Yeah, but we have a new dad, and he's a fucking moron.This sounds like: "Dad? Can we Brexit the UN?"
"How 'bout now?"
"How 'bout now?"
"How 'bout now?"
--Patrick
You're right. Obviously the only way to improve the situation is to leave the UN, thumb our nose at the rest of the world, and react with disdain to the very suggestion of working with other nations.I've said it before, and I'm sure I'll say it again: The UN is a dictators' club that for some reason the democracies of the world has given the air of legitimacy. Some of their sub-organizations do good work (the World Health Organization, for example) but the General Assembly and even the Security Council (and especially the UN Human Rights Council... chaired by countries like Iran in the past) are just jokes and an affront to anything resembling a "good thing" for the world.
When a world government comes around that ONLY allows places with a minimum standard of Democracy into it (it can be pretty loose, see India), then I'll respect that. The UN as "world government" is a farce.
I'm in Canada. Our PM has love-ins with international dictators as a "normal" thing, and even lauded Castro when he died.You're right. Obviously the only way to improve the situation is to leave the UN, thumb our nose at the rest of the world, and react with disdain to the very suggestion of working with other nations.
Bubble, it's ineffective BECAUSE those dictators are part of it. They use their votes and influence to gum up the works for anything that would actually declare that what they're doing (routinely) is bad, and trying to concentrate any ire they can generate towards countries that are on the whole pretty damned good, but with a few social problems.What the right is saying now about the UN is exactly what the right said about the League of Nations in the 1930s. Yes, they're ineffective and they do'nt achieve their stated goals, but no, the alternative of simply not dealing with dictators and letting them do their own thing isn't any better. That way lies war, famine, death. Maybe not for Canadians and Americans in the short term, but for everyone in the long term. Reform, evolve, change, don't just stand there holding your dick while other countries invade, oppress, butcher. Besides, choosing who to deal with only leads to more "Putin's my biggest bestest buddy now!".
Of course. It'll beAnyone want to hazard a guess on whether a budget will actually get passed this year?
That all depends on how well the Dems are at filibustering.Anyone want to hazard a guess on whether a budget will actually get passed this year?
I read this at first as "defibrillating" and didn't think it out of place at all.That all depends on how well the Dems are at filibustering.
That quote didn't help her party's electability, and it was a devastating loss for them for projecting 7 years of misery. There were other reasons as well, no doubt (funnily enough, her party being pro-NAFTA and the opposition being anti-NAFTA was one of them, despite the other party which got in SIGNING it later), but that quote dogged the campaign greatly. Funny how the 90s was wonderfully prosperous for most of the western world (at the least).At the Rideau Hall event, she told reporters that it was unlikely that the deficit or unemployment would be much reduced before the "end of the century"
And why was that considered foolish? Admittedly, I don't know your tax system down there, but I was under the impression that you could write off your interest payments on your mortgages as "not income" and thus it was really a very sound strategy to make your house a "primary investment" in a way, and thus putting lots of money into that was actually a fairly decent strategy to finance yourself later through the proceeds of such.I replied "yeah, and more boomers have put more into their houses than they have retirement".
Housing as an investment only hodls up if real estate prices go up at least by inflation. I don't know how eal estate prices evolved where you live, but most of the US doesn't exactly have the same real eastate market as before 2008.And why was that considered foolish? Admittedly, I don't know your tax system down there, but I was under the impression that you could write off your interest payments on your mortgages as "not income" and thus it was really a very sound strategy to make your house a "primary investment" in a way, and thus putting lots of money into that was actually a fairly decent strategy to finance yourself later through the proceeds of such.
I'll admit this is overly-simplistic, but why was your response a "burn" to those pissing away (literally) their money on expensive coffee? If you LIKE it, great, and you're spending your money accordingly, but what does that have to do with investments?
Maybe I'm missing something huge.
I'm with you. Even home improvements are a more worth while investment than the purchase of a disposable beverage.And why was that considered foolish? Admittedly, I don't know your tax system down there, but I was under the impression that you could write off your interest payments on your mortgages as "not income" and thus it was really a very sound strategy to make your house a "primary investment" in a way, and thus putting lots of money into that was actually a fairly decent strategy to finance yourself later through the proceeds of such.
