Ed

1.5K posts

Ed

Ed

@hedoestheworkof

Canada Katılım Haziran 2014
1K Takip Edilen89 Takipçiler
Ed retweetledi
Ed retweetledi
JayGen 𝕏 er🇨🇦
JayGen 𝕏 er🇨🇦@JayGenXer·
**Mark Carney just set a NEW RECORD** 💥 **The WORST first full fiscal year deficit in modern Canadian history.** **-$66.9 BILLION** 📉 (2025-26 est.) Compare that disaster to: - Justin Trudeau (Liberal): **-$17.8 BILLION** 🔴 deficit - Stephen Harper (Conservative): **+$13.8 BILLION** 🟢 SURPLUS - Paul Martin (Liberal): +$1.6B 🟢 surplus Liberals keep saying “best economy in a decade”… Then drop **record-breaking debt** from Day One 💸 This is Carney’s “strong economy”? Canadians are getting crushed by Liberal tax-and-spend madness. Wake up 👀 What do you think of this record? Drop your thoughts 👇 Canada First — not more Liberal economic destruction. 🇨🇦 #CDNPoli #MarkCarney #LiberalFail #CanadaFirst #CanadianEconomy
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@Artedeingenio What do you need midjourney for?
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OscarAI
OscarAI@Artedeingenio·
It’s never been easier to create a children’s book. You don’t even need Illustrator, Photoshop, or anything like that anymore. All you really need are these two tools: Midjourney and ChatGPT. With that, you can create endless children’s books in any beautiful style you can imagine. For this one, I used a Niji 6 moodboard to give GPT Image 2 some visual references, and from there I designed the cover and three interior pages of a children’s story: A Friend for Every Adventure. The text, typography, and even the layout can all be done in ChatGPT. Then you just upscale the images to increase the resolution, and you’ve got a book ready for your kids to read, or even to sell. 👉 If you want access to the best children’s illustration styles, I recommend subscribing. I have hundreds of styles available for my subscribers, and I keep adding more regularly.
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Mario Zelaya
Mario Zelaya@mario4thenorth·
Blacklock’s takes $0 in government money. The same government that has been fighting them in court for years over their paywall. Last month, Blacklock’s won their appeal against the federal government. Yesterday the same government appointed Giuseppina D’Agostino to the Federal Court. The same D’Agostino who publicly argued that paying Blacklock’s was “conceding to a bully.” The same court that will hear future cases involving Blacklock’s. Outlets that takes government millions NEVER gets sued. The outlet that takes $0 has to fight Liberala in court so the government pays their fair share in subscription fees to keep updated on their own failures. Then the government appoints the Blacklock’s critic to the bench? Don’t you see what they’re doing?
Holly Doan@hollyanndoan

Newly appointed federal judge once portrayed government as a victim in ongoing litigation to defend news media paywalls. “If they pay up, then it’s sort of like conceding to a bully.” — Giuseppina D’Agostino, September 16, 2016 @financialpost

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David Knight Legg
David Knight Legg@KnightLegg·
Canada’s Chief Justice Richard Wagner has installed a lifelike bronze bust of himself in our highest court. It should be called ‘Narcissus Canadiannus” - There is no precedent for something this vulgar in the history of the Court. It should be taken down. Richard fancies himself. - Richard also fancies his own opinion on things. He violated legal due process and the Courts reputation by publicly accusing the Convoy - who protested backwards federal Covid policies that were soon dropped of ‘anarchy’ and ‘hostage taking’. Now that the Convoys freedom of speech, assembly and due process rights have been asserted by lower courts the Supreme Court has to consider the appeal of the federal govt and weigh the rights of citizens against the decision of the federal government to impose the Emergencies Act to suspend those rights. Wagners lack of judicial discretion in the first instance makes his recusal from such an important rights-defining case important because it signals not just fairness in the content of the decision but in the way the decision gets reached by the highest Court. He has already shown his bias. Any decision against the convoy poisons the integrity of the Court if he remains present. But Richard - the man with the bust of himself in our Court - doesn’t imagine himself under the law he imposes on others. He hasn’t completed any graduate work in law or published any academic work in law, philosophy or jurisprudence so it’s hard to know how he justifies himself in these matters. Ironically, he has a reputation for warning others - including those far more qualified in formal jurisprudence than he is - not to critique Canadian judges like himself or their (increasingly bizarre and politicized) decisions. But, from the Magna Carta onwards, Richard should know that in law as in politics dissent is democracy. The dissent of the Convoy and the growing critique of Richards own bizarre behaviour and inability to articulate a judicial philosophy is exactly what’s needed to save Canada - and the Court’s reputation as a place where justice - not the ego of the Justices - is at stake. Richard should recuse himself. And remove that vulgar bust from the Supreme Court. #SCC #RuleOfLaw
David Knight Legg tweet media
Paul Manning@mobinfiltrator

