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@ku88sh

📍North

Katılım Kasım 2013
1.5K Takip Edilen90 Takipçiler
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@ku88sh·
@CP24 It’s happening all over now, that was never heard of before, maybe few idiots here or there but not like this
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@ku88sh·
@CP24 Why has this never been an issue in the recent past?
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CP24
CP24@CP24·
Two people who allegedly shot fireworks into a crowd of people during Toronto’s Victoria Day celebrations are facing charges. cp24.com/local/toronto/…
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Justin M🇨🇦
Justin M🇨🇦@JustinMWeather·
Publicly funded weather service doesn’t want the public to see weather outlooks. 🤡 #onstorm #onwx
Justin M🇨🇦 tweet media
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Caryma Sa'd - Lawyer + Political Satirist
A message to missing teen Esti from her family: “Please come home. We love you so very much… You are not in trouble. Nobody is angry with you, no matter what has happened. All we care about is knowing that you are okay.” TIPS: 647-557-6735 📸 May 19, 2026 #Toronto #ProtestMania
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Daniel Foch
Daniel Foch@danielfoch·
I always wished we had a Canadian version of @truflation, so I vibe-coded a "real" inflation tracker and calculator at realflation.ca Scrapes & tracks goods pricing in real time starting today, so the real-time tracking should get a bit better with time. I modelled it out over the last 40 years as well and backtested. This is v0 and literally just a random thing I wanted to pump out... so, feedback welcome.
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CHCH News
CHCH News@CHCHNews·
Halton police have charged a Mississauga man with voyeurism following two incidents at a Winners in Oakville. chch.com/chch-news/man-…
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Tom Stoukas
Tom Stoukas@StoukasTom·
I noticed my city Sarnia, Ontario has more litter than usual. Only going to get worse.
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National Post
National Post@nationalpost·
'The current 24-month backlog means that even an ineligible asylum claimant can expect at least two years of free Canadian health benefits before their claim is rejected' nationalpost.com/opinion/canadi…
National Post tweet media
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Mario Zelaya
Mario Zelaya@mario4thenorth·
What is it with the Liberals and having an obsession with Asylum seekers and giving them more benefits than Canadian Citizens?
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Aliya Pabani
Aliya Pabani@aliyapabani·
"The secrecy around the tool is so extreme that the Crown may abandon the prosecution rather than reveal the vendor’s identity and details of the ODITs capabilities and limitations, according to a court document filed in Windsor Superior Court."
Toronto Star@TorontoStar

Ontario police are using spyware that lets them remotely take over your smartphone. They’re fighting to keep almost everything about it secret trib.al/oJn95hQ

