Steve

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Steve

Steve

@StevePerfocus

Mgt, evaluation, perf planning, measurement + reporting practitioner, consultant and teacher. Mission: to have interesting conversations with thoughtful people.

Katılım Ağustos 2012
86 Takip Edilen418 Takipçiler
Steve
Steve@StevePerfocus·
Indeed let’s review-we got major concessions on potash trade for 50,000 EVs which will BTW likely save Canadians $ millions. Trump gave away Taiwan’s sovereignty for essentially nothing.
Univrsle@univrsle

Yes, your comments were just as absurd then as they are today First, let's start with over-dramatizing of this supposed partnership in the face of Trump's 'kiss the ass' tour of China. Second, threatening our sovereignty was always going to have consequence, that was a US choice

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Steve@StevePerfocus·
Spot on. The tired ‘art of the deal’ tactics we have seen again & again are hopefully wearing thin with Canadians. Let’s let PM Carney & team do their thing and not panic here. Trump hated Freeland because she wouldn’t cave on dispute resolution. It paid off. Let’s stay strong.
David Carment@cdnfp

@acoyne Has nothing to do with lecturing. This is another example of using ambiguity and incrementalism to extract concessions from Canada. Shared institutions are leveraged to America's advantage (like NORAD, CUSMA and NATO). hilltimes.com/2026/04/01/des…

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Steve@StevePerfocus·
@smerconish Lazy conspiracism is part of a larger lazy cause-effect thinking across topics these days.
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Steve@StevePerfocus·
Hilarious.. until you realize this guy almost got Mad Max Bernier nominated as CPC leader. I wish Canadians hated this gaslighting ignoramus more.. we don’t need this kind of MAGA North tactics anywhere.
Brent Toderian@BrentToderian

The only thing I don’t love about this video — which to be clear, I really love — is that they keep reminding us that technically the thoroughly awful Kevin O’Leary is a Canadian. I’m pretty sure most Canadians hate him more than Americans do. #MrAwful

