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afransen TO
Guest
Let's say the economy stagnated for ten years. Over those ten years, the debt could grow by $350 - $500 billion and we'd be no worse off than we were in 1993.
Canada managed to go through Confederation, the Great Depression and three major wars without deficit spending.
You want a multi-lane, divided expressway across the country? For what? Beyond transport trucks, there is not sufficient trans-national traffic for this.we don't even have a single expressway that crosses the country,
I've driven the TransCanada Highway from Charlottetown to Halifax to Thunder Bay and to the west as far as Calgary. It seemed like a good road to me, though very seldom used in rural northern Ontario beyond trucks.Not everything in the world needs to be ruled by assessments of whether capacity is absolutely needed this year. Better infrastructure creates growth. This is bad when it comes to suburban sprawl, but good when it comes to trade tying the country together. The Americans (and Europeans) have built a network that allows access to all parts of their country. The Americans have five transcontinental expressways. There's nothing wrong with Canada having one rather than forcing our travellers down into the States.
Not in the middle of no where, which is what most of the trans-national expressway that was proposed here would comprise of.Trucks are vehicles which cause congestion too.
I didn't know that, thx. Does it touch Nova Scotia at all?The Trans Canada Highway doesn't go to Halifax.




