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I have a feeling liberals think like this because the conservatives that live close to them, are complete useless cucked slimeballs that deserve the wall.Remember, the government freezing money kept by people protesting that they're being manipulated by the government will definitely make them fall in line with the government. Getting some galaxybrain vibes from the retard Liberals.
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"The people will eventually stop protesting if we give them even more things to protest about"
I don't know if this means Hochul is just more spineless, or there was more to be lost by a mass strike on the part of the public workers.
"Hey, stop eating paste that's what retards do."
I could just stop doing my job one day and I'm confident no one would say anything for a year or more as long as I said the right thing during meetings.The fragility in office spaces is ridiculous. I've regularly been completely blind to the scale of a given problem in my systems at work because everyone is too cucked to complain. Something broke a few months ago that lead to mass email spam, and it took six weeks for someone to grow the balls to say something.
They're not mutually exclusive. You can both be a spineless loser and be completely unable to risk the protests. The honk takes no prisoners.I don't know if this means Hochul is just more spineless, or there was more to be lost by a mass strike on the part of the public workers.
Maybe it's because if the blue heart of New York City has been pushed to its tipping point and literally waving the Canadian flag, then it means you really done fucked up.
Hahaha they are doing the protestors’ jobs for them.Apologies for the double post
Ottowa police staff sergeant resigns
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Edit: seems like the threat to relocate to Toronto was a psy-op
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A few years ago, true. Things are worse now.All of the big-tech fundraising sites might as well just count as PACs for the Democrat party.
I made that mistake in my first white collar job. Basically I was befuddled by some stupidity and called it out in a diplomatic manner but it caused a lot of butthurt. The go to strategy for corpos seems to be pretend to be busy and don’t point out anything that’s wrong.The fragility in office spaces is ridiculous. I've regularly been completely blind to the scale of a given problem in my systems at work because everyone is too cucked to complain. Something broke a few months ago that lead to mass email spam, and it took six weeks for someone to grow the balls to say something.
The revolution will not be televised but the lockdown that sets it off will be sponsored by Wal-Mart.
I think some bean counter just goes over the math with HR. The cost of giving parasites a salary is less than the cost of lawsuits for hostile work environmental.I could just stop doing my job one day and I'm confident no one would say anything for a year or more as long as I said the right thing during meetings.
It's a shame I'm burdened with all this conscientiousness and self-respect.
Not just Edmonton, Calgary International Airport also has one convenient intersection that if you take offline shuts basic travel down:Lmao blockading Edmonton international airport would be laughably simple, there are like 2 roads in/out.
Kenney has never been a competent or sought-after leader. He was elected because he promised greasy Albertans (love you Alberta) that he'd build the Trans Mountain pipeline in BC and provide jobs to the oil industry.
It's the equivalent of Trudeau being elected for muh weed but for conservatives and muh oil.
Pretty much as Rebel Wilson says, Kenney became Premier because he wasn't Notley and the Conservative wing united (instead of broken into PC and Wildrose) just overwhelms the left leaning city vote. I'm still dubious about Kenney actually losing his position in April given all the bureaucratic fuckery, but the longer these protests continue and screw with things, the more Kenney cannot pivot to what he really wants to talk about - i.e. rising oil prices and Alberta's imminent return to the black - the more likely he gets thrown out. O'Toole was the shot, Kenney is the chaser.Honestly its not even that complex, he was literally 'Not rachel Notley" which is why he was elected, and he rigged the vote to become leader of the UCP in the first place.
He is a parachute candidate just like his predecessor Jim Prentice was, and will soon be replaced by the man who SHOULD be Alberta's Premier at the moment if not for his fuckery Brian Jean.
None of them will ever replace >Our Kike King Ralph though....
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Not just entitlements but responsibilities were handed to them, their own "work" was assigned to them by schools and programs that their parents enrolled them in, which smoothly transitions into being assigned work by their university, and then their job afterwards. Though that level of passivity isn't good for the resume, so I'm not sure how they got to afford to live in downtown Ottawa unless they were well-connected or their parents helicoptered them into every resume-padding extracurricular known to man.It's a childlike mentality. As a kid mommy and daddy did everything for them and they somehow seamlessly transitioned into an adulthood where the government and the service economy do everything for them today. Parasites.
