This is a garbage read. Train timid? How in the world does this HSR nonsense compare to a continental rail effort? How will this improve the life of this writer in B.C. Lotus Land? Do better.
If I were to compare a Prime Minister to Macdonald , it certainly wouldn’t be Mr. Carney.
While I enjoyed reading the essay, please know that the idea of “infrastructure” can contain good ideas, and bad ideas.
The National Dream had a reason: to tie together the western territories in the hope of creating a grand Country. Macdonald employed common sense, both with the use of his heart, and his gut.
The only politician with that same skill set is Pierre Poilievre. He sees that this is a vote-buying strategy with the three by-elections on the horizon.
Poilievre has proposed an “East-West Energy Corridor” in pursuit of a goal that will benefit all Canadians, not just the usual elite, Laurentian, bilingual, meretricious popinjays.
If Canadians continue to allow their votes to be purchased with their own tax dollars, that is a situation beyond comprehension; that some among us refuse to buy the myth is not a symptom of fear, or a lack of vision.
This is a garbage read. Train timid? How in the world does this HSR nonsense compare to a continental rail effort? How will this improve the life of this writer in B.C. Lotus Land? Do better.
HSR to Quebec would be a perfect Liberal boondoggle. Polievre is right.
If I were to compare a Prime Minister to Macdonald , it certainly wouldn’t be Mr. Carney.
While I enjoyed reading the essay, please know that the idea of “infrastructure” can contain good ideas, and bad ideas.
The National Dream had a reason: to tie together the western territories in the hope of creating a grand Country. Macdonald employed common sense, both with the use of his heart, and his gut.
The only politician with that same skill set is Pierre Poilievre. He sees that this is a vote-buying strategy with the three by-elections on the horizon.
Poilievre has proposed an “East-West Energy Corridor” in pursuit of a goal that will benefit all Canadians, not just the usual elite, Laurentian, bilingual, meretricious popinjays.
If Canadians continue to allow their votes to be purchased with their own tax dollars, that is a situation beyond comprehension; that some among us refuse to buy the myth is not a symptom of fear, or a lack of vision.
Article misses the mark in many ways. Need to see the big picture.