L. Wayne Mathison

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L. Wayne Mathison

L. Wayne Mathison

@WayneMathison

Entrepreneur & Ex Municipal Leader. Cross-disciplinary student of economics, psychology, and philosophy. I prefer local grit and real-world results over vibes.

Manitoba Sumali Aralık 2021
2.2K Sinusundan6K Mga Tagasunod
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L. Wayne Mathison
L. Wayne Mathison@WayneMathison·
Pelican Lake, Manitoba
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The Food Professor
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor·
I occasionally receive emails like this ⬇️from former media professionals—now retired and finally able to speak freely. I’ve withheld the name for obvious reasons. This one comes from a very well-known figure. Thought I’d share this one with my followers tonight.
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The Food Professor
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor·
A plan to slowly wean Canada off supply management Reform is inevitable. The only question is whether Canada designs the transition itself, or waits for the next trade negotiation to do it for us. nationalpost.com/opinion/a-plan…
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L. Wayne Mathison
L. Wayne Mathison@WayneMathison·
Let Canadians Hear the Argument Before Judging It Public debate in Canada is starting to feel less like an exchange of ideas and more like a managed performance. Positions are framed before they are heard. Reactions arrive before the facts. And too often, the goal is not to persuade but to pre-empt. The recent reaction to Pierre Poilievre’s appearance on a long-form podcast made that pattern hard to ignore. Much of the criticism surfaced before most people had even listened to the interview. That suggests something deeper than disagreement. It suggests a habit of judgment without engagement. This is not healthy for a democracy that depends on citizens weighing arguments for themselves. A growing ecosystem of political actors, media voices, and online activists appears to operate on a shared playbook. First, define a figure as “dangerous.” Second, establish a moral frame that places one side on higher ground. Third, amplify selective clips that reinforce the narrative while leaving out context. The result is not debate. It is conditioning. The danger here is not that people disagree. It is that disagreement is increasingly treated as something suspect, even illegitimate. Mark Carney represents a polished, technocratic approach to leadership. His credentials are strong, and his tone is measured. But his model also reflects a broader shift toward centralized, expert-driven decision-making. In that framework, public input is often filtered through institutions that claim authority over interpretation. That approach can bring stability. It can also distance decision-making from the people it affects. Canadians have already seen moments where institutions extended their reach into areas many believed should remain off-limits. Those moments raised legitimate questions about how power is exercised, and how easily it can be justified in the name of broader goals. Pierre Poilievre’s communication style takes a different path. He favours direct, unfiltered conversation. Long-form interviews, where ideas can be explored without interruption or editing, allow voters to hear arguments in full. That format carries risks. It is less controlled, less polished. But it is also more transparent. The strong reaction to that kind of exposure is telling. It suggests that open platforms challenge an environment that depends on framing and interpretation to guide public opinion. At its core, this is not a dispute between left and right. It is a question of whether Canadians are encouraged to think independently or guided toward approved conclusions. A functioning democracy requires more than access to information. It requires the freedom to evaluate competing ideas without pressure to conform. When debate is replaced by labeling, and curiosity is replaced by certainty, that freedom begins to erode. Canadians deserve better than pre-packaged judgments. They deserve the chance to hear arguments in full, to question them, and to make up their own minds. The simplest step forward is also the most important. Listen first. Decide after.
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L. Wayne Mathison
L. Wayne Mathison@WayneMathison·
Here’s the trick: “everyone I meet is talking about it” is one of those lines that sounds like evidence but isn’t. It’s soft persuasion. No names, no quotes, no context. Just implied importance. It’s the rhetorical version of “trust me, it’s a big deal.” Now, could foreign officials ask about a high-profile Davos speech? Sure. That happens. Davos is basically a networking circus for elites. People trade talking points the way your old store traded coffee chatter at the counter. But turning that into “this is defining global policy” is a leap. A big one. And calling it a “doctrine”? That’s branding. Not analysis. Real doctrines show up in policy, budgets, laws, and outcomes. Not just speeches and buzz. So do I believe her? I believe she probably had conversations. I don’t believe the implied weight without receipts. What changed in the real world because of this?
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The Real Mr Bench
The Real Mr Bench@therealmrbench·
"The Carney Doctrine" That's how Anita Anand describes The Mark Carney speech from Davos. She also says... Every foreign minister she meets starts of a conversation asking about the speech. Do you believe her? Anand is in London, England
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L. Wayne Mathison
L. Wayne Mathison@WayneMathison·
@Mikeggibbs That’s a status update, not a resolution. “No current activity” just means nothing detected right now. Show me sustained behaviour change, not a headline.
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Michael Gerald Gibbs🏳️‍🌈🍁 🇺🇦 (He/Him)
Holy sh--, Carney got it done! The India-Canada cold war, is over! The RCMP announced today that it appears India has ceased all clandestine activities against Canada. Modi delivered and kept his word. Hopefully this marks the beginning of a long new trusting prosperous friendship. "EXCLUSIVE: RCMP says no current clandestine activities in Canada linked to government of India" ctvnews.ca/politics/artic…
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Lorrie Goldstein
Lorrie Goldstein@sunlorrie·
Tom Marazzo: How Supreme Court Chief Justice Richard Wagner dragged the Supreme Court Into Politics 'He placed himself at the centre of a serious judicial controversy when he described the Freedom Convoy in language no Chief Justice should ever use about a politically charged event that could come before the courts.' tommarazzo.substack.com/p/how-wagner-d… h/t @cbcwatcher
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Jon Fraser
Jon Fraser@JonFraserTF·
If @LoriIdlout robbed a bank but gave the money back after being caught, would she have no consequences? Apparently she's operating under the exclusive Liberal school of ethics. I wonder if that's the coercion used by the @liberal_party to get her to cross the floor?
Canada Proud@WeAreCanProud

#REPORT: Nunavut MP Lori Idlout, who crossed the floor from the NDP to the Liberals earlier this month, has reimbursed the House of Commons $1,700 after being caught expensing items she purchased for her office from Carvings Nunavut, her own private business.

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Polling Canada
Polling Canada@CanadianPolling·
Between 2013-2015, Canada ranked 6th for happiest country Today, we rank 25th
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Jasmin Laine
Jasmin Laine@JasminLaine_·
“So why did you lose?” Joe Rogan seems baffled that Canadians had anything bad to say about Pierre Poilievre based on how sensible and effective his policies would be.
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