sj_zero on Nostr: I think you're misinterpreting what I'm saying. 67% of Canadian businesses were ...
I think you're misinterpreting what I'm saying. 67% of Canadian businesses were already in trouble because we're a socialist dictatorship that's one of the worst places on earth to run a business. Tariffs are just cream on top of very big cake. Nobody likes it, but the next step is leaving (and many people and companies have)
We're already in a per capita depression, and the only reason we haven't been in recession is millions of immigrants being brought in to live in subhuman conditions in unfurnished basements while working for minimum wage. Housing (not anything productive) accounts for 40% of Canada's GDP, and as a direct result of that fact, housing is unaffordable for human beings from planet Earth -- the average house price in Canada peaked at $850,000 nation-wide. The only way to afford a mortgage or rent is to have a high paying job of which there just aren't that many.
Insolvencies have been seeing meteoric rises from 2020 to now, all the while the government has burned through a cool trillion in debt.
There's tent cities in every major city -- in January. In Canada. They never used to be like this.
But it's like "oh no! Tariffs!" And everyone is acting like it's a bigger deal than it really is, we were already a dumpster fire, this is just another tire.
We're already in a per capita depression, and the only reason we haven't been in recession is millions of immigrants being brought in to live in subhuman conditions in unfurnished basements while working for minimum wage. Housing (not anything productive) accounts for 40% of Canada's GDP, and as a direct result of that fact, housing is unaffordable for human beings from planet Earth -- the average house price in Canada peaked at $850,000 nation-wide. The only way to afford a mortgage or rent is to have a high paying job of which there just aren't that many.
Insolvencies have been seeing meteoric rises from 2020 to now, all the while the government has burned through a cool trillion in debt.
There's tent cities in every major city -- in January. In Canada. They never used to be like this.
But it's like "oh no! Tariffs!" And everyone is acting like it's a bigger deal than it really is, we were already a dumpster fire, this is just another tire.