OKAY LET'S GIVE ME A RHYTHM!Really, what could be more corporate hellscape than making an announcement about continuing oppression with a fucking walmart as a background. Why the fuck would you ever hold a press event at a walmart.
PROTIP: If you're autistic enough not give a shit whether your coworkers like you and uninterested in climbing the corpo ladder, you can do this indefinitely and everyone is too cucked to be anything more than vaguely passive-aggressive.I made that mistake in my first white collar job. Basically I was befuddled by some stupidity and called it out in a diplomatic manner but it caused a lot of butthurt. The go to strategy for corpos seems to be pretend to be busy and don’t point out anything that’s wrong.
That's the thing, even your superiors are spineless to call you out on ANYTHING these days.I could just stop doing my job one day and I'm confident no one would say anything for a year or more as long as I said the right thing during meetings.
It's a shame I'm burdened with all this conscientiousness and self-respect.
In my experience, it's because both the staff and the employer have no idea how to address the problem nor do they have the experience to fix it themselves NOR do they have the will or forethought to try and find their own solution. If you don't point out the problem, you don't have to fix it. What you did was point out something no one can fix or no one has the will to address. White collars throw money and products at a problem until it goes away. Blue collars are problem solvers.I made that mistake in my first white collar job. Basically I was befuddled by some stupidity and called it out in a diplomatic manner but it caused a lot of butthurt. The go to strategy for corpos seems to be pretend to be busy and don’t point out anything that’s wrong.
Article Text By Malcolm Kyeyune said:They call it “The Honkening”. Ottawa, Canada’s capital city, is currently being besieged by a novel kind of protest. Honkening is a fairly appropriate name for what’s going on. Thousands of truckers have driven to the capital, and barraged the city with the noise of truck horns creating a cacophony of sound. Elsewhere, on the border between the United States and Canada, truckers, farmers and cowboys have blockaded traffic.
As the protests enter another week, Ottawa’s mayor has declared a state of emergency. Jim Watson described the truckers — ostensibly protesting against Canada’s harsh Covid mandates — as “out of control”. Watson sees anarchy; the truckers fulminate against Covid authoritarianism. But this battle is really about working-class discontent.
The naive among us could be forgiven for thinking that this protest signalled something auspicious about “late capitalist” society. For decades, the common folk wisdom for both the Left and the Right was that the West’s working classes had been completely neutralised as a political force, and that class conflict itself was a relic of the past.
This idea took hold in the Sixties, when Herbert Marcuse theorised that Western workers had been subjected to a “socially engineered arrest of consciousness”. Their vested interest in the existing capitalist order made them impossible to radicalise. Ever since, finding new theoretical models to explain the unreliability (and stodgy conservatism) of workers has been a recurring activity on parts of the Left. Marxists had made a horrific discovery: the working class were not their foot soldiers. As Joan Didion once put it: “The have-nots, it turned out, mainly aspired to having.”
Many on the Left came to believe that without their corporatist union structures, and without their shop stewards and political organisers, the working classes were done for. They were little better, to paraphrase Marx, than a “sack of potatoes”.
Without proper leadership, the workers would be too inert and stupid to do anything about their plight. As such, the decades after the fall of the Soviet Union (and the defeat of the strike waves of the Eighties) saw many Leftists indulge a wistful nostalgia for a time when the workers stuck it to the powers that be. Celebration of the good old days of the Left, and of “working-class power” in general, was thus central to the aesthetics of the now completely defunct wave of Left populism in the 2010s.
With that backdrop in mind, the explosion of worker militancy over vaccine mandates — and, on a related note, high fuel taxes in Europe — ought to have been greeted by enthusiasm by the Leftist activist and organiser set. Yet nothing could be further from the truth. The truckers in Canada have instead triggered a primordial sense of dread in the hearts of the urban classes, in the people who Canadian trucker Gord Magill has dubbed “the email job caste”.
