You wanted the "hip" and "cool" snowboard instructor who has never run a business, held any significant political position, has never had to work his way out of meager circumstances and obscurity and prove his mettle.
What you got was an arrogant frat-boy whose ability to answer direct and easy-to-understand questions simply doesn't exist without the help from from lackey's whispering in an ear piece pre-written answers on a sheet.
Canada has the highest unemployment rate of any G7 country, a country that cannot afford to throw around the money it is currently throwing around. Justin is not only phenomenally stupid but arrogant, as well. He does not care about whatever money spent for whatever reason. He does not care how his actions affect anyone. He does not care (and neither do Canadians, apparently) if he rules autocratically. He has never offered his loyalty to Canada (SEE: China, admire, basic dictatorship of). It's not his money, he still gets a pension and he never has to answer for his outrageous stupidity.
You, however, are left holding the bag.
Enjoy the decline. You did, after all, vote for it:
While some may have found their biggest work-related inconvenience of 2020 took the form of a cat running across their keyboard as they adjusted to their new home offices, for many people the pandemic ripped away their paycheck and shattered their finances. The latter was the reality for the nine per cent of Canadians who reported losing their jobs in the last year -- and they are far more likely to be young adults, according to the new poll from Ipsos.
Seventeen per cent of Canadians aged 18 to 34 say they’ve lost their job, according to Ipsos. That number dips to 10 per cent for those aged 35-54 and three per cent for those over the age of 55.
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