2
drinkboxwaterbottles 2 points ago +2 / -0

Hahaha you're probably right. There are a lot of bitchy men in urban centers, I wonder if that's true in most cases where there is an urban/rural divide though. No question about rural Canadian men being tough and hard working though, and a lot of our political divide does fall between real hard working rural Canadians and the urbanites.

4
drinkboxwaterbottles 4 points ago +4 / -0

I agree with this, I don't know how his popularity rating continues to increase. I think Canadian's don't have many options for media, and few grassroots journalism like in the US for alternative coverage, and we're poorly misinformed about what our government is doing.

10
drinkboxwaterbottles 10 points ago +10 / -0

As a rural Canadian who loves guns and thinks Trudeau is a cuck, I confirm your opinion of rural Canadians.

10
drinkboxwaterbottles 10 points ago +10 / -0

they hate themselves, that's why, it's what makes them useful idiots to be recruited to spread ideologies that they don't understand.

16
drinkboxwaterbottles 16 points ago +16 / -0

Uhhhh.... aaaaaand, uhhh... Just listen to him, monotone uhhhh, ummm, aaaaand, uhhhh, it lulls you off to sleep guy puts you in a trance he's so boring.

2
drinkboxwaterbottles 2 points ago +2 / -0

It was basically peaceful. The disagreement between the hereditary and elected chiefs was egregious from the beginning. I also hold our feds responsible for failing to act; the feds failing to do anything is the reason why native communities are such disasters.

I know a few people who have worked on various reserves, and you would not believe the absolute horror stories of child sexual abuse, meth and fentanyl abuse, and just the absolute state of some of those reserves. Obviously, there are more successful ones too, and I can see where they come from, they have a valid claim to treaties.

3
drinkboxwaterbottles 3 points ago +3 / -0

They did however block railways all over Canada for most of February for an illegitimate stand against pipelines.

6
drinkboxwaterbottles 6 points ago +6 / -0

I've been to Montana plenty of times, I'd love to be your neighboring state. Alberta has more in common with Montana than Ontario.

2
drinkboxwaterbottles 2 points ago +2 / -0

I have been saying exactly this to my friends and family! This vaccine is being rushed to market so fast that it would not be surprising that severe unintended health effects manifest within a few years of taking it.

3
drinkboxwaterbottles 3 points ago +3 / -0

I am not sure if anyone noticed the guy in the red shirt just runs in from off screen and straight drop kicks someone. I couldn't see what happened after that, but it was certainly an entrance.

6
drinkboxwaterbottles 6 points ago +8 / -2

I grew up in a born again Evangelical fellowship that did not allow women to become preachers. They did not allow musical accompaniment either, just the whole congregation singing hymns together that were written in 1800s.

Who wants to hear Jesus rock anyway, it's shitty, and uninspiring. A lot of that crap started in the 70s, it was lame then, and it's lame now. I moved away and am no longer close to the fellowship. They were fundamentalist to a fault, which made their bible readings reductively literal and lacking in theological relevance.

Nowadays I would not know where to go. Seems there are a lot of woke or progressive churches out there that tried to adapt to bring millennials back to the church, and haven't course corrected since.

3
drinkboxwaterbottles 3 points ago +3 / -0

I should be more concise, but this is something I have seen first hand and I wanted to write it somewhere.

You're absolutely right, and that is the most important point. Once you see how the sausage is made, you can't un-see it. We've done about 70 years of nonstop social services spending, and all it is gotten us is more bureaucracy, more government, broken communities, and broken people. It really has weakened and subverted us.

2
drinkboxwaterbottles 2 points ago +2 / -0

The importance of loyalty is something politicians in particular underestimate. Loyalty requires trust, respect, commitment, and faith, all qualities that most politicians do not have and do not inspire. Being loyal to someone whether it be God, your wife, or your leader, means that you've put your own lot in with theirs, you've made the sacrifice of wedding your outcomes with theirs. In other words, you're all in, whatever you do I will be on your side.

2
drinkboxwaterbottles 2 points ago +2 / -0

This right here is a good take. There isn't really a discourse around hysteria in the modern era, but news entertainment, social media, and COVID hype are going to be textbook examples of the madness of crowds.

3
drinkboxwaterbottles 3 points ago +3 / -0

Oh man, I encountered so many insecure ugly chicks in college; they all started off kind of unsure of themselves and shy, and by the end they had taken on all of their profs ideas and opinions. Interestingly, some of them premised their self esteem on whoring around for four years, then after college they took a hard left into radical feminism to compensate.

It's not even like they could discuss the differences between post modernism and modernism with you, they were still dumbasses, but they just internalized the "smart person opinions" from their leftist profs.

Once you start poking holes in their shitty arguments they don't provide you with a counter argument, they just get triggered and hurl insults at you because you just reminded them that they're not smart, and they have no authentic identity beyond being a mouthpiece for ideas they don't understand.

After college of course they all get jobs and wield these bad ideas as an integral part of their identity. This is because they have done no serious thinking about who they are and how to act in the world as an adult.

view more: ‹ Prev Next ›