I'm feeling strangely torn about the whole Truth-JD angle; on one hand, as dangerous as comedy can be in being a drag on credibility, I'm enjoying the lighter side to the JD, esp watching Priest trying not to crack. On the other hand, the actual character of R-Truth kind of makes me uncomfortable, there just seems to be certain undertones there that, intentional or not (and I really don't think they are), just has a "US film from the 30's or 40's" vibe that I can't shake.
alabasterhotdog
While I acknowledge my tribal chief, the less he works the more I'd like to see the title on someone else.
A strong economy is great, but not at the expense of even a middling quality of life for those within it.
I'm quite certain there's ways to bring attention to your point without sounding absolutely insufferable, hopefully it doesn't continue to elude you.
Up to this point, I don't think the problem has been messaging for the Liberals, it's that they have largely ignored housing as an issue for way too long and are struggling to respond effectively.
Not too tack to hard the devil's advocate side of things but if you're expecting morals from a business, that's a you problem. I can appreciate the point you're trying to make but still kind of a senseless comment.
All one really needs to know is that there's nothing legislated here, these are merely "guidelines" for the banking industry, i.e. essentially nothing.
Umm have you followed the Canadian Green party in recent years? I don't think I'd trust them to organize a bake sale, let alone a federal government. Just being ideologically correct sure ain't enough to be government.
You...should probably take a break from politics and the internet for a bit.
You're being quite generous to call that "logic."
That NDP party leadership isn't already planning a campaign with cost of living issues as the focus unfortunately sums up today's NDP: looking for headlines instead of votes.
Considering that she's only been back for a few weeks, that's rough.