• 63 Posts
  • 6 Comments
Joined 3 days ago
cake
Cake day: June 15th, 2025

help-circle













  • But the tax is set to be fully repealed on July 1. Its abolition was one of the first acts of Premier John Hogan, who took office in May. He said it was contributing to affordability issues in the province.

    Very short-sighted man.

    Obesity costs the Canadian Healthcare system billions of dollars every year:

    https://nbhc.ca/health-in-the-news/one-third-canadian-adults-will-be-obese-2025-costing-country-337b-annually

    https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-025-21905-2

    Currently, most Canadian politicians are treating people like little children.

    It’s time to tell people the brutal truth:

    “We can reduce traffic jams in the city. But we are going to increase parking fees. We are going to build a bike lane network. Many drivers will be unhappy and will have to change their habits. Do you think it’s worth it? Yes or no?”

    “We can significantly reduce the number of car crashes. Less people will die. Less people will be injured. But the number of speed cameras will increase. A lot of speeding citizens are going to receive fines in the first years and will be furious. Getting a driver license will also become much harder for older people. Do you think it’s worth it?”

    "We can make the healthcare system more financially sustainable. We can do that by increasing your income tax. Or we can increase the sales tax. Or we can do that by increasing alcohol tax and sugar tax. Which do you prefer? Otherwise, I will simply not invest more money into the healthcare system.

    “We can reduce gun trafficking. We will do it by tripling the number of inspections of trucks and cars coming from the United States. But this means longer waiting times at border crossings. The number of american tourists will be reduced. The price of some imported things may also increase. Should we do it?”

    "We can significantly reduce homelessness. But we are going to build very tall buildings like in Eastern Europe. We will ban cities from opposing housing projects that meet legal norms. In many neighborhoods, individual homeowners will be outraged. Should we do it?

    No pain, no gain. It’s true at the gym. But it’s also true in politics.

    There are some decisions that are easy wins (cracking down on tax evasion, using open source software, stronger ethics laws). But most decisions actually require some pain if you want some gains.

    Time to start treating people like adults. Tell them the brutal truth.