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Peter Girnus 🦅
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz·
I am the Executive Vice President of the Trump Organization. I am visiting China this week in a personal capacity as a supportive son. Normal people visit their mothers in a personal capacity. Normal people attend funerals in a personal capacity. I do it beside sixteen CEOs, five billionaires worth $870 billion, and a 500-aircraft Boeing order being finalized with Beijing during the trip. Goldman Sachs. Citigroup. Mastercard. Visa. Tim Cook. Larry Fink. Stephen Schwarzman. In a personal capacity. I am also the Chief Strategy Officer of American Bitcoin. My qualifications for this role include mowing lawns on my father's golf courses, laying tile at his properties, and serving as a boardroom judge on The Apprentice from 2010 to 2015. I have no documented experience in cryptocurrency, blockchain, or Bitcoin mining. My stake in American Bitcoin alone was worth $548 million by September 2025 — eight months into my father's second term. We purchased 16,000 Bitmain mining rigs for $314 million. Bitmain is Chinese. Bitmain is headquartered in Beijing. Beijing is where I am visiting in a personal capacity. In March we bought 11,298 more. The terms were "unusual" — hundreds of millions in equipment for "future considerations." I'm not sure what "future considerations" means in this context, especially when your father sets the tariff rate on your supplier's home country. I can tell you it is not a "conflict of interest." It is a "supply chain relationship." On May 12, the day I boarded this plane, my father announced a trade agreement with China. Tariffs on Chinese goods dropped from 145 percent to 30 percent. That is a 115-point reduction on the country that manufactures my equipment, announced the same day I flew there. I did not know. I did not ask. I did not need to ask. My family owns 60 percent of World Liberty Financial. We receive 75 percent of every token sold. The New Yorker's running total is $4.2 billion. Politico documented $12.9 billion in trading volume. Let me tell you about our team. My brother Barron is our "DeFi visionary." He was eighteen years old. His prior experience is being tall. My brother Don is "Web3 Ambassador." His prior experience is selling condos and shooting elephants. I handle "strategic planning." My prior experience is tile. My brother-in-law Jared received $2 billion from the Saudi sovereign wealth fund six months after leaving the White House. The fund's own advisory panel flagged his "lack of private equity experience" and called the due diligence results "unsatisfactory." They gave him the money anyway. My sister Ivanka received Chinese government approval for 16 trademarks during my father's first term. The categories included handbags, sunglasses, perfume, baby blankets, and voting machines. Voting machines. From China. While her father was president. That is not "corruption." That is "brand diversification." My father spent four years on Hunter Biden. Four years. The charge: Hunter sat on the board of Burisma for $83,000 a month with no energy experience. My father called it the greatest corruption in American political history. He withheld $391 million in military aid to Ukraine to pressure an investigation. He was impeached for it. He did it again. A special counsel was appointed. Total cost to taxpayers: millions. Total Hunter earnings: $11 million over five years. Let me do the math my father never did. Hunter Biden made $6,027 per day. My family makes $8.75 million per day. That is 1,451 times Hunter's rate. We earn his entire five-year scandal every thirty hours. Hunter had no energy experience. I have no crypto experience. Hunter sat on one board. I run the operation. Hunter met one banker for a coffee. I sit on Air Force One beside $870 billion negotiating with the country that manufactures my equipment. But here is the part that makes me proud. We launched a cryptocurrency in my father's name. It peaked at $73. It trades today at $2.43. Retail investors lost 95 percent of their money. We collected $400 million in transaction fees regardless of price. We hosted a dinner — the top 220 holders gained entry by holding enough of my father's coin. The top 29 received a champagne toast with the President of the United States. Price of admission: approximately $3.28 million in tokens. A public school teacher earns $3.28 million in 47 years. We call that "community engagement." Not "selling access." Access is what Hunter Biden sold for a cup of coffee. Three days before I boarded this plane to Beijing, our team moved $12 million in memecoin assets to custody platforms. Routine. Unrelated. Everything is unrelated to everything. In a personal capacity. On January 24, 2025 — four days after the inauguration — my father fired seventeen inspectors general in a single night. Without explanation. Without notice to Congress. Seventeen. The people whose job is to look. He removed them all at once and no one replaced them. There is no inspector general for a son's "personal capacity." There is no disclosure form for love. There is no ethics office for a champagne toast priced at $3.28 million. He didn't bend the guardrails. He fired the people who hold them. He built that. I fly in on it. $4.2 billion at cruising altitude. Every thirty hours, another Hunter Biden. Hunter Biden got a special counsel for a cup of coffee and a board seat that paid less per month than one champagne toast with my father costs per million. I am the Executive Vice President of the Trump Organization. I am the Chief Strategy Officer of American Bitcoin. I am the Web3 strategic planner at World Liberty Financial. I am visiting the country that manufactures my mining rigs, approved my sister's trademarks, and funds my brother-in-law's private equity firm, on a plane beside $870 billion and a president who spent four years calling $11 million treason. In a personal capacity. As a supportive son.
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Andrew Coyne 🇺🇦🇮🇱🇬🇪🇲🇩
They never do. Read The Morning After, by Chantal Hebert and Jean Lapierre. Twenty years after the 95 referendum, the major players *still* hadn’t figured out what they would have done in the event of a yes vote. It was all just bluff and improv. But anyone who does try to game the thing out with any rigour pretty quickly comes to the conclusion that it can’t be done: not unilaterally/illegally, and not by negotiation/constitutionally. That needs to be communicated to people. But what needs to be communicated even more is that the whole enterprise is illegitimate; that there is not, and cannot be, any such thing as a right to secede from a democratic country (which is why virtually no democratic country recognizes such a right); that threatening to do so to blackmail your fellow Canadians is as morally bankrupt as it is practically futile; that the attempt to invoke democratic principle in its defence is bogus — you cannot vote to help yourself to something that isn’t yours, namely the territory of Canada — while the right of self determination simply folds in on itself: if Albertans or Quebecers have a right to self determination, do Edmontonians or Montrealers? For that matter, do Canadians? Or is the proposition that the vast majority of Canadians must simply stand mute while their country, which tens of millions have built over several centuries, is blown apart by a single vote on a single day by a small fraction of the population? Even if either Alberta or Quebec had been sovereign states prior to entering the federation, that would not hold water: once you’ve dissolved your sovereignty in the larger entity, you can’t reconstitute it. It no longer exists. There’s nothing to reconstitute it with. But it’s just gaga to make such claims with regard to a province that, like Alberta, was itself the creation of an Act of the Parliament of Canada, or like Quebec, of the Parliament of Great Britain — and then only the relatively minor rump that was carved out of the pre-existing Province of Canada at Confederation. Two thirds of the present-day territory of the province of Quebec was added after Confederation — again, by acts of the Parliament of Canada. So there’s no actual likelihood of Canada breaking up, even if there is a referendum in either or both provinces, and even in the vanishingly unlikely event that either or both of them managed to win a “clear majority” on a “clear question.” What is possible is that either or both of them might land themselves in a ruinous, divisive, and possibly violent mess, whose costs would mostly be borne by their own citizens. But we do not make that prospect more likely by rushing to make offers to dissuade them from leaving or going to great lengths to show “the federation works.” The committed hardliners regard such offers with contempt while the cynical blackmailers regard them as a baseline from which to make further demands. Neither is anything achieved by saying “fine, go.” Acquiescing in the theft of Canadian territory and the destruction of the federation hardy counts as a “tough” position. No, the proper stance is to advertise, well in advance, that neither exercise will be regarded as conferring any right to secede of any kind; that whatever we might be willing to talk about afterward, it would not be secession. It might not even be as advantageous as the status quo.
Don Braid@DonBraid

