mar (₿)

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mar (₿)

mar (₿)

@mar101xy

nostr is the future

Katılım Şubat 2024
378 Takip Edilen136 Takipçiler
mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@HagenaarsFamily @YouTube I want to move in too and be part of your family for a year or two, All I need is a corner to sleep in and A/C, Canada is boring these days I need some excitement. I want to learn Spanish. I'm not religious tho.
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mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@X22Report It's difficult to understand him. He mumbles alot. I don't know what you two were arguing about.
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X22 Report
X22 Report@X22Report·
Claudio Grass - The Old Guard Is Being Removed, People Are Taking Back The Power, It Will Happen WW With My Digital Money's Crypto IRA - Your Bitcoin grows tax-free! mydigitalmoney.com Grow It. Guard It.  Own Your future! Today's Guest: Claudio Grass |Website: claudiograss.ch Claudio begins his discussion talking about how the people are no longer going along with the [DS] plans, the [DS] plan is failing, the truth is rising to the top, people are now questioning their governments. The old guard is being removed and the people will be taking back the power. Some might not see it now, especially in Europe but soon people will see the truth of the matter and it will all start turning around.
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mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@js_757 @aiouy oh, I know that site. I check it sometimes. I'm in Alberta and only like 2 places accept Bitcoin. Most businesses don't care about Bitcoin. Not enough demand. Luckily I can just my shakePay card anywhere.
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mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@Can_Libertarian Nah you're wrong. The majority of Americans still stand with President Trump. We don't listen to losers like Tucker and the other losers that are trying to turn us against Trump. We think for ourselves. We stand with President Trump
mar (₿) tweet media
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Bennett Hunter (I am Canadian Libertarian)
Trump can try to gaslight us all he wants, and suggest that team MAGA are dominating the info-wars, but the fact of the matter is, the attacks on Joe Rogan, Tucker Carlson, Dave Smith, and many other prominent anti-war personalities are only resonating with Neo-Con Boomers, warmongers, and the easy fooled. Joe, Tucker, Theo, and Steve Ryan are all at the top of the charts, and very popular with everyone else. Withdrawal of their support means a big loss for Republicans in the mid-terms. I don't mean voting for the Dems. I mean simply not voting for either side. Libertarians and independents are not beholden to either party, and quite use to having to function under one form of tyranny or another.
Newsweek@Newsweek

President Donald Trump has said that Tucker Carlson is "always easy to beat" after a poll showed he has a much higher favorability rating among Republicans. #Echobox=1776432134" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">newsweek.com/donald-trump-c…

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mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@missjina6861 I'm not sure. I thought you were in South Korea, but don't worry I will learn whichever language you speak.
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jina miss
jina miss@missjina6861·
옷 가게 언니와 대화 중
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mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@MaddyLavender I didn't know Australian cars had their steering wheels on the right side,
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maddy
maddy@MaddyLavender·
A pale transgirl appeared
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mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@tsprincess__ I didn't know that worked, just get breast implants, I dunno. I think ur boobs are fine now
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lillith_xoxo
lillith_xoxo@tsprincess__·
Should I start taking birth control to make my boobs bigger
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mar (₿)
mar (₿)@mar101xy·
@Can_Libertarian no you're not, you are a boomer, you said in previous posts that you are an old man,
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Tim Moen
Tim Moen@moen_tim·
@mar101xy You think this can continue much longer?
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Tim Moen
Tim Moen@moen_tim·
Not sure what the point of this is. Is he saying we should stop trying? Wear a billboard that says “independence probably isn’t happening”?
Billboard Chris 🌎@BillboardChris

For everyone who thinks Alberta can simply vote to leave Canada and take the oil with them, it doesn’t work like that. A referendum does not automatically achieve independence. Under Canadian constitutional law, informed by the Supreme Court of Canada’s 1998 Reference re Secession of Quebec and the federal Clarity Act (2000): • Unilateral secession is illegal. Alberta cannot simply declare independence. • A “clear question” (the proposed wording aims to meet this) and a “clear majority” (not precisely defined, but the House of Commons would assess factors like the size of the yes vote, turnout, and overall circumstances) would create a reciprocal obligation for the federal government, other provinces, and relevant parties (including Indigenous nations) to negotiate in good faith on potential constitutional changes to allow secession. • Negotiations would cover complex issues: division of national debt, borders, currency, trade agreements, military/NORAD/NATO membership, pensions (CPP/OAS), equalization, Indigenous treaty rights (Treaties 6, 7, 8 cover much of Alberta), environmental obligations, and more. These would require a constitutional amendment approved under Canada’s amending formula (typically involving Parliament and at least seven provinces representing 50% of the population). • First Nations groups have launched court challenges arguing that the petition and referendum process violates treaty rights and the duty to consult, potentially delaying or blocking certification of signatures. In short, even a strong yes vote would start a long, uncertain, multilateral negotiation process—not an immediate exit. Failure to reach agreement could leave the status quo or lead to prolonged uncertainty.

