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PM Mark Carney's Canada

How many homes did Harper build?
Change of topic and whataboutisms...

I'll refer you to this from earlier:
Housing stock-to-population ratio actually increased under Harper, only to decrease under Trudeau almost immediately. [housing prices grew a lot under both admins, but the self-inflicted declining ratio contributed to rising costs under Trudeau]
you can't put food on your table because housing costs are so high.

Yes, Trudeau was more socially progressive in some ways. This is not mutually exclusive with what I am claiming. Many social conditions worsened under Trudeau. Often a result of high population growth, which lead to housing and public services not keeping up, which later contributed to increased crime. This then ties into Trudeau's poor record on filling judicial vacancies to ensure timely prosecution of alleged criminals.

I think progressive minded people know a decline in socioeconomic conditions is correlated with higher crime.

1776694195634.png

https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/250722/cg-a001-eng.htm

"National homicide rate increases for fourth consecutive year [...] The homicide rate increased 8% from 2.08 homicides per 100,000 population in 2021 to 2.25 homicides per 100,000 population in 2022. This was the highest rate since 1992."
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/230727/dq230727b-eng.htm

When comparing eras, sexual assault against women stats show a similar depressing trend.
---------------------------------------------------------

I am not defending Harper the person. I am pointing out that despite Trudeau's progressive image and rhetoric, on many social items that matter to ordinary Canadians---housing unaffordability, food insecurity, wealth inequality, violent crime, to name a few---got worse under his admin. So while Harper may not have presented himself as progressive, many social conditions happened to be better during his administration.

That's not to say I give 0 credit to the Trudeau admin, $10 a day childcare is great, but even that only benefits less than half of the population:

"In 2024, 51.5% of Canadian women aged 20 to 49 years were not yet mothers."
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/260126/dq260126a-eng.htm

Federal immigration-driven population growth was the primary driver of declining per capita access to public services, while provincial underfunding (relative to inflation*) was a secondary aggravating factor. The sentiment I am getting is that Ford came in and made deep cuts to every public facing department. That's not true. And any relative* decline in aggregate spending did not lead to the smoldering ruin of public institutions overnight, as some are perceiving....

Even if I wholeheartedly disagree with Ford's attitudes and policies on healthcare, education, etc.

TD Chief Economist, Oct 2025: "The federal government’s revised immigration policy is beginning to pay dividends in returning balance to a stretched social infrastructure."
https://economics.td.com/ca-dial-back-of-immigration-intended-impacts
----------------------------------------

If we are not allowed to fault Trudeau's admin for policy failures leading to socioeconomic backsliding (oil prices and covid scapegoat), then we similarly cannot credit Harper's admin for generally not worsening things despite the great recession.

When Carney recently said, "more substance" less "showboating", you wonder who the previous showboater-in-chief was...

Although I recall this chart from Ottawa citizen that shows the wealthy did the best under Chretien/Martin, whereas Harper improved the lot of everyone equally.
1776731739863.png
I find it funny that noone is pointing out the obvious, that the 08 financial crisis led to income growth flatlining in that chart...

Purchasing a place to live should be about obtaining a home, not about building wealth.
The same sentiment rings true when Chinese leadership said this:

I agree with this ideal. Wealth should not be the primary goal of housing, but a happy by-product.

However, in virtually every country, the quality of life, wealth, socioeconomic mobility for homeowners tends to be better. $1 of net worth is still $1 of wealth. High rents prevent you from accumulating any form of savings. Low rents tend to lead to homeownership. Our ideals will not change the fact that wealth tends to accumulate among the homeowner class.

There is also a reason why ostensibly socialistic countries pursue de facto homeownership for their residents. China for reference has 90+% homeownership rate (with Reuters reporting 96%), compared to less than 66% in Canada and declining.

The point is, people are dismissing the benefits that homeownership can bring. As if it's no big deal that 70% of adults under age 30 are priced out, forced to pay exorbitant rents or live with their parents, as long as other social ideals are met, like a 50/50 gender ratio in the Cabinet.

"Nationally, renters report lower quality of life than homeowners"
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/240219/dq240219b-eng.htm

Gen Z men are increasingly diverging from women in having more socially conservative attitudes towards gender equality, LGBT issues, immigration, etc.
And some part of that divergence is due to socioeconomic decline. Although I strongly disagree with the notion that American-style social conservatism is as prevalent in Canada as UT perceives. If that were the case, PP would've won and not clutched defeat from the jaws of victory. Something like 1/4 to 1/3 of Americans are evangelical Protestants, compared to less than 10% of Canadians. And religious affiliation is declining faster in Canada.

He ensured that the number of homes needed due to immigration match the number built by the private sector.
Citation needed. The housing bubble continued to inflate under Harper.
Both of your claims are true enough. As I said before, housing stock-to-population ratio consistently increased under Harper, but that did not prevent housing costs from rising faster than inflation. There were other factors at play.
 
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The problem is that PP is beholden to the significant percentage of the CPC vote and even more significant percentage of the party faithful and donors that are Maple MAGA. PP would have a hard time standing up to Trump when 30-50% of the people he needs to beg for money from think Trump is the best thing to happen to the US. And yes, these people walk among us.
True; that's what enabled him to be fatally framed in terms of Trump. However, when PP was leading by a landslide in the polls, Trump wasn't (back) in office yet.
 
Change of topic and whataboutisms...

I'll refer you to this from earlier:



Yes, Trudeau was more socially progressive in some ways. This is not mutually exclusive with what I am claiming. Many social conditions worsened under Trudeau. Often a result of high population growth, which lead to housing and public services not keeping up, which later contributed to increased crime. This then ties into Trudeau's poor record on filling judicial vacancies to ensure timely prosecution of alleged criminals.

