That's the kind of temperature that keeps me in a car all day with the AC cranked.[DOUBLEPOST=1408747982][/DOUBLEPOST]They are saskatoons YOU FUCKING MORONS!@Frank, I hate you so much right now, brother (Heat index at 105 today, with 80-90% humidity).
No, neat thing about Alberta is we don't get those awful ice storms like you guys get in the winter.Keep that shit weather.
I'm good with 30ies almost every day.
I live in Kitchener! Well, Waterloo more precisely, but the two basically blend together.The All Star team for my roller derby league is playing in the WFTDA Playoffs in Kitchener today. That's Canadian right?
PS: Someone send me some Tim Hortons. I didn't get a chance to visit my parents this summer.
There's currently a loophole whereby a company buys a foreign company and relocates to the headquarters of the purchased company as a means of reducing taxes (so I heard on NPR). Sounds like that is the plan here.Burger King in talks to buy Tim's: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...-to-acquire-tim-hortons-restaurant-chain.html
CTV: http://www.ctvnews.ca/business/burger-king-in-talks-to-take-over-tim-hortons-1.1974544
Canadian Press: http://www.calgaryherald.com/busine...aders+anticipate+friendly/10146808/story.html
Sun Media: http://www.calgarysun.com/2014/08/24/whopper-tim-hortons-sale-in-the-works-report
The most interesting thing here IMO is how BK wants to move its corporate headquarters to Canada as well for tax reasons and how for the USA people that's supposedly been a trend. I'm not sure if that's true, or just hype, since there tends to be a "panic bias" with that kind of thing. What I mean is that you hear "death of Canadian business" whenever a Canadian business gets bought by somebody overseas, but when Canadian businesses are doing the same (which they are, at about the same rate) there is no news story 99% of the time. So I wonder if it's the same for the USA right now, but with businesses moving.
Overall, not a big deal IMO. Tim's was owned by Wendy's for a long time, and it was fine. I have no issues with this as long as things don't get fuc*ed up. Few enough restaurants in the small town I'm in as it is!
Burger King actually ain't a bad place to eat, as far as fast food burger joints go. But yeah, ever since 2008 companies have been fleeing the US for better deals in other countries. Some of it was the recession, some of it was the perception (or reality, YMMV) of a business-hostile federal government, and some of it is just the fact that our tax code is a giant spaghettified nightmare knot of bullshit that keeps getting bigger. Think you guys could do us a solid and re-enact 1812? Burn down washington again? I know you remember how.Burger King in talks to buy Tim's: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...-to-acquire-tim-hortons-restaurant-chain.html
CTV: http://www.ctvnews.ca/business/burger-king-in-talks-to-take-over-tim-hortons-1.1974544
Canadian Press: http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/Hortons Burger King shares surge traders anticipate friendly/10146808/story.html
Sun Media: http://www.calgarysun.com/2014/08/24/whopper-tim-hortons-sale-in-the-works-report
The most interesting thing here IMO is how BK wants to move its corporate headquarters to Canada as well for tax reasons and how for the USA people that's supposedly been a trend. I'm not sure if that's true, or just hype, since there tends to be a "panic bias" with that kind of thing. What I mean is that you hear "death of Canadian business" whenever a Canadian business gets bought by somebody overseas, but when Canadian businesses are doing the same (which they are, at about the same rate) there is no news story 99% of the time. So I wonder if it's the same for the USA right now, but with businesses moving.
Overall, not a big deal IMO. Tim's was owned by Wendy's for a long time, and it was fine. I have no issues with this as long as things don't get fuc*ed up. Few enough restaurants in the small town I'm in as it is!
Tax law is so damned specific, I wonder whom can even comment on the relative complexity per country? People with international finance specialties maybe?Burger King actually ain't a bad place to eat, as far as fast food burger joints go. But yeah, ever since 2008 companies have been fleeing the US for better deals in other countries. Some of it was the recession, some of it was the perception (or reality, YMMV) of a business-hostile federal government, and some of it is just the fact that our tax code is a giant spaghettified nightmare knot of bullshit that keeps getting bigger. Think you guys could do us a solid and re-enact 1812? Burn down washington again? I know you remember how.
Which isn't really fair. Canadians are a very polite people, they always insist you go first.And if it's a tie, they go to a shootout.
That's like that ice football, right?Oh you floridians and your lack of getting hockey references.
I am SOO disappointed that the Internet failed me on this one.Mad Max on ice.
This reminded me of where I get the quotation, "Aren't we forgetting one teensy weensy, but-ever-so-crucial little, tiny detail?"
They belong(ed) to Britain technically. In addition, Canada didn't exist as a country at the time. All British territory.You guys need to keep better track of your toys.
Sonar finds ship belonging to Franklin expedition, missing 170 years.
--Patrick
There's no image/link man.Newfie valet parking....