I'll admit this is overly-simplistic, but why was your response a "burn" to those pissing away (literally) their money on expensive coffee? If you LIKE it, great, and you're spending your money accordingly, but what does that have to do with investments?
Maybe I'm missing something huge.
I'd forgotten that. Our country's price crash hasn't really happened... yet (well, it'll only really crash in Vancouver and Toronto, as they're insane). For somebody in the USA, it's a different story, which makes @Necronic's original point an OK one, though tragic in different ways.Housing as an investment only hodls up if real estate prices go up at least by inflation. I don't know how eal estate prices evolved where you live, but most of the US doesn't exactly have the same real eastate market as before 2008.
That's real estate purely as investment. A primary residence basically turns your biggest living expense into a free investment.Housing as an investment only hodls up if real estate prices go up at least by inflation. I don't know how eal estate prices evolved where you live, but most of the US doesn't exactly have the same real eastate market as before 2008.
That's simply not true. Home ownership always has a cost even when you own it flat out. In my case nearly half of my mortgage payment is escrow (taxes/insurance/etc).That's real estate purely as investment. A primary residence basically turns your biggest living expense into a free investment.
Well, I did recently buy a second house, you're right....There's rumblings we're looking at a second housing bubble already.
I remember Chretien and Martin having it balanced for most of their terms.Something has been nagging at me since I heard it recently, and I couldn't figure out why. It was a report from the Canadian Department of Finance, projecting that we won't have a balanced budget for at LEAST 30 years: Report That itself is horrifying enough, but I couldn't shake the feeling that I'd heard it before. Today I remembered:
Back in 1993, during the Election that year, our Prime Minister said this at/near the beginning of the campaign:
That quote didn't help her party's electability, and it was a devastating loss for them for projecting 7 years of misery. There were other reasons as well, no doubt (funnily enough, her party being pro-NAFTA and the opposition being anti-NAFTA was one of them, despite the other party which got in SIGNING it later), but that quote dogged the campaign greatly. Funny how the 90s was wonderfully prosperous for most of the western world (at the least).
And now, with 30 (some say 38 or longer based on that report) years of deficit and more to come, not much is being made of it. It's just resignation that it'll happen. This is even with a CBC report from early 2015 showing how the deficit was on a trend of being reduced to almost nothing (at least one report I read said it was a slight surplus right before the Conservatives left). Now numbers between $30B and $100B have been said by various people, but you'd be surprised how hard it is to get concrete numbers for 2016. Maybe it considers the fiscal year not ended yet? I dunno.
And this isn't sinking the ship of our current PM? Weird and sad this isn't focused on more IMO.
Sorry I never actually responded to this. Spending more money on coffee than you do on retirement is a god damned terrible idea. But it's actually a pretty complicated fact that doesn't carry a lot of weight imho:I'll admit this is overly-simplistic, but why was your response a "burn" to those pissing away (literally) their money on expensive coffee? If you LIKE it, great, and you're spending your money accordingly, but what does that have to do with investments?
How long have you lived there? How long do you plan to? Are you afraid of ending up upside down?I'll take my mortgage payment & HOA fees (combined still less than the rent on a much smaller place I was paying for) over $8 mochas plus a rent payment any day. Because while I probably put more into my house yearly than retirement I still get more value out of it than a PSL.
I enjoy looking at houses for sale in the area and from my perusings, prices have gone up a lot in the last few years. It could just be local factors as the economy around here is doing pretty well, but it's sure seemed like a large increase.There's rumblings we're looking at a second housing bubble already.
The CBC graph that I linked shows that. It's quite good. But I'm just going on the political echoes of politicians saying certain things and public reaction, and how it's different now, with no different (and worse really) promises about duration.I remember Chretien and Martin having it balanced for most of their terms.
Just look in "Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada" for rental rates. If $1300/m for 1 bedroom makes you cry, look there. You may have a heart attack.Colorado housing is ridiculous right now, there isn't enough supply to meet demand, it's even worse for renting, so everything costs a lot. Houses are on and off the market within sometimes days. People are playing $1300+ in rent for a 1 bedroom apartment in some places.
I'm talking in bumblefuck parts of Colorado. Boulder and Denver are a lot worse.Just look in "Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada" for rental rates. If $1300/m for 1 bedroom makes you cry, look there. You may have a heart attack.