Canadian Government Weary of Patriot Act
IllogicalStudent writes "An article on canoe discusses how the Canadian government is moving to counter worries surrounding Canadian citizens' privacy being compromised by the United States' Patriot act. Apparently the FBI currently has the right, through Patriot, to search documents which may contain Canadian information sent to US firms carrying out work under contract. Thankfully, privacy still means something up here."
When you get paranoid, your friends suffer more than your enemies...
(It's never too late to join the Renaissance)
this post in private and may not be read by the FBI.
Is the Canada the USA's Palestina ?
Trolling using another account since 2005.
We can expect to see a massive farting extravaganza as Terence and Philip sort out the US?
Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
What truth?
There is no dupe
'nuf said.
So are they weary or wary? A little copy editing goes a long way, you know.
Slashdot: 24 hours behind every other site or your money back!
I wonder how many terrorists this amazingly intrusive and expensive system has actually caught.
US companies with data on citizens of European Union countries have to follow the European Privacy laws. So, the situation is more complex than just the US extending its law internationally, othe countries do so as well.
As if there was something of importance coming through Canadian mail... (pst - dont worry so much)
You might be next - it would be much cheaper for George W. to invade ya.
The Patriot Act was the result of Paranoia... Of people willing to endorse anything if it was security-related. I would still like to count Canada as a US friend, even if half the politicians down here call it "Canuckistan"...
(It's never too late to join the Renaissance)
If Google was headquartered in Canada and kept all their user cookie data, search-term data, and Gmail servers inside of Canada, the world would be a better place because ordinary people would have more privacy rights.
We're tired of it too!
You don't have to be Canadian to be weary/wary of the Patriot Act. You just need Sovereign power to get your message across.
Windows has detected an undetectable error.
Its not like the USA was built on industrial espionage gleened from Britain's industrial revolution
now everything is global, who is to say that USA doesn't still do it, but now they take the info from any country "legally" Hmmmmmmm....
dodgy fnckers
Telling Bush he can shove his missile defense system up his idea hole. We really would rather work towards a more peaceful world through understanding and compromise, not a peace built on fear and threats.
Do Canadians get fingerprinted and photographed at the border like all us other foreign criminals? You complain, but you offer no solution. I suggest that you are worse than the problem you complain about.
And, if memory serves, the terrorists that took down the WTC came through Canada.
Are we (the US) supposed to look the other way when it comes to Canada? It seems like we did in the past, and terrorists got through, took 4 jets, crashing 3 of them into buildings. What would you suggest?
Okay, so it's not new, but it seems to be more obvious recently...
Agile Artisans
A few weeks after 9/11 the Canadian government gave the U.S. government full access to all government data on Canadian citizens, with no apparent quid pro quo. Fair enough, I probably would have given the kitchen sink too, but what would have been nice is some agreement outlining eg. more economic integration between Canada and the U.S., a la the very successful NAFTA treaty.
Because now it's harder for me to travel 5 minutes north (yes, that's right, I'm Canadian and the U.S. is to the NORTH of my house) to see my friends in the U.S., over an invisible dotted line drawn by politicians. And no, I'm not talking about Alaska.
The U.S. and Canada are symbiotes both economically and security-wise. More integration is better for everyone. I think a really good idea is Canada becoming a commonwealth of the U.S., like Puerto Rico.
When CNN is assuring Americans about making sure their "security" is covered, you be sure that we have lost the "War of Terror". Sorry Canadians. We'll bounce back eventually, I hope.
Fortunately George W. Still can't find Canada on the map (sssh! let's keep it that way), so any information acquired that violates our privacy will probably be useless to them. They might as well get a SETI client and mine through some of that data. I can see it right now:
"Your excellence, it appears that an evil race of aliens are planning to attack us -- also, they have a whole bunch of oil. Good thing we already have PATRIOT ACT VIII drafted up."
I eat bees -- they taste stingy.
Other than what is granted by the host country. What is wrong with a country wanting to track foreign nationals inside their border? When does your personal rights exceed that of a country you do not even hold citizenship in?
In other words, does your selfishness override the rights of the country in question to do what it can to protect its citizens and police its borders?
As someone else mentioned, your not forced to come here.
Along your line of reasoning why should I have to declare anything to foreign customs agents when I arrive or leave their countries? Why should I have to tell German authorities I am in their country. Hell with that, why should I put up with "THEIR" idea of airport security, after all it annoys me.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
I think a really good idea is Canada becoming a commonwealth of the U.S., like Puerto Rico. Puerto Ricans are stuck in a lovely political loophole that's not quite statehood and not quite independence. The US Government can basically run roughshod over Puerto Rico with nothing but the occasional referendum to maybe change the situation. A better idea would be for Canada to look at joining the European Union (it's already a member of ESA) and making that kind of transnational governance take hold over more of the world than a teensie continent.
(It's never too late to join the Renaissance)
That is a false media meme that has become truth simply because it has been repeated so often.
6 -e n.asp?format=print
To quote:
This is not the first time that Canada has been falsely accused of harboring terrorists and allowing its space to be used as a launching pad for a potential attack on the United States. Immediately after the September 11 attacks, media reports flashed around the world stating that several (and in some reports, all) of the 19 hijackers entered the United States from the northern border. We now know that all of the terrorists entered the United States directly from overseas with US-issued documents. None of the terrorists came from Canada.
http://www.canadianembassy.org/ambassador/03011
The solution is suggested in the article, have everything done in Canadian facilities with strict controls over the data. The next step would be to make it a contract condition that companies doing work with this data must not have any presence in the US, directly or indirectly, or any jurisdiction that supports the patriot act. This has the benefit to Canadian companies to be somewhat protectionist. In case some of you haven't noticed US trans-national corporations are buying up Canadian businesses at an alarming rate. US citizens are also investing in Canadian properties too. Seems they look at us as the safe place to invest their money. After all didn't most of them put Canadian flags on their coats and backpacks when they went travelling during College? Sorry I digressed a bit from the topic... Summary, Canadians really do like and wish the best for the American people, but sometimes we find it hard to like your Governments policies, both internal and external. Most of us find it hard to believe that you allowed so many of your hard won civil rights to be stripped away with so little discussion and thought, the Partiot Act. ... God bless and save us all...
If anyone is interested, the Canadian Privacy Commissioner's website can be found here: http://www.privcom.gc.ca/index_e.asp The privacy laws here generally fall under PIPEDA - Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act. Passed just a few years ago, it has made it very easy for the individual to take the upper hand in privacy disputes with corporations as the act greatly favours the little guy.
One time I zipped up into Canada on a day trip. Going in, the Canadian border guards wanted to know if I had any firearms or ammunition. Coming back, the US border guards wanted to know if I had any fruits or vegetables. That says a lot (hey, two words!) about our two countries.
Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
The facts of history indicate peace isn't something the USA has ever been interested in, a nation can change but i dont think it will be soon.
In Belgium we have an eID card that contains all your personal details, surfing habits and credit card transactions. If you want to be allowed to use internet this then plugs into MSN and all your details are sent to Microsoft who then send it to Bush in America. This is legal under European rules. It is good for everyone. It stops all terrorists and makes the world safer. Also it cost each citizen 20,000 Euros. if you don't pay you go to prison. We sacrifice all privacy to fight for war on terror. Also EU governemnt soon outlaw Linux and make Microsoft manditory. It is safer OS anyway and better that everyone use the same thing. Next year if you use Linux you go to prison. You have to have special licence to run other Unix or Mac. This is only for businesses and cost 750,000 Euros a year.
Then just don't do business with those firms.
Let your money do the talking... apparently politicians listen more to corporations than individuals (especially the average
Welley Corporation - SLM Scammers
PS : You'll notice the Canadians were more than happy to send troops to Afghanistan, from where the terrorists actually were operating.
PPS : Threadjack!
The main thing they are complaining about is that an American company could be ordered by a US court to supply info that they owned and was stored in Canada and that a US company that was storing infomation for a Canadian company could also be ordered by a court to provide infomation on a person.
This is no different then was going on before the patriot act, so no big change, it just looks better to the mass idiots if include the words US Patriot act in the headlines.
