charles

joined 2 years ago
[–] charles 9 points 7 hours ago

Not quite. There's still enough polls left to report that could lead to a Liberal majority, even if that doesn't happen (it's quite unlikely), then current projections are that the NDP will have enough seats to support the minority government, even though the Bloc will hold more seats overall than the NDP.

[–] charles 2 points 1 day ago

Other than ZFS as someone mentioned already, they also offer dual drive parity now. IMO it's a good balance to also allow a very flexible and easily expandable array.

[–] charles 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

The best part of having a homelab/home server is the reproducible dopamine hits. First you'll get some dopamine just getting the thing up and running, but then each service I decide to tackle and implement gives me a whole new hit of dopamine. Most services you can get up in a day or two of tinkering/learning even as a system noob like me. On top of that, if you don't manage to get it working, it's pretty easy to scrap the attempt and try something easier.

Then you also get dopamine hits whenever something breaks and you manage to fix it. 10/10 would recommend.

[–] charles 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I completely agree with you that mandatory enlistment is essentially never acceptable as if a conflict is so dire, you'd expect citizens to feel empowered to join the fight without fear of penalty or retribution if they didn't.

That being said, I think most of what you were replying to was not an argument for mandatory enlistment, they were suggesting that we might want to include a couple years of work placements following high school, with one option being military service but other choices being available and none decided by the government. I also believe they were suggesting that the penalty for not doing so would be similar to penalties for not attending high school and not what we've seen countries implement as penalties for conscription. I'm not saying that plan is perfect but I can at least see a significant nuance between their suggestion and military conscription.

[–] charles 1 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Just FYI, you're the only one making a spectacle of themselves in this thread.

[–] charles 4 points 1 week ago

The LDC is an independent commission established by the Government of Canada. The list of who is serving on the Secretariat and the Advisory Board can be found here https://www.debates-debats.ca/en/about/commission/

[–] charles 4 points 1 week ago

Your post would be better worded as "if your riding isn't competitive for conservatives, you don't have to vote strategically and can vote for your preferred candidate/party."

[–] charles 1 points 1 week ago

I'd even be okay with patents lasting more than 5 years as long as the patented concept is being actively utilized. Essentially, use it or lose it.

[–] charles 2 points 1 month ago

Another thing to consider is that the PM being in the house of commons effectively elevates the leader of the opposition to being a near equal to the PM. If the PM weren’t even there, would anybody pay attention to what the leader of the opposition was saying?

I think that's a very interesting thought, I hadn't considered the impacts on the opposition if the PM wasn't in the house when I wrote my previous reply.

I definitely agree with you that there's pros and cons to either systems and it comes down a lot more to how its implemented than anything else. I also agree that this is not the best time to be experimenting with new systems/tweaks to the system and I wish there was a way for us (as a society) to better assess how a system might work without risking so much.

[–] charles 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

It's definitely an interesting conversation to have, and I think you raise some excellent points on whether it's the most effective use of the PMs time to be in the House. I think one big drawback if they aren't is that the opposition would be able to speak about the PM without the PM being able to directly respond but a) that doesn't matter much if the party has a majority, b) it's possible this wouldn't be as big of an issue over time if we had multiple PMs not in the House as it's possible the opposition would start focusing on the leader in the house (such as deputy PM), c) it also wouldn't be entirely unprecedented as the PM isn't always in attendance, even if they are allowed to.

[–] charles 2 points 1 month ago (4 children)

He absolutely could remain PM without being an MP but I believe he then wouldn't be allowed to actually sit or speak in the House which is obviously not ideal.

[–] charles 4 points 1 month ago

I haven't done enough research to confidently answer your second question but for your first one:

That is the official website of the House of Commons of Canada. The process varies a bit between paper petitions and e-petitions but essentially, once the petition is certified (has enough signatures (25 for paper petitions, 500 for e-petitions), is formatted properly, and an MP is willing to present it) it will then be presented in the House by the MP associated with the petition and the government then has 45 days to respond to the content, if they fail to respond within 45 days, the MP who presented the petition can designate a committee of the house to look into why the government failed to respond.

So it doesn't force the government to enact the content of the petition, but it forces the issue to be brought up in the House and forces the government to respond.

Source of most of that info: https://www.ourcommons.ca/petitions/en/home/index

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by charles to c/plex@lemm.ee
 

I might be a bit out of the loop here but why was the decision made to migrate the community to a different instance?

All I've seen is that it was to move to a "friendlier" instance, did something happen previously or is this just related to the admins of lemmy.ml?

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