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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 1st, 2023

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  • Shame we never considered bringing in construction workers as we process over a million new immigrants a year.

    Edit

    I’ll provide some links since I am coming off as racist/anti immigrant

    here’s a gov of Canada link to a pilot program for construction immigration strategies

    Another article

    “Despite this program’s utility, it excludes applicants with experience as construction trades helpers and labourers, which is one of the top two residential construction occupations most in need of workers.”

    Both of these articles are from the worst priced housing markets (BC and Toronto) and both talk about temporary pilot programs/completely ignored labor skills resulting in continued construction labor shortages, which should be nearly impossible when bringing in a million people with favorable entry to construction workers.

    I’m on mobile and I don’t really feel like pumping out tons of articles to prove everything I say, but essentially the marketing on immigration has been “we’re bringing homebuilders to Canada to relieve the housing crush” and the reality is “we’re using immigration to prop up housing and suppress wages, with little actual home builders coming in who then require training anyhow.”

    Another comment mentioned that it’s hard to ensure training and knowledge/understanding of trade skills, and language barriers can prevent people with construction experience from being able to work. So instead of enticing Canadians to get educated in jobs we need, we import them and make them take training anyhow to keep wages down.

    I’m not trying to say immigration is bad, but what’s happening in Canada is in reality far far away from the wave of homebuilding immigrants that was promised


  • Since most grocers in Canada have internalized a large portion of the supply chain (and don’t have to really compete with each other since there aren’t many options) they have several ways to affect prices at multiple points in the supply chain.

    “we only make 3% profits at retail!” while they jack up farm cost, processing cost, warehouse cost, distribution cost, etc etc. They are picking up profits from themselves, but counting it at a cost to obfuscate their margins as only being obtained once its bought at the end of the supply line (retail)

    You can nationalize food by knowing how much real costs are throughout the supply chain and capping costs for consumers either through policy, or by mandating that prices for groceries are set by the government.

    It can still be operated by a private business, but they would have to stop unlimited profits at the expense of the population for guaranteed, smaller profits to the benefit of everyone who eats food.

    Let me tell ya, if I had the option to eat a capitalism apple at $8/each, or the same nationalized apple for $1/each I’m eating the nationalized apple.

    The general population seems to hate taxes (mostly because the wealthy don’t actually pay taxes and also receive subsidies) - but somehow don’t associate profiteering as a wealth Tax that never returns to the public like real taxes, and instead often defend a businesses prerogative to profit seek, even at their own detriment.

    Public taxes that pay for social systems? Bad!

    Private taxes (excess profits) that exclusively benefit the wealthy? Good!



  • Nationalize (or at least crown corp) everything.

    Energy

    Telecom/Internet

    Food

    Water

    Natural resources

    Insurance

    Transportation

    Housing (edited to include)

    The idea that it’s better to have single/few entities profiting instead of every Canadian benefitting is ridiculous.

    Nobody is saying you can’t be profitable and wealthy if you run a successful business.

    But that’s not what Canada is about, what we have in Canada is collusion and price fixing by like 8 businesses that own nearly everything in Canada completely unchecked.