A peaceful world will only come about when those who prey on civilians because of religious, ethnic, or other differences are eradicated.
So basically, when the poorly named Homo Sapiens is extinct.
I think this applies to everyone and we should all be worried. With the US Mentality of "your with us or against us!" you HAVE to support them. even if you want them all to fuck off and die, you can't say it out loud and sleep soundly at night. after starting two wars (I'm from the UK, so yes we helped...) and having a guy with more self confidence then sense in charge I'd rather keep my anti-yank opinions away from him in the political forum.
Maybe someone should teach Bush that there isn't only "us" and "them". Because mentality like that slowly chips away at "us" untill everyone is "them" and you're in a padded room going "THE VOICES TELL ME THEY ARE GOING TO BOMB US! THEY WILL BOMB US AND WE MUST GET THEM FIRST! IF WE DONT WE'LL ALL DIE! QUICK NUKE THEM ALL!"
I like muppets.
...and do you wonder why the coalition of the willing includes such major military world powers as ...
Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Angola, El Salvador, Colombia, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Honduras, Tonga, Micronesia, Solomon Islands, Mongolia, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Philippines, Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Georgia, Albania, Macedonia, Romania,
Bulgaria, Turkey, Croatia , Slovenia, Ukraine, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia , Hungary, Estonia , Latvia , Lithuania , Spain, Portugal
Denmark, Netherlands, Iceland, Italy
http://www.m-w.com
Main Entry: weary
Pronunciation: 'wir-E
Function: adjective
Etymology: Middle English wery, from Old English wErig; akin to Old High German wuorag intoxicated and perhaps to Greek aOros sleep
1 : exhausted in strength, endurance, vigor, or freshness
2 : expressing or characteristic of weariness
3 : having one's patience, tolerance, or pleasure exhausted -- used with of
Main Entry: wary
Pronunciation: 'war-E, 'wer-
Function: adjective
Etymology: 1ware, from Middle English war, ware, from Old English wær careful, aware, wary; akin to Old High German giwar aware, attentive, Latin vereri to fear, Greek horan to see
: marked by keen caution, cunning, and watchful prudence especially in detecting and escaping danger
We're all getting a little tired of hearing about that bit of legislation.
Here's the thing,
I didn't vote for you.
It was cool cause I didn't want to.
Yeah, yeah. Since u been gone.
Inaugurated, sat in the oval room.
Wasn't long before the dot-com boom.
Yeah, yeah. Since u been gone.
And all you'd ever hear me say
Is "Don't globalize our jobs!"
That's all you'd ever hear me say.
BUT SINCE U BEEN GONE....
We've got this insane cowboy.
I visit MoveOn-Dot-Com
After you - rednecks get - what they want
Since u been gone
How can I put it, I was afraid of you.
I even was afraid of Janet Reno.
Yeah, yeah. Since u been gone.
How come I never hear you say
"We'll have a smaller government"
I guess you never felt that way.
BUT SINCE U BEEN GONE....
Hi-Cap mags are back in our schools
Torture isn't wrong. Yeah, yeah.
After you - the whole world - hates our guts.
Since u been gone.
You had your chance, you blew it
Out of sight out of mind.
Shut your fly, I just can't take it
Again and again and again and again
SINCE U BEEN GONE.... (Since u been gone....)
Eternal war against terror.
Little Green Footballs is popular.
After you (After you)
Our dollar - took a plunge.
I'd vote for your wife if I could.
But not John Kerry, he's a douche bag.
After you (After you)
Now you know (you know)
You should know( you should know) Red China,
The Chinese own our ass.
Since u been gone
Since u been gone
Since u been gone
Big apologies to Kelly Clarkson's "Since U Been Gone"
It's official..
Somebody even made a webpage about it:
http://orwell.ru/a_life/USA/
AFAIK, it is not just the USA (Un)Patriot Act (I)
that the Canadians have to be concerned about if
they are worried about their privacy. ECHELON,
TIPPS, and MATRIX all threaten privacy across
national boundaries as well. You don't have to
share a border with the USA to get trapped in
the TIA (Total Information Awareness) spiderweb.
Australia and Britain (and the rest of the EU)
all have to play by Uncle Sam's rules to travel
or do business in the USA.
TIA should be marked with "666". It is the sign
of the beast...
Well, here in the US, we're not terribly pleased about how easily almost anyone from anywhere can, at least temporarily, stay in Canada with no practical restrictions. Maybe saunter across a very open border. I thought we were pals. (See? - These things cut both ways.)
Just so you know, even those here in the US who support the Patriot Act on balance, object to some provision or another of it.
Oh, but I've just crashed a US bash-fest and I'm not in style.
Research shows that 67% of those who use the term "research shows", are just making shit up.
in soviet russia, privacy comprimises YOU
must have meant Iran.
I have asked for clarification of this situation from Rogers but have not received a reply. As a Canadian I find it odious that my personal communications can be inspected by a foreign government without cause or warrant, and with no recourse to the law.
Both countries officially espouse 'due process of law'. For those of us looking in from the outside, it sometimes seems the US is working hard to change this to 'due process of erosion of privacy rights' (with a big side order of 'due process of corporate-profit enforcement' but that's another story).
If the tables were turned, and the Canadian government was trolling through American's e-mail accounts, the hue and cry from the south would be deafening. Right now, the only thing deafening is the silence as the American people allow their own government to trample the rights and freedoms that were bought and paid for in one Revolution, 2 World Wars, and countless other military and civil actions.
Don't get me wrong - I am not an Anti-American, as your media would have you believe all Canadians are. Hell, we all grew up watching the same TV shows and news programs, reading the same magazines, driving the same cars and eating at the same restaurants. We all swallowed the same propaganda.
That's why it's especially chilling to watch our neighbours sheepishly acquiesce to - or worse, actively endorse - these 'terror-busting' measures.
If American themselves can't identify and stop the erosion or elimination of their own rights, what hope does that leave for the rest of us?
Chilling, very chilling.
This article was already posted WAY back in october, titled "What's Going On in Canada?"
3 30204&tid=123&tid=158&tid=129
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/10/29/2
Do you know what the Patriot Act covers? It has provisions that are clearly unconstitutional, and some of which have been ruled as such by the Courts of Appeals already.
But it also has provisions which are designed to catch money launderers, and do a reasonably good job of it. I know you haven't considered actually reading the law to find out what it actually does, because that would interfere with your fantasy of America being the most intrusive government in the world, but you really should take a look sometime.
if you read this replies title you may get the impression that i am pro-american. what i actually mean is that it would not surprise me in the least if the agencies who put forward the patriot act knew exactly what they were doing. I am a brit (currently sat in a leicester uni computer lab) and as such i dont claim to know everything about the U.S. government legal system, however i saw the Micheal Moore fil Fahrenheit 911 a few nights ago and was astounded by the fact that most acts are not even read before they get passed. I firmly believe that those who wrote the patriot act knew this perfectly well and so wrote their own agenda into it hidden behind a shollow mask of "security" we can never really know for sure WHY they want to read canadian mail but it is more than likely not too far from the fact that they believe knowledge is power...and the patriot act is just another way for them to gain power! Matt
And my hamster also ate my lunch. Look at him, with the big cheeks!
The law explicitly states that the Feds can monitor U.S. citizens. Isn't Canadia just the northernmost state in the union?
...to share Ann Coulter's views and stupidity with regard to Canada...
l terCBC.html
http://homepage.mac.com/onegoodmove/movies/anncou
Paying your outrageous taxes ...so that people not as rich as myself can afford to live, yes. Something I do gladly.
...that operate pretty much like any other store. I have no trouble getting hammered either way.
...thus making sure we have affordable healthcare available to all.
only being allowed to purchase booze at state approved stores
nice central planning for health care.
Yeah Canada sure is a Socialist utopia.
So that's what they're teaching in your schools these days, is it? What you have mentioned has nothing to do with socialism. These things are the products of a civilized society founded on social libertarianism. The state leaves me alone unless I ask for help and that's exactly as it should be.
Idiots.
At least I'm happy, safe, well-off and not daily raped by my government.
