I was gonna say that it's very suspicious for him to want to "renegotiate" right away. More like he's looking to completely sell us out. Fuck smöl ~pp~.
60d
An actual shit post lol
Average income is about 60k, I can't see a way past the triple cost for housing to make up for the comparatively tiny hit you'll take in income.
To live in a city, you're looking at 4k a month for a 3bdrm. Small town you're looking at 1.5k. The 2.5k difference is 30k more per year for housing.
I just don't see a 60k person making 90k just to live in a city.
What you serve to others you should eat yourself. And if rural America cannot choke down its portion, why must other Americans stomach theirs?
Love this.
Because they don't know how to do a spreadsheet for household budget.
Once you see the numbers all laid out, living in a small town is usually better in NA.
Summary of "New Biography Ripper Delivers a Searing and Convincing Critique of Pierre Poilievre"
This article reviews Mark Bourrie's biography "Ripper: The Making of Pierre Poilievre," which portrays the Conservative Leader as an unchanged political figure since his teenage years in Calgary's Reform Party backrooms.
Key Points:
- Bourrie characterizes Poilievre as "the political equivalent of a hockey goon" and a "ripper" who sees politics as war
- The biography argues Poilievre hasn't evolved his tactics or outlook since adolescence
- Poilievre is described as the "angriest person on Canada's political stage" and "the nastiest leader of a major party" in Canadian history
- The book covers Poilievre's rise from teenage volunteer to Conservative Leader, highlighting his aggressive communication style and effective media tactics
- Bourrie acknowledges Poilievre's strengths as a constituency member and family man, but questions his ability to unite the country
The reviewer, Charlotte Gray, calls the biography "a searing but convincing critique" that shows how Poilievre's confrontational politics found success amid declining traditional journalism and changing socioeconomic conditions. She notes that recent events (the Liberal leadership race and Trump's tariff threat) have potentially undermined Poilievre's electoral strategy, suggesting voters may decide "an angry ripper may not be what Canada needs right now."
The article is from The Globe and Mail, published April 1, 2025, during the Canadian federal election campaign.
Empathy is a weakness. In all its forms it must be stamped out. Unless we're talking about empathy for power.
--Elmo
~~dipshit~~ ketamine
FTFY
Looks like nothing was lost when that CEO died. There was only righteousness in the killers actions.
I'm pretty sure that the shooter is not guilty by reason of benefiting society at large.
Add Hoopla for a Canadian equivalent of Libby. It's 🇺🇸 but it serves library content for Canada.
I should of looked at that before I wrote "should of".
Bullshit. McDonald's workers don't make 60k in a city bro.