Heather Geverding

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Heather Geverding

Heather Geverding

@heathergev

Senior Programmer/Analyst. I ♥️ Northen Ontario. Go Sens Go.

Ontario, Canada Katılım Mayıs 2009
267 Takip Edilen139 Takipçiler
Heather Geverding
Heather Geverding@heathergev·
@kingcambie @stphnmaher Even if you can’t appreciate a Premier standing up for the country, half the interview was about developing the Port of Churchill for LNG, and opportunities for Northern Manitoba.
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kingcambie
kingcambie@kingcambie·
@stphnmaher This is dumb, getting so tired of empty virtue. If I was a Manitoba voter I'd want Kinew to concentrate on leading the province not fan service for lefties.
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Ed
Ed@cdn_proud2b·
@acoyne Canada will not benefit by China replacing the US as our primary trading partner. China will increase its influence in gov’t and Cdn society. We have already seen how quickly and harshly they applied tariffs on Canada. We shouldn’t jump from the frying pan into the fire!
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Nagrom 🍉
Nagrom 🍉@gibeau_orange·
Well that didn’t age well. Over half of these authors are cancelled lol.
Nagrom 🍉 tweet media
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Dale
Dale@dalebornfree·
@acoyne It's called the USMCA by the world, except for those with an inferiority complex . Don't worry Andrew. It's not a complex.
Dale tweet media
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Matina Stevis-Gridneff
Matina Stevis-Gridneff@MatinaStevis·
i haven’t had enough coffee to follow the pace of delivery of this danielle smith address, she is on X2 speed
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Heather Geverding
Heather Geverding@heathergev·
@Huhimagine @jengerson @toog416 The goal is not replacement. It's diversification - to reduce, not eliminate, the dependency. To find alternative markets and build in resiliency so we are not subject to economic coercion. I think the goal is getting it down to 50%.
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C’estmoi?
C’estmoi?@Huhimagine·
@heathergev @jengerson @toog416 The delusion from the left, thinking Canada can replace US as trade partner, is something to behold. Canada will ALWAYS be dependent on US for trade….unless of course you plan on moving Canada?
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Jen Gerson
Jen Gerson@jengerson·
The most famous quote of the election was: “Our old relationship of integration with the US is now over. We are over the shock of the American betrayal...America wants our land, our resources, our water, our country. These are not idle threats.” x.com/toog416/status…
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C’estmoi?
C’estmoi?@Huhimagine·
@heathergev @jengerson @toog416 You can’t ’diversify’ from a market you depend on, that you send 76% of your imports to, an integrated market. What part do you not understand…?
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C’estmoi?
C’estmoi?@Huhimagine·
Nice semantics dodge. Carney didn’t run on ‘maybe we’ll chat politely.’ He ran on ‘elbows up’, fight back with retaliatory tariffs that hit 🇺🇸hard & deliver a win for 🇨🇦. He sold himself as tough guy who’d protect workers, negotiate from strength & get a better deal. 🇨🇦heard anti-‘Orangeman’ toughness, not vague future talks. That’s platform he won on…
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Heather Geverding
Heather Geverding@heathergev·
@stphnmaher Finally, someone with the mettle to call out the National Post on its inexorable leftward list.
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Annie Dufour
Annie Dufour@anniedufour99·
@heathergev @stphnmaher Now, I love what you wrote ! It's very wise and insightful! It makes me see aging differently! Thank you Heather!
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Stephen Maher
Stephen Maher@stphnmaher·
Someone could write a piece that challenges the current bureaucratic nature of our bilingual federal systems, suggesting it is time to reform them, but this article is not that. A key argument here is that our political class is too narrow because of the need to learn French. 1/2
Maclean’s Magazine@macleans

Canada’s bilingualism policy produces some strange spectacles: French schools in the Arctic, French CBC programming for Albertans, prime ministers speaking French in Australia, a $126-million French-language university in Toronto with just 25 students. In an essay for Maclean’s, commentator @JJ_McCullough argues that these are signs of a political doctrine that has become more revered than rationally defended. “State-mandated bilingualism conflicts with Canada’s self-image as a fair and merit-based democracy,” he writes. “And the worst may be yet to come.” McCullough writes that the usual case for bilingualism rests on shakier ground than Canadians like to admit. It’s often justified as a historic obligation to one of the country’s “two founding peoples.” But he points out that Canada was never meaningfully a country of only two peoples. In any case, he argues that official bilingualism was more of an accommodation to keep Quebec nationalism in check. “Official bilingualism nevertheless remains venerated by all manner of Canadian elites as a taboo in the truest sense,” he writes. McCullough’s point is that the language policy merely privileges a narrow pool of bilingual people from the Laurentian region to the upper ranks of politics, government and public institutions. The result, he argues, is a gatekeeping system that shuts many Canadians out of top careers. “This bilingual glass ceiling on political talent has warped Canadian democracy,” he writes. “Review the heads of basically any senior federal institution, be it the courts, Crown Corporations, the military or some major regulatory board and you’ll find a Canadian elite that remains much whiter and much more Laurentian than the country it rules.” In a country that presents itself as multicultural, meritocratic and inclusive, he argues, official bilingualism is becoming harder to defend as anything other than exclusion with financial and cultural costs. macleans.ca/politics/offic…

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Heather Geverding
Heather Geverding@heathergev·
@anniedufour99 @stphnmaher I think age can be a secret weapon. You need to be willing to make rookie mistakes and sound ridiculous along the way. That gets infinitely easier.
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Annie Dufour
Annie Dufour@anniedufour99·
From very recent conversations with Stephe, I concur that he speaks French beautifully, and his Spanish is coming along nicely ! To further his argument: both my parents learned a third language, Spanish, pas their 50's and 60's respectively. It is NEVER too late. And NOT that hard. It's even fun !
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Erin O'Toole
Erin O'Toole@erinotoole·
We the North. Strong and Free. 🇨🇦
Erin O'Toole tweet media
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Heather Geverding
Heather Geverding@heathergev·
@stphnmaher Made me think immediately of it's thematic inverse in Oasis' Cigarettes and Alcohol. Same socioeconomic stress, one sacrifices, the other flips the board and refuses to play a rigged game. Responsibility vs hedonism. Gives the "idiot" concept more profundity than it might have.
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Stephen Maher
Stephen Maher@stphnmaher·
I am surprised that the president of a think tank would post this. The ideal location for a launch site depends on the orbit you are seeking to achieve for the satellite you are launching. 1/x
Peter McCaffrey@peteremcc

Does anyone in Ottawa understand basic physics? It's significantly easier (ie, cheaper) to launch to space from near the equator. That's why Europe's space port is in French Guiana. Anyone launching from Canada is either an idiot or expecting massive government subsidies.

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Heather Geverding retweetledi
Jen Gerson
Jen Gerson@jengerson·
I think there are a lot of fair criticisms to be levelled at Carney; but starting from the assumption that the Americans are acting in good faith to secure "free trade" and the Canadians are mucking it up -- that's just pure delusion or dishonesty.
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