Mike
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This led me down a rabbit hole where I found some invisible pink unicorns.
“Invisible Pink Unicorns are beings of great spiritual power. We know this because they are capable of being invisible and pink at the same time. Like all religions, the Faith of the Invisible Pink Unicorns is based upon both logic and faith. We have faith that they are pink; we logically know that they are invisible because we can’t see them.” 🤣
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Alberta considers new law allowing it to ignore international agreements signed by Canada
13·3 months agoFeels like this is probably aimed at climate agreements, but it’s similar to the ‘sovereignty act’, intended to grant broad powers without saying exactly what the law would change.
This kind of law only creates more legal uncertainty (bad for business as well!) and wastes money on court fights, when we could be doing something constructive. Like paying teachers to educate our children.
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canada needs a crown corporation for vehicle production
3·4 months agoYeah definitely a difference there. Rural is also often further travel distances - so that’s a thing as well.
Snow clearing is pretty good in the city (generally), and the studs work well on the ice. Hardest biking days are usually 12-24h after a snowfall when its not fresh, but just a mess to ride through.
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Canada needs a crown corporation for vehicle production
6·4 months agoI started winter bike commuting last year, and it was great. Studded winter tires, bar mitts, and warm shoes; helmet / goggles are great. Very little “traffic” on my ~40min commute.
I start getting cold toes below -22C or so, so maybe I need some better boots, but honestly, the people who say you can’t bike in the winter have probably either never tried it, or are dressed inappropriately. Summer is definitely more forgiving if you get a flat tire though.
It’s not for everyone, because there’s some fitness requirement, and equipment isn’t cheap (but neither are cars), but I’m stoked to get ~70-80 minutes of exercise daily on my way to/from work.
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Photo radar is becoming increasingly common. That doesn’t make it any less infuriating
102·4 months agoTurns out, photo radar is only “annoying” if you’re exceeding the legal posted speed limit…
Its bizarre to me that the government (who is responsible for creating laws), is taking the stance that enforcing them should be optional.
Imagine if Alberta could fund fall immunization programs instead of reducing speeding fines for people speeding!
Mike@lemmy.cato
Globalnews.ca@rss.ponder.cat•Alberta changing rules to ensure ‘age appropriate’ books in schoolsEnglish
2·7 months agoI’ll just leave this here; perhaps some citizens will provide some feedback during the public consultation process.
Hebrew & Christian Bibles, along with the Qur’an have passages that include:
- Erotic imagery, sexual desire described in first person.
- Graphic metaphor for sexual promiscuity.
- Incest, non-consensual sexual encounters.
- Sexual violence and mutilation.
- Incestuous rape.
- Graphic violence against children.
- Corporal punishment (for sexual sin)
- Domestic abuse
- Battle commands with graphic imagery
So… if we’re going to ban books (which we generally should not), it seems that the offending versions of religious texts should be amongst the contenders for ‘age inappropriate’ content. Some versions paraphrase or omit some of the most egregious passages); however, even commonly circulated editions such as the New International Version (NIV) include passages about sex, violence, and bodily authority / consent.
The point of course, is that the so-called ‘freedoms’ that the UCP like to push seems to involve a whole lot of limiting freedoms of those they don’t agree with…
Mike@lemmy.cato
Alberta@lemmy.ca•Alberta overhauls election laws to allow corporate donations, change referendum thresholds
4·8 months agoSo you’re saying we could get 178k people and hold a referendum on whether the Albertans agree to have Family Day become a monthly paid statutory holiday - on the third Friday of every month?
Longest referendum ballot challenge?
This sounds like a fun can of worms! Can’t wait for the debate in the newly renamed “Ledgy McLedgeface”!
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Stephen Maher: Separatism is in the Alberta air, as Liberal victory looms
3·8 months agoThat’s very useful context that I wasn’t aware of - thanks for sharing!
For others interested: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995_Quebec_referendum#Opinion_polling
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Stephen Maher: Separatism is in the Alberta air, as Liberal victory looms
6·8 months agoYep agree. I like having the numbers with these headlines, to avoid people getting the wrong impression.
E.g. “70-75% of Albertans oppose separatism, comparable to Quebec”
Provides similar information - but doesn’t give the impression that everyone wants to separate. Its a threat, but let’s not give it any extra credibility than it deserves?
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Stephen Maher: Separatism is in the Alberta air, as Liberal victory looms
12·8 months agoThere’s polling from Angus Reid on this; it’s not particularly popular - not enough to come close to winning a referendum, but it’s still an uncomfortably high number of people who don’t value Canada.
https://angusreid.org/smith-shapiro-sovereignty/

