fickle Canadian voters were tired, though. Tired of the scandals and unforced errors that come with years of unchecked power (Canada's parliamentary system is a unitary executive-legislative branch). Political appointees and friends of Harper's couldn't resist feeding at the taxpayers' trough. Though the trail never led directly to Harper, the scandal only fed a public perception that the cool-to-a-fault, calculating (and yes, even Nixonian) Prime Minister was up to no good.

Despite their success, Harper's policies, too, seemed to echo the "American" political discourse, a byword for becoming what Canadians fear most -- too much like their rapacious, bellicose and paranoid neighbors to the south. In Canada, identity is tied up in a few things (hockey, universal health care) but none more powerful than a genteel anti-Americanism that tinges every political debate in the Great White North.

When Harper introduced anti-terror legislation called C-51, or "Canada's Patriot Act," after prominent attacks inspired by radical Islam, the wing nuts of Canada's left came out of the woodwork, painting the Prime Minister as a tyrant in the making.

His inaction on climate change -- a shrewd move for a near-petro state -- enraged the ecowarriors.

But the final straw came when Harper took a stand for an inclusive, but fully Westernized and assimilating Canada -- banning the niqab, or face veil, from being worn at citizenship swearing-in ceremonies. The din of the "culturally sensitive" left's cries was deafening -- "racist," "Islamophobe" and "anti-immigrant" entered the normally polite Canadian discourse.

What lies next for Canada is bad news for America and especially conservatives.

Canada under Harper's leadership was a conservative wonderland with balanced budgets, increasingly low taxes and a robust foreign policy aimed at taking on terrorists and bullies the world over. But that is poised to change under the Liberal Party's Trudeau, who promises to run deficits, pull out of the anti-ISIS operation in Iraq and Syria, and re-establish ties with Iran. He also wants to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada.

Furthermore, although the abortion debate has been "settled" for a generation by repeated diktats from Canada's uber-leftist Supreme Court, Trudeau has stamped out dissent within his own party over abortion, where a thriving anti-abortion wing once existed.

Without Harper at the helm, the lessons of Canada's miracle -- surviving the financial crisis, balancing budgets, slashing red tape and taxes while maintaining a healthy welfare state -- will be lost to history as Trudeau's Liberals in a fit of pique roll back the gains the Great White North has made.

Politics is a fickle game and fatigue is a real phenomenon. Harper's achievements will be relegated to the dustbin of history.

As Shelley's "Ozymandias" reminds us, "Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"


http://www.cnn.com/2015/10/20/opinions/ ... index.html
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by Gone_Fishin »

'nuff said.


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madmudder
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by madmudder »

Gone_Fishin wrote:'nuff said.


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Your CONS lost nuff said.
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maryjane48
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Re: Its a New Day for Canada

Post by maryjane48 »

cue the con blues
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Re: It's a New Day for Canada

Post by I Think »

We got rid of the worst pm in Canadas recent history, now its time to undo the damage he did. Lets get together and help make Canada a better place.
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Re: It's a New Day for Canada

Post by Rwede »

The best laugh is watching all these neo-NDPers trying to celebrate the worst defeat for their party since 2008.

The NDP lost everything it had - it is no longer the Official Opposition, its leader has been ousted from his residence, and it has been relegated to fringe party status, and will be treated as a non-entity in Canadian politics once again.
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Re: It's a New Day for Canada

Post by jimmy4321 »

The news of the day is that the biggest problem is picking a cabinet.
There's a fair bit of talent and considering senior members, star candidates, regional representation, and now gender balance -there's gonna be a lot of sad faces.
Hopefully they can keep it all bottled up for a few years before infighting Lol.
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Re: It's a New Day for Canada

Post by I Think »

Good positive input always helps things along.
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Re: It's a New Day for Canada

Post by flamingfingers »

Interesting to note that in 2011 the Liberals were reduced to a mere 34 seats - 10 fewer than the NDP's 44 in 2015.
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Re: It's a New Day for Canada

Post by Rwede »

flamingfingers wrote:Interesting to note that in 2011 the Liberals were reduced to a mere 34 seats - 10 fewer than the NDP's 44 in 2015.



All mainstream parties end up there once or twice when a "protest vote" smacks them upside the head. They always recover.

The NDP lives there perennially, and for good reason. A one time blip to O.O. status was short-lived, and democracy put them right back into the trailer park.
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Re: It's a New Day for Canada

Post by jimmy4321 »

NDP believed polls (protest without much consequence) which were inaccurate that far away from election day considering 70% wanted change, and ran with that. They made the critical error in believing 2011 wasn' t a fluke and should have been working as though they faced elimination.
You have to go back more than 4 years to see a trend
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