For some years I had planned to move to Canada and was gearing up to sell my house in the Netherlands when I met a Swedish woman at a party in the UK which sort of changed my plans - I moved to the north of Europe instead of the north of the Americas.
Now, 22 years later I see that Sheriff's words in a different light. No, Canada is still not a 'communist country' but it has proven to be a country which is easily taken over by (what I consider to be) the 'looney left'. The People's Republic of Trudeaunia is not the Canada I envisioned when I planned to move there and I am - for more than only this reason - glad things worked out the way they did for me so I did not end up living there. Sweden might have its own set of problems but when compared to Canada we're a beacon of sanity. This became even more clear during the SARS2 unpleasantness when the contrast between oppressive Canada and free Sweden became even more obvious.
What went wrong in Canada? Why has it gone from being a 'more civilised version of the USA' to the caricature of a 'liberal utopia' (in the American sense of the term 'liberal') it has become and what will it take to put the country back on track towards sanity?
A lot of time expensive treatment would have to be restarted (or became much more complex and thus costly), limited hospital beds were taken for too long etc. In Switzerland these folks have right to all treatment regular paying folks have by law, and guess who at the end pays the bill.
Accept human nature with warts and all, work on which is manageable for sure, but some medieval primitive mindset when addressing this complex topic simply doesn't work and its proven ad nauseum, and literally everybody get hits back eventually, one way or another.
Municipalities are passing unconstitutional laws to prevent people from using drugs in parks.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-court-blocks-...
Obviously the supreme court struck this law(s) down. Obviously BC has one of the worst homelessness crisis which is related. They also fired thousands of antivaxxer healthcare workers and still are, resulting in a healthcare worker crisis as well. Those vaxxer who remained now have far significant higher workload.
Overall you can clearly see multiple major crisis caused by the BC politicians. Luckily there's an election in October this year. But for some reason the current politicians are looking at a landslide win? lol?
The new government has actually done a surprisingly good job at fixing things despite how badly the previous government salted the earth.
Speaking of healthcare one of the things they are praised for is changing the way doctors are paid. As a result we've had 700 new GP'S come to BCIT in the last year. I know people who couldn't get GP'S for over a decade that are finally getting doctors.
I have trouble believing you are from BC or perhaps you are abti-vaxx and have some kind of agenda.
Regardless I find your take very disengenuous.
Horgan took power in 2017. Most of BC's problems started after this. Though don't take me as defending the liberals because they did tremendous damage to BC as well.
>The new government has actually done a surprisingly good job at fixing things despite how badly the previous government salted the earth.
The NDP are the ones making 'changes' and are the ones causing problems with their changes.
>Speaking of healthcare one of the things they are praised for is changing the way doctors are paid. As a result we've had 700 new GP'S come to BCIT in the last year. I know people who couldn't get GP'S for over a decade that are finally getting doctors.
So the net change is still thousands less?
https://www.kamloopsbcnow.com/watercooler/news/news/Provinci...
And you think thousands less of workers has resulted in better services?
>I have trouble believing you are from BC or perhaps you are abti-vaxx and have some kind of agenda.
You're the throwaway.
>Regardless I find your take very disengenuous.
All of my points are easily confirmed. There are those ongoing crisis.