"Jack ... as in Yukon?"
Not anymore, but I did work in the Yukon when I was young.
WHAT IN THE HELL DOES YOUR LACONIC REPLY/QUESTION MEAN??
Please clarify! Thanks!
It means you should grow a sense of humour so you can comprehend it.
"Jack ... as in Yukon?"
Not anymore, but I did work in the Yukon when I was young.
WHAT IN THE HELL DOES YOUR LACONIC REPLY/QUESTION MEAN??
Please clarify! Thanks!
"It means you should grow a sense of humour so you can comprehend it."
Sense of humour??? I am laughing so hard it hurts.
I know. I think I can wipe me own bum, thanks anyway. I don't need Ottawa for that.Constitutionally, and historically...Ottawa was intended to be the great power, able on a whim to disallow provincial legislation.......and the recipient of all residual powers. The devolution of power to the provinces is, in reality, at best not in line with the original design of the nation, and at worst, is unconstitutional.
So you think (using my example again) that imposing the stupid firearms registry upon good people like farmers and ranchers going about their business because of some nutcase in a university in Montreal is fair. I see.First off - I am saying that you are ACTING like a kid because you don't seem to understand that "reality" and "what is the correct thing to do" does not, and has never, equalled to "fair". Also - just because you don't like something doesn't make it unfair.
And to make everyone's vote in Canada equal would be funny. In order to have the 27,000 equal votes in Nunavut actually have a seat in Ottawa, the population/representation numbers would drastically change.You're right - the everyone's votes are NOT equal - nor have I said they are equal. I said they SHOULD be equal. I have also said is that to make things MORE unequal is not going to solve the problem. In a HoC that is SUPPOSED to be Rep. by Pop. the West will ALWAYS have a smaller voice than Ontario - until such time as the population of the West is higher than Ontario.
Not province, region. But, I agree. I also mentioned several times in various threads that partisan politics is nothing but a bane to Canadians. It's stagnating at best and regressive at worst.Your supposition rests on the assumption that once in the HoC - members vote according to the direction of the PROVINCE that they are from, which is not true. Members serve the party and THAT is the problem.
Provinces regions. I am fine with either. But at least you have the idea I am trying to portray.It would work - up until the time people starting b*tching about how Manitoba has the same say as BC - and they together only have 1/2 the say of Ontario.
Provinces should have equal say - not regions. Manitoba is not the same as BC. Canada would need a massive overhaul of provincial boundaries in order to "spread the power."
Pretty much.It would take a poltician with guts to do it. Sadly - being a politician precludes that.
... and absolute power corrupts absolutely, so power in Ottawa should be given to the provinces.Power corrupts
Fish isn't cheap. lol Maybe if we could get them to eat ragweed, dandelions, or something ......Why don't we put in ACTUAL trained seals? It would be much cheaper - and maybe the Europeans would stop complaining about the hunt!
Fish isn't cheap. lol Maybe if we could get them to eat ragweed, dandelions, or something ......
... and absolute power corrupts absolutely, so power in Ottawa should be given to the provinces.
And Ottawa can't do anything right. So it's SNAFU in Canada and Canadians are screwed one way or the other.The provinces do have power but do a pi$$ poor job and has to rely on Ottawa
I suppose. lolPoliticians or seals? I wouldn't oppose the former, but it's cruel for the latter...
Yeah, and everything in Canada is just perfect. Good job, Ottawa!! YAY!! roflmaoThe provinces have as much power as they should, and are properly and appropriatel subordinate to the federal Government. Canada was never supposed to be led by the provinces—rather, it was supposed to be led by the Government of Canada as they report to the representatives of Canada as a whole,
Yeah, and everything in Canada is just perfect. Good job, Ottawa!! YAY!! roflmao
Canada was never supposed to be led by the provinces—rather, it was supposed to be led by the Government of Canada as they report to the representatives of Canada as a whole, with complementary functions performed by the Legislatures of the Provinces to ease the burden of national government.
If I was someone new to Canada and wanted to learn about how its politics works, I wouldn't look to the gov't website. I'd try something written in normal English like Wiki. Wiki is easy to find stuff in, gov.ca isn't near as easy.:lol:
Things are absolutely not perfect! (Have you seen who’s prime minister?)
The point is, though, that I think that our existing system could be extremely effective, if Canadians educated themselves about how the system works (the nuances and constitutional conventions inclusive), and everyone seriously engaged themselves in the process. I have to wonder how many Canadians regularly communicate with their House of Commons representative, and their province’s senators—probably far less people than those who simply complain, I would dare to guess.
Nice theory but if they'd stick to standards for things that affect all Canadians as a whole rather than nosing into personal issues and things like that, we'd all be better off. Once they start microgoverning everything they become nothing better than a nuisance and a waste of taxes.Having power consolidated and centralised with the national government is an excellent method whereby we can promote common goals and interests amongst Canadians, and foster greater national unity—the provinces are only geographic borders for the ease of administration, in my view; the provinces are (and should be) charged only with the legislation of matters that are strictly local in nature, whereas the national government should be the one concerned with everything else.