Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Canada the Lazy

The lazy attitudes even towards life have resulted in one of the worst political and social disasters the country has ever seen:

A recent report from Global Affairs Canada (GAC) revealed disciplinary actions against nearly 100 employees for various breaches, including serious criminal acts.

The most severe incidents included drugging and raping two foreigners, illegal sales of Canadian mission cars and a senior executive sending inappropriate selfies to women. As a result, 20 employees were terminated, though GAC determined that nearly 100 of its employees had committed breaches last fiscal year.

Those breaches ranged from administrative issues to criminal activities, according to the June 21 report. Some federal employees allegedly arrived to work intoxicated, watched pornography on work devices and used “mouse jigglers” to appear active while presumably away from their desks.


This Global Affairs:

Global Affairs Canada has not updated its human rights reporting on nearly 80 countries since 2019, according to a new report by a national security review body.

The department’s human rights reports are used by other government agencies to help make decisions about sharing information with foreign governments, informing diplomatic activities and directing foreign aid.

The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) said the list of countries that have not been reviewed includes Ukraine, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen. Belarus – a key ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin in his ongoing invasion of Ukraine – has not been updated since 2015.

Maintaining up-to-date profiles on countries’ human rights records is “vital” given how other government departments and agencies rely on GAC’s assessments, particularly when it comes to sharing information that could result in the mistreatment of foreign nationals abroad, NSIRA warned.

“(The reports) help inform Canada’s international engagement and programming decisions, including foreign policy, development, trade, security and consular activities,” the agency’s latest report, released Thursday afternoon, read.

 

 

It's called propaganda:

Since 2021, federal government departments and agencies have spent at least $1.7 million on influencers, and influencer marketing campaigns and strategies, documents recently tabled in the House of Commons and publicly available contracts show.

It’s just a fraction of what the government otherwise spends on traditional advertising.

“We need to evolve with the times,” Anand, who holds the government’s purse strings, said at a recent press conference.

 

You use those purse strings, Anita!

However, even the slackest of youthful voters who has had to have Liberal censorship laws and migrant values that involve Jew-hatred explained to him realises that if he can't pay rent, his voting for you isn't worth his time.

 

 

Tip, dammit!:

Compared to their U.S. counterparts, Canadians are less likely to tip at higher percentages. Just over a quarter (27 per cent) of Canadians are open to tipping between 16 and 20 per cent, while 38 per cent of Americans are willing to do so. Nearly half (47 per cent) of Canadians prefer to tip between 10 and 15 per cent, with 15 per cent tipping less than 10 per cent.

Besides expectations at restaurants, respondents support tipping delivery drivers (48 per cent) but are less enthusiastic about gratuities when placing an order at cafés (22 per cent) or counters (15 per cent).

From your corner coffee shop to a fine-dining restaurant, auto-tipping prompts on digital screens are commonplace. Despite their ubiquity, the survey suggests that Canadians are overwhelmingly opposed to them, at 77 per cent. On the other end of the spectrum, a small but growing number of spots have adopted no-tipping policies, such as the Michelin-starred Restaurant 20 Victoria in Toronto and Vancouver’s Folke. The data suggests that Canadian diners could get on board with this movement. Tied with Belgium, Canadians feel the most strongly about eliminating tipping, at 34 per cent.

 

Cheap b@$#@rds.


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