Home of Faramir Paint Shop Pro scripts
This is a question I've had. A while ago I was given a new word by a teacher. I could have sworn she said "decronym", as it made sense, however that is not a word. The meaning of the word was so good that there must be a correct word out there for it.
The meaning I was told is a decronym is a word which becomes an acronym, after the fact. Such as in this case, "PATRIOT" existed for a long time and the word itself was (well, abused) by finding words to exactly fit it. The example we had in class was "BASIC", which originally stood for nothing but was then given the ol' beginner's all-purpose symbolic instruction code. This one was actually better than PATRIOT in that they called the language Basic, using this context, before it stood for anything.
Anyone know what I'm talking about? Does such a word actually exist? If not, can we make it now?
Just some advice for people further down the line...
:) If you do business that crosses into our country, you need to be held accountable by our laws, whatever they may be. The same holds true in reverse - if we're doing business with your country, then once we, our product, or our communication crosses the border, it's susceptible to whatever laws you have up there.
Yeah, the Patriot act gives some legitimate cause for concern to people (although I personally don't feel threatened by it). However, Slashdot comments (and some of the editors) are famous for seeing the worst case only and getting so worked up that no one will take them seriously. For example: No offense to Timothy, but I stopped reading his articles a long time ago, since I know exactly what his opinion will be on any given topic (oh, no, government is horrible!).
Many of the posts I've seen above made it sound like the PATRIOT act is the end of the world. One claimed that we now live in an Orwellian 1984-style society. We don't. Sure, mistakes will be made along the way, but it happens all the time. Even with the judicial process, innocent people get tossed in jail from time to time. It happens.
But increasing the government's power (while not something I'm in favor of) is not really a cause of that. The people that work for the government are still just regular joes like you and me who will try their best to be good and do their jobs well. Even if you're one of those left-wing wackos who believes that President Bush is the antichrist, remember that the hundreds of thousands of people who work for him will make their own decisions about right and wrong.
Too many people on Slash see the government (or corporations, for that matter) as big, faceless entities whose sole goal is power and the opression of the little people's rights. Believe it or not, that's not really the goal. So just take it easy with your comments here. Try to reason things out before you post so that we can have intelligent debates instead of spreading FUD about American laws.
And just for my 2 cents on topic, tough luck Canada.
Sigh.. this has been covered so many times, but your response doesn't include the fact that when you compare the tax structures Canadians really don't really pay that much more and sometimes less (depending which state/province you compare), the health system costs less of the GNP than in the US and lets people who get sick not lose everything, but you did indeed mention that most countries consider it a good thing to take care of the basic needs of its citizens so they can get on with other things.
It's really not that big a deal to just take of the problem when you consider how nice it makes it to walk around with a social conscience, but it's a great distraction to throw up if you have other agendas.
As for the liquor stores.. that is something I occasionally find over the top too, but everything needs constant tuning, no one is saying otherwise.
was astounded by the fact that most acts are not even read before they get passed
And you really, seriously believe our MPs read the bills they pass?
I'd hazard that the word you are looking for is "Wary". You know, it means kinda like cautious? While I am sure Canadians are also somewhat tired of the act, the wording doesn't match the context.
My Photography - http://ian-x.com
The Deathlings (comic) - http://thedeathlings.com
...American People weary of Patriot act.
But there is another kind of evil that we must fear most... and that is the indifference of good men.
All those bombs dropping on cities in Iraq have ensured that the US will be loathed, featured, and especially distrusted by third and even some first world countries for at least the next four years.
It's also heartening to know that we have removed the torturous murderers who ran the country previously and have installed our own torturers. It's about damn time we stopped pretending to be civilized and resorted to the tactics everyone despises the most.
Lastly, it helps me sleep at night knowing that our nation's military, the largest, most expensive military in the world, is under the control of a good ol' American redneck who will lie to us to ensure that he can do what he's gotta do to further his own, righteous agenda.
Oh, I guess it's also good to know that all those bombs that we paid so much for didn't go to waste.
Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
And this I would be ready to fight for... we already did, and won!
Nah I'd go with the EU anytime, that would be really nice, independance trough cooperation I like it...
My country's better than yours ...
(I have not read the Patriot act)
The Patriot act says that a US company must turn over information to the US government, even if such information currently resides outside US jurisdiction or is held by a foreign subsiduary.
I think the pre-existing situation was the US would have to work with the foreign government to get an order to release information not held in the US. This cooperation would ensure the laws of the country holding the information were respected, whereas the Patriot act ignores them.
This is far from being surprising, given that canadian was sent to Syria by US authorities and tortured there for a year, thanks to the "Patriot" "act".
Backronym.
Let's not confuse the poor fellah, shall we?
My point was that taxes are the way they are because we allow them to be that way in order to make sure everyone gets a certain minimum of necessary services. That centralization and streamlining leads to better coordination and a more effective service overall is lost on the free-market-is-the-answer-to-everything crowd.
The last country that invaded Canada had its capital burned down. They made such a mess of the leaders residence that it has had to be whitewashed for nearly 2 centuries now.
With an example like that, the world should conclude that you people are good friends but lousy enemies!
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
And she'd kick you're pansy ass any day of the week.
You push us Canadians any more we'll write you a very nasty letter, and mail it too!
...we might even use the word damn... I'm sorry, that was rude.
"Actually the US has just as good a safety net for the poor (I've read a number of articles that the say $ quantity of support is even more),"
...Or atleast he may aslong as it doesn't effect Texas Social Security Corporation's profit margin!
I'm sorry, but that is just absolute, total, utter c^@p!
Most international surveys rate Canada right up there with the levels of social welfare of West & Nothern Europe (which are generally accepted to have the highest levels in the world).
I doubt there has ever been a survey - not counting the ones issued by the Whitehouse and other right-wing rednecks (and I'm sure they REALLY cary about the welfare of the poor) - that places USA welfare anywhere near Canadian levels over the past 50 years! Trying to claim any sort of viable financial assistance is given to the poor in the USA that anywhere approaches Canada is just absolutly absurd and a plain lie.
I suppose with the privitisation of social security, America's poor will be given an even higher standard of living will they?
Yea, and after retiring from office, George Bush will leave his multi-million dollar texas ranch and start delivering the help himself to the ghettos full of mexican immigrants simply left to rot in nearby cities.
from a chart of the top 50 nations for "Revenues per capita" (meaning how much they have in the budget to spend per citizen:
>>>>>
27. United States $6702.42 per person
28. Jersey $6666.22 per person
29. Man, Isle of $6531.01 per person
30. Austria $6472.72 per person
31. Cayman Islands $6324.22 per person
32. Israel $6294.41 per person
33. Qatar $6119.56 per person
34. Singapore $6053.90 per person
35. Guernsey $5882.62 per person
36. British Virgin Islands $5591.34 per person
37. Andorra $5567.60 per person
38. Canada $5545.35 per person
>>>>
OK, now I know you are a "free market" conservative, and everything, but I really think that even YOU can see that $6702 is more than $5545. But since you are what you are (hey, I used to be one myself), I am going to put a real fine point on this for you: the taxes in America, all totalled up and everything, are MORE per person that they are in Canada. Period.
eat shiat and bark at the moon
If I were Iran or North Korea, I would be loving Canada right now.
The U.S. is taking on the bad guys with little thanks from the rest of the world, but with great benefit to countries like Canada.
The lack of understanding about human nature displayed in your post is truly dangerous. Understanding and compromise? That works if people are reasonable and good. Otherwise, that will be a recipe for disaster.
Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
This is no different then was going on before the patriot act, so no big change
The change is that with the PATRIOT Act the US authorities can order the company to stay quiet. In the past if information was given, the customer could be told about it. Now a lot of data can be given away and no one would know.
Before that it was almost 10 years between the first attempt on the WTC and the second.
So out of anger and fear we craft the badly misnamed US Patriot Act. An act that stomps on friend and foe alike, but hardest on our own people. We create yet another new massive federal bureaucracy to protect us. What do you suppose all those people at that massive new federal agency are going to do for the next 10 years to justify their existence? They're going to put their own people and friendly visitors through endless procedure and invasive, pointless snooping. All to try and find a handful of people patient enough to wait another decade or longer.