Chief Justice Richard Wagner is refusing to recuse himself from the Emergencies Act case, despite previously calling the Freedom Convoy the “start of anarchy” and saying protesters “took citizens hostage.” He has clearly shown his bias. Now he says there’s “no reasonable apprehension of bias.” That’s a problem. You don’t publicly characterize one side in those terms, then turn around and sit in judgment over them. This isn’t about whether he believes he’s impartial, it’s whether a reasonable person would. Do you or I believe him to be unbiased with everything we currently know? From his comments I don't see him as unbiased on this matter. When the Chief Justice has already framed the conduct as “anarchy,” the answer isn’t complicated. It's a given. Even Mahmud Jamal stepped aside in another case to avoid becoming a distraction, not because he had to, but because public confidence matters. That’s the standard. This isn’t just about one case, it’s about whether the public believes the process is fair. Because once that’s gone, the ruling doesn’t matter. No one will believe his "findings." And we currently have a government that are happy to ignore 'bias' in their favour if it adds momentum to their current goals. #onpoli #cdnpoli

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Andrew Scheer
Andrew Scheer@AndrewScheer·
Carney claims he’s an economic genius. But he’s doing the exact same things the Liberals have been doing for the past 11 years. His promise to deliver change was all an illusion.
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@gneubig LOL. Codex needs more middle management training. Have you tried using a skill?
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Graham Neubig
Graham Neubig@gneubig·
I tell GPT 5.5, you are a manager, not a coder. Find the issues to solve and delegate to other agents. Do not write any code yourself. It does so for a while. I think "good GPT" and log off, I let it do its long running tasks with its team of subordinates. I log on an hour later and check in. GPT 5.5 is coding alone, its sub agents diligently waiting for orders. No STOP, I say, you are a manager. You MUST NOT code. My bad, says GPT 5.5, got it, I must manage, not code. One hour later, GPT 5.5 is coding. But it's OK GPT, I get you. For I am also guilty. No matter how many times a coder is told they are a manager, in their heart of hearts, they are still a coder. So I tell Claude Opus 4.7...
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@TinaDebove Also, a way to have a discussion about a specific part of the plan not just one way comment
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Tina Debove ᯅ
Tina Debove ᯅ@TinaDebove·
Codex team, can we have a "Add comment" UI for each line of the plan so we can easily modify it instead of cramming everything into that tiny text field
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@ryangerritsen The angle of making committees less performative and more collaborative would be plausible if the Liberals weren't also trying to enact censorius legislation. And also generally gaslighting the public about the state of the failing economy.
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Ryan Gerritsen🇨🇦🇳🇱
CTV discussed the Liberals moving to shut down the cameras from public view which happened at least 4 times during the first week of them having a majority. Sabrina Grover the first analyst is all in with the Liberals decision, her take is laughable. But Melanie Paradis nails it.
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Pierre Poilievre
Pierre Poilievre@PierrePoilievre·
A nurse with a spotless track record gets fined and suspended for pointing out there are two genders, and for praising world renowned author & women's rights advocate @jk_rowling. This is authoritarian censorship. We must restore free speech and free thinking in a free country.
National Post@nationalpost

B.C. nursing college went to great lengths to enforce ideology that rejects scientific facts, argues Michael Higgins. Fining nurse Amy Hamm $93,000 a grotesque attack on free speech nationalpost.com/opinion/michae…

