LycanGalen

joined 1 year ago
[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I dont agree with calling a quarter of our population "dead weight". Quebec has the highest provincial taxes in Canada, and weren't so fortunate as to have their lines on the map surround a fuck tonne of O&G. One of the political topics most QC premieres have had in their platform since at least 2017, arguably earlier, has been to eliminate their reliance on equalization. They're not just sitting there doing nothing. Their real GDP has been in line with the rest of Canada with a 2.2% growth year-on-year, and were ahead of the national average by 0.1% at the beginning of 2025.

Alberta's in a deficit because their provincial taxes are way below the national average. They whine about not getting hand outs when they have the ability to be self-sufficient right in front of them. They refuse to invest in diversifying their economy, so everything hinges on pipelines that require billions of federal dollars (hand out?) across multiple parliaments because it won't be completed in ~4 years, coordinating across multiple provinces, and multiple premieres in those provinces; who can't cooperate with each other if their lives depended on it, working with indigenous communities to ensure they are heard and respected with regards to their land (spoiler, they generally aren't by the O&G industry). In the end, that crude would not be going to Europe. It would be going to California and Asia. So we're back to Trump's BS for a good portion of any of that actually benefiting. If this is so important to AB and BC, maybe those gov'ts need to put on their big person pants, increase their provincial taxes, and take some initiative on their own instead of waiting for daddy Carney to do it for them. Federal gov't is much more likely to help if the provinces can present the project proposal showing they won't be throwing billions into the void.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Well, we could look at it in the sense of CPP, Where all of the provinces signed on with the understanding of a mutual benefit, and also an understanding of not knowing the future, or whether the payout would be evenly spread across provinces. Unfortunately, Ms. "I get mine first" Smith wants to pull Alberta out of the CPP, so I'm not sure now would be the time to try for a new mutual benefit project. The provinces have become much more adversarial than they were 100 years ago, minus QC, who's always had a certain "we do what we want, dégage, maudit anglophones!" attitude (said lovingly with a stepmother from QC, and family still there).

That said, when Ms. Marlaina Smith and her UCP flunkies tried to pull financial coverage for people on insulin pumps, enough people became outraged so quickly that the UCP changed directions almost immediately. So if we can get it into people's hands, and make it worthwhile for them, people might self-regulate.

My larger concern for me, is the article mentions the big 3 undermining, then buying out India's insulin manufacturing company. India has a notably larger economy, and population, than Canada. I'm skeptical we'd be able to manufacture insulin at a scale where it would be enough to compete -- not in a profit sense, but in the sense of it being financialy wise for the average person to switch and thereby sustain the manufacturing costs. I know the big 3 are focusing on drugs with larger profit potential, and I also know those CEOs have a narcissistic drive to not let anyone take any of "their" money until they've completely discarded that endeavour. I don't know how we'd be able to protect from their shenanigans.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 3 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Seconding Skarn's comment. Heliboard has a lot of options for what is and is not displayed, shortcuts, etc. If you can't get it the way you want it through the options, a feature in settings allows you to edit the scripting for the layout. I have all the punctuation to the left of the space bar so I don't put periods between each word. It took me no more than 10 mins to configure that, including wasting time backing up the original script (it has an option to return it to defaults), and I'm a "hobbyist" progammer at most.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

The Canada Elections Act does not regulate signs outside an election, so any "rules" about removal would be covered by regional legislation. It's your call; if you feel like hunting down the local legislation in hopes of making trouble for that candidate, all the power to you. If not, I'd say the signs are fair game to remove.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Hitler marched his armies in to Austria less than 24 hours before the referendum and annexed the country.

Based on your account, annexing Austria before the referendum indicates Hitler didn't need an excuse. Not marching would have saved resources, but clearly he was going to take it regardless. I doubt Trump will need an excuse either - if that's what he intends to do.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 18 points 1 week ago

Bringing your voter information card with a driver's license or any other Canadian Gov't issued card with photo, name and address is like having a FastPass for voting.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 5 points 2 weeks ago

Nope, they still require a number.

From their site:

Requiring phone numbers in Signal lets people see which of their friends they can easily talk to on Signal while limiting the potential for spam within the app.

There are options to spoof a number in the States, and probably some areas of th EU, but many other places are SOL.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 3 points 3 weeks ago

Alberta has a thriving film industry, too. Nearly any Western, or show that's written for Texas and vicinity will have scenes shot in Alberta. The Last of Us was shot in Calgary, Edmonton, and Canmore along with various "wilderness" locations. The giraffes in the series are Calgary Zoo residents.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

The last time I looked into it in 2021, Ecobee used google cloud for telemetry and analytics.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I've found this site to be a helpful breakdown of the different quality levels of CO2, along with an overview of what those contaminants can be. I personally prefer to keep the purity at food or beverage level, but your risk profile is unique to you.

https://www.co2meter.com/en-ca/blogs/news/co2-purity-grade-charts

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 9 points 1 month ago

The 2022 AB general election was 52.63% UCP, 44.05% NDP. The only reason they have a majority is the dumpster fire that is first past the post.

AB's about on par with ON, and it's 5% off from the difference between BC's two parties in their last election.

And in fact there are people taking steps to force a leadership change. I dont know why you don't know about it. Maybe you don't speak with anyone actually in Alberta, and just go off what you read in our right-owned media?

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Likely not what you're looking for, but a note to consider: Most monitored security/camera/automation services (the ones with monthly fees) in Canada use the Alarm.com platform, meaning you're supporting american indirectly.

Telus launched its own competition to ADC, with their own cameras, etc. But when you dig into the coding a bit, you can see the platform uses Amazon's AWS, and the cameras are manufactured overseas.

If you have the patience and savvy, the self hosted Home Assistant suggested elsewhere is the way to go.

 

I was about to pull the trigger and buy a System 76 Pangolin when the trade BS started. As far as I can tell, there are no Canadian manufacturers (or repackagers like System 76), so I'm looking for suggestions. My preference would be Canadian, but happy to consider anything non-US.

I prefer to buy hardware that can last - my phone is nearly 10 years old, and my tower PC is almost 20, with various upgrades over time. I know that laptops aren't as good for upgrades, but some sturdiness, and non-soldered RAM would be appreciated.

I'm looking for a 15"/16" laptop that plays well with Linux (I like Pop!OS, but fine to migrate) it would be primarily for office stuff, but with decent enough iGPU that I can do basic graphic work, and play some indy games. I'd like something that generally doesn't sound like a helicopter when I use it. 1-2Tb SDD, and 32 GB RAM. ~$2500 CAD is my max.

I looked at Lenovo, but they're getting expensive, and I'm not sure whether they go through the US prior to hitting Canada or not.

Thanks in advance!

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