In some ways the terrorists have already won. How easily we're spooked into throwing over constitutional protections that used to be the envy of the world. Thousands died on the battlefield to protect those freedoms but what's that sacrifice to a generation that grew up under the coddled over-protection of those ridiculous Baby On Board signs?
I hope our friends to the north don't take it personally because it's not.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
I thought we learned a few weeks ago that the Patriot act is a pro-privacy bill.
/ 14 32217&tid=158&tid=103&tid=17
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/01/19
Both share the fact that both were born out of paranioa.
PATRIOT came from Terrosit fears.
Socialism came from the great depression.
Everyone knows both are unconsitutional. The Patriot Act will be overturned in whole or in part, eventually, if enough people care. Socialism, particilarly Social [in]Security if nothing more than socialit welfare, which has no place in the United States.
Many people think that Social Security is a a sure thing. Recently, the only good thing to come from the Bush administration is the paranoia they are causing about its collapse. Reguardless of WHEN it will collapse, it WILL collapse. 2050 by my estimate. Al Gore chamioned a "locked box", Bush is pushing for private accounts. Why are they doing this? Because your SS (FICA) funds are deposited in the federal treasury, along with all the other tax money. Only the SSA knows how much you SHOULD get. Whether or not you get it is up to congress. Every year, Congress has to authorize the allocation from the treasury for SS. If Congress ever fails to allocate those funds, say for an economic or war crisis, no one on SSI gets thier money for that year.
Social Security is theft. It is the only insurance that you pay for that you don't know if it will be there when it is your turn.
I also object to SS on moral grounds. It enslaves our kids (YOUR KIDS, I don't have any) to pay for MY retirement. Do you think that is fair. Most would call it slavery.
Don't even get me startedon govt health insurance...
But anyway bak to the topic: We need a law that says no knee-jerk laws for 1 year after a catastripic event.
Here's a fact for you. Less than 5000 people died in the TWC. 15,000 people are killed in automobiles a year, over 1/2 by drunk drivrs. But you don't see us installing breathalizers in every car.
Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
+1, Beat Me To It.
America was founded by people fleeing religious persecution, and it was founded on the principle that everyone deserved equal rights. Yet today it persecutes people because of their religion (you try being a Muslim immigrant...), and ignores the rights of tourists, immigrants, and frequently even its own citizens.
We thought that light far away was a city on a hill. As we get closer, it turns out to be a volcano...
Religion? Check. That allowed.
Firearms? Check. Them too.
Differences?
No religion in Government (would be discriminatory)
Firearms arent sold in convenience stores and must be licensed.
These are Rights we dont mind losing.
but it cool if you dont get it, you keep fighting for your guns and theocrasy.
The truth about Led Zep should never be told on
Canada is uniquely situated. They could have had French cuisine, British culture, and American Technology. Instead, they ended up with British cuisine, American culture, and French technology.
Excerpt from my latest column:
"Our president wants to "spread democracy" around at the point of a sword, because America doesn't feel safe in a world where there are people who look, think, act, govern and worship in ways other than what we believe to be right. For if we tolerate other ways, that might mean that other ways are right, and we are therefore wrong."
The House Between - Original Sci-Fi Series
My dad and I were ordered to pull over for a search when we we driving from North Dakota up through Winnipeg to go fishing. I think they have the place surrounded by cameras not to catch smugglers or terrorists, but to fine the employees if they so much as hint at a smile.
Anyway, they poked around our vehicle for a good couple of hours. And it's all because I had the nerve to say "eh?" back to the girl in the booth, when she said "oh, are you going fishing, eh?" when she saw the canoe on the top of my dad's SUV. At least I didn't say "no doot aboot it", or else they probably would have ordered up a round of cavity searches.
Period? These numbers are meaningless. They tell me that Canadians pay an average of 82.7% of what Americans pay in taxes. Now if Canadians earned the same amount as Americans your point would be valid, but we don't. Our average income is much smaller than yours - the most recent numbers i could find are from 1999, but they put us at 78.1% (http://www.csls.ca/reports/drache.pdf).
IANAE (i am not an economist), but factoring that into the numbers puts our relative taxes (assuming we earned the same) at $7109.42, which clearly is more that $6702.42.
If the original numbers you posted took that into account, I apologize, but it appears they did not (they took exchange rates into account only).
It's hard to soar like an eagle when you're surrounded by turkeys.
"Americans know quite a bit about the rest of the world."
Or at least some of us do, I was a little pissed off at the GP for writing that we didn't.
"We don't subscribe to the "live-and-let live" moral relativism that many other countries espouse. We want to make the world a better place for the oppressed."
Sorry to burst your bubble, but supporting the Iraq invasion on grounds you are spreading democracy is the height of moral relativism. You're saying "it's OK to kill X amount of innocent people because Y amount of oppressed people will (hopefully) be liberated". It's the ends justifying the means. If that's not moral relativism I don't know what is.
The really scary part is that the FBI was waiting for him at the airport -- they do take the stuff seriously, even though anyone who was really planning something would never confess to it like that.
They can be ordered by the court to stay quiet for certain period of time (IIRC less then 30 days) that can be extended by the court if the investigation is still in progress.
Are you upset that companies were not able to alert child molesters that they are being investigated? That was allowed before the US Patriot Act, which extented that portion to use the same action "against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities."
"No fucking shit lady, what do you think I'm doing, ordering a pizza?!"
The sentiments, if not the words, are appropriate.
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
http://www.printfu.org/storage/longTermStorage/pat riotAct.pdf
[Posted AC to protect my freedom!]
I am a Canadian contractor who lives and works from Canada. On occasion, I have developed software for the Canadian government. However, my business servers are located in California and when I got my servers I pretty much accepted the fact that any data I send down south is intercepted by a police agency.
The way I protect myself and sensitive data is through heavy use of GnuPG, where the keys are not stored in the USA obviously. This way I can tell my Canadian government/corporate clients that sensitive data is never readable while it is stored in the USA.
I am very glad you live in Canada. Stop benefiting from my country, and the goods and services that come from it.
DISCLAIMER:
I don't believe what I write, and neither should you.
aren't firearms (more) legal in canada?
...allowed the Taliban to nearly destroy Afghanistan
No, the Soviets destroyed Afghanistan after we lured them in with the intent of creating "their Vietnam". The Taliban rose to power in an already destroyed nation.
Obviously the Soviets never heard about Wing Attack Plan R.......
The way I see it, the anti-military western bloc [AMWB] (Canada, EU, etc) behavior can be defined thusly:
Regardless of the weapons any one "rogue" nation might possess, they don't pose a meaningful military threat to AMWB due to those nations' inability to realistically wage a war of aggression and/or occupation, plus those nations' enemies are seen as in their own neighborhood and not the AMWB nations themselves.
Despite the utopian rhetoric of the AMWB nations, some, like France, have a VERY activist foreign policy (Ivory Coast, as a recent example) and France's opposition to US policy in the Middle East may be significantly motivated by their own geopolitical interests.
Furthermore, many of these nations are motivated by economic self-interest and, particularly in the case of the Middle East, resent the Iraq action in particular as it undermines their economic activities.
I also have to wonder why, if the AMWB nations are truly motivated by utopian interest of peace, love, etc. why they haven't been willing to stop significant human rights abuses in Africa (Sudan, pretty much all of West Africa, Zimbabwe, etc). Furthermore, look at their pathetic track record in putting a lid on Yugoslavia's violence. None of that came to any serious halt until the US got deeply involved and initiated military action against Milosevic. EU-sourced Blue Helmets even stood by as (ie, Srebencia) Serbs killed hundreds.
I've heard that most European governments are largely slaves to their welfare states; despite the pacifist rhetoric, they can so barely manage their own economies that a projectable military force is impossible.
Is this meant to be satirical? Your myoptic view of America is funny.
The only capability the US has to make any real difference in the world is to blow stuff up.
Before you respond I think you better brush up a bit on world politics first. I'll be debate you after you educate yourself.
A Patriot is someone who loves their country, while
A Nationalist is someone who hates everybody else's countries.
Paul
www.opencouncil.org
Open
You can stuff your "goods and services" in your curly-cul, between the grunts and oinks. The total ignorance of you 'Oosahists' is a$$tounding.
