I guess Pearson intl airport is in absolute chaos right now and the Liberals have lost control of the situation.
As most of you know the Liberal government ordered the flight attendants back to work but they aren't listening as their union has ordered them off the job.
Now there are four or five other government unions protesting at Pearson in support of the attendants, Pearson is currently a complete mess.
The Liberals are in major trouble here which I find extremely pleasing so I hope you'll get a good belly laugh from the attached video, it is very funny indeed.
Liberals meet four little old ladys
The straw that broke the camels back
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Is this it? It just might be
The MARK CARNEY government is completely MISJUDGING the public sentiment.
Canadians don’t work 2 or 3 jobs for VACATIONS or LUXURY they do it just to afford FOOD and SHELTER.
Life is so UNAFFORDABLE most Canadians aren’t even making it.
This strike represents 99.9% of ALL workers who’ve watched their PURCHASING POWER evaporate.
And the IRONY? 42% voted LIBERAL thinking Carney would fix the “lost decade” the Liberals CAUSED.
Instead, Canadians are waking up to the truth: it was the LIBERALS all along holding us back.
The WAKING UP of a nation is GLORIOUS.
https://www.westernstandard.news/news/bank-of-canada-reveals-cash-still-popular/66871
“Most Canadians still keep bills in their wallet and banknotes at home even as governments and banks tighten restrictions on large cash transactions, according to a Bank of Canada study released yesterday.
The average Canadian now carries $156, up from $140 in 2023, and keeps another $200 at home, most often in $20 bills, said the Methods of Payment Survey Report: Cash in an Era of Alternatives. Cash was used in 21% of all transactions, with older Canadians using it most frequently.
Per Blacklock's Reporter, about 32% of Canadians withdrew money from an automated banking machine in the past week, taking out an average of $176. Most people withdrew cash twice a month, said researchers, who surveyed about 4,000 people nationwide.
Asked if they expected to go cashless, 79% said no. The share of Canadians without cash has ranged from 10% to 19% since 2019, peaking at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The ...