This sense of fear and dread at the machinations of the proles is hardly something unique to Canada. Indeed, even the United States saw a large increase of worker militancy and wildcat strikes over oppressive vaccine mandates. Like their compatriots in Canada, America’s various professional friends of the working class responded with horror and scorn. The well-known Marxist economist, Richard Wolff, was mobbed on Twitter for suggesting that workers striking over mandates were actually part of something called “class struggle”, rather than merely an expression of “fascism”.
https://unherd.com/2022/02/why-the-experts-are-losing/?=refinnar
Ottawa’s truckers are a symptom of the massive class divide that is opening up across the West. Marxists are sticking their heads in the sand about this generational moment, or papering it over with absurd topsy-turvy leaps. In one recent display of moon logic, the Canadian activist, writer and self-described socialist Nora Loreto complained that “labour” was invisible in the resistance to the “fascist” truckers that had occupied Ottawa. An exasperated comrade chimed in with a story of being a shop steward for a teamster (truck driver) union, and — horror of horrors — the painful truth was that many teamsters were more likely to be in the protest themselves than protesting against it.
The exchange is modern Western Leftism in a nutshell. Is there a single better illustration of the contradictions of the moment? An “activist” and organiser” recoiling in horror at a bunch of truckers — people who work in the real, material economy, ferrying the foodstuffs and goods we all depend on to survive — staging a political protest, only to then ask “but where is the organised working class in all of this?”. Isn’t it obvious to the point of parody that the workers are the people inside the trucks?
It’s easy to laugh at this sort of absurdity, but the lesson here is anything but a joke. The divorce between “the Left” and “the workers” is now complete and irrevocable. Nora Loreto may not be a person with calloused hands, and she may very well belong to Gord Magill’s “email jobs caste”. But for the longest time, the political rhetoric and worldview of the Left depended on the idea that the trucker and the activist were merely two sides of the same coin.
Without the activist and the “organiser”, the trucker would never be able to know how to organise himself and his fellows politically; without the trucker, the activist and the organiser would not have a cause for which to organise. Now it seems that the trucker — and by extension, the pilot, the garbage collector, and the bus driver — does not need or want this caste of self-appointed leaders.
https://unherd.com/2021/11/would-america-survive-a-civil-war/?=refinnar
This divorce has happened all over the world in recent years. After the massive rejection by Red Wall voters of Jeremy Corbyn and his activist base in the smart, urban, and highly credentialed parts of Britain, one started to see a rhetoric of open loathing for the dumb, uneducated gammons and proles. In Germany, the Left party Die Linke has endured several rounds of severe internal fighting and strife. As in the UK, the younger, more urban, more credentialed parts of the Left have fought a running battle — and thrown pies — against pro-worker “racists” such as Sahra Wagenknecht.
In Canada, that loathing has now turned into fear — and into outright hatred. The problem of the truckers is not really the honking (which the Guardian sniffily calls “crude behaviour“), because sooner or later, that honking will stop. The state of emergency will end. But the protests, significantly, have shown how confused and weak the opponents of the working classes are today.
During the pandemic lockdowns, the email jobs caste loved to talk about essential workers, and luxuriated in public displays of gratitude for them. But this caste of genteel urbanites never realised that this choice of nomenclature was in fact much more meaningful — and ominous – than they understood. Some people, it seems, simply are critical to the functioning of the economy, pandemic or no pandemic. Once those people — and truck drivers are perhaps the most critical of them all — start to demand to be listened to, they have ways to make those demands felt.
For the Left, the problem of the truckers is their newfound political independence. Nostalgia really is a thing of the past now; the dinosaurs that were thought long extinct are back now, and they are hungry. Gone are the halcyon days of dreaming about halcyon days – where serious working class militancy was just a distant myth.
The real danger of any trucker’s strike, or any pilot’s walkout, or any fuel tax protest in Europe, is that every new confrontation sets a precedent: a precedent that says that the Gord Magills are done taking orders from the Nora Letos of the world.
The problem with that is the world is running out of helium, so to keep costs down they'd have to use hydrogenIt’d be funny if
>Tries to create aerial economy. To avoid truck convoy.
>A bunch of weather balloons, drones, and hot air balloons lounge around the area.
We commit to a mild amount of tomfoolery.
Yeah logistics is incredibly easy to disrupt. A handful of drones can shut down an airport (happened in London a few years back) and a few strategically placed trucks can shut down a border crossing. When all your stuff comes from the US by truck or chinkistan by plane it doesn't take much to make it all go sideways.It’d be funny if
>Tries to create aerial economy. To avoid truck convoy.
>A bunch of weather balloons, drones, and hot air balloons lounge around the area.
We commit to a mild amount of tomfoolery.