Friday, November 11, 2022

Your Disgusting, Incompetent and Treasonous Government and You

Let it sink in that Canadians voted for this ...


Let's also talk about how the government puts caps on who is trained, that very few of the "enriching" class are actual physicians, that medical staff was fired for refusing a heart-stopping jab, that patients are an expense and even seen as a drain on the system and not as actual patients who paid for healthcare that they are not receiving and that the system was crumbled well before the lockdown:

At least 2.9 million Canadians are waiting for surgery, diagnostic scans, or specialist appointments, according to Freedom of Information (FOI) requests obtained by SecondStreet.org, a think tank. Not all provinces had data available, leading SecondStreet.org to suggest that the true total could be close to 4 million people on waiting lists.
Waiting lists are at historic highs, according to the Fraser Institute’s 2021 report, Waiting Your Turn: Wait Times for Health Care in Canada. The report said that the median wait time in 2021 was the longest recorded in the survey’s history. The figures were derived from surveying specialist physicians regarding wait times, with a median waiting time of 25.6 weeks between referral from a general practitioner and receipt of treatment. In 1993, the wait time was just 9.3 weeks, the report said. Patients who needed neurosurgical procedures waited the longest time for health care, at 49.2 weeks, while cancer patients requiring radiation typically waited 3.7 weeks, said the 2021 report.
SecondStreet.org said its research identified nearly 12,000 patients across Canada who died in 2020–2021 while on a waiting list. The patient deaths identified ranged from people waiting for potentially life-saving treatment such as heart operations, to procedures like hip operations that improve quality of life.
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Canadians pay the highest costs for health care when adjusted for the age of our population among 29 other comparable countries, at 13.3% of GDP annually, and the eighth highest cost on a per capita basis of US $5,987.60 annually.

Despite high costs Canada ranks 28th out of 30 countries in the number of doctors (2.8 per 1,000 people); 23rd out of 28 in acute care beds (2.2 per 1,000); 22nd out of 29 in psychiatric beds (0.38 per 1,000); 26th out of 29 in the number of MRI machines (10.3 per million people), and 27th out of 30 for CT scanners, (15 per million).

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Among 10 comparable universal health-care countries that track wait times, Canada ranks last, with the lowest percentage of patients waiting four weeks or less to see a specialist, (38%), and the lowest percentage of patients waiting four months or less for elective surgery (62%).

A survey of 1,100 Canadian doctors last year found the median wait time for medically-necessary elective medical treatment in Canada in 2021 was 25.6 weeks from the time of a referral by a general practitioner to the start of treatment by a specialist.


Also - Justin has always been a woman-hating @$$hole. 

That you refused to see it is all on you:

For all his rhetoric on feminism, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seems to only care superficially about issues that actually matter to women. For all his chest thumping about the new national daycare program, I still had to accept recently expired infant Tylenol samples from my doctor’s office because I couldn’t find any in stores. I still had to switch my infant to whole milk two weeks early (with the OK from my pediatrician) because finding formula was too stressful.


Something tells me that this idiot couldn't fix a straw if it was bent.



Yeah, that must be it:

High inflation and COVID-19 are dampening some Canadians’ hopes for travelling as the holiday season approaches, a new poll indicates.

Right now, 77 per cent of 1,001 Canadians Ipsos surveyed exclusively for Global News in October said they’re comfortable travelling within Canada over the holidays, while 55 per cent said the same for international travel.


Having no money doesn't enter into things at all.

When even the public sector is too bloated for one more piggy, perhaps it is time to admit that, yes, we are in a recession, and, no, there are no jobs to feed a family.



We know who Justin really works for:

“The former director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) has calling on the Liberal government to scrutinize the recent takeover of a Nunavut[Canadian] goldmine by a Chinese state-owned company.”

TMAC is among an increasing number of Canadian companies being bought up by state-owned Chinese corporations. In March 2020, the Trudeau government permitted Continental Gold to be purchased by China’s state-controlled Zijin Mining for $1.3 billion dollars.

Richard Fadden, head of CSIS from 2009-2013, told the Globe and Mail that the federal government should keep Canada’s national security interests in mind when examining the purchase.”

“I think gold is pretty important for the world economy. China has enough of a grip on the world economy as it is, given its capital assets, so I would include gold.

According to Fadden, “the intelligence community has been increasingly worried regarding China’s investments in Canadian companies which skirt regulation.”

Justin Trudeau isn’t worried in the least. Away from public knowledge, our prime minister approved a comprehensive sell-off of Canadian gold reserves. Nearly all of it was purchased by China. Throughout the process, establishment media barely blinked an eye. Important to CSIS— irrelevant to the prime minister of Canada. 

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“MPs, provincial legislators and city councillors are known to be in the pay of foreign agents, a former espionage officer yesterday told the Commons ethics committee.”

“The foreign agents’ source country was not named though cabinet has accused China of clandestine activities. What we know for sure is we have various foreign countries that succeeded in recruiting elected officials – again, municipal, provincial or federal.”


Also:

For several months, the Trudeau government has been sitting on briefing notes from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service setting out how Beijing quietly funded 11 candidates in the 2019 federal election and placed operatives on campaign staff. The $250,000 operation was run from China’s Toronto consulate. The effort went on to place operatives in the offices of several members of Parliament.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has earned international headlines for himself this week by appearing to talk tough, but he referred only to “state actors from around the world, whether it’s China or others,” that are “continuing to play aggressive games with our institutions, with our democracies.” Everything’s under control, Trudeau said Monday. “There are already significant laws and measures that our intelligence and security officials have to go against foreign actors operating on Canadian soil.”

But that’s not what Canada’s national security and intelligence agencies say, and these are not games. Only last week, the House Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs heard that Canada’s intelligence agencies don’t even have “the tools to understand the threat.”

In hearings on foreign election interference, CSIS director-general for Intelligence Assessments Adam Fisher told the committee: “Our act was designed in 1984 and it has not had significant changes or amendments.” What’s necessary is a total “rethink” about how these threats are dealt with, he said.

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As with dismissing objections to one’s domestic policies as “partisan games,” it’s not serious language. But Justin Trudeau’s tongue works this way because his brain does. And his prattle, when finally forced to move beyond his infamous 2013 praise for China’s dictatorship, reminds me of historian Arnold Toynbee’s maxim, “Civilizations die from suicide, not murder.” Which I was alerted to by Mark Steyn, who called Toynbee’s “A Study of History” “his now mostly forgotten work on the subject.”



1 comment:

Fenris Badwulf said...

You can break this down into groups, you know. There are 'do not know', 'could not know', and, 'do not care'. Variants include 'did not know it was important', and, 'other things are more important'.