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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@lesliechurch Delusional take. Do people really believe the economy is doing well? Serious question. If so, what gives you that impression day to day? Record numbers of people below the poverty line, record inflation, record homeless and drug addiction. Record crime...
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Leslie Church 🇨🇦
Leslie Church 🇨🇦@lesliechurch·
The deficit is coming down 📉 Home prices and rents are coming down 📉 The GDP is going up 📈 Non-U.S. exports are going up 📈 Why? Because our plan is starting to pay off. We are empowering workers, we are investing in Canada and we are Building 🇨🇦 Strong.
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@robinebers new bro! Congrats!
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@LLMJunky @nummanali Yup, it'll be interesting to see how they incorporate ChatGPT into the super app; it'd be cool if you can treat it as a separate agent for planning, brainstorming and reviewing with a different master prompt.
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am.will
am.will@LLMJunky·
@nummanali i think we'll get an app this upcoming week actually, but i still think you're right. whether or not they phase/migrate now or later, it feels inevitable. but i do believe we get a mobile app in <6 days
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Numman Ali
Numman Ali@nummanali·
I realised why there isn’t a Codex app on mobile It’s very likely the full ChatGPT brand will phase out in favour Codex When Codex is being called the everything app, it makes complete sense So they’re probably setting up the right infra for the 900m+ user transfer
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@JayGenXer Newspeak. Transparently and in-public means literally the opposite. And the Conservatives are to blame, even though it was the Liberals who moved for the committees to be in-camera.
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JayGen 𝕏 er🇨🇦
Oh wow, Liberal House Leader Steven MacKinnon just dropped the mask: “If Conservatives don’t behave the way we like… we’ll simply shut the cameras off in committee.” In other words: **NONE OF YOUR DAMN BUSINESS, TAXPAYERS.** You peasants aren’t worthy of watching how we spend your money. This is what Liberal “democracy” looks like the second they get a majority — total blackout, zero transparency, and “order and balance” only when they’re the ones doing the ordering. We pay the bills. They hide the receipts. Bless their authoritarian little hearts. 😂🔥🇨🇦 🎥 Credit @beautifulcanada1
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Eric St-Pierre
Eric St-Pierre@EricRStPierre·
I was taking Luna out for a walk today with my wife. A friendly woman with her dog joined us for a bit. She was super chatty, gave Luna a delicious treat, and her big fluffy dog got one too. She was especially fired up about the price of gas. She seemed pretty savvy, sharing all the tips she uses to save at the pump, and she kept saying how brutal it is for regular folks now that it’s climbing toward $1.90 a litre. I told her I was surprised we haven’t hit $2.00 yet, like they’ve already seen in B.C. She looked absolutely stunned. And you know what? Millions of Canadians are going to wear that exact same stunned look when gas really starts marching north of $2.00 a litre — because it’s coming, folks. It’s coming hard. Millions of us are already tapped out and broke. We’re the ones staring at the pump in disbelief, doing the mental math on whether we can afford to drive to work, pick up the kids from hockey, or even run to the grocery store without wincing. And while we’re scraping by, Canada, this massive, resource-rich beast of a country, could be an absolute economic powerhouse. We could be the energy capital of the world. We could be creating wealth, lowering prices for every family from coast to coast, creating hundreds of thousands of high-paying jobs, and telling the world “come and get it” on our terms. If the Liberals had just positioned us properly. Instead? They sold us out to ideology and handed the Americans the keys to our own wallet. Think about it. Canada sits on the third-largest proven oil reserves on the planet, the oil sands alone are an absolute monster. We’ve got natural gas for days, hydro power that could light up half the continent, and the geography to be the energy bridge between North America, Asia, and Europe. Done right, we could be exporting clean, reliable Canadian energy to the world at full price. No more selling our raw bitumen at a massive discount to the Americans while they refine it and sell the finished product back to us at a premium. No more begging for pipeline capacity. No more watching our own oil get bottlenecked and discounted because Ottawa spent years demonizing the very industry that could have made us rich. We could have had pipelines running east, west, and south, Energy East, Northern Gateway, a properly fast-tracked Trans Mountain that didn’t balloon into a multi-billion-dollar clown show. We could have had west-coast ports shipping our product straight to hungry markets in Asia instead of forcing 97% of our crude down a single leaky pipeline into the U.S. market where they set the terms. We could have built refineries here at home so Canadian families aren’t getting gouged at the pump while American refiners laugh all the way to the