- Joined
- Apr 4, 2025
It's cliché, but I really disliked Toronto and really the whole of Southern Ontario. Torontonians are as pretentious as New Yorkers, but unlike New Yorkers, they really don't have anything to be pretentious about. Maybe the most irritating thing is they want you, if not need you, to parrot this fantasy that Toronto is sooo great and sooo unique and it's sooo much better than NYC, and if you disagree that means you just don't get Toronto. It's basically an inferiority complex masked with a superiority complex, and it makes for very tiresome interactions and conversations.What place did you dislike the most?
Toronto is the "best" that Canada has to offer, or at least that's how it's often billed, but it's still a nothingburger with no soul. I could forgive all of this if the people were at least friendly or nice, but they aren't! As cosmopolitan as the city is, everyone is still so closed-minded and cold. Someone in this thread mentioned this a while back, but Canadians really are not a friendly people, and I think that Toronto is prime example of how unfriendly and anti-social Canadians can be.
"For the last time, Mr. Johnson, you're not having a heart attack. Your inner fire is being dowsed by the spirit of Sky Eagle because you didn't give your spare change to that Housing-Challenged Cree man you saw folded over on šxʷməθkʷəy̓əmasəm Street. Maybe going into the sweat lodge to smoke tobacco and converse with the ancestor-guide, Great Junkie, will help ease your suffering?"Regulated Canadian nurses are now required to align their conduct with a detailed set of political values — among them, social justice, gender ideology, Indigenous belief systems, and climate activism.