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19 votes
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‘America, uh... First!’: Immigration and Customs Enforcement to buy $7.2 million worth of Canadian armored personnel carriers
15 votes -
Canadian PM Mark Carney's minority government budget passed a crucial confidence vote thanks to the support of the Greens and multiple abstentions, averting the possibility of a federal election
20 votes -
Intercepted communications link Indian government to British Columbia Sikh leader’s assassination
20 votes -
United Kingdom, Australia and Canada officially recognize a Palestinian state
66 votes -
Anyone know the closest Canada has political commentary content like the US?
Obviously, Canada and U.S. are entirely different political systems with different media environments and so forth, but as someone who likes the content of podcasters like The Daily Show, Trevor...
Obviously, Canada and U.S. are entirely different political systems with different media environments and so forth, but as someone who likes the content of podcasters like The Daily Show, Trevor Noah, Hasan Minhaj and podcasters/tech journalists like Scott Galloway and Kara Swisher and "free thinkers" like Bari Weiss and her ilk, I am wondering if Canada has any similar content that I am just unable to find with google/duck searches? As a Canadian, I think I should be consuming more content that goes over Canadian news rather than American but our media environment seems really barren if you are trying to avoid CBC produced material.
The closest I could find was Canadaland but after a few episodes, I found that host is of a particular brand of "progressive" that I don't particularly care for.
12 votes -
Canada won’t become the 51st US state – but could it join the EU?
19 votes -
Bilingual, educated, qualified—and still not welcome in Quebec. As the province seeks to expand on its controversial Bill 21, critics warn of deepening discrimination.
13 votes -
Has international travel to the US really collapsed? (No, except Canada).
13 votes -
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberals win election
57 votes -
Canadian election: Liberals projected to form government
26 votes -
These regular Canadians share the personal experience that shapes how they will vote
12 votes -
Help me understand the phrase, "Elbows up"
I keep seeing this phrase, mostly with relation to USA-Canadian politics right now. I was curious enough to look this up and it seems this phrase came from a famous hockey player, Gordie Howe....
I keep seeing this phrase, mostly with relation to USA-Canadian politics right now.
I was curious enough to look this up and it seems this phrase came from a famous hockey player, Gordie Howe.
Now, I want to say that my initial thought before researching this was, "oh, elbows up must be passive resistance, it's like someone folding their arms waiting for you to calm down, it's like putting your elbows up on a table refusing to eat/being rude on purpose to prove a point"
What I found, and the crux of the question, is it seems like a license to practice violence, when you deem it necessary. It seems very, "ends justify the means" -- because it is inherently a very violent rhetoric. I feel the current use of the term is, "don't take shit from anyone if they are bullying you". But this completely disregards its origins.
My further search into the hockey part of it sounds like the player didn't just use his "elbows" in retaliation, it sounds like he was really actively violent (on the ice)...so...I guess I just don't get it, I don't get why a society would glorify such a violent backed terminology, to combat...extremely violent behavior (threats of annexation).
Genuinely interested to hear anyone's opinions on this phrase.
Bonus, I saw one explanation of the player that I thought was funny, his "rational and expert application of violence"
23 votes -
UK open to Canadian involvement in new fighter jet project
19 votes -
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney calls for snap election amid trade war with US
24 votes -
Mark Carney elected as leader of Liberal Party, becoming Prime Minister-designate of Canada
42 votes