I think progressive minded people know a decline in socioeconomic conditions is correlated with higher crime.

View attachment 730555
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/250722/cg-a001-eng.htm

"National homicide rate increases for fourth consecutive year [...] The homicide rate increased 8% from 2.08 homicides per 100,000 population in 2021 to 2.25 homicides per 100,000 population in 2022. This was the highest rate since 1992."
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/230727/dq230727b-eng.htm

When comparing eras, sexual assault against women stats show a similar depressing trend.
---------------------------------------------------------

I am not defending Harper the person. I am pointing out that despite Trudeau's progressive image and rhetoric, on many social items that matter to ordinary Canadians---housing unaffordability, food insecurity, wealth inequality, violent crime, to name a few---got worse under his admin. So while Harper may not have presented himself as progressive, many social conditions happened to be better during his administration.

That's not to say I give 0 credit to the Trudeau admin, $10 a day childcare is great, but even that only benefits less than half of the population:

"In 2024, 51.5% of Canadian women aged 20 to 49 years were not yet mothers."
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/260126/dq260126a-eng.htm

Federal immigration-driven population growth was the primary driver of declining per capita access to public services, while provincial underfunding (relative to inflation) was a secondary aggravating factor. The sentiment I am getting is that Ford came in and made deep cuts to every public facing department. That's not true. And any relative decline in spending did not lead to the smoldering ruin of public institutions overnight, as some are perceiving....

Even if I wholeheartedly disagree with Ford's attitudes and policies on healthcare, education, etc.

"The federal government’s revised immigration policy is beginning to pay dividends in returning balance to a stretched social infrastructure."
----------------------------------------

If we are not allowed to fault Trudeau's admin for policy failures leading to socioeconomic backsliding (oil prices and covid scapegoat), then we similarly cannot credit Harper's admin for generally not worsening things despite the great recession.

When Carney recently said, "more substance" less "showboating", you wonder who the previous showboater-in-chief was...


I find it funny that noone is pointing out the obvious, that the 08 financial crisis led to income growth flatlining in that chart...


The same sentiment rings true when Chinese leadership said this:

I agree with this ideal. Wealth should not be the primary goal of housing, but a happy by-product.

However, in virtually every country, the quality of life, wealth, socioeconomic mobility for homeowners tends to be better. $1 of net worth is still $1 of wealth. High rents prevent you from accumulating any form of savings. Low rents tend to lead to homeownership. Our ideals will not change the fact that wealth tends to accumulate among the homeowner class.

There is also a reason why ostensibly socialistic countries pursue de facto homeownership for their residents. China for reference has 90+% homeownership rate (with Reuters reporting 96%), compared to less than 66% in Canada and declining.

The point is, people are dismissing the benefits that homeownership can bring. As if it's no big deal that 70% of adults under age 30 are priced out, forced to pay exorbitant rents or live with their parents, as long as other social ideals are met, like a 50/50 gender ratio in the Cabinet.

"Nationally, renters report lower quality of life than homeowners"
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/240219/dq240219b-eng.htm


And some part of that divergence is due to socioeconomic decline. Although I strongly disagree with the notion that American-style social conservatism is as prevalent in Canada as UT perceives. If that were the case, PP would've won and not clutched defeat from the jaws of victory. Something like 1/4 to 1/3 of Americans are evangelical Protestants, compared to less than 10% of Canadians. And religious affiliation is declining faster in Canada.



Both of your claims are true enough. As I said before, housing stock-to-population ratio consistently increased under Harper, but that did not prevent housing costs from rising faster than inflation. There were other factors at play.
Harper increased the use of Mandatory Minimums in new offences and this lead to courts in Canada being overburdened. The Tyee has done an article about it.
 
"racial discounts" didn't come in until Trudeau.
To be fair, white people benefited from racial discounts as well. For starters, we whites are less likely to be stopped and searched by police, more likely to have police let us off with a warning or have lessor charges applied, more likely to have good legal representation and obtain more lenient sentencing. There's a reason Chris Rock recommend black drivers have a white friend. Perhaps Trudeau was just trying to even the playing field.

 
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Meanwhile...

These are the Ontario postal codes losing door-to-door Canada Post delivery​


Good. I think the double standard is ridiculous. Young people who live in new (often denser) neighbourhoods get the community mailbox. The wealthy upper class hoods get daily service to the door. Meanwhile, Canada Post costs $1.6B annually, mostly for junk mail that goes into the trash. I'm glad disciplined is being opposed on this obvious waste and double standard.
 
Except that it has come out in evidence in a number of cases, certainly not anywhere close to a majority, that the crime was committed by or on the behest of a family member because the victim brought shame on the family or otherwise was believed to have violated some cultural norm. It's not a captured statistic because the motive for a crime is not a fact-in-issue in Canadian law (with very few exception).

There was no need for some dedicated snitch line. People can just call the cops if they suspect a crime. It was nothing but pandering to racists.
 
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Is the killing of a woman at the hands of a jealous/angry/mentally ill man different in some way because of the culture they come from?
Anyone could do it regardless of culture, but some cultures condemn it, while others encourage it.
The problem to me is that you're conflating too many people and too many people of a particular demographic
Undeniably a big problem in the EU, and the problem is definitely not that there are "too many Finns in Finland"
 
Undeniably a big problem in the EU, and the problem is definitely not that there are "too many Finns in Finland"

You dug up a quote of mine from last October to quote six months later?

***

For context here, because I think that quote reads badly, I was clarifying to another poster that was reasonable to critique how many people you allow into a country all at once, when the infrastructure and housing for them aren't in place, and the job market can't support it, without that being a critique of people who want to come to Canada, in that case, and having nothing to do w/their particular demographic.

My comment had nothing do with the exchange above and is not properly contextualized.
 

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