Interesting you should be commenting on permafrost. I helped dig though it using a jackhammer when I worked in the high arctic. Just one question though. What does permafrost have to do with this topic?
Any by the way if you did patrol on quads you would destroy a considerable amount of arctic environment. Tundra is incredibly easy to destroy and takes decades to return to its original state.
You seem to be a real traditionalist so far as language is concerned. I hope you don't still refer to a tire (tyre) as an iron band used to hold a wagon wheel together.
I expect you are exaggerating the dangers of the current financial crisis; and yes, the Cold War is over. At least the Cold War the way it was conducted from 1946 to 1990 is over. International rivalries continue along with the threat of various terrorist groups but that is a far cry from what existed during the days of superpower confrontation.
So far as your comment about the need for an armed forces I have no disagreement there. Where we might disagree on is what shape the armed forces and their equipment takes.
As Omicron pointed out the last time Canada used its fighters in combat was in Kosovo. However, they were not really needed given the huge number of aircraft the US and other NATO allies already had in the region. Since that time they have been of very little use at all.
What Canada should be doing is assessing the most likely threats to the country and how the Canadian armed forces are most likely to be used. So far as I can see that means making sure Canada has a well-trained and well-equipped army as over the last few decades that is the part of Canada's armed forces that has been the most useful.
That does not mean the Air Force and the Navy get shut down; it just means that these branches of the armed forces should be equipped to complement the army. So far as the Air Force is concerned this means global-reach transports and attack and transport helicopters. Supersonic fighters are likely to be the least useful aircraft in any future wars. It is one of the reasons why the US government recently canceled production of the F-22.
The navy needs transport and patrol vessels - especially ships capable of patrolling all regions of Canada. Since no single vessel can do this it needs to have a variety of craft to deal with all situations.
It looks as if the current government is simply equipping Canada's military with weapons that were used during the Cold War. Such weapons may be of little use in future military missions. What is needed is a reassessment of Canada's military requirements.
He brings up melting permafrost turning the arctic into a vast marshland which would hamper patrols by normal means and yes the tundra is very delicate but it's not everywhere,the trails they have now are established and it's very taboo for even the innuit to go off these trails with a quad.White men from the south arent even allowed to walk on certain areas as the seeds and diseases they carry on their shoes will cause many caribou to die.I have pictures of the signs they post now,this is all just recent.
I realize how delicate the tundra is,I argued with a supervisor about dragging a blasting skid a mile from camp a few years ago,within an hour there was 2 creeks flowing where the skids on the sloop exposed the dark dirt under the grass,this in turn silted up a whole lake all within a half a day.
But thats another topic,this ones about slamming cons.:lol: