Andrew

1.1K posts

Andrew banner
Andrew

Andrew

@andrewa

too much politics. here for the laughs. opinions are my own. occasionally mediocre photos

Montreal, QC - Toronto, ON Katılım Haziran 2007
297 Takip Edilen128 Takipçiler
Andrew retweetledi
My screen is red
My screen is red@tradeoilstocks·
“Give them a massive amount of oil, agricultural land, copper, freshwater, and every natural resource in the world. Now make them neighbors with the biggest market in the world. Great, now have them leave the resources in the ground and instead flip condos to each other”.
My screen is red tweet media
English
132
1.5K
16.3K
1M
Andrew retweetledi
Department of State
Department of State@StateDept·
Last week, the United States refused to participate in the UN’s review of the Global Compact on Migration. The United States objects to the Global Compact on Migration and UN efforts to facilitate replacement migration to the United States and our Western allies.
English
3.5K
19.2K
106.2K
9.8M
Andrew
Andrew@andrewa·
@RobynfromON @Tablesalt13 They need cheap workers and low wages to stay in business. That, and when ai replaces everyone, those at the top will feel less bad about exterminating the poor if they’re also mostly brown.
English
0
0
4
140
Robyn Holt
Robyn Holt@RobynfromON·
@Tablesalt13 Oh there's a plan...but I am honestly confused what they think their end game is. In order for them to live their wealthy overlord lifestyles they need our tax money and there isn't going to be any if everyone is unemployed and poverty stricken.
English
14
0
18
2.2K
Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Why did ALL commonwealth countries do THIS at the EXACT same time? Why did they all overload our infrastructure and crush youth employment?
English
484
2K
9.3K
156.2K
John Carter
John Carter@martianwyrdlord·
This provincial Liberal Party leadership contestant is staking out a position on immigration several steps to the right of both the provincial and federal Conservative Parties.
Eric Lombardi (EricForOLP.ca) 🇨🇦🚀@EricDLombardi

Canadian leaders are too afraid to engage seriously with the frustration many normal people feel about immigration after the last few years. But I share many of their concerns. We have made honest conversation too difficult. And in Ontario especially, we have been naive about the effects of sudden population growth on housing, wages, infrastructure, public services, and yes, social and cultural cohesion. Immigration has historically been one of Ontario’s greatest strengths. It helped build our industries, our cities, and our prosperity. But many Ontarians feel gaslit if they express frustration about current circumstances. Young people watched rents explode. Entry-level work became more competitive and lower paid. Colleges transformed into immigration pathways. Infrastructure and healthcare struggled to keep up. It has changed our politics, too. People are not imagining this. Ontario experienced a genuine immigration shock. This at least is somewhat acknowledged. And while Ottawa deserves plenty of blame, Ontario cannot pretend this simply happened to us. Doug Ford’s government helped create the conditions for this crisis by blowing up the higher education funding model. They froze tuition, underfunded colleges and universities, then allowed institutions to make up the difference by massively expanding international student enrollment. That turned parts of our higher education system into an immigration-processing business. Now Ontario now needs a reset. And because immigration policy is ultimately federal, Ontario will need to work closely with (and pressure) Ottawa to pursue a system that is sustainable, orderly, and capable of maintaining public trust. Permanent immigration should return to a more normal and sustainable baseline, and no longer be subject to insiders claiming “labour shortages”. Over the next 5-10 years, Canada should gradually unwind the enormous temporary resident population from roughly 5 million people nationally to well under 1 million. Some, of course, should be offered a path to stay, but many cannot and we need to honestly acknowledge that. That likely means a prolonged period of near-flat population growth. Going forward, temporary worker, asylum, and student streams need to shrink substantially. More than they have. Visa rules need to actually mean something. Asylum claims cannot quietly become a parallel permanent residency system. At the same time, we should reward people who follow the rules. If someone came legally, worked or studied honestly, avoided welfare, and left when required, they should receive a meaningful advantage if they later apply to immigrate permanently. And finally, we need to remember what immigration policy is for. It is not primarily a humanitarian program. It is a civilization-building and economy-building program. Ontario and Canada should prioritize immigrants with the skills, education, economic potential, and cultural compatibility to help build a prosperous, cohesive, high-trust society.

English
10
16
214
7.1K
Andrew retweetledi
Eric Lombardi (EricForOLP.ca) 🇨🇦🚀
Canadian leaders are too afraid to engage seriously with the frustration many normal people feel about immigration after the last few years. But I share many of their concerns. We have made honest conversation too difficult. And in Ontario especially, we have been naive about the effects of sudden population growth on housing, wages, infrastructure, public services, and yes, social and cultural cohesion. Immigration has historically been one of Ontario’s greatest strengths. It helped build our industries, our cities, and our prosperity. But many Ontarians feel gaslit if they express frustration about current circumstances. Young people watched rents explode. Entry-level work became more competitive and lower paid. Colleges transformed into immigration pathways. Infrastructure and healthcare struggled to keep up. It has changed our politics, too. People are not imagining this. Ontario experienced a genuine immigration shock. This at least is somewhat acknowledged. And while Ottawa deserves plenty of blame, Ontario cannot pretend this simply happened to us. Doug Ford’s government helped create the conditions for this crisis by blowing up the higher education funding model. They froze tuition, underfunded colleges and universities, then allowed institutions to make up the difference by massively expanding international student enrollment. That turned parts of our higher education system into an immigration-processing business. Now Ontario now needs a reset. And because immigration policy is ultimately federal, Ontario will need to work closely with (and pressure) Ottawa to pursue a system that is sustainable, orderly, and capable of maintaining public trust. Permanent immigration should return to a more normal and sustainable baseline, and no longer be subject to insiders claiming “labour shortages”. Over the next 5-10 years, Canada should gradually unwind the enormous temporary resident population from roughly 5 million people nationally to well under 1 million. Some, of course, should be offered a path to stay, but many cannot and we need to honestly acknowledge that. That likely means a prolonged period of near-flat population growth. Going forward, temporary worker, asylum, and student streams need to shrink substantially. More than they have. Visa rules need to actually mean something. Asylum claims cannot quietly become a parallel permanent residency system. At the same time, we should reward people who follow the rules. If someone came legally, worked or studied honestly, avoided welfare, and left when required, they should receive a meaningful advantage if they later apply to immigrate permanently. And finally, we need to remember what immigration policy is for. It is not primarily a humanitarian program. It is a civilization-building and economy-building program. Ontario and Canada should prioritize immigrants with the skills, education, economic potential, and cultural compatibility to help build a prosperous, cohesive, high-trust society.
English
199
206
1.4K
165.7K
Andrew
Andrew@andrewa·
@100MCanada @ShaneWenzel Your whole project is nothing more than agressive wage suppression at the behest of the laurentian elite and the other parasites sapping this country dry. Stop trying to turn this great country into a third world shithole resource extraction pit.
English
0
0
22
121
The Canada100million Project
@ShaneWenzel Canada is underpopulated, for one thing. We do need new Canadians but housing needs to keep up. We need to create new jobs to replace those being automated. We need companies that can exist and prosper without endless grants from the public purse.
English
105
2
4
28.8K
Shane Wenzel
Shane Wenzel@ShaneWenzel·
The Fraser Institute report is a gut punch. Youth unemployment at 14.3%? Our kids are being priced out by "expert" policies that flood the market and hike costs. We've effectively kicked away the ladder of opportunity. It's time to stop the experiments and finally put Canadian youth first!
The Fraser Institute@FraserInstitute

What happened to youth employment numbers in Canada after Ottawa significantly raised immigration quotas? fraserinstitute.org/commentary/gov… #cdnpoli

English
17
178
502
8.6K
Andrew retweetledi
Shane Wenzel
Shane Wenzel@ShaneWenzel·
Who decided Canada is "underpopulated"? The government never received a mandate to engineer this demographic explosion. Ottawa overtaxes citizens, stifling the domestic birthrate while forcing growth through mass migration. Canadians didn’t vote for this, yet they pay the price in housing costs and strained services. Where is the democratic consent? There is no mandate to replace a nation’s population against its will.
The Canada100million Project@100MCanada

@ShaneWenzel Canada is underpopulated, for one thing. We do need new Canadians but housing needs to keep up. We need to create new jobs to replace those being automated. We need companies that can exist and prosper without endless grants from the public purse.

