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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 30th, 2023

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  • The abandonment of public housing by the federal government in the 1990s went hand-in-hand with a wider push to financialize the entire sector: rent controls were deregulated, rules were rewritten to make it easier for landlords to purchase buildings then forcibly hike rents.

    Once the Liberal and Conservatives governments pushed us into this era of investor led housing development it was obvious there was going to be a growing group of people that would be very happy that general housing prices were sky rocketing. Imagine how society would have viewed any type a significant bump in housing otherwise, how would anyone view it as anything as a bad thing.

    List of random thoughts for what investor led housing has brought us aside for the prices:

    • Worse quality housing - They’re not living in it so they don’t care how poorly built or designed it is as long as it can be flipped for profit.
    • Worse quality local amenities - Why invest in things like local amenities, transit and anything else when it doesn’t make a difference for you
    • Worse maintained strata housing - Anyone that has been on strata boards know that investors owned units don’t want to maintain the building since they’ll be gone by the time the shit hits the fan and be twice as expensive to fix.



  • Is this incompetence or malice?

    On the surface you can’t really say the Liberals didn’t try to regulate some of this stuff and get more local content but the results in this case is Bell getting $40 million break in fees that would usually fund these programs plus another $30 mill from the Google deal. Canadian lose more local news coverage and get to watch the Prime Minister of the country essentially shrugs and says he can’t believe Bell only care about maximizing profits.

    The Liberals’ update to broadcasting law, the Online Streaming Act, came into effect last April. It abolished certain licensing fees, which St-Onge said will save the company some $40 million a year.

    https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/social-media-creators-podcasts-won-t-be-regulated-under-liberal-online-streaming-law-1.6644499

    This marks the end of the government’s direct role with the law formerly known as Bill C-11, the Liberal government’s second attempt to bring major online-streaming services into Canada’s broadcasting system and eventually have them contribute to supporting local music and stories.

    “The sector needs to adapt to where the Canadian public is today. And we know Canadians look for their news and content online,” Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge said Tuesday in Montreal.

     

    I can’t believe 80% of Canadian voters were good with these 2 imbeciles running country last election.

    https://ottawa.citynews.ca/2024/02/08/local-news-cuts-at-bell-come-after-it-was-granted-40m-in-regulatory-relief-st-onge/

    Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre responded to the cuts on Thursday by placing blame on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    He said high taxes, burdensome red tape and an uncompetitive business environment “is driving our jobs and our money out of the country to foreign nations that are prospering at our expense.”





  • For anyone wondering this is at current time Provincially regulated.

    Some provinces have regulations that require a person’s written consent if an insurance agreement restricts access to their pharmacy of choice, including Ontario. But according to the Ontario College of Pharmacists, when it comes to preferred provider contracts, “consent is given by the [patient] when they opt-in or enrol for benefits.”

    The only province in Canada where these kinds of exclusivity deals are illegal is in Quebec. The province’s Bill 92 prohibits preferred pharmacy arrangements between pharmacies and insurance providers.