Usually I find the Beaverton a bit more punchy. This one feels lackluster compared to their usual poignant blows.
FerretAres on
Clearly the liberals have seen how well the big tent worked for the cons and thought, yeah let’s do that.
CaliperLee62 on
Can they go back to ending FPTP then please? 🙏
DogeDoRight on
The biggest tent party.
ProudVancouverLL on
Where’s the funny?
Comrade_agent on
-Pierre Poilievre to announce his resignation later today, PM Carney to take over as leader of the CPC with Maxime Bernier being appointed as his Deputy Prime Minister.
-Green Party leader Elizabeth May allegedly heard saying “*The tent is so fucking big the shade might cause global cooling*”
Plucky_DuckYa on
The good news is, they can never again run fear mongering campaigns about their opponents, because they clearly welcome the same views they used to fear monger about.
ZardozSama on
There are absolutely valid points and criticisms to be made about what kind of people a political party will accept as representatives.
For me, I would care about that more during a general election than I would for taking in MPs that cross the floor.
Ultimately, I am more concerned about what an elected party actually votes in favor of and what they actually do when in power then I am about the specific beliefs of individual MPs. If the problem at hand is lowering housing costs, I do not care much that the deciding vote to do it was cast by a hardcore communist who is advocating for the abolition of all property rights, or if they are an obsessive capitalist who wants to privatize water resources to sell on a for profit basis.
Clearly, I would rather neither person was in parliament at all, and I would never vote for either to be in office. But if the Liberal party was able to use such MP’s to do something worthwhile and productive, I view that as a net positive.
END COMMUNICATION
nosungdeeptongs on
This is reflective of NDP and CPC failure more than anything. I do find it funny that the NDP are going through the process of electing a leader and reshaping their party to meet the moment while the CPC insists on continuing to run Poilievre against Trudeau and is losing MPs to the LPC.
neontetra1548 on
Except acknowledging American/Israeli war crimes and illegal wars.
mfyxtplyx on
“So: full public dental and prescription meds?”
“No, not that.”
OogerSchmidt on
The Liberal tent is held up by Canada’s collective morning wood.
Interesting_Pen_167 on
Atilla the Hun is waiting to see what the package is before changing sided.
Code_Echo_Chaser on
Welcome to true Centrism!
AbnormMacdonald on
The wolf is in the sheep’s den. I’m with the wolf.
LoosePelvis on
Went from JT pride parade photo ops to Gladu joining lmao
Thereal_Stormm006 on
Big Tent Coalitions barely hold water. I give this one 2-3 years.
Two-Shots-Of-Vodka on
The liberals perfect reflect the essence of Canada
You WILL assimilate into the liberal party
Hot_Cheesecake_905 on
Except for law abiding, legal, gun owners.
Bigchunky_Boy on
There is a new pipeline news . Carney announced there is one from the it only goes one way from Conservative side to his office .
v857 on
I think articles and discord like this really exemplify why we should not be politicized as much as we are. A centrist party combines left and right. I think we are so at each other’s throats that any compromise seems like hypocrisy.
Gezzer52 on
Many people on both sides of the political spectrum have no idea what it is and how liberalism came to be.
Feudalism is a hierarchal system where the social order and everyone’s position in it is fairly fixed. King, nobles, tradesmen including military, everyone else. Social/economic mobility is limited to a select few with very little movement up the ladder, one maybe two rungs. For the most part if you’re born a peasant you die a peasant, because that’s what you deserve for being born to peasant parents.
Then came the age of enlightenment and Liberalism. It’s main concept is that your social position shouldn’t be limited by an accident of birth. That every one is equal with the same innate potential for achievement. So under liberalism a person born a peasant can become king, and the reverse. As well it means that everyone has protection under the law so they can’t be abused by anyone higher up the ladder (in theory).
That’s it. Normally it sits in the middle of the political spectrum, but due to it’s nature it can pretty much cover any policies other political schools of thought might have. So a liberal government can have both socialist and capitalist policies as long as they don’t conflict with people’s ability to have social/economic freedom and mobility.