...socialism...is unconstitutional
Forgive me for paraphrasing but I had trouble understanding the enormity of this statement until I'd done so. You seem to be yet another American falling for the lie that socialism=communism, and I don't believe either of those words are mentioned in your constitution. McCarthyism never really died, did it?
And I suppose the huddled masses can now just bugger off, yes?
The Patriot Act was the result of Paranoia.
Perhaps, but consider that under Bush post 9/11 security policies Al-Qaida has been degraded to the point where they cannot even get away with taking a GI Joe hostage.
an ill wind that blows no good
We haven't had one single act of terrorism in the US since 911 due a lot to the patriot act. Getting by the leftist propaganda, there have been no cases of abuse. I know, Senator Feinstein looked into over 22,000 cases trying to find an abuse and couldn't find one. Article on this from the Washington Post is out to archive now (bucks required to get to it now).
Not that I see this as justification Canada, I think people are making a lot to do about nothing. Relax, you have nothing to worry about from the US. Look at your own government closer, they are your real problem. They keep adopting failed socialist policies from abroad with the best of intentions. They just don't seem to think them through. Just look at the Kyoto crises up there. Good luck trying to comply. Then there is the big pile of dung they are about to step in with "gay marriage" legislation. Just because the medical diagnoses was removed without any scientific evidence doesn't mean it isn't really a psychosis.
Personally, I love it. I also love it that the liqour stores are very pleasent to visit. I don't think I've ever met a rude employee at an lcbo.
Anyway, that's my $0.02
Treat me like a marketing stat, and I'll treat your movie like a series of ones and zeros
Your myoptic view of America is funny.
Your myoptic spelling of myopic is funny.
Before you respond I think you better brush up a bit on world politics first. I'll be debate you after you educate yourself.
Before you respond I think you better brush up a bit on spelling first. I'll be debate you after you educate yourself.
I work with a company in Toronto. I asked for an associates information so I could contact him, but was given a line about the current privacy laws in Canada. I had to give my information so that it could be passed onto my associate for him to contact me. All information had to be voluntarily given by the owner of the information. It was a pain, but I can see why they did it.
The Canadians are taking initiative that the US didn't take a few years ago.
Film makers are the reason we pull our feet back when something brushes against them.
They can be ordered by the court, but with the Patriot act, they don't need to ask the court. It just happens. They can invoke their right to violate your rights without judicial review.
In relation to the topic and being canadian, i'm personally not too worried about Americans violating my privacy, even if my shopping receipts find their way down there somewhere.
Its the Americans who have reason to worry. Your rights, your freedoms. If you don't want them, its up to you.
No they cannot, anything of content requires that they get a court order.
You are mixing that up with URLs and email address that under the US patriot act treated as phone numbers. So provided the content is not looked at they can be recorded without a courts approval but they do have to be under active investigation; ie just like a phone number.
The irony of the privacy attempt is that we already have our own PATRIOT act. It's just a PR stunt to makes the Canadian sheep feel warm and fuzzy inside. Check out bill C-36 below. Also check out the Canada-US relations site.. Lots of info bout economic/continent integration..
b ills/government/C-36/C-36_1/C-36TOCE.html/
http://www.parl.gc.ca/37/1/parlbus/chambus/house/
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/can-am/menu-en.asp/
"Thankfully, privacy still means something up here."
0 30630/
Oh, really? Is that why you have to register every gun in the country with the Canadian government or face charges?
http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/06/30/gun_registry
My boy, my boy!
Take into account other things though, like medical benefits etc. A lot of what comes for free (or cheap) here comes at a cost elsewhere. You can't directly compare income.
br. I could move a few cities over, be making a fair bit more than now, but be paying out the ass in living expenses and thus make less. That's just between two cities, the different between countries is obviously more.
These are Rights we dont mind losing.
I would mind very much losing the right to own guns without registration. The Canadian culture is such that they are not as afraid of big governments as we are. Of course their government is much smaller, and less corrupt. Our government has been moving slowly towards a totalitarian state, well since it was created. It takes on more and more power and places more and more restrictions on the people. At some point it will need to be overthrown. Read some of our founding father's writings. You will read the phrase "when the government becomes oppressive." To them it was foregone conclusion that it would, hence all the protections and restrictions they placed on the government. How many of those restrictions are still in place and enforced?
Their may come the day when Canada is very happy that the people of the U.S. have unregistered firearms.
"As a Canadian, I just want to assure you that we do indeed refer to ourselves as being Canuckistani"
Since when are we called Canuckistani? I've lived in Toronto for over 20 years, and Halifax for over four. I have never even heard that 'word' in common speech, news, tv, print, jokes, etc. Never once. So since when is this something we refer to ourselves as?
Maybe you heard the word 'canuck' which is pretty common, especially on the parody-news shows such as 'this hour has 22 minutes' and 'royal canadian air farce', but Canuckistani?
This man/woman does not speak for the 32 million Canadians. Apparently nobody I know (through a quick poll) has heard of it either. Avoid the generalization. 'WE' do not use that term.
-M
when you see the word 'Linux', drink!
The problem is that data does not have to cross the border to fall under the PATRIOT act jusridiction.
Canadian branches of US corporations can be ordered to give their data too. And THAT is the problem the governement tries to fix. It has nothing to do with "exported" data.
I agree that Canadian laws should not extend across our borders, but the reverse is true and US laws have nothing to do outside theirs.
The "freedom" of America is the freedom to engage in all manner of shameless maneuverings to get filthy rich. Political and social freedoms, however, are another matter. In truth, even the freedom to ratfuck your way to the top has been eroded, as study after study shows that upward mobility in America is very limited, available only to the lucky few (that's why people play the lotto). Myths die hard, however, and Americans -- and many immigrants -- still think that with enough effort anyone can get rich. So, how valuable this primary freedom of America is depends on how much you value money over other kinds of freedom. Basically, do you value money over people?
When travelling to the US and back to Canada, I've actually found many less questions going down to the US than coming back up. Coming back up they ask questions non-stop.
I don't really fit what you'd call a 'high-risk profile', so I've never had too many bad experiences. Nonetheless the only questions with a car full of mid-20 year olds was "where are you going and for how long". On the way back up the endless questions about firearms and whatnot...
This is supposed to be a fairly open border though... the entire point is that if we all check people coming in overseas (and Mexico), then they shouldn't get much trouble moving around in North America. This is how it's always worked, and better for both countries.
On the other hand I hear of people getting stopped all the time and having to unload their cars, I hear of bags being searched, I hear of people not being allowed in for their DUI chargers (It's a criminal offense in Canada).
Nonetheless, the "Wow- it's so easy to get across the Canadian border with a smile" myth I'm sure happens, but no more than anywhere else.
-M
when you see the word 'Linux', drink!
"...Thankfully, privacy still means something up here."
Sure the Canadians may have slightly more privacy, but they still have other bad things that we luckily don't have down here in the states.
1. Hearsay evidence is admissable in a CRIMINAL trial (in the states hearsay is only admissible in a civil trial).
2. Evidence gathered without a search warrent or even probable case is addmissble in a CRIMINAL trial (in the states this is a big no no, it is tossed out period).
Nuff said for me.
Off topic, but I love this quote:
Jim Hacker: You know what they say about the average Common Market official: he has the organizing ability of the Italians, the flexibility of the Germans, and the modesty of the French. And that's topped up by the imagination of the Belgians, the generosity of the Dutch and the intelligence of the Irish.
This sig all sigs devours
the canadian gov't (and USA companies dealing with canada) are griping because the patriot act forces these companies to give up their information....well if you don't want this to happen - don't bring it into the US borders. Once it's on US land it falls under US jurisdiction.
I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
Nova Scotia (the Atlantic Canadian Province) is about 40 years behind the times with pretty much everything. Pictou is a small town in Nova Scotia. We're not talking about something in the middle of a big city here.
This is a matter of use of public resources and facilities. It's been the age old argument about lighting a christmas tree for the city. It excludes people and makes the many other religions feel left out. It's about being fair to all religions. Nowdays it's not a Christmas tree but a holiday tree or something along those lines... They light candles as well for the jews, and do various other things for many other major religions, without leaving out those not recognized.
