GrizzlyBur

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
 

I'm really worried about Windsor. Essex county is my home in Canada. Of all of the Canadian cities, we're probably the ones to be most hurt the most from this. I hope we can all come together and help each other overcome this as a community.

PS: Amherstburg has some 1812 cannons that could be put back into working order, but keep it on the down-low so the Yanks don't know. They've been pointed towards the American side for 200 years now, but I think it may soon be time to let them sing again.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Same! I've got 3,250 hours on it. Tynan really keeps it on the down low that he is based in Canada!

It's strange, somehow nearly all of my favourite games are Canadian made. Despite being disconnected from Canada by living in the US for over a decade, so many of my favourite musicians, games, movies and even youtubers are Canadian. Stuff Canadians make just appeals to me more often than not, and it makes me feel fuzzy and like I'm still Canadian despite being gone for so long. So excited to move back this year.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 months ago

What you've said is true, but I still insist that Canada is not an imperial or opportunist country that is looking to gobble up states, even if handed on a silver platter. It's just not really what we do. You are severely overlooking the fact that it would require a supermajority of support in both the seceding state and Canada as a whole to admit a new province/territory into the confederation. That is simply unlikely.

If the US collapses USSR-style, it would likely just simply balkanize instead of being picked over by its neighbours. It would balkanize either by region, or completely by states. What is probably more likely is probably another civil war, with one side completely winning or a stalemate being met and two or more separate USAs existing. But honestly, there is literally no way to know what will happen to the US going forward.

Gun to my head, had to choose, I'd say that America just continues to be a flawed democracy and returns to its isolationism that it historically always does inbetween major wars, probably suffer a major recession, and then has a civil war.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 1 points 5 months ago

If the Cons were smart, they're have kept him on a leash as an attack dog while making someone much more respectable be the party leader. Let PP do his vicious mockery act and outrage farming to soak up all the bad press, and let a normal-looking con take the seat.

Right now, PP is like a little yapping dog that got ahold of its own leash and doesn't know what to do with it.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 4 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Most Canadians would love the idea of states joining us

Nope. Not true.

They wouldn't even refuse solidly red states, I think

I would. They would view us as an occupying power, and would be right to think so. Think of Quebec, but instead of being French they're just racist. I don't want that in my Canada.

It would make Canada stronger, and a better life for the states

It would be a clusterfuck. Not Canada's problem to make life better for Americans. Ever heard the saying, people get the government they deserve? Majority of them are assholes or unable to help themselves. If they want to enjoy a better life the Canadian way, they can work on immigrating here. Canada is not an expansionist country. Plenty Happy as is, geopolitically speaking.

Economic power together is enhanced

We've been doing this already, as two separate sovereign nations. Assholes turned it against us. You know, you read the news.

Canada even as 10 states instead of 1, doesn't work because US debt is too high, and US simply has too harsh of a society meant for oligarchy.

Not sure what you're going on about with the US debt. But that alone is a reason for us to not join together. Who the hell would want to inherent that problem? Canadians would be taxed like crazy to help pay that off. If by too harsh of a society, you mean ruthless individualism at the expense of the overall social fabric, which has a nasty effect of creating oligarchs? Correct.

Healthcare would be a major issue.

It would be, but in this scenario is would ironically be the least problematic thing.

These opinions are presented to you by a dual citizen Canadian currently living in the Southeast of America. No normal people here want to invade Canada, and no Canadian wants to be a "savior" of poor abused American states. I'm down to let more people immigrate and become PR or citizens, but not a blanket annexation of entire states. If Americans have a issue with their current federal government, they can take some bricks and throw them through select politicians windows while doing mass strikes like the rest of the civilized world does to keep their democracy clean. The French revolution wasn't bloodless, nor was the American Revolutionary War. Tyrants don't go away on their own.

You know nothing about Canadians nor what the average American thinks and it shows.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 11 points 5 months ago

I had no idea this was Canadian! Seems like Canadian game devs are really making top notch games.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 38 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (9 children)
  • Rimworld is created by Tynan Sylvester, who lives in Ottawa. Fantastic colony sim game that still gets consistent and major updates alongside the DLC releases.

  • Torn Banner Studios, creators of Chivalry and Chivalry 2, the Medieval multiplayer combat games are also Based in Toronto. They recently declared Chiv 2 to be a completed game, ceasing anynew content updates but still supporting the servers and community. They seem to be cooking up something new, but no info yet.

  • Hinterland Studios, creators of The Long Dark, a survival game, are based in Vancouver. The game is slower paced with realistic survival mechanics in rural north BC I believe. It's not abandoned, but updates very slowly. Cool devs though.

All of these games have active dev and fan communities. Rimworld has a SUPER talented & stable modding community.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 7 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

I love me some Letterkenny. While it is a comedy, it really does an excellent job at highlighting what being Canadian means. I really need to watch the spin off, Shoresy.

If you're interested in more media that helps you understand what being Canadian is all about, I'd recommend listening to some of the most iconic Canadians musicians of all time: Leonard Cohen, Neil Young, Gordon Lightfoot, The Tragically Hip, Bachman-Turner Overdrive, and The Band. You've almost certainly heard their songs before, but listen to some of their less popular music.