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TDot Resident
TDot Resident@TDotResident·
#ONpoli Amazing how Doug Ford announces endless ways for the OPP to surveil all of us... while blocking any attempts to track his own records.
TDot Resident tweet mediaTDot Resident tweet mediaTDot Resident tweet media
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@ku88sh·
@CTVNews PEOPLE DONT GET PREGNANT FEMALES DO … FUCK YOU
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The Economic LongWave
The Economic LongWave@TheELongWave·
People keep asking me why I believe Canadian housing is in a historic bubble. Here is one simple comparison. Toronto, 1962, versus Toronto today. In the early 1960s, the average Toronto home was roughly 2.5 to 3 times household income. That was normal. A working family could buy a home because house prices were still connected to wages, productivity, and the real economy. Canada’s economy was also booming. In 1962, Canada’s real GDP growth was roughly 7.4%. Think about that. Canada was growing at more than four times the pace of 2025, when real GDP growth was closer to 1.7%. So in 1962, you had: 🌱 Strong real economic growth 🌱 Rising wages 🌱 Productive industrial expansion 🌱 Lower household debt 🌱 Affordable housing 🌱 Homes priced at 3 times income That was not a housing bubble. That was an economy in which shelter was still tied to productive income. Now compare that to today. Today, Toronto housing is not 3 times the income. It is closer to 10 times income or more, depending on the measure used. Yet Canada’s economy is no longer growing at 7%. It is barely growing. Real GDP growth is weak. GDP per capita has been under pressure. Productivity has stagnated. Household debt is extreme. Mortgage payments have exploded. And the housing market has become dependent on credit, not income. That is the core problem. People look at old house prices and say: “Well, prices always go up.” No. Prices went up for very different reasons in different economic seasons. In the postwar Economic Spring and early Summer, house prices rose because incomes, productivity, population growth, industrial expansion, and household formation were moving together. The real economy was strong. Credit-supported growth, but it did not dominate it. By contrast, the past 40 years were different. Since the early 1980s, Canada has entered a long economic autumn. 🍂 Interest rates fell for decades 🍂 Credit expanded 🍂 Mortgage debt exploded 🍂 Banks increasingly fed real estate 🍂 Housing became a financial asset 🍂 House prices detached from incomes 🍂 Speculation replaced affordability That is not the same kind of price increase. One was income-driven. The other was credit-driven. And this distinction matters enormously. A home at 3 times income in a 7% growth economy is not the same risk as a home at 10 times income in a 1% to 2% growth economy. Those are completely different worlds. In 1962, the Canadian economy could support rising homeownership because the productive base was expanding. Today, Canada is trying to support inflated asset prices with weak growth, record debt, government intervention, and the hope that lower interest rates will restart the bubble. But debt is not income. Credit is not productivity. Asset inflation is not prosperity. And a housing market that requires ever-larger amounts of debt to keep prices elevated is not healthy. It is fragile. This is why the affordability debate misses the deeper point. The issue is not just that homes are expensive. The issue is that homes became expensive while the real economy weakened. That is the signature of a late-stage credit bubble. In a healthy economy, house prices rise because families earn more. In a financialized economy, house prices rise because families borrow more. Canada chose the second path. And now we are reaching the limit of that model. The 1962 comparison exposes the entire illusion. Back then: Canada had 7.4% real GDP growth. Toronto housing was roughly 3 times the income. Families could buy homes with their wages. Today: Canada has weak real GDP growth. Toronto housing is still priced at extreme multiples. Families need massive debt just to enter the market. That is not progress. That is financialization. This is the lesson of the Economic LongWave. 🌱 Spring builds the productive economy. ☀️ Summer expands it. 🍂 Autumn financializes it. ❄️ Winter forces the system to deal with the debt. Canada is now moving from Autumn into Winter. That does not mean every market falls at the same speed. It does not mean every city declines equally. But it does mean the old model is breaking. The model was simple: Lower rates. Expand credit. Push asset prices higher. Call it wealth. That model worked for decades because rates kept falling and debt capacity kept expanding. But once debt capacity is exhausted, the process reverses. Then the question becomes: Can incomes support the price? In Toronto, the answer is obvious. They cannot. Not at current multiples. Not with weak growth. Not with today’s debt burden. Not with mortgage renewals still hitting households. Not with productivity this poor. This is why comparing today to the 1960s is so powerful. The 1960s economy was stronger, but housing was cheaper. Today’s economy is weaker, but housing is far more expensive. That is the bubble. Not just high prices. High prices unsupported by the underlying economic structure. The bears were not wrong because they were early. They were warning that the foundation was changing. And now the data is catching up. The future was borrowed. The bill is arriving.
The Economic LongWave@TheELongWave

In 1962, Canada had 7.4% real GDP growth and Toronto housing near 3× income. In 2025, Canada had roughly 1.7% real GDP growth and Toronto housing still near bubble 12 ×level. That is not prosperity. That is the residue of a 40-year credit supercycle. youtu.be/St3OGDxIfT8?si…

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Matthew Camenzuli
Matthew Camenzuli@Matt_Camenzuli·
This is a peach. It must be allowed to sit with the peaches at the shop. If you don't agree, it will sue you in the Australian federal court. It will win.
Matthew Camenzuli tweet media
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@ku88sh·
@HelenWebberley Then go sleep with a man … FEMALES DONT HAVE PENISES YOURE NASTY LIKE THE MEN IN DRESSES
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Dr Helen Webberley (she/her)
Dr Helen Webberley (she/her)@HelenWebberley·
I think I would prefer to date a kind trans lesbian woman than a selfish cis lesbian woman.
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JayGen 𝕏 er🇨🇦
🚨 “I left Canada… and it had NOTHING to do with the weather.” Even immigrants are bailing on this country. This guy lays it out brutally honest: •Grew up believing hard work + education = a good life (house, family, one income) •Reality? Companies demand insane qualifications and years of experience for entry-level jobs •Salaries that barely let you survive while rent, housing, and groceries explode •Massive immigration flooding in with zero new jobs, housing, or infrastructure to support it So what happens? Highly educated immigrants and international students end up in low-income jobs, young professionals pack up and leave, and ambitious people get stuck. Canada has become a stepping stone. 
Come here, take advantage of our systems, then bounce to the US for real opportunity and almost double the pay. There is NO Canadian Dream left.
 It’s a nightmare engineered by 11+ years of Liberal failure. Canada is full of talented people… the system is just destroying them. Drop a 🔥 if you’re sick of watching ambitious Canadians (and immigrants) forced to leave the country they wanted to build a life in. #cdnpoli #BrainDrainCanada #NoCanadianDream #LiberalNightmare #CanadaHasFallen #YouthExodus #CanadaFirst
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