I agree. Let's quit allowing refugees in that don't speak French or English or sign.
That would be the place to start after the ten year moritorium is over.
I agree. Let's quit allowing refugees in that don't speak French or English or sign.
And keep going. Disallow entry to those with no skills, money, etc. too.That would be the place to start after the ten year moritorium is over.
Quoting JLM
"When an immigrant comes to this country I think the onus should be on him to learn the language in a reasonable amount of time (I suggest one year) and after that his problems are his/her own, nothing to do with Gov't."
That is exactly what I did, all alone, as a seventeen-year-old boy. I learned English without the phony "Englisg as second language" taxpayer funded program that only a self-loathing, freeloading louse could like.
My only dependence on the government was a six-week period in 1963 when I drew pogey, and now, that I am retired and happily receive a pittance from Canada Pension, a pittance compared to what what I paid into it.
Jesus - How old are you - 7 dollars - I remember when pop was a nickel - empties were worth a penny - collected enough one winter -over 25 dollars - should have held on and waited a few months - they raised the deposit. Considerable gains were lost -Hey Y.J. - I like your style, but you have to be a bit gentler on the youngsters of today, they are too used to someone looking after them and thinking for them. Sounds like you are the same vintage as me, so you are getting approx. the same benefit from C.P.P. as I am and we're not hard done by. You are miserable enough to live to be 100 so you'll get back far more than you paid in. When I first started paying into it, it was less than $7 a month for the maximum wage earner.
Well what about the one armed, deaf and mute wall paper hanger - Who speaks for him.I agree. Let's quit allowing refugees in that don't speak French or English or sign.
Jesus - How old are you - 7 dollars - I remember when pop was a nickel - empties were worth a penny - collected enough one winter -over 25 dollars - should have held on and waited a few months - they raised the deposit. Considerable gains were lost -
I am 53 - Lived in PEI - and everywheres was the sticks as you say - Remember mefore Medicare and you did not go to the Dr on a whim.You must be older than I am. I remember pop for 7 cents, and bread for 11 cents, but then we lived out in the sticks so I guess in town you could probably buy a stubby bottle of coke for a nickel.
I am 53 - Lived in PEI - and everywheres was the sticks as you say - Remember mefore Medicare and you did not go to the Dr on a whim.
You're just a kid. Yep, we never went to the Doc until we absolutely had to usually at the point before choosing him or the morgue. Of course getting a shot of penicillin in those days was a major ordeal. They never threw away the needles so most likely you were getting it with a weapon about as dull as a Dutch hoe. Trips to the dentist were a real treat with those low speed drills.
Good line.