AGM

joined 1 month ago
[–] AGM 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

"There is no public uproar and little clamour from within the institutions; ... Resistance must come from outside the institutions"

Pretty revealing take. "Resistance"

[–] AGM 12 points 2 weeks ago

Alberta 2025 = Crimea 2013

[–] AGM 25 points 2 weeks ago

Moderate conservatives and far-right secessionist conservatives don't agree on secession, but if she doesn't do what the far-right conservatives want, she might lose political power, so she's happy to support the people threatening to tear the country apart because it serves her personal interests.

[–] AGM 18 points 2 weeks ago

Take off the CPC-tinted glasses. There was nothing comparable to Biden there. Carney handled that meeting very, very well.

[–] AGM 4 points 2 weeks ago

Keep in mind, our neighbor to the south is the world's leading expert in regime change with a long track record of causing civil unrest and undermining the social and democratic systems of democratic allies.

[–] AGM 11 points 2 weeks ago

We are far from out of the woods on dealing with the rising far right movement. We need to see other parties divide the moderate conservatives from the far right conservatives on wedge issues like Alberta separatism and other crazier stuff from the far right.

At the same time, the Liberals and the NDP need to work on winning over the moderate voters who went with the CPC because of the economic & labour pains they've felt in recent years.

Also, killing off X in Canada would be great, but much more contentious.

[–] AGM 1 points 2 weeks ago

Maybe you're confused about what I mean by CPC caucus? Those are the elected MPs in the Conservative party. They ultimately vote on who is the leader of the party, but that's something they do outside of parliament. They just do it in their own party organization. That's what I mean about holding him accountable, because they can choose to replace him with another leader, or they can choose to keep him as leader even after losing the election and losing his own seat.

[–] AGM 5 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

What a random and disconnected reply to my comment. Odd. Not sure what to do with that.

[–] AGM 7 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

The CPC caucus are the ones who need to enforce accountability and decency in their own party. I don't think they will, because the strategy of attacking the centre while making the far right feel welcome is what expanded their vote share, and Poilievre is their guy for that. They'll be looking at it and recognizing that if they lose the far right and lose their attack dog who tears down opponents, they will lose vote share. So, even though he's toxic and lost his own seat, I suspect they'll back him, and it will be bad for Canada.

[–] AGM 21 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Bernier is awful, but a win would likely result in the PPC gaining strength in the next election, which would pull far right voters away from the CPC and weaken them while keeping the far right on the fringes. That sounds good to me. I don't think it's at all likely that he'll run against Poilievre and win, but it would be fine by me.

[–] AGM 23 points 2 weeks ago

I was relieved that the CPC didn't form government, but we're still in a lot of danger. Spend any time on X and you can see a full court press going on with propaganda to push Alberta separatism. The same stuff is going on now in Alberta that took place in Crimea prior to 2014, and the online media ecosystem is American. I see a lot of people stating Alberta couldn't separate because of the treaties, but when a powerful country decides they don't care about the laws, the courts aren't going to save you.

[–] AGM 1 points 2 weeks ago

Canada is now the front line against what's rising in the US, and we're not out of the woods with Alberta or our domestic far-right movement either.

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