This Pastor is perfectly welcome to put on his own show in a private theatre. He's welcome to invite people and preach all he wants...
At the expense of tax-payer paid facilities, it should not be biased... that doesn't represent the views of many Canadians.
-M
when you see the word 'Linux', drink!
True, but the US loves to cut off trade. In the end, they import from Canada more than the Export to Canada in terms of dollars and volume... so it ultimately hurts the US more than Canada... but Of course the US puts trying to force other countries to do things over the wellbeing and comfort of their own citizens. Funny how that works out?
As much as we are our own country, we also need to work in cooperation with our allies (pretty much everyone) and neighbours.
But it's okay- someone will come in in about 3.5 years and undo all the mistakes (so pretty much the previous 8 years).
-M
when you see the word 'Linux', drink!
You're right, and in fact the LCBO has a very good selection of liquor offered at good prices due to its consolidated buying power. So its not all bad. I do find it a bit creepy that they are tending towards the upscale in design, but I guess it makes people feel good about being boozehounds, and is a profit centre.
Of course, other Canadian provinces do allow private stores to sell liquor.
I do not recognize your American spelling of myoptic or of clarfiy (parent post) ;)
Apolitically but mandatorily funded public media (like the CBC or the BBC -- which George Orwell wrongly feared) might improve your news landscape down there. It's not perfect either, but it's the biggest thing I've missed every time I travel in America (which gets less and less every year).
cheers...ank
Still hoping for Gentle Treatment...
I dunno, but the number of convictions as far as terrorism goes is exactly ZERO.
Why convict someone and give them a limited sentence when you can just call them an enemy combatant and detain them indefinitely.
----- If communism is a system where the government owns business, what do you call a system where business owns govern
Officially, the folks who invaded were British because Canada didn't exist. Fine- Agree with that argument.
HOWEVER, it was these people who became Canadian as opposed to a 'British Colony'. So in theory the forefathers of what is no Canadian (and hence the Canadian ideals and culture) stems from those people.
-M
when you see the word 'Linux', drink!
This part is ironic, and I saw the video clip on the Daily Show last week:
Bush (when asked about repressive regiemes like Saudi Arabia after he said he wanted to bring democracy to everywhere in the Middle East): "Well, it's not an either or proposition, you know..."
Bush (2001 - post 9/11): "You're either with us, or against us..."
Interesting stuff.
Manitoba's liquor stores rock, too. On New Year's Eve, in one of the larger mall outlets, there were two huge lines of people all the way to the back of the store. I was out of there in ten minutes flat. The clerks at the till (four of them, I think) were unfailingly polite and upbeat in the face of this liquor-crazed horde that had descended upon them.
And I really like the idea that there's quality control.
So what, exactly, makes a private liquor outlet superior to a publicly-owned one?
This happens all the time with outsourcing/offshoring, when you send your customer's data to another country, you give up the privacy protections afforded by your country's laws. The Canadians are blowing by sending there data to the US, now that are constutional rights are infringed, also I'd rather not have my data sent to India etc. Caveat emptor!
The Patriot Act was in response to a direct attack on the US by non-state sponsored terrorism, and our desire to combat such terrorism from killing any more American AND Canadian (amongst others) citizens. It's just a terrible pity that other governments choose not to do anything about the threats to their citizens, and in fact allow these terrorist cells to live and grow in their countries. Real pathetic. At least America is doing something about it. And in response to the inevitable "shrinking of civil rights," I personally have had ZERO reduction in my civil rights/liberties, and I don't know a single person that has, either personally or from the press (demonstrably). If you aren't a crook or a terrorist, you've got nothing to be afraid of. :)
Canada IS NOT the northern most country. That would be Greenland (Denmark).
Canada owns the North Pole. Can't go any further north than "around the north pole".
You can't take the sky from me...
Your post isn't even worth the few bytes that it takes up in the database.
nuff said.
Actually, not a single 9/11 terrorist entered the US through Canada.
And none were Iraqi either...
In case you haven't noticed, you do the same thing with your car.
How come the American flag has 12 stripes now? Did I miss the memo?
(look up at the flag used as the topic icon for this story)
The huddled masses came here looking for the american dream. You work hard, you get a head. They did not come here looking for free handouts or to have their way payed by all the other taxpayers.
If what the huddled masses want is a welfare system where those who work hard pay their way, then yeah, they can bugger off. Socialist states like Canada and Europe are a much better place for such slackers.
The lure of America and the American Dream is self-determination. Not subserviant service to a government. If that is what you want, then what you want is Amerika.
Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
If you can live, work, vacation, conduct business, trade and travel within one country, see the arctic, visit sunny warm beaches on both the Atlantic and the Pacific without needing a passport, you wouldn't need to concern yourself with foreign affairs or world geography.
You just wouldn't!
Their may come the day when Canada is very happy that the people of the U.S. have unregistered firearms.
Somehow, I highly doubt that. Even so, it's a chance I'm willing to take, considering that is that the only people we've ever been invaded by are americans with their (unregistered) guns.
It's called natural selection. Culling the weak (be it intellectual or physical) is NOT a bad thing.
You are an idiot. You don't know what "natural selection" is, your definition of "weak" is confused and vague, and you couldn't differentiate between learned and innate behaviour if it bit you in the ass.
My natural selection includes altruism.
Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
> A peaceful world will only come about when those who prey on civilians because of religious, ethnic, or other differences are eradicated.
Unfortunately Bush & Cheney and so forth have too many weapons to be eradicated, so I think you're stuck with at least the really dangerous racists with WOMD.
Before we canucks get sanctimonious, let's look at our own history first. After a spate of "terrorist incidents" (the october crisis was absurdly overblown), our government declared marshall law and cancelled out all civil liberties from coast to coast. This is despite the fact all violence occured in a concentrated area. In our weakest moment we succumbed to our fears. We have no reason to feel superior.
The War Measures Act led to the arrest of 500 people without warrant. The majority of the people were artists, unionists, intellectuals and individuals who supported Quebec nationalism.
The War Measures Act was similar in intent to the Patriot Act, but the consequences were far worse. It was later repealed by a conservative government, but no one honestly believes that a new government isn't still capable of bringing it back.
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
- Benjamin Franklin
it's a chance I'm willing to take, considering that is that the only people we've ever been invaded by are americans
Should the United States turn even more towards totalitarianism how would Canada react? How would the U.S. deal with Canada after a few years of dictatorship, given the U.S.'s military superiority? When newspapers here talk about the radical Canadian atheist government and all the terrorists Canada is intentionally allowing across the border what will happen?
Canada's best defense against another invasion from the south, is the people who live there. Hopefully the U.S. will never be a country that Canada needs to fear invasion from. It is entirely possible that guns in the hands of private citizens, with no record of ownership will be the thing that keeps that from happening.
Why should we worry about materials coming in from Canada? They have such foolproof border security. We've never had terrorists enter the US through Canada. Oh, wait...
But it's okay- someone will come in in about 3.5 years and undo all the mistakes (so pretty much the previous 8 years).
You expect that the "Americans" will actually elect a reasonable person next time? Man, I admire your faith, brother...
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Canadian Government Weary of Patriot act
I think the word you're looking for is wary.
"Well kids, you tried your best, and you failed. The lesson is, never try."
A real question for the future is IF the waters around the large North American Arctic islands melt, will this new navigitable passage be international waters or Canadian territorial waters?
A global warming pattern could open a passage between Europe and Asia across northern Canada and north of Alaska. The question is could Canada regulate hazardous materials or the size of ships or collect tolls for passage between Canadian islands from these ships?
Six hundred years ago, the Arctic was warmer. The Chinese record sailing from Greenland to China across the northern coast of Russia that is today locked almost always in ice. This was from 1421 by Gavin Menzies, about Chinese explorations in the early 1400's.
wow i had no I idea canadians were so bad ass!!!!!
The White House was already regularly whitewashed when the British troops burned it. It was even called "the White House" informally before then, if not officially.
:-)
But please, don't let facts get in the way of your rhetoric!
I was just on another forum. whoops.