Here's some specific songs that I am fond of, and feel highlight Common Canadian Sensibilities:

  • King Harvest (Has Surely Come) by The Band
  • Dance me to the End of Love by Leonard Cohen
  • In View by The Tragically Hip
  • Bobcaygeon by The Tragically Hip
  • Signs by Five Man Electrical Band
  • Carefree Highway by Gordon Lightfoot
  • If You Could Read My Mind by Gordon Lightfoot
  • Illegal by Corbeau
  • Universal Soldier by Buffy Sainte-Marie
  • Til I Am Myself Again by Blue Rodeo
  • (You're A) Strange Animal by Gowan
  • The Rest of My Life by Sloan
  • Money City Maniacs by Sloan
  • The Consumer by Stompin' Tom Connors
  • Helpless by Neil Young
  • Heart of Gold by Neil Young
  • Life Is A Highway by Tom Cochrane
  • American Psycho by Treble Charger
  • Truth Doesn't Live in a Book by Ben Chaplan
  • The Night Pat Murphy Died by Great Big Sea

These showcase a variety of genres and locations within Canada. We are a big country with such a beautiful mixture of experiences that allow for such wonderful music to be produced.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 21 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (6 children)

I can't tell whats more annoying: if they did it out of malice or indifference.

Either way, the cultural homogenizing effects of mass social media is a mistake and must be fought against. Countries that primarily speak English are at the greatest threat of this. If I had a magic genie I'd wish that Canadian's native language was anything other than English so people's minds wouldn't be so easily poisoned by all the dumb bullshit media the US produces. There are genuinely people in Canada who believe they have Second Amendment rights.

I've been saying this lately, but Canada as a whole needs to emulate what Quebec is doing to protect its cultural identity. Limit American media coming into the country. Defend and cultivate our unique cultural identity at all costs.

Anyone that says Canada is not distinguished culturally from America is ignorant. I am a dual citizen who has lived in and loved both countries. Just because we are neighbours, mostly white, and speak the same language, does not make us identical. We have a different social fabric. The biggest difference is that America is a extremely individualistic society, and Canadians are a collective society. I'd call us socialist, but that word immediately turns off the listening ears of Americans as they have been programmed since McCarthy to reject socialism in all forms -- even though America has dozens of socialist programs such as social security and food stamps. To explain socialist concepts to Americans you have to use synonyms. It's like feeding a dog a pill covered in fucking peanut butter. Gotta "trick" them to help them because they just don't understand otherwise. I don't wanna trick anybody I just wanna help but stupid fucking billionaires got these idiots convinced socialist concepts are gonna destroy the country. Oh no! We made your medications cheaper and allowed you to unionize so you can get better wages and job security! So evil! I swear, if you changed "Union Dues" to "Employment Insurance" they'd be all aboard.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 6 points 5 months ago (21 children)

My theory is that some asshole at google thought it was soo much to keep track of what every government globally calls their government operated parks and nature reserves, and just wanted a blanket term for it and went for "state park", with no consideration for how itd piss most countries off.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 10 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Yep. Its not technically wrong to call them state parks, but still fuck'em that is our PROVINCIAL park.

Maybe a small cultural hill we are on right now but we give us enough of these hills and suddenly we lose any semblance of cultural uniqueness.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 161 points 5 months ago (43 children)

They're done this globally apparently. They just got rid of the provincial park option and defaults all government operated nature reserves, of any government, as "state parks".

Seems very shortsighted and with a disregard for other countries. Extremely confusing move by google.

[–] GrizzlyBur@lemmy.ca 1 points 5 months ago

That's a fair assessment. Now that you mention it, we don't actually have many frozen donuts at my location. I wonder what they do to freeze the tim horton donuts, or what could be done to make them just as good despite being frozen. Maybe thawing a "blank" and cremeing and icing it freshly? Almost makes me want to experiment at home for freezing methods.

 

This is pulled from the r/windsorontario subreddit, by user u/coyotefew6535 . I do not claim credit for this post. Am reposting here for visibility and discussion, and appreciation of a high quality post.

NEW REPORT HIGHLIGHTS GROWING INCOME INEQUALITY AND HOUSING CRISIS IN WINDSOR-ESSEX COUNTY

Windsor-Essex, ON – With a provincial election under way, a newly released report, Income Inequality and the Housing Crisis in Windsor-Essex County, reveals alarming trends in income disparity and housing affordability in the region. The report, a collaboration between five community organizations, underscores the urgent need for policy interventions to address rising economic inequality and its impact on housing accessibility.

Developed as a collaborative project between Assisted Living Southwestern Ontario (ALSO), Family Services Windsor-Essex (FSWE), Habitat for Humanity Windsor-Essex, South Essex Community Council (SECC), and the Welcome Centre Shelter for Women and Families, with research undertaken by Community Policy Solutions the report provides an in-depth analysis of income distribution and housing affordability challenges in Windsor-Essex.

