Mad Mike
Well-known member
Are you comparing Ontario PCs to the Maple Leafs?Well at least this time around I didn't have any false hopes of someone else winning.
Are you comparing Ontario PCs to the Maple Leafs?Well at least this time around I didn't have any false hopes of someone else winning.
Given how completely nutty most NDP and Lib promises were lately and given that neither party has a leader, any chance of a merge? Splitting the vote makes it hard to win. NDP wouldn't love giving up exclusive control of official opposition but it could increase their seat count greatly in the next election.Ok, I’ll predict that in 4 years time this swings just as wildly towards the liberals or a lib/NDP coalition. No one has the stomach for change right now. What’s voter turnout?
I'll make you a bet. If you're right in 4 years, I'll chug 3 tallboy pineapple/blueberry/cinnamon stouts.Ok, I’ll predict that in 4 years time this swings just as wildly towards the liberals or a lib/NDP coalition. No one has the stomach for change right now. What’s voter turnout?
I'll make you a bet. If you're right in 4 years, I'll chug 3 tallboy pineapple/blueberry/cinnamon stouts.
If i win, you down 3 cans of Old Milwaukee Ice.
PitifulWhat’s voter turnout?
Yup. 680 stated it was the ‘worst turnout ever’ for a provincial election. 60% of eligible voters did NOT show up.Pitiful
Be careful what you ask for...Now if you excuse me, I need to draft 2 letters for leadership positions at both Liberals and NDP.
What's the worst that can happen?Be careful what you ask for...
This is a major concern in my industry.At least this means the Bradford bypass is not gonna get cancelled.
And to say Doug botched the pandemic? Who got it right ? Anybody here ever been through a pandemic like this before ?
As per handling the pandemic...I don't think either the NDP or Liberals would do much better steering the ship during a once in a lifetime event. Whether at the Federal or Provincial level. Everyone thinks they'd do a better job...in hindsight.
It's kinda crazy if you ask me. There should be some type of higher governance with no political party influence affiliation make the plans decisions and decisions to continually improve in the same general direction.This is a major concern in my industry.
Major infrastructure projects (transit in particular) are started, changed, and cancelled depending on political whims of the time. A few examples over the years where holes were dug, new gov't shows up, and they fill the holes back up.
Impossible in Canada...but removing infrastructure projects from politics would be a huge (and great) step. But impossible here. They're too ingrained with politics where politicians use them for personal gain...not what benefits the most people.
100% agreed. But reality is unfortunately very different.It's kinda crazy if you ask me. There should be some type of higher governance with no political party influence affiliation make the plans decisions and decisions to continually improve in the same general direction.
I can't argue with anything you say - points all valid.Right, just to make it clear, I think there's four ways Doug got it very wrong during the pandemic, and wrong compared to others at the time, so it's not just hindsight:
1. At the very beginning, he encouraged Ontarians to "go away and have fun" for March break, while the BC premier said it would be best to stay home. This resulted in a much more severe initial phase of Covid, including thousands of completely unnecessary care home deaths.
2. The response to data was always incredibly slow, which meant lockdowns ended up being way longer than necessary. The most obvious example was Christmas 2020, where anyone who glanced at a graph of cases could see the vertical line, but they dragged their feet for two weeks, resulting in a much higher case load and longer lockdown. If you argue that lockdowns weren't effective or necessary, he enacted them anyway, so either way it was a massive screw up. They did this repeatedly throughout, and in my mind is the biggest offence.
3. Their messaging was contradictory, confusing and infuriatingly difficult to puzzle out. They kept Dr. David Williams on (a man so forgettable I just had to Google his name) for ages, despite his total inability to articulate a plan, while Dougie bounced from one folksy platitude to another.
4. Later on, their choices about what to open and what to keep closed were just bizarre, particularly related to schools. Having bars and hair salons open but schools closed was a decision nobody could understand, especially those folks going slowly insane with kids under 12 bouncing off the walls at home.
Sure, hindsight is 20/20, but all of the above is stuff that had obvious solutions, even at the time. I compare Ontario to BC, and their response was better on so many levels, including statistically and in regards to the length and severity of lockdowns and mandates.
And that's why I couldn't vote blue this go round...
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Like Putin?It's kinda crazy if you ask me. There should be some type of higher governance with no political party influence affiliation make the plans decisions and decisions to continually improve in the same general direction.
It's kinda crazy if you ask me. There should be some type of higher governance with no political party influence affiliation make the plans decisions and decisions to continually improve in the same general direction.
Used to have to take the Scarborough LRT, I was not a fan. Seemed to be always broken down, much like Ottawa now.100% agreed. But reality is unfortunately very different.
Scarborough would already have an LRT that was fully funded…but subways subways subways.