T Money
World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
Sometimes I fantisize that the administration does something that's actually good for the economy. Then I wake up.
We apologize for the inconvenience.
"half the politicians down here call it "Canuckistan"..."
We refer to the red states as "dumbfukistan"
Isn't it funny how a post about the Patriot Act turned into nothing but a pissing contest between neighbors?
To quote the great, and innocent, Rodney King...
"Can't we all just git along?"
Bravo!!! Dumbfuckistanites do not understand because they have proven beyond a doubt they are stupid. Two times. Once by electing the idiot Texan redneck, fundamentalist twerp, then by RE-electing him. There is no doubt. That's Not an eagle..., that's a chicken..., symbol of American collective intelligence..., or rather lack of it.
Canada currently has billions in surplus. No deficit. Been this way for the last few years.
Ahhh classic.
Well it doesn't matter how reasonable the next person is... that's the system. Create a mess before you leave and someone else will clean it up.
It's all relative though.
when you see the word 'Linux', drink!
I am. Honestly. I guess I underestimated the intelligence of the
I was expecting a lot of True American(tm) sentiment and an awful lot of Canadian bashing in response to some of the pro Canadian views that have been expressed so far in this thread. But I haven't seen a lot of that. It's brilliant.
[I guess it could be explained by some good modding, but I don't want to start thinking like that!]
Thanks
Stephen Colbert on race: "While skin and race are often synonymous, skin cleansing is good, race cleansing is bad."
I need to move to canada
at least they respect something about their citizens
Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.
Jeez, dude. What part of the country do you live in that you are so burdened by government coersion? Other than having to go to work every day, I do pretty much as I please. Hey, wait a minute. I have to go to work every day. That makes me a slave to my company. Sure, I could quit. But I'd just have to find a different master, err, employer. Or I could go into business for myself. But that requires capital, which I would again have to work for.
I have to eat three times a day, does that make me a slave to my stomach?
"You work hard, you get a head."
Thanks, but I already have a head. But seriously! If only that were true. How many millionaire construction workers do you know? Hell, people who work hard would get even less if we didn't have unions and labor laws and other such tyrannies.
"What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
Here's how I see it. If I want to marry someone in the eyes of the church, it is up to the church whether they wish to sanction that union. If I choose to build a life partnership with someone (own property, raise kids etc as a partnership) then the government should recognize that as a partnership regardless of the sexuality (or lack thereof) of the relationship, gender or relationship of the participants. If that means that we have to replace the word "spouse" with some PC phrase like "current socio-economic life partner" then so be it.
It seems bizarre and wrong that having sex with one's roommate, for example, can greatly affect the tax you pay.
Canadian Government Weary of Patriot act
I'm sorry they are so tired. Hope they get some rest soon, eh.
I'm an Indian living in the U.S. and have a brother living in Toronto. Due to a misunderstanding on my part, I didn't get a proper visa when I went to visit him over a long weekend, and I was expecting them to just send me back to the U.S. right away. Instead, they were nice enough to "delay" consideration of my Visa status until after the weekend - just before my return flight - and *then* they denied me entry, so I was able to see my brother, and didn't waste an expensive plane ticket.
I seriously doubt if the U.S. would have done the same thing. The Canadian border official was very nice, and said "You made a stupid mistake, but it's be a shame for you not to see your brother after coming all the way here." The U.S. probably would have said: "You look like a terrorist because you are brown, and we are going to detain you because we can".
To be fair, there was one attempted border crossing. The guy who was stopped in Port Angeles, on his way to blow up LAX for Y2K.
But ya, in general, foreign terrorists get into the US on visitor or student visas. A lot of people incorrectly associate the idea of 'illegal alien' with 'terrorist'. Illegal aliens are the people who do the jobs none of the citizens want to do.
"I have to go to work every day. That makes me a slave to my company. "
You have the right (to which the government cannot interfere in) to contract at your discretion. You have contracted to provide your labor in return for some sum of federal reserve notes. The point is, you work completely by choice. That is why all those empolyment agreements say that your work is voluntary, not compulsary.
You also have the right, as you properly said, to work for yourself.
Your construction workers comment is just cheap. If these people had a better skill that they could and would like to offer, I am sure they would. If they want to be millionares, then they have to find a skill that is worth that.
And don't get me started about orgainzed labor...
Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
This clearly explains why we've been plagued by Korean, Vietnamese, German, and Japanese suicide bombers. 'Cause we killed shit loads of their parents and grandparents and they're pissed at us and want us all dead.
-gandalf23@work
Better skill? You owe the floor you are standing on to a construction worker. You owe modern civilization itself to construction workers. The point I was making is that people are not paid based on their work, their skills, or their value to society. They are paid based on the amount of money they can make for someone else. This is why my company pays me as little as they can. I don;t directly contribute to the bottom line.
Why does a CEO make 500% more than a teacher? Because he works 500% harder? Hardly. He gets paid that because he makes the decisions that enable the company to increase it's profits. If he does not increase company profits he will be replaced. Pro athletes are paid huge sums because their playing attracts more people to buy tickets and beer. The fact is that that CEO would have no building to sit in and the athlete no stadium to play in were it not for construction workers. But the worker gets paid squat compared with the other two, even though it is his labor that makes it all possible. Go read Nickel and Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich and tell me how much you think hard work and success are correlated.
"What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
As a Canadian, I believe that it's aboot time for the Canadian God to deliver His people from the oppression and rapture of the American Devil, eh? I understand our country is financially dependent upon America, that we depend on America for all our amenities, and that America's technological advances are in no way derived from the ingenuity, or lack thereof, of our Canadian people. Yet I will continue to bash America because of my decided insecurity, eh?
lets people who get sick not lose everything
Amen. Did you see the figures published the other day for U.S. bankruptcies? 50% of personal bankruptcies are the result of a medical problem. 75% of those people had medical insurance when the medical problem started. The fact that the system has become this broken is ridiculous.
You don't need to beat the military, you just have to kill the leaders and legislators turning your country into a facist state (or secular democracy or whatever you're against your country becoming).
If you Canadians are going to be so self righteous, why don't you just start Canashdot.org?
Vancouver BC has a climate only slightly cooler than Seattle, WA.
Victoria BC is often warmer than Vancouver, though also often windier. It also thinks it's still part of Britain -- forgivable as their climate resembles that of Sussex pretty closely. If you like the west coast of Washington and Oregon, southwestern BC would be a comfy place for you.
cheers...ank
Still hoping for Gentle Treatment...
Nuff said
Canada can afford the luxury of privacy, here's why:
Canada differs from the United States in it's chosen defense mechanism. While the U.S. employs brute force, Canada employs the political/social equivalent of neoteny, the biological trait commonly referred to as "cuteness". Canada has cultivated a national persona of cuddly harmlessness. This is exactly what creatures with little in the way of natural defenses but a lot of potential predators do. In the animal world it is accomplished with soft fur and big, round, pleading eyes. In the political world it is is accomplished by having a non-threatining military, an economic system based on beer, and a liberal, open society. Domestic anti-privacy measures would work at cross-purposes with this defense mechanism. So far, it seems to be working. Of course being the cute kitten living next door to the big ugly, yet friendly to you, grizzly has it's advantages too.
"Putin Vows Zero Tolerance for Terrorists, Hostages"
If they have no need to use the provions in the Patriot act, then they shouldn't be there. The problem with the Patriot Act isn't what is done, but what can be done. Right now, most of the actions to prevent terrorism have almost no effect on someone carrying out a terrorist act. But they do pave the way for a absolute government control.
Other initiaves include Total Information Awareness. It has now been re-named but it still is a goal of this administration. Tracking every bit of information about a citizen, won't help stop someone from doing a criminal act, because most criminal acts occur without receipts. So the fact that the government knows I bought a quart of milk and some bread is just going to hide anything significant like a needle in a haystack. But tracking everything about me would work to control dissent or who gets power. If a Senator used a credit card at the Crazy Horse in Vegas, this can be used as blackmail or leverage on that Senator voting a certain way. No connection will every be made back to the government program, because all threats or use of the information would be parcelled out to other agencies. Like a government funded think tank, charity or even a church.
