Canada needs a new northern coast to coast rail line for mass immigration and agricul

JLM

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Nov 27, 2008
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We live in a consumer economy. What is wrong with increasing our consumer base to at least the size of the U.S. if not more?


What's wrong with it? We have about 1/4 of the arable land and half of the rest of it is climatically impossible! Any more stupid questions? :) :)

F-ck the Irish. They can go to Boston where they belong.


And they might tell you to go to Edmonton, or Vernon! :) :)
 

Vbeacher

Electoral Member
Sep 9, 2013
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Hi Pete- Have you taken a drive up the new highway to Tuk yet? It opened this morning- cost $300 million- gives Canada a new dimension!

A population of nine hundred, and we spend over a million bucks per family to build a road there. Absolutely ridiculous. We could give each family a million bucks and have them move south.

That's what all the racists say. Unfortunately, they all want their snootful from the trough and can't explain who's going to pay for it.


Not losers like you, welfare-boy. And not your fellow immigrant losers working as security guards and pushing brooms.

More true than not, but the host tells the gust which room he will sleep in and if that is not good enough, he can always pay his own way elsewhere.

The constitution will not allow any interference in where people want to live. And the idea you're going to take a bunch of immigrants from the desert and tropical lands and get them to live in the north is preposterous.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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Canada needs a new northern coast to coast rail line for mass immigration and agriculture.

http://bigthink.com/stephen-johnson/15000-scientists-from-around-the-world-issue-warning-to-humanity?utm_source=Daily+Newsletter&utm_campaign=816188a80c-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_11_14&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_45b26faecc-816188a80c-43589329

Global climate change is pushing Canada’s tree line northwards.


Mass immigration and Canada becoming the bread basket of the future world should prompt us to take advantage of this trend by building a modern rail system to what will be the new breadbasket below the new predictable tree line.


New mass immigration will give us the manpower required to do this and we owe it to the world to get going on this ASAP.


To not do so invites the vast numbers of future immigrant to find other places to live and that means a lot of war and unrest.


Canada already has a system in place that guarantees that corn produces will sell their produce to Canada so as to increase our biofuel production.


It may sound corny but we should plan to grow a vast amount of corn along a new northern rail line that goes coast to coast. This would also help in our transporting crude oil by rail as Canadians do not want pipelines.


We should act now and not wait till people start killing each other is those areas that will face desertification. We can save lot of people from a lot of hardship if we start now as desertification has already started.


Do you have any corny thoughts?

Regards
DL



This is not going to happen, a decade from now, 45 degress and north will grow snow ten months outta twelve untill about 2030 when the freeze peaks a couple of decades later grass will appear in Regina again maybe. An ice road is not out of the question however.
 
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French Patriot

Council Member
Sep 17, 2012
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As of 1 January 2017, the population of Canada was estimated to be 36,508,003 people.

The current population of the United States of America is 325,322,429 as of Wednesday, November 15, 2017, based on the latest United Nations estimates.

Well you better hope that the majority of the 288, 814, 426 people you would see come to Canada - just to catch up to the US - have a job waiting, money in the bank and a place to live. Otherwise, Canada would simply become one big ghetto.



Farming pays, it does not cost. and ghettos we would have regardless of where we put immigrants.


Regards
DL
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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But ghettos in other countries are not our problem.
Farming does not pay well. Lots of hard work too so good luck getting millinials to do it.
 

French Patriot

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Sep 17, 2012
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We did. That is so 19th century.

Land is prvincial jurisdiction so not all were the same.



Thanks for confirming what I said. Government control. Not Canadian Native control.
If it was Native control, non-natives would be on worthless reserves where we have put our native.


Non-Canadians Natives would be ghettoised and not our hosts.


Regards
DL

But ghettos in other countries are not our problem.
Farming does not pay well. Lots of hard work too so good luck getting millinials to do it.



Ask a homeless man if he will work hard for his hungry children. If he says no, he does not belong in Canada.
If he will not farm to feed his family, we do not want his ilk infesting Canada.


Regards
DL
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Thanks for confirming what I said. Government control. Not Canadian Native control.
If it was Native control, non-natives would be on worthless reserves where we have put our native.


Non-Canadians Natives would be ghettoised and not our hosts.


Regards
DL





Ask a homeless man if he will work hard for his hungry children. If he says no, he does not belong in Canada.
If he will not farm to feed his family, we do not want his ilk infesting Canada.


Regards
DL

You best read some of the decisions regarding native jurisdiction over crown land. If it is in their traditional area they have Pretty much total control over what happens. Litterly billions of $$$$ of economic opportunity have been lost because some tribe refused to sign off on the project.
 

French Patriot

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You best read some of the decisions regarding native jurisdiction over crown land. If it is in their traditional area they have Pretty much total control over what happens. Litterly billions of $$$$ of economic opportunity have been lost because some tribe refused to sign off on the project.


The traditional area of our Native Canadians, who are North American Indians, is all of north America and basically the rest of the world.


Their tradition was that no one owned the land. That notion came from outside of native tradition.


Regards
DL

The road wasn't built for the people, it was built for the resources.



I agree. We have forgotten our fiduciary responsibilities to our Canadian natives, --- if we ever actually meant to live to our treaty obligations that is.


Regards
DL
 

JLM

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A population of nine hundred, and we spend over a million bucks per family to build a road there. Absolutely ridiculous. We could give each family a million bucks and have them move south.




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No your contention is absolutely ridiculous. People are only one thing served by the road. It's an access to resources. It's access to a huge geographical entity like the 4th largest ocean in the world, not to mention a huge potential for population growth on the MacKenzie delta, not to mention access to Russia, Norway, Finland and Sweden. It will likely become a huge port for shipping oil to Russia. The possibilities are unlimited! There, I've just tripled your knowledge of geography! :)
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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Why would we ship oil or even food for that matter to Russia?


Not unless they are willing to pay for it. :)

We could give each family a million bucks and have them move south.


Another questionable statement! We already have lots of people "south", we don't want more down there where it's already overly congested. We want to move people to the wide open spaces where resources are abundant.

Farming does not pay well. Lots of hard work too so good luck getting millinials to do it.


But it prevents hunger!
 

French Patriot

Council Member
Sep 17, 2012
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Grain producing pays great and it's not hard work any longer. It's just super expensive to start from scratch.


Not when economy of scale is applied and the government pays for it instead of Canadian tax payers paying welfare and have people sit on their rumps instead of working a profitable farm.


Regards
DL