bank. But no. The Liberals, with their virtue-signaling, their endless environmental reviews, their Bill C-69 that basically made it illegal to build anything bigger than a lemonade stand, and their carbon tax that punishes every driver, trucker, farmer, and senior just trying to heat their home, chose ideology over infrastructure. They killed project after project. They delayed, they regulated, they virtue-posted on social media while the rest of us watched our lifeblood get siphoned off. And now? The Americans have us by the throat. They control the pipelines. They control the refining capacity. They buy our heavy crude cheap because we have nowhere else to send it, then sell us back gasoline and diesel at whatever price the market (and their profit margins) will bear. Every time global tensions spike or a refinery hiccup happens south of the border, we feel it immediately at the pump, while our own vast reserves sit there like a trapped gold mine we’re not allowed to fully develop. This isn’t bad luck. This is policy failure on a national scale. This is why your wife is cutting back on groceries. This is why the single mom down the street is choosing between gas money and rent. This is why truckers are idling their rigs because the numbers don’t add up anymore. This is why small businesses in every province are closing their doors. Energy is the foundation of everything, heating, transportation, manufacturing, food production. When you let ideologues strangle that foundation, the entire economy starts to crumble. And the worst part? The Liberals had the chance, hell, they still have the chance under Carney, to flip this script. To say “Canada first,” to fast-track the infrastructure, to partner with industry and Indigenous communities the right way, and to turn our energy advantage into real sovereignty and real prosperity. We could be the envy of the world instead of the cautionary tale. We could have 85 cent gas and a booming economy funding better healthcare, better roads, and actual climate innovation that doesn’t bankrupt families. But they chose the opposite. They chose the photo-ops, the international applause, the net-zero fairy tales while real Canadians get hammered at the pump and in the wallet. So the next time you’re standing at that gas station watching the numbers climb, remember this: it didn’t have to be this way. Canada didn’t have to be held hostage by American leverage. We could have been the energy powerhouse of the planet, rich, independent, and thriving. Instead we got weak leadership, neglected infrastructure, and a government that would rather lecture you about your carbon footprint than secure your future. Wake up, Canada. It’s time to demand better. Because at $2.00 a litre and rising, we’re not just paying at the pump anymore, we’re paying for decades of Liberal failure. And Luna and I are tired of watching good, hardworking people get stunned into silence while the country we love gets sold short. What do you think, am I wrong? Or is this the conversation we all need to be having before it’s too late?
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@NewEmergingKing Love these videos seeing young people taught practical life skills
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King Randall, I.
King Randall, I.@NewEmergingKing·
Most people don’t mess up at the airport because they don’t know what to do. They mess up because they don’t speak clearly. Speak up.
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@simpsoka @Rjdleee It's quite frustrating when something gets released and 1) it's for Mac only and the messaging does not clearly state it 2) for whatever reason, maybe the region of the user the feature (I'm in Canada) is not available and it's not clear when it might be available
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@doodlestein It's server-side architecture but with a massive amount of intelligent computing on the server side.
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Jeffrey Emanuel
Jeffrey Emanuel@doodlestein·
It’s fascinating how much better it is to use ChatGPT instead of a mobile web browser when you’re dealing with spotty cell service. But it makes sense, because you’re sending it just a few kilobytes of text. And then it can check 30+ websites for you in under a minute on their servers using ultra high-speed internet. It would take way longer than that to manually visit even one of those sites using the mobile web browser. And then it can respond with a couple hundred kilobytes of text instead of shipping back megabytes of html and JS assets for each page.
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Ed@hedoestheworkof·
@vincentneilho Why is he doing the Carney "thank you for the question" thing? Is that part of the Liberal handbook?
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Vincent Neil Ho
Vincent Neil Ho@vincentneilho·
LIBERAL HYPOCRISY ON FULL DISPLAY: Watch as a Liberal witness at committee twists his own words. He claims he supports an auto strategy that keeps supply chains in Canada to protect Canadian workers. Then, moments later, he defended a policy that could allow up to 30% of Canada’s EV sales to be imported from a single foreign country. You cannot build a Canadian auto sector by outsourcing Canadian jobs. You cannot claim to stand with workers while opening the door for foreign-made EVs to flood our market.
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