Okay then, so what’s being a conservative mean? People who prefer a hierarchical system where everyone knows their place/purpose and except for a limited number of exceptions, stay there. Yup, conservatives pretty much want a modern version of feudalism. This is also why you have socially and economically disadvantaged conservatives. It isn’t about improving their own lot, it’s about making sure no one unfairly (in their view) jumps the queue and gets ahead of them.
22 Comments
Usually I find the Beaverton a bit more punchy. This one feels lackluster compared to their usual poignant blows.
Clearly the liberals have seen how well the big tent worked for the cons and thought, yeah let’s do that.
Can they go back to ending FPTP then please? 🙏
The biggest tent party.
Where’s the funny?
-Pierre Poilievre to announce his resignation later today, PM Carney to take over as leader of the CPC with Maxime Bernier being appointed as his Deputy Prime Minister.
-Green Party leader Elizabeth May allegedly heard saying “*The tent is so fucking big the shade might cause global cooling*”
The good news is, they can never again run fear mongering campaigns about their opponents, because they clearly welcome the same views they used to fear monger about.
There are absolutely valid points and criticisms to be made about what kind of people a political party will accept as representatives.
For me, I would care about that more during a general election than I would for taking in MPs that cross the floor.
Ultimately, I am more concerned about what an elected party actually votes in favor of and what they actually do when in power then I am about the specific beliefs of individual MPs. If the problem at hand is lowering housing costs, I do not care much that the deciding vote to do it was cast by a hardcore communist who is advocating for the abolition of all property rights, or if they are an obsessive capitalist who wants to privatize water resources to sell on a for profit basis.
Clearly, I would rather neither person was in parliament at all, and I would never vote for either to be in office. But if the Liberal party was able to use such MP’s to do something worthwhile and productive, I view that as a net positive.
END COMMUNICATION
This is reflective of NDP and CPC failure more than anything. I do find it funny that the NDP are going through the process of electing a leader and reshaping their party to meet the moment while the CPC insists on continuing to run Poilievre against Trudeau and is losing MPs to the LPC.
Except acknowledging American/Israeli war crimes and illegal wars.
“So: full public dental and prescription meds?”
“No, not that.”
The Liberal tent is held up by Canada’s collective morning wood.
Atilla the Hun is waiting to see what the package is before changing sided.
Welcome to true Centrism!
The wolf is in the sheep’s den. I’m with the wolf.
Went from JT pride parade photo ops to Gladu joining lmao
Big Tent Coalitions barely hold water. I give this one 2-3 years.
The liberals perfect reflect the essence of Canada
You WILL assimilate into the liberal party
Except for law abiding, legal, gun owners.
There is a new pipeline news . Carney announced there is one from the it only goes one way from Conservative side to his office .
I think articles and discord like this really exemplify why we should not be politicized as much as we are. A centrist party combines left and right. I think we are so at each other’s throats that any compromise seems like hypocrisy.
Many people on both sides of the political spectrum have no idea what it is and how liberalism came to be.
Feudalism is a hierarchal system where the social order and everyone’s position in it is fairly fixed. King, nobles, tradesmen including military, everyone else. Social/economic mobility is limited to a select few with very little movement up the ladder, one maybe two rungs. For the most part if you’re born a peasant you die a peasant, because that’s what you deserve for being born to peasant parents.
Then came the age of enlightenment and Liberalism. It’s main concept is that your social position shouldn’t be limited by an accident of birth. That every one is equal with the same innate potential for achievement. So under liberalism a person born a peasant can become king, and the reverse. As well it means that everyone has protection under the law so they can’t be abused by anyone higher up the ladder (in theory).
That’s it. Normally it sits in the middle of the political spectrum, but due to it’s nature it can pretty much cover any policies other political schools of thought might have. So a liberal government can have both socialist and capitalist policies as long as they don’t conflict with people’s ability to have social/economic freedom and mobility.
Okay then, so what’s being a conservative mean? People who prefer a hierarchical system where everyone knows their place/purpose and except for a limited number of exceptions, stay there. Yup, conservatives pretty much want a modern version of feudalism. This is also why you have socially and economically disadvantaged conservatives. It isn’t about improving their own lot, it’s about making sure no one unfairly (in their view) jumps the queue and gets ahead of them.