If Canada were to respond to things like this with trade sanctions, as several of your remarks suggest, it would hurt us more than it would hurt them. It would suck to be poor.
There ya go (again) twisting the sentences 180 degrees and putting them ass-backwards into my mouth, in order to support your off-centre position. Where do I advocate tariffs? Lol..in fact, this issue that you invent, where it to be applicable, is exactly the opposite. Talk to any mill owner, or softwood supplier. It's the US that has the protectionist tariffs. I was proposing it's time to get less reliant on the US market for the few pitiful things that we do actually still supply (and for the reasons that you twist backwards). It was a business solution. And yes, we definitely should be making at least one household appliance in Canada, but that's another argument, I just threw on it initially to fan the fire.
lol, Are you actually a Canadian Trunc? Or more a Torontonian (as I suspect) with New Yorker Syndrome
9-11 happened less than four years ago. It's not as though use of a hijacked plane as a weapon of mass destruction is some sort of paranoid tin-foil-het theory. A terrorist at the helm of a big passenger airplane can and will do a lot more damage than Stephen Harper ever could or would.
Be careful of over-use of that tin-foil-hat metaphor, your sounding clichéd doesn't fit with your uniquely interesting writing style.
The mission is to stop the terrorists BEFORE they get on the plane. This latest manoeuvre is simply leverage to gain more information on you as a citizen under the guise of protecting American airspace. That's the point under discussion. Consider for a moment where this process leads, and where you must draw the line. I'm drawing the line in the sand here, RIGHT here. Our domestic PERSONAL information on citizenry movements is none of any other foreign countries business. PERIOD. I have a clear and meaningful cause to take this position, you on the other hand (seemingly) have some weak rational for capitulation which I find is against our national interest, and therefore against my personal interest, and as such, is a threat to my rights as a citizen. (in fact now that I actually see how serious this is, I think you should go to jail for the weekend or do some comminty time as penance)
Wouldn't it be reasonable for both sides to compromise, seeing as how it's a bi-national issue ? It's not as though the Americans are proposing that we be banned from taking shortcuts through their turf. It's reasonable for them to ask something in return, no ?
Yes, I agree. They can ask. But I guarantee you they will be as high-handed and broadminded as our friendly American poster-neighbour OTB, whose position is, "Tough, we own it, it's our way or the highway." Wake up Trunc. This is Canada. They are Americans. They are an aggressive, take-no prisoners para-military-business mentality that are trying to gain a leg-up on your sovereignty. And you/we are a fat lazy docile sheep. Jesus, there should be some kind of therapy where some Canadians can go to regain their sense of lost national survival mechanisms.
Quote:
International Law is based on International Shipping Law, and to date it's the strongest body of Laws in common to the Planet. What's your point? I am quite sure the US suggestion will run contrary to this body of law. Someone with 'real' knowledge no doubt speak out on it shortly.
I was speaking to the belief, widesparead in Canada, that a sovereign nation has to get permission from the UN or whatever before starting a war.
Yes, opposite to your Patriotic bedfellow to the South, the one whose demands to invade your sovereign privacy you are crawling in with.
There ya go (again) twisting the sentences 180 degrees and putting them ass-backwards into my mouth, in order to support your off-centre position. Where do I advocate tariffs? Lol..in fact, this issue that you invent, where it to be applicable, is exactly the opposite. Talk to any mill owner, or softwood supplier. It's the US that has the protectionist tariffs. I was proposing it's time to get less reliant on the US market for the few pitiful things that we do actually still supply (and for the reasons that you twist backwards). It was a business solution. And yes, we definitely should be making at least one household appliance in Canada, but that's another argument, I just threw on it initially to fan the fire.
lol, Are you actually a Canadian Trunc? Or more a Torontonian (as I suspect) with New Yorker Syndrome
9-11 happened less than four years ago. It's not as though use of a hijacked plane as a weapon of mass destruction is some sort of paranoid tin-foil-het theory. A terrorist at the helm of a big passenger airplane can and will do a lot more damage than Stephen Harper ever could or would.
Be careful of over-use of that tin-foil-hat metaphor, your sounding clichéd doesn't fit with your uniquely interesting writing style.
The mission is to stop the terrorists BEFORE they get on the plane. This latest manoeuvre is simply leverage to gain more information on you as a citizen under the guise of protecting American airspace. That's the point under discussion. Consider for a moment where this process leads, and where you must draw the line. I'm drawing the line in the sand here, RIGHT here. Our domestic PERSONAL information on citizenry movements is none of any other foreign countries business. PERIOD. I have a clear and meaningful cause to take this position, you on the other hand (seemingly) have some weak rational for capitulation which I find is against our national interest, and therefore against my personal interest, and as such, is a threat to my rights as a citizen. (in fact now that I actually see how serious this is, I think you should go to jail for the weekend or do some comminty time as penance)
Wouldn't it be reasonable for both sides to compromise, seeing as how it's a bi-national issue ? It's not as though the Americans are proposing that we be banned from taking shortcuts through their turf. It's reasonable for them to ask something in return, no ?
Yes, I agree. They can ask. But I guarantee you they will be as high-handed and broadminded as our friendly American poster-neighbour OTB, whose position is, "Tough, we own it, it's our way or the highway." Wake up Trunc. This is Canada. They are Americans. They are an aggressive, take-no prisoners para-military-business mentality that are trying to gain a leg-up on your sovereignty. And you/we are a fat lazy docile sheep. Jesus, there should be some kind of therapy where some Canadians can go to regain their sense of lost national survival mechanisms.
Quote:
International Law is based on International Shipping Law, and to date it's the strongest body of Laws in common to the Planet. What's your point? I am quite sure the US suggestion will run contrary to this body of law. Someone with 'real' knowledge no doubt speak out on it shortly.
I was speaking to the belief, widesparead in Canada, that a sovereign nation has to get permission from the UN or whatever before starting a war.
Yes, opposite to your Patriotic bedfellow to the South, the one whose demands to invade your sovereign privacy you are crawling in with.