It's because every Canadian wants to be an American and secretly wishes they had our freedom instead of living under the commie Trudeau regime with all of its socialisms.
You aren't doing it wrong if no one knows what you are doing.
JTA wrote:It's because every Canadian wants to be an American and secretly wishes they had our freedom instead of living under the commie Trudeau regime with all of its socialisms.
That, and because places like Winnipeg are closer to the US than most places in Mississippi.
JTA wrote:It's because every Canadian wants to be an American and secretly wishes they had our freedom instead of living under the commie Trudeau regime with all of its socialisms.
Plus, it's like living in a freezer in Winnipeg.
That, and because places like Winnipeg are closer to the US than most places in Mississippi. People in Mississippi tend to their own affairs, though.
Don't take life too seriously; No one gets out alive
Just yesterday I was reading how that communist Obama had worked hard to reduce any American influence from the world. (No, the Milner clone didn't give any examples, and yes, he really used the word "communist" several times.) No doubt he too would be offended by foreigners taking an interest in US politics. Without of course, any understanding that the more influence America has on the rest of the world, the more American politics becomes the rest of the world's business.
When Canada ratified NAFTA it became the law of the land here. But it turned out that in the US, honoring it is subject to the whim of politicians and the lobbyists who own them. With so much of our economy based on trade with the US, US politics is very much our business. American gun politics is especially important here, with so many guns flowing across the border.
We have the NRA lobbying to expand its "gun in every school locker" culture to Canada. American corporations lobbying to dismantle Canada's healthcare system and drug patent laws. The MPAA and RIAA lobbying to add decades to Canadian copyright law and remove fair use / fair dealing clauses. And they're usually backed by American elected officials.
Seth Milner wrote:
People in Mississippi tend to their own affairs, though.
[/quote]
Not very well, according to practically every measure. But in any case, just as "no man is an island," no state/country ever lives in a vacuum - tending only to itself without affecting or being affected by the rest of the world.
And, of course, people in the US never weigh in on other country's politics, do they?
Seth Milner wrote: People in Mississippi tend to their own affairs, though.
Not very well, according to practically every measure. But in any case, just as "no man is an island," no state/country ever lives in a vacuum - tending only to itself without affecting or being affected by the rest of the world.
And, of course, people in the US never weigh in on other country's politics, do they?
How can anyone, let alone a supposed "investigative journalist" not know that Mississippi has long ranked at or near the bottom by virtually every societal metric? Also, getting more money from the feds than it pays in is hardly tending "to their own affairs".
Seth Milner wrote: People in Mississippi tend to their own affairs, though.
Not very well, according to practically every measure. But in any case, just as "no man is an island," no state/country ever lives in a vacuum - tending only to itself without affecting or being affected by the rest of the world.
And, of course, people in the US never weigh in on other country's politics, do they?
How can anyone, let alone a supposed "investigative journalist" not know that Mississippi has long ranked at or near the bottom by virtually every societal metric? Also, getting more money from the feds than it pays in is hardly tending "to their own affairs".
Individuals mind their own business. You and your dance partner always have political running out your ass.
Don't take life too seriously; No one gets out alive
2383 D delegates needed to win
Clinton pledged: 1229
Sanders pledged: 912
Impressive for such an underdog.
1237 R delegates needed to win
Trump pledged: 741
Cruz pledged: 461
Kasich pledged: 145
One scenario: Cruz does better with some of the GOP establishment now swallowing their pride and common sense and endorsing him, neither he nor Trump get enough to win and Kasich doesn't have the juice to be the alternative. Will Kasich play kingmaker if he can, or will he just say, "Fuck this, y'all decide"?