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Joined 29 days ago
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Cake day: April 29th, 2025

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  • If you want to know why nobody helps Gazan refugees theres a good history of places like Lebanon and Kuwait who let them in and ultimately banished them. Theres even some theories that keeping them stateless as they are is all part of the plan to keep them poor and helpless, to prevent further political extremism.

    In the 1960s Lebanon was relatively calm, but this soon changed. Fatah and other Palestinian Liberation Organization factions had long been active among the 400,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanese camps. Throughout the 1960s, the center for armed Palestinian activities had been in Jordan. They were forced to relocate after being evicted by King Hussein during the 1970 Black September in Jordan. Fatah and other Palestinian groups attempted to mount a coup in Jordan by incentivizing a split in the Jordanian army, something that the ANM had attempted to do a decade earlier by Nasser’s bidding. Jordan responded, and expelled the Palestinian forces into Lebanon. When they arrived, they created “a State within the State”. This action was not welcomed by the Lebanese government, and this shook Lebanon’s fragile sectarian balance.

    Solidarity with the Palestinians was expressed by the Lebanese Sunni Muslims, with the aim to change the political system from one of consensus amongst different sects, towards one where their power share would increase. Certain groups in the Lebanese National Movement wished to bring about a more secular and democratic order, but as this group increasingly included Islamist groups, encouraged to join by the PLO, the more progressive demands of the initial agenda was dropped by January 1976. Islamists did not support a secular order in Lebanon and wished to bring about rule by Muslim clerics.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhDGfctSTfI










  • The only reason we haven’t been in a recession this whole year is mass immigration. We let in more people than the US, who has 10x the population we do.

    Its lobbying by corporations who want wage suppression, which is why we are second last place in the OECD in per capita GDP growth since Trudeau took over.

    We imported huge sums of people and are facing capital shallowing, which is also why our investment per worker is extremely low, and why corporation don’t invest in productivity growth; which is required for wage growth. Which is also why the BoC is “ringing the alarm bells” on stagnant productivity growth, as this inevitably affects our borrowing rates and foreign exchange.




  • The federal government loosened LMIA requirements, increased immigration, created a surf class the UN described as modern slavery. That all directly affects housing for Canadians who fight for finite land and jobs, as we fail to invest in modern infrastructure like high speed rail to make it sustainable.

    One year we brought in 1.4 million people, the US brings in 1/4 that per year and has 10x the density , so 2.5% on a per capita basis.





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