Don Moss

9.6K posts

Don Moss banner
Don Moss

Don Moss

@RealDChad

Woke up in 2020 during covid and its a different world. Doing my best to make a difference. Fitness, health and family is my passion. 🇨🇦

Alberta, CA Katılım Şubat 2024
95 Takip Edilen258 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
Take care of your family as best you can so that they look at you like this. ❤️
Don Moss tweet media
English
0
1
7
324
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@VerminusM Its wild watching you cry on one post than literally cheer on death and destruction in another. Jews really are the kings of victimhood. 🤴
English
0
0
0
5
Uri Kurlianchik
Uri Kurlianchik@VerminusM·
Jordan, Egypt, Syria, Gaza, Lebanon, and now Iran. Every. Damn. Time.
Uri Kurlianchik tweet media
English
507
1.6K
8.7K
112.3K
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@MichaelRapaport Hating a genocidal government does not require hating an entire race of people - but I love how much of a victim you are.
English
0
0
0
2
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
Watching all the typical Jews violently react to the @TheoVon and @joerogan podcast yesterday has told me one thing - the podcast is going to be great and they clearly call out the truth.
English
0
0
0
11
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 Nah I just don't read word vomit from washed up 50 year old boomers.
English
0
0
0
41
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦
To the people of Alberta, I hear you. I really do. The frustration is real. Feels like your province carries more than its share and still gets brushed aside. Watching decisions come out of Ottawa that feel completely disconnected from your reality, your work, your way of life. That kind of anger does not just appear out of nowhere. But I want to talk to you honestly, not like a politician, more like someone who actually cares how this plays out for you. Separation sounds good at first. It feels like control. Like finally getting to call your own shots. But the day after a yes vote, reality kicks in, and it does not wait for anyone to catch up. Suddenly, the markets you have always had full access to is no longer guaranteed. You are on the outside trying to negotiate your way back in. Those trade relationships took decades to build. They do not just reset overnight because Alberta wants them to. Then there are the everyday things people do not think about right away. Pensions. Passports. Federal funding that helps keep hospitals running and infrastructure moving. None of that disappears instantly, but all of it becomes uncertain. And uncertainty is not just a political word. It shows up as companies holding back, investments slowing down, costs going up, and people wondering what the next few years actually look like. And this is not something that gets sorted out quickly. Look at Quebec. Decades of referendums and constitutional fights, and they never even left. Look at Scotland. Serious economists were saying it could take at least ten years just to stabilize, and they still voted no. Alberta would not be simpler. If anything, it would be more complicated. Resource rights, land, debt, pensions, borders. None of that has a clean or fast solution. This could stretch across ten, fifteen years or more. That is a big chunk of your life. That is kids growing up in the middle of uncertainty. That is businesses trying to plan without knowing what the rules will even be a few years down the line. The people voting yes in a moment of frustration are not always the ones who have to live with that uncertainty long term. That part never makes it onto the slogans. And here is the thing. Alberta is not powerless in Canada. Not even close. You have one of the strongest economies in the country. You have leverage. You have a voice that can carry weight when it is used properly. Being ignored does not mean you walk away. It means you push harder. It means you force your way into the conversation and refuse to be sidelined. You deserve better. That part is not up for debate. But leaving does not fix the problem. It replaces it with a much bigger, much riskier one. Separation is not a fresh start. It is a long, expensive, uncertain road. Stay. Push harder. Demand more. And win the argument from a position of strength, not from the outside looking in.
English
214
45
168
15.9K
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 Resorting to insults doesnt fix your loss.
English
1
0
0
11
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦
Here’s a continuation from yesterday’s post about China taking over Canada. Militarily or financially. People keep saying China is “financially taking over” Canada. Now they’re pointing to things like Canada–China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement and the Belt and Road Initiative as “proof.” Let’s clear that up. FIPA is not some secret takeover mechanism. It is a standard investment protection agreement, the kind Canada has signed with dozens of countries. It does not give China control over Canadian assets, land, or policy. What it does is set rules so investors from both countries are treated fairly and disputes go through arbitration instead of politics. Canada benefits from that just as much as China does. As for the Belt and Road Initiative, Canada is not even a participant. That program is focused mainly on developing countries in Asia, Africa, and parts of Europe where China funds infrastructure projects. You can debate whether that creates influence in those regions, sure. But it has nothing to do with Canada being “taken over.” We are simply not part of it. Meanwhile, the actual numbers tell a very different story. China is not a top investor in Canada compared to the United States or Europe. In fact, Chinese investment here has been shrinking, and the Canadian government has been actively blocking or unwinding deals in sensitive sectors like critical minerals and energy. Trade is not control. Agreements like FIPA are not control. And programs we are not even part of definitely are not control. There are real issues worth debating when it comes to China. “They’re financially taking over Canada” just isn’t one of them.
English
16
12
56
2.2K
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 You lost this argument clown fuck off to bluesky
English
1
0
0
15
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 You basically explained how economics works - then ignored that we are intangible linked to the USD. The effect your talking about isnt happening once. Its happening twice. Secondly, China is trying to actively take America's power. Stop ignoring that in your books.
English
0
0
0
14
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 They do not because our country has their own specific currency and spending habits hence the double inflation being rebranded as hyper inflating. You consistently write entire novels to write absolutely nothing.
English
1
0
0
16
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦
You’re right that printing more money can reduce purchasing power. That part is basic economics. But it’s not that simple. Inflation is not just about money supply. It also depends on demand, interest rates, productivity, and exchange rates. If the United States prints money, Canada does not just get “debased twice.” The currency adjusts. If it worked the way you’re saying, every country tied to the U.S. would have identical inflation. They do not.
English
1
0
3
24
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 You clearly dont understand how economics work - but money printing directly makes money WORTH LESS because there is more of it in the economy. America's power resides in its economical dominance - China wants that and is extremely patient - clearly foresight eludes you.
English
1
0
1
24
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦
You’re stacking a few different arguments together and treating them like they prove the same thing. Yes, China is trying to expand its economic influence. Every major power does that, including the United States. That is not the same thing as “financial takeover,” and it does not mean normal trade equals support for dominance. Canada can trade with China while still restricting investment, blocking sensitive deals, and protecting key industries. That is exactly what Canada has been doing. On your debasement point, it still does not land the way you think. U.S. monetary policy does not automatically debase Canada a second time. Exchange rates, capital flows, and independent central bank decisions all adjust. If it were that simple, every country tied to the U.S. would have identical inflation problems. They do not.
English
1
0
1
23
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@MarioNawfal Been wild watching tucket land on the right side of every issue over the last 4 years. Covid, putin and now this lolol.
English
0
0
0
19
Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇺🇸 Trump shared an article calling Tucker “deranged” and accusing him of backstabbing him. The piece claims Tucker, once a strong Trump ally, is now turning the MAGA base against him, especially over his Middle East and Iran policies. It goes further, accusing Tucker of pushing extreme narratives, platforming controversial figures, and calling Trump’s actions “evil” while undermining his strategy. Trump is doubling down on a hardline stance against Iran, while Tucker is openly criticizing it and trying to shift his audience away from Trump. Why should anyone be expected to show unconditional loyalty to a president until the very end? If someone genuinely wants the best for their country and believes the president is making the wrong decisions, why shouldn’t they be free to say it? Source: NY Post
Mario Nawfal tweet media
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇦🇹🇺🇸 Austria just rejected every single U.S. request to cross their airspace since the Iran war started. Their colonel basically said: “If it involves a country at war, we say no.” Neutrality is one thing… but this is just freeloading while hiding under NATO’s protection. Source: Disclose TV, AFP

