Canada is a failed state

Regarding the TFW Pajeet who was allegedly burnt alive in the Walmart walk-in oven, I'm torn between feeling bad for a dead 19 year old and happy Canada has one less immigrant gaming the system.

Eh, I'm feeling charitable tonight. My condolensces. Your grieving family can still fuck off back to India though.
500 more replacements to offset the loss
 
Regarding the TFW Pajeet who was allegedly burnt alive in the Walmart walk-in oven, I'm torn between feeling bad for a dead 19 year old and happy Canada has one less immigrant gaming the system.

Eh, I'm feeling charitable tonight. My condolensces. Your grieving family can still fuck off back to India though.
Just remember that her death has granted her father and brother a visa on “compassionate grounds”.

I have a good feeling that they're not leaving anytime soon after the funeral.
 
Regarding the TFW Pajeet who was allegedly burnt alive in the Walmart walk-in oven, I'm torn between feeling bad for a dead 19 year old and happy Canada has one less immigrant gaming the system.

Eh, I'm feeling charitable tonight. My condolensces. Your grieving family can still fuck off back to India though.
Her brother and father will be in Canada soon, and her boyfriend(?) probably killed her.

You lost one woman, and gained two more men for it.
 
People know Canada for things like maple syrup, mounties, poutine... oh and Canadians being nice. Never heard anyone say Canada is diverse. I don't think that impression exists outside of Canada. But I could be out of touch. It sounds to me like your boomers are repeating some propaganda they've been fed from TV.
The socialized healthcare thing is kind of true but other countries have that too so it's only really special when compared directly with the US. Which makes for a lame "feature" for the country.
I dunno, I always thought Canada was nice and unique, but not because of "diversity" or "healthcare"
I think what really defined Canadian identity was a certain connection to the environment; probably some personal bias here, but there's a level of romanticism that accompanies a journey the deep rural parts of the country. It was those long road trips for hockey tournaments through the boonies to old rustic rinks that made me feel Canadian as a kid, not "diversity".

The eternal Canadian struggle to discern ourselves from Americans has been a point of mockery, but I think most (either consciously or subconsciously) just viewed Canada as a bilingual extension of 'European North America'. However, the second Canada undertook a policy of swarthification it's fate as a definitive, unique nation was effectively sealed. Canada's internal perception of its national character would change from one of vast nature and pioneers into that of rootless cosmopolitanism and "multiculturalism" being apparent points of pride. You kinda see this epitomized in the emergence of Toronto's international recognition as as the Canadian city, rather than Montreal which is bilingual and much more historic.

(I've always found post-national Canada's insistence on "diversity" as a differentiating characteristic hilarious. It's as if the United States, a vast landmass stretching from the North East to the Midwest and PNW, to California, to the Deep South is apparently "non-diverse'". What about pre-enrichment Britain; are England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales all the same with no social, linguistic or historical differences? Apparently homogenous white societies are all boring cultural monoliths and only become 'special' when magical brown people are flown in.)

IMHO one of the larger signs of Canada's decay is the dissapearance of Anglo-Franco disputes in contemporary political discourse. The duality of English and French demographics within Canada was its core defining principle, and an inseperable component of national identity. After the apocalyptic decline of the last 10+ years it's not even on the radar, ranking far below primary or even secondary concerns for most Canadians.
 
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Canadian identity
As an American, the thing that made Canada different from the United States to me was the loyalty showed to the crown during the revolutionary war, and the war of 1812. Canada was/is the Britain of North America with a bit of France added in. A completely unique mix of North American frontiersmen ship with the mother country's culture. Where as we Americans did are best to distance ourselves from Britain, to make our selves not British. Its a shame such a beautiful land, with a unique culture shaped by the interactions between itself, America, and the mother nation is being destroyed in the name of neoliberal economics and brown worship.
 
Redditors will claim they hate the flag now because the only people they see flying the flag also have the Fuck Trudeau Flags.
I hate the flag because it represents everything wrong with this country.

I recently sat in on a politician claiming that everyone in this country was an immigrant the other day and that means nobody has any more say over the country than anyone else. My people have been here for 300 years, the French Canadiens for 400, neither of us are immigrants we are a distinct population that we used to just call Canadians and IMO that 100% gives us more say.

I'd sooner fly the Union Jack like we used to before this country was taken over by globalist idiots.

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I hate the flag because it represents everything wrong with this country.

I recently sat in on a politician claiming that everyone in this country was an immigrant the other day and that means nobody has any more say over the country than anyone else. My people have been here for 300 years, the French Canadiens for 400, neither of us are immigrants we are a distinct population that we used to just call Canadians and IMO that 100% gives us more say.

I'd sooner fly the Union Jack like we used to before this country was taken over by globalist idiots.

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Yes my paternal side settled rural Ontario in 1839 (a few years before the Irish famine)

While my Dutch side came over after WW2 (1953) because they wanted land to farm. Even though on that side I'm the third generation there is no way the Dutch government will grant me EU citizenship. There is no escape for me from this country going downhill (unless I become a rootless cosmopolitan who gets a US professional Visa)
 
(I've always found post-national Canada's insistence on "diversity" as a differentiating characteristic hilarious. It's as if the United States, a vast landmass stretching from the North East to the Midwest and PNW, to California, to the Deep South is apparently "non-diverse'".
The US has a long history with diversity. Slavery, Ellis Island, Irish immigration, Chinese immigration, Japanese internment camps.. it's not all pretty but it's a long history. We've been doing this for a very long time.
How does Canada think it competes with that? You can't suddenly decide to become more diverse in the 21st century, and compete with a country that's already been at it for centuries and already has it as a core part of its identity.

I feel like a lot of the current problems with European countries as well as Canada is they look at the US and think that we're doing diversity wrong and they can do it way better and get all the benefits (which do exist) and ALSO have less racism, because they think they are better people than racist Americans. Now everybody is finding out that having a diverse society is not easy and magical, and actually America knows what it's doing and has been doing it better than them the whole time.
 
It is a derivative but it's just milk fat without any nutrients.
The purpose of Ghee in the past several millennia is that it essentially doesn't go bad and doesn't require refrigeration. The French style Clarified Butter has legitimate cooking purposes beyond that. Rather than be used in everything like pajeets do. As it does have a very distinctive flavor profile and smell.
 
It's really reprocessed butter that didn't get sold. In the age of refrigeration we are way past silly antics of people who didn't have cold storage.
 
I bought some a while back out of curiosity.

1. Cook an egg in regular butter and its delicious.
2. Cook an egg in ghee and its.... well its edible. You have to be really used to it or conditioned to it to like it immediately.

I see it as something that was very convenient for rations when traveling, prior to modern transportation and food storage/preservation.
 
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