Separatist leaders hate Canada but have no real plan for secession. Why is that? Do they count on the U.S. to step in? Column calgaryherald.com/opinion/column… #ableg #abpoli #cdnpoli #yyc #yeg

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Steve
Steve@StevePerfocus·
This is what partner material looks like.
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Justin Wolfers
Justin Wolfers@JustinWolfers·
Lemme ’splain: calling it a “big beautiful bill” doesn’t make the maths prettier. If you cut taxes and don’t cut spending, the deficit goes up. That’s not ideology. That’s just arithmetic wearing sensible shoes.
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Steve retweetledi
macmike086 ❤️ 🇨🇦 🦞 🇺🇦 🇬🇱 🇩🇰 🇫🇮
Never forget that defeated Carleton candidate refused to leave Stornoway after his humiliating defeat after the 2025 election. He charged taxpayers an avg of $576,000 a mth in 2025 & expensed over $6 mil that yr. Meanwhile, Mark Carney lived in a cottage. Stop the grifting, PP!
macmike086 ❤️ 🇨🇦 🦞 🇺🇦 🇬🇱 🇩🇰 🇫🇮 tweet media
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G McThink
G McThink@redsnoopy69·
No conservatives haven't governed Canada in over a decade; however, conservatives have been governing Ontario for the better part of decade, Saskatchewan since 2007 and in Alberta 71 out of the last 75 years. Is poverty eliminated in these jurisdictions Jack?
Jack Mcleod@QcMcleod

@redsnoopy69 Conservatives haven't governed in Canada for over a decade. Poverty is the only result of liberalism. Enjoy!

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Steve
Steve@StevePerfocus·
Indeed this opposition leader can’t keep his partisan attack mode in check - even when addressing his question publicly would hurt Canada’s negotiating position.
Univrsle@univrsle

@globeandmail Why is he unfit for office? well this little bimbo eruption does the trick. Canadians aren't dumb, even if they don't get the complexity of CUSMA, they understand at a basic level what a negotiation is and how idiotic it would be to lay all your cards on the table in public.

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D.Radka, #NAFO 🇨🇿🤝🇺🇦
"The way out of the conflict? The way out of the conflict is for Russia to leave Ukraine. That's the way out of the conflict." -Sanna Marin Former PM of Finland Just an awesome woman😊 Respect🫡
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