English
154
128
721
71K
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@ezralevant Fuck Israel. Watching you beg me for funds for your broke ass company is hilarious. Maybe ask Israel for the 7k shekels they give for shills like you.
English
0
0
0
5
Ezra Levant 🍁🚛
Ezra Levant 🍁🚛@ezralevant·
You are the leading cause of antisemitism in Canada. There is no anti-Israel hoax originating with Hamas or Iran you won’t launder. And you have abandoned Jews to an antisemitic crime wave. All because your mass immigration has brought in countless Jew-haters.
Mark Carney@MarkJCarney

Tonight at sundown, Jewish communities in Canada and around the world will mark the start of Passover. Over the next eight days, Jewish Canadians will gather to honour that shared history and celebrate the resilience that continues to unite them. I wish a happy Passover to everyone celebrating. Chag Pesach Sameach.

English
175
230
1.2K
21.7K
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 You are dodging the broader point and throwing a red herring into our conversation. China is focused on securing economical dominance. We shouldn't be supporting that behavior, as it damages our ally, and emboldens China. My point about debasement still stands.
English
1
0
0
29
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦
You’re mixing a real concept with the wrong conclusion. Yes, money creation can affect inflation. But Canada is not getting “debased twice” because the U.S. prints money. Our inflation is driven mainly by our own monetary policy, domestic spending, housing supply, and global factors like energy and supply chains. The idea that U.S. printing automatically devalues Canada in some direct, double-hit way is just not how currencies work. If anything, exchange rates adjust and offset a lot of that. And on spending, Canada isn’t uniquely reckless. The U.S. has run significantly larger deficits relative to its economy for years. High costs here are real. But blaming it on “America prints and then we print again” is an oversimplification that doesn’t hold up.
English
1
0
2
34
Don Moss
Don Moss@RealDChad·
@Reil76 The thing you dont understand is prices are so high because we get debased twice. Once when america prints and second when we print. The problem with costs isnt America, look at how much worse our spending is. You are so bias that you cant see the faults on your own side.
Don Moss tweet media
English
1
0
0
34
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦
@RealDChad Well than don’t buy it if you don’t want. People complaining daily about costs, aren’t gonna pay 5x as much for North American made, regardless of what they say.
English
1
0
3
88
Ian Miles Cheong
Ian Miles Cheong@ianmiles·
Joe Kent is a total fraud. Think about how moronic this statement is. U.S. service members join the military because they are badasses who want to fight. They want to be put in harm's way to defend their country and protect freedom. Obviously, it is always a tragedy any time a soldier loses their life. They are heroes and should be remembered as such. But this BS from Kent is designed to appeal to low-IQ people's emotions. He in essence is saying: "The whole point of having a military is so no one ever dies." That is the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
Ian Miles Cheong tweet media
English
130
27
156
8.9K