Me as well. I don’t remember where / how I got the CD. Linux as a desktop has come so far since then!
This brought back some memories: https://www.mandrakelinux.org/
Mike@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Peterborough race is the tightest in the country. 1 vote could make it or break it. VOTE!
10·8 months agoI’m in an Alberta riding which is very likely to go CPC, but exercising my right to vote is also my civic duty.
So while it might not affect the outcome this time, my vote contributes to popular vote metrics, turnout, and in the case where there’s lots people who happen to surprise (it is within the margin of error), my vote might in fact be the deciding vote that sways a riding.
It’s a shame when people value democracy so little they can’t be bothered to vote.
I highly recommend taking a look through pages like this: https://www.policyalternatives.ca/news-research/platform-crunch-3-every-party-is-promising-tax-cuts-and-cash-transfers/
Its really interesting to see how the proposed changes actually benefit different income brackets. TLDR: Proposed income tax changes from the Conservatives and Liberals predominantly benefit the richest tax bracket(s). If you happen to be in those tax brackets, I can see how conservative policies might ‘appeal’ to that demographic.

In general, when parties propose tax cuts (unless very thoughtfully targeted), they benefit the rich - who already have ample financial resources to pay for things they might need (like healthcare, private education for their children, etc.), while those who get net benefit from taxation through services are net losers from tax cuts… Because cutting taxes necessitates some reductions in service funding to balance the books. (I’m always fascinated when low income voters vote conservative as opposed to NDP.)
Mike@lemmy.cato
Technology•US tech tariff exemption may only be temporary, says LutnickEnglish
10·8 months agoThat would sum it up nicely; however, It’d be unfair to not mention the 77 million Americans that voted for this clown, the 90 million people who neglected their right & responsibility to vote, and the 75 million americans who voted against him.
Voting matters…until it doesn’t.
Mike@lemmy.cato
CanadaPolitics@lemmy.ca•The Globe and Mail is Buying Partisan Political Ads on Reddit
5·8 months agoI’m also a subscriber - and that was my initial reaction as well - but perhaps if they can get more Canadians (to whom that ad appeals) reading the Globe instead of Postmedia, we end up in a better place?
I still think it’s a bad look if they just ran partisan ads supporting a specific party - I wonder how many stories they ran as promotional / paid content? Hopefully a blend of stories?
Mike@lemmy.caOPto
Alberta@lemmy.ca•30% of Albertans want to leave Canada if Liberals win election: Angus Reid poll
1·8 months agoThis clip by 22 minutes is pretty solid: https://youtu.be/NsFo_ZvMC8I or: https://yewtu.be/watch?v=NsFo_ZvMC8I
Mike@lemmy.caOPto
Alberta@lemmy.ca•30% of Albertans want to leave Canada if Liberals win election: Angus Reid poll
1·8 months agoIt’d be a much better headline inverted. (Unfortunately less clicks?)
Now that said, there’s also the effect where this type of article stokes nationalism in the majority of the population - and that may play into a shift away from supporting the UCP and by extension/relation the CPC in some cases.
I’m seeing many more canadian flags on houses these days. 🇨🇦
Mike@lemmy.caOPto
Alberta@lemmy.ca•30% of Albertans want to leave Canada if Liberals win election: Angus Reid poll
4·8 months agoIts especially dumb as a landlocked province…
I agree with you - those who don’t like being part of Canada should leave… They can find out if the grass is in fact greener.
Mike@lemmy.caOPto
Alberta@lemmy.ca•30% of Albertans want to leave Canada if Liberals win election: Angus Reid poll
12·8 months agoIt’s hard knowing that 1/4 to 1/3 of my fellow Albertans don’t see value in being a part of Canada.
On the other hand, 3/4 to 2/3 do… So there’s that!



Even if this was an economically sound proposal, the next X45 magnitude solar flare might be a nasty surprise for reliability metrics…
Edit: at some point, this would also likely contribute to Kessler Syndrome, but at least we’d have chat bots.