voluble

@voluble@lemmy.ca

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

voluble,

alleged

Dude. For real?

voluble, (edited )

The claim that ‘the people who killed Nijjar were too young to be state actors’ is fallacious to begin with. It’s even more tenuous in light of everything else that’s known about the murder.

It goes without saying that there’s no reason to give any weight to India’s denial of involvement. That’s all that really needs to be said about that.

Canada expelled an Indian diplomat. There’s no reason to do that if India wasn’t involved. There’s no reason for India not to cooperate with investigations if they’re not involved. We know that Five Eyes intelligence exists that makes a connection between the assassination and the Indian government. The intelligence itself hasn’t been disclosed (and never will be - sources & methods, etc). So, waiting for that kind of disclosure before forming an opinion on this is folly at best.

The current Canadian government is horribly weak on matters of foreign interference, so if they’ve been mealymouthed regarding this assassination, I don’t think that casts doubt on India’s involvement. If anything, it’s a suggestion of the opposite.

Given the degraded state of Canada’s current foreign policy, it’s expected that they would tiptoe around confirming a direct link between India and the assassination, and may choose to never confirm it. That doesn’t mean we should infer that a link doesn’t exist.

With all that in mind, I don’t see any reason to conclude that India wasn’t involved.

voluble,

Fair - all I’m saying is, given what we know, it’s not a situation of India’s involvement being equally likely and unlikely. It’s likely, and there are good reasons to believe it to be the case, and no good reasons to doubt it. So I think making a point of saying that it’s unproven is nitpicking and doesn’t accurately reflect the facts of the matter.

voluble,

In September, the Canadian prime minister told lawmakers that “agents of the government of India” had been linked to Mr. Nijjar’s killing on Canadian soil

The New York Times - “What We Know About the Killing of a Sikh Separatist in Canada”

Do you have a good reason to doubt the mainstream view on this? The fact that the killers were young isn’t a good reason.

voluble,

Didn’t look too big this evening, but was very close to the highway. Stay safe everyone.

voluble,

Their menu increasing contradicts the core principles of taste.

voluble,

It would be interesting if there was a federal party with big ideas and detailed policy proposals worth actually getting behind.

voluble,

At this point, why not trade big pieces? If your top guys can’t perform in the playoffs, move them out.

voluble,

Lol. Out of curiosity, are you hearing this from management, or from staff on the floor?

If prices are so high that a store inspires a unified national boycott, jobs loss (if it happens) can actually be blamed directly on the prices!

voluble,

Not going to steal, but definitely will boycott for the month of May.

voluble,

As a millennial with a not-amazing but decent paying job, the notion of retirement at all is laughable. What incentive do people like me have to save, when inflation and cost of living are on the trajectory that they’re currently on? Putting money away at this point just means less money for groceries, rent, and enjoyable things. And in 5 years, that saved money will be worth less than it is today.

voluble,

Every cheap clear spirit from an AB producer is proofed, or re-distilled 97%abv neutral grain spirit from a factory in Saskatchewan. The neutral grain spirit from Saskatchewan is very high quality, so, actually kind of impossible to fuck up. Some distilleries actually manage to, however.

voluble,

AB government advocacy for local craft producers: Drake no

AB government advocacy for gambling and cannabis: Drake yes

The liquor regulation system in Alberta is prohibitionary already. What changes would you want to see?

voluble,

For the interested, my estimate is that $34.28 of this sticker price is liquor tax.

Federal excise is $13.93 per litre of absolute alcohol. Normally, AB provincial liquor tax is $13.76 per litre of volume, but this 4L is probably self-distributed by an AWP producer. They get reduced rates that scale based on the volume of production. Here, I’d guess it’s something like $3 per litre of volume.

voluble,

Alberta does have minimum prices for both wholesale as well as on-premise liquor.

voluble,

Minimum pricing in AB, AFAIK, is regulated on the wholesale price of the product. So, producers are regulated, but retail stores aren’t prevented from competition, loss leaders, stunts, etc., which is what this might be.

Given that the tax money from alcohol/tobacco just goes into provincial and federal slush funds that proportionately end up being funneled into seniors benefits, I don’t believe minimum pricing really addresses the things that people think it does. I’m an advocate of directing alcohol taxes towards the harms it creates. But, try to find a politician who wants to grind that axe. I say this as someone who enjoys a good beverage, & acknowledging the pragmatic importance of offsetting the healthcare costs of alcohol abuse. I don’t believe that simply making a good more expensive is the wisest move on the policy side, if healthcare outcomes are the ultimate target.

voluble,

Talking points printed for comrades at the Russian troll farm

voluble,

Median wage of $45k per year is wild. Tough to live comfortably on that in most cities in this country.

voluble,

FYI just about any liquor product manufactured in North America has spent substantial time in an HDPE tote.

voluble,

OP, are you saying there are homes in Quebec that a person making $30k a year can buy? If so, tabarnak, I need to learn French.

voluble,

In the case at-hand, Legault certainly looks like a guy who was grasping at straws for a lighter hand from the justice system. Not sure who would need to be ‘paid’ in this circumstance.

As a sidebar, I believe Gladue explicitly addresses loss of language and connection with background as an impact of colonialism that must be considered in sentencing, i.e., it’s not necessary to have a deep connection with Indigenous heritage / culture to be considered via Gladue. But yeah, not a factor in this case, which the judge went to great lengths to point out.

Anyway, the sentencing referenced some material that pointed me to the case of writer Joseph Boyden, who falsely claimed Indigenous ancestry. Led me to an article by Wab Kinew about the issue titled There is room in our circle for Joseph Boyden. If you don’t mind sharing, what’s your take on Kinew’s stance?

I ask because it strikes me as antipodal from your view, and I’m just not sure what to think about the issue of identity here.

voluble,

Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

voluble,

Man, fuck these UCP idiots.

Provincial governments need to work closely with the federal government. The provincial government actually has a responsibility to establish and nurture that relationship, and not simply throw temper tantrums when the relationship isn’t what they want it to be. When the UCP chooses to be oppositional and obstructive like this, it hurts Alberta citizens, and makes life worse.

There are a lot of things I love about Alberta. But if the next provincial election shows that a majority of the citizens truly want a provincial government that behaves like this, I’m outta here.

voluble,

Get Damon Killian to send them down the chute.

voluble,

Eventually it turns out that Project Hype Train does not have a functioning train system at launch.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • provamag3
  • rosin
  • thenastyranch
  • Durango
  • DreamBathrooms
  • ngwrru68w68
  • magazineikmin
  • cubers
  • Youngstown
  • mdbf
  • slotface
  • osvaldo12
  • GTA5RPClips
  • kavyap
  • megavids
  • InstantRegret
  • everett
  • tacticalgear
  • vwfavf
  • tester
  • normalnudes
  • modclub
  • ethstaker
  • khanakhh
  • cisconetworking
  • anitta
  • Leos
  • JUstTest
  • All magazines