Key Findings:

Windsor-Essex Among Canada’s Most Unequal Regions: The region ranks fifth in Canada for income inequality, trailing only Toronto, Calgary, Vancouver, and Hamilton.
Soaring Housing Costs: Since 2006, housing prices have surged by 150%, while median incomes have declined by 10% when adjusted for inflation.
Disproportionate Impact on Vulnerable Groups: Persons with disabilities, single mothers, newcomers, and low-income households face significant barriers to securing stable housing.
Investor-Owned Properties Increasing: 64% of condos and 12% of single-family homes in Windsor-Essex are owned by investors, driving up rental costs and exacerbating affordability and inequality issues.
Housing Affordability in Decline: Between 2015 and 2020, 149 neighbourhoods (Census Dissemination Areas) in Windsor-Essex became unaffordable to middle-income earners to purchase a new home.

https://preview.redd.it/96kor1bs84ke1.png?width=842&format=png&auto=webp&s=9bcf181850ad4d7b3aa83b0b7b48a9e02c6d619a

https://preview.redd.it/qazya2bs84ke1.png?width=852&format=png&auto=webp&s=17d5088f22df2723dc5c2d401cd4e28034abf182

A Call for Action

The report emphasizes the need for a multi-faceted approach to address these challenges, including:

Zoning and Planning Reforms to allow for more diverse and affordable housing options to be built at lower costs.
Innovative housing solutions like Community Land Trusts to keep land and housing permanently affordable.
Improved Social Assistance Rates to ensure the most vulnerable are able to afford housing in our community.
Adopt broader community wealth building strategies across our region by buying local, ensuring fair wages are being paid, access to public transportation services in all municipalities, and considering tangible community benefits when municipal or regional projects are advance.

“The findings are clear: Windsor-Essex can no longer rely on historically low housing costs to balance out lower income of residents. Growing inequality is pointing to the fact that many people in Windsor-Essex are now being left behind. Without immediate action, the affordability crisis will continue to push more residents into precarious housing situations,” said Frazier Fathers, report author and Lead Consultant at Community Policy Solutions.

The full report is available for download as are over a dozen maps that maps affordability and inequality at different income thresholds for the Windsor-Essex region.

Partner Perspectives: As part of the project each partner’s perspective on the topic of inequality and housing was explored deeper. Each of their perspectives provide a unique insight into this pressing issue and an important conversation about affordability and inequality. Each link below goes to a one pager focusing on this organization's perspective.

Assisted Living Southwestern Ontario

“For the people we support, we see the impacts of income inequality and housing affordability daily. Some of our clients are fortunate while others barely can keep a roof over their heads on ODSP forcing them into impossible choices. At the same time, it costs 300% more to retrofit a housing unit to make it accessible rather than build it from scratch. This forces higher prices on our clients than the average community member.”

Leigh Vachon, Executive Director, Assisted Living Southwestern Ontario.

Family Services Windsor Essex

“The housing crisis and growing income inequality in our region are complex and our community needs action. We need to have the space to innovate and try out new ideas and solutions. We need to explore ideas like Land Trusts and new strategic partnerships between organizations and government to leverage the limited resources we have available to move the needle on this crisis. We need more affordable housing.”

Ciara Holmes, Acting Executive Director, Family Services Windsor Essex

Habitat for Humanity Windsor-Essex

““This report makes it clear—income inequality is a growing issue in Windsor-Essex, and without action, more families will be shut out of homeownership and long-term financial stability. Homeownership is one of the most effective ways to break the cycle of poverty and build generational wealth, but rising costs and systemic barriers are making it increasingly out of reach. At Habitat for Humanity, we see firsthand how a stable, affordable home transforms lives. That’s why it’s critical for nonprofits to work together on research like this—to highlight the challenges, advocate for change, and push for policies that make homeownership and affordable housing a reality for more families in our region.”

South Essex Community Council

**“**As a multi-service agency operating in Essex County, we see the impacts of income inequality and housing affordability every day. These issues affect the physical and mental health of many of the people we serve. It affects their ability to search for employment. It affects a person’s ability to access healthy food. The impacts of income inequality and housing affordability are deep. In smaller communities, it is not just about housing, but the supports around housing. Are people making a living wage, can they afford groceries? Do they have reliable and affordable transportation access to find work or attend school? Without these and other supports, those that “have” will continue to prosper, while those that “have not” will continue to struggle.”

Carloyn Warkentin, Executive Director, South Essex Community Council

Welcome Centre Shelter for Women and Families

“As a shelter provider we see the direct impact of growing inequality and unaffordability in our community. Timelines for housing our clients have grown and data shows that women and families face a disproportionate impact of these crises. The need for transitional housing options continues to grow and without a spectrum of supports, keeping people with greatest needs will remain a challenge in our region.”

Lady Laforet, Executive Director, Welcome Centre Shelter for Women and Families

If you want to know more about this report or the data. Reach out to info@communitypolicysolutions.ca

 

Hi all! Saw that the city I was born and raised around was not represented on the Canadian fediverse, so I thought I'd step up!

While this community is named after Windsor, all content and discussion pertaining to Essex County is welcomed here. I myself am actually from Amherstburg.

view more: ‹ prev next ›