English
77
442
1.9K
29.6K
Andrew retweetledi
Paul
Paul@WomanDefiner·
Millennials were the first generation that had the trades stripped out of the schools because their boomer parents wanted to brag about their kids going to college. You know why all Millennials went? Because boomers destroyed every other path coming out of high school. My Highschool had an entire wing of trades classrooms that were empty and shuttered. High schools were turned into a farming system for colleges.
BoiltOwl@nealjclark1

College is expensive because every millenial INSISTED they get to go. The boomers spent a ton so they could go. This was not the case in the boomers day. They understood natural hierarchy and sorted themselves appropriately. Their big sin was liking their children too much.

English
340
1.5K
14.1K
472.1K
Andrew retweetledi
🌘ʀᴇᴠᴇɴᴀɴᴛ⚡
If you grew up in the '90s or '00s you were constantly hearing about it since grade school. They had us sit in assemblies in middle & high school telling us we all needed to go to college and corralling us to apply, or else we'd never find work. This is insane revisionism:
BoiltOwl@nealjclark1

College is expensive because every millenial INSISTED they get to go. The boomers spent a ton so they could go. This was not the case in the boomers day. They understood natural hierarchy and sorted themselves appropriately. Their big sin was liking their children too much.

English
475
6.6K
67.6K
1.9M
Andrew retweetledi
Smirkley
Smirkley@Smirkley·
In Canada, a star Lib candidate named Erskine-Smith, who was in Parliament and endorsed by the current PM, lost a local nomination to a Bangladeshi man who owns Domino’s franchises. The second most popular language in the riding is Bengali. No lessons will be learned.
English
32
148
2.4K
48.2K
Andrew retweetledi
cbcwatcher
cbcwatcher@cbcwatcher·
Watch Andrew Coyne drop the truth bomb on At Issue: 'And of course, the most recent one is we're now bailing out every section of the media as well.' Cue the nervous chuckle from Althia Raj... like someone just pointed out the quiet part out loud at the subsidized dinner table And poof, the topic vanishes faster than accountability in a newsroom on payroll At Issue for thee, but not for we, media bailout recipients. Nothing to see here, folks—just keep those taxpayer cheques flowing while we 'independently' analyze the government that's keeping the lights on" Classic insider moment: one panelist dares to acknowledge the giant conflict-of-interest elephant in the CBC studio, everyone else suddenly develops selective hearing... But aerospace! Journalism 2026, baby! Now Coyne can say 'See I raised the issue' 🤦‍♂️
English
92
447
1.8K
65.3K
Andrew retweetledi
Martin Pelletier
Martin Pelletier@MPelletierCIO·
Look at it this way. A company being run by Mark Carney and his CFO being François-Philippe Champagne, and his COO being Mélanie Joly. The short trade of a lifetime.
English
24
27
419
4.8K
Andrew retweetledi
Claude
Claude@claudeai·
We’ve agreed to a partnership with @SpaceX that will substantially increase our compute capacity. This, along with our other recent compute deals, means that we’ve been able to increase our usage limits for Claude Code and the Claude API.
English
4.8K
12.1K
131K
23.7M
Andrew retweetledi
Shawn Kivimaa
Shawn Kivimaa@SKivimaa·
Temporary Foreign Workers are more accurately named as Permanent Foreign Wage Deflation.
English
4
51
281
2.4K
Andrew retweetledi
Riley Donovan
Riley Donovan@valdombre·
- Ethiopian comes on a study visa - A "minor traffic infraction" in Calgary sends him into road rage - Pulls a loaded Glock on the other driver - Probably won't be deported though because Ethiopia is dangerous - So instead Ethiopian criminals can stay and make Canada dangerous?
Riley Donovan tweet media
English
278
1K
3.4K
149.1K