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Tim Moen
Tim Moen@moen_tim·
DC is a swamp too. I don’t want to be tied to the federal reserve and US military industrial complex either. They’re an empire in decline. We need more nations not fewer nations. I don’t want to have to go to DC or Ottawa to confront my rulers. I want them walking around my neighbourhood.
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Billboard Chris 🌎
Billboard Chris 🌎@BillboardChris·
Grok says the chance of Alberta becoming independent is near 0%. I think they’d be better off independent, but leaving isn’t a simple matter of a yes vote in a referendum. From Grok: Current public support for Alberta independence is a minority position (typically 25–30% in recent polls), though it has reached a 5-year high amid ongoing frustrations with federal policies. A clear majority of Albertans (around 60–70%) consistently say they would vote to stay in Canada. Recent polling examples (as of early-to-mid 2026): • Pollara Strategic Insights (March 16–25, 2026, released early April): 27% of decided voters would vote to separate (a record high, up 7 points since December 2025). Another 15% of those planning to vote “remain” say they might switch to “yes” as a protest message to Ottawa, potentially pushing support as high as 42% in a referendum scenario. Among United Conservative Party (UCP) voters, it’s roughly split (55% separate vs. 45% remain). • Abacus Data (February 2026): 26% support independence; 64% oppose. • Angus Reid Institute (February 2026): 29% would vote to leave (only 8% definite; 21% leaning); 65% would vote to stay (57% definite). • Other polls (Ipsos, Research Co., Leger, Mainstream Research in Jan–March 2026) show similar ranges: 17–31% open to independence, with “committed” support dropping to ~15–16% once real-world economic and social costs are factored in. Support is higher among younger voters and UCP/federal Conservative supporters, but it remains far short of the clear majority needed for any realistic path forward. A citizen-led petition to force an independence referendum question has reportedly gathered enough signatures, but its path forward is now legally uncertain. Stay Free Alberta claims it surpassed the required ~177,732–178,000 valid signatures by late March 2026 (well before the May 2 deadline). If verified by Elections Alberta, Premier Danielle Smith has pledged to include the question on the provincial referendum ballot scheduled for October 19, 2026. However, First Nations groups have launched court challenges arguing the petition violates treaty rights and lacked consultation. A judge has paused signature verification pending review. If blocked, separatists may ask the provincial government to proceed anyway. Smith herself opposes full separation. She describes her position as favoring a “strong and sovereign Alberta within a united Canada” and is using the 2026 referendum mainly for other questions on immigration, constitutional changes, and provincial autonomy—not as a direct push for independence. Even if a referendum happens and a “yes” side somehow wins (which current polling makes unlikely), actual independence as a sovereign country is extremely improbable in the near term (realistically near 0% chance without a dramatic, sustained shift in sentiment and politics). Reasons include: • Legal hurdles: The 1998 Supreme Court of Canada Secession Reference and the federal Clarity Act require a “clear question” and “clear majority,” followed by good-faith negotiations with the federal government and other provinces. Unilateral secession is not possible, and constitutional amendments would be needed. • National opposition: Roughly 79% of all Canadians (including majorities outside Alberta) say they would block Alberta from leaving if given a vote. • Historical precedent: Quebec’s two referendums (1980 and 1995) failed despite higher support levels at the time, and even a narrow “yes” would trigger prolonged, uncertain negotiations. In short, the movement reflects real grievances (resource policy, carbon taxes, federal overreach), and it has energized separatist activism and a possible symbolic vote in October 2026. But polling, legal barriers, and political reality point to very low odds of Alberta becoming an independent country anytime soon. Most Albertans and Canadians prefer reform within Confederation over breakup.
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