9/11 was very preventable. In fact, 99 other cases of planes going off of their transponder were dealt with on an average of 15 minutes previously. The fact that it took 2 and 1/2 hours to send out fighter gets to already crashed planes was just good luck for the administration.
I believe the Constitution and a society of happy, brave and free citizens is always the best security. We should look towards getting rid of the overabundance of crooked polliticians in our broken system. The CIA is more of a group of industrial and economic sabatours for multinational corporations than any sort of protection from tyranny.
If we became an actual "good" country, we'd have less to worry about. People don't decide to blow themselves up for no reason.
Certainly I agree that as gun crime has dropped, other types - knife clubs physical etc. The difference is, how much more random is gun violence.
When was the last time you heard of innocents killed in a drive by punching???
The law abiding will always be a source of interest to the sociopathic. Criminals are rarely trained in the use of their weapons. I would suggest that guns should not only be licenced, but the licences should only be available to those who have been trained, have no police records and have a valid reason for carrying them. Political opinions based on pholosophies created in the 17th century and codified in the 18th century are no reason at all.
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
Wow, compare a socialist government to Nazis, always a good way to indicate that you don't know what the f*ck you're talking about.
Ummm.. just what exactly do you think the etymology of the word "Nazi" is?
Could it possibly have been an abbreviation (im Deutsch) of the National Socialist Party of Germany?
No, guess not... Rock on, Slashdotter!
Neoteny, (I don't understand the linguistics behind your term, but it's as good a label as any for 'appearing harmless and friendly'), combined with lethality when necessary is a great defense mechanism. --As one friend used to laugh when in the U.S. "Don't fuck with us, or we'll come and burn down your White House. Again."
Brute military in large numbers (the U.S. way) means exactly nothing when a small team of less than ten men with advanced hardware and ninja training (the Canadian way) can erase large armies as if they weren't there. Nobody talks about this. I am breaking code.
But then the U.S. doesn't care about effective militaries. It cares about controlling its population through enslaving all the people to military service and the war support industry. It's about social control through military structure rather than actually being able to kill your enemies effectively. (As we are seeing in Iraq. What a joke. --If anybody really wanted to take out the leadership in Baghdad, it could have been done quickly, quietly and nearly invisibly with very few casualties. It's been done before. --Big armies racing in and blowing everything up and then not being able to maintain control is unbelievably stupid. --Unless your goal is to create a giant quagmire through which to funnel lots of money and fuck up your country and stay in power. Hmm.)
I'd crow and say that Canada is one of the smartest and most dangerous countries on the face of the earth, but a bunch of beer drinking hockey players would kick my ass for talking.
Don't worry, though. We're all about survival and getting along happily with our friends all over the world. We don't have any interest in conquest. That's for schoolyard bullies, which we're not.
Even though it's still mostly based on a bunch of bullshit dogma and nationalistic rhetoric, and even though our government is run by the usual corrupt suspects, I'm actually quite proud to be Canadian. It'll be interesting to see if our groundwork is strong enough to withstand the black hole of the U.S. If our shit-head PM manages to get Canada to throw in with this missile defense bullshit, as well as the insane plan to bring both Canadian and U.S. armed forces under one command, I'll be seriously considering a move to France.
Fuck Anschluss!
-FL
The Japanese government understands well that the economic ruin that would follow a US departure would be inevitable, and not because of any payback from across the pacific. First, they'd have to build a real defense force, which would consume a massive amount of man power in perpetuity. Then there are the material costs which present something of a dilemma. They could simply buy the products elsewhere, or they could give up some of their industrial capacity to build it themselves, which would eventually be better, but risks creating a powerful military industrial complex. Worse yet, they'd need to manufacture a modest quantity of nuclear weapons. Which are a colossal investment, and a significant economic drain. All this build up, given Japan's history, and contemporary view of itself would no doubt be a source of social unrest for sometime. To kick an economy like that when it's just righting itself, that would be ruin.
This doesn't even begin to investigate the domino effect that such a move would have on increased militarism in asia. In generaly nuclear proliferation is seen as a bad thing, as is war. The US vacating Korea or Japan, no matter how attractive the proposition is to the citizens of every country involved, makes the first all but certain, and the second far more likely.
Countries need to be able to defend themselves. Even in the modern era.
He was obviously joking you moron. Think of all the 'whatever'-istan countries next to Russia.. that's what he was poking fun at. *woosh* right over your small head.
I seriously doubt that the Canadian government is _weary_ of the Patriot Act (well, maybe that too). However, it's very likely that it, along with many Americans, is _wary_ of the Act.
......
I'm weary (and wary) of people who don't know the difference between weary and wary, principal and principle, affect and effect,
hahah, you may blame us for the "illegal" route people take to enter the US. Sure, they may have gotten threw our cracks, but they sure as shit went threw YOURS as well...idiot
when in doubt press enter and we'll figure it out later..
so one has to, you can't look after yourself...to us your like that obnoxious uncle no one likes.
when in doubt press enter and we'll figure it out later..
hahahaah, shitty eh, the UN must be wrong then, lets just move from the top down to 10 to 15 in the US. No wait, I want my kids to go threw metal detectors at school...and please...please can I shoot you with my pistol? hahah another yankee sounds pretty jealous to me...
when in doubt press enter and we'll figure it out later..
yeah sure, an yankee trying to set the "facts" straight... more of the pot and kettle I think..
when in doubt press enter and we'll figure it out later..
You've got to realize that the BC "Liberals" are, for the most part, Socreds who abandoned ship the moment the going got tough. Even compared to other career politicians, the BC Liberal is a particularly slimy breed.
If you care to bear with the story, this is an excellent lesson in how large-scale "democracy" works.
The Socreds were, for many years, BC's answer to conservatism: big money, big business the whole bit. At that point in history, the provincial Liberals, despite having the same name as the federal Liberals, were a fringe party carrying maybe one or two seats every election.
Eventually the people got fed up. The Socreds got absolutely killed--reduced to 6 seats. I believe they got hammered so badly, the Socreds went from incumbent to "not an official party" in one election.
Did the Socreds have a change of heart? Mend their ways? Give the people what they wanted?
No. They found an easier way: They all became Liberals. Overnight, the Socred membership dropped like a stone. Liberal membership skyrocketed. 20-year veterans of the Socred party quietly took out Liberal memberships and abandoned their old party. The Liberal cabinet found themselves being voted out of the power structure by all of these new members to be replaced by the exact same people who had held those roles with the Socred party.
Since the original Liberals were new, idealistic and relatively uncorrupted, they had done a rather good job which allowed the new (old?) power structure to sweep into office on the back of their work.
Now we're being served the same s*** in a red bag instead of a blue one but, believe me, it smells the same. The only change has been that all of the Socred's and Liberal's idealists have been weeded out leaving a party composed entirely of opportunistic whores (My sincere apologies to prostitutes everywhere for the comparison).
I
Canadian government which supports mandatory biometric national identity cards, attempted to create a massive database with information on every Canadian, passed anti-privacy laws after 9/11, has banking laws no less invasive then those of the U.S., blah blah blah etc. is angry about the USA PATRIOT Act.
Wake me up when they aren't hypocrites.
You want to know who isn't running Firefox 2.x? They spell it "definately" and "rediculous".
"The CBC raked the Liberals over the coals just as much as anyone else"
Which is to say, not much. The Liberals have been getting a free propaganda ride for years. The CBC is taxpayer funded shit.
The last time I crossed into Washington state from Vancouver, BC, it was American boarder guards I had to deal with, not Canadians. If you're all so god-damn worried about terrorists coming from here, maybe you should start looking at your own customs policies and boarders, not ours.
Not to mention the Beer Store.... god.. what could be better... it's like fast food beer and they usually remember what you drink :)
Why aren't more of you americans worried about the patriot act?
... The patriot act makes it legal and simple for the USA to partake in MASSIVE corporate espionage, on a scale that makes the chinese spies look like inspector gadget!
.... why dont you put half that effort into protecting the real rights you have that the patriot act has stolen from you?
It destroys the rights given to you by the 4th and 6th constitutional amendments, yet your courts have not overturned the law for taking away those rights.
The patriot act has already been used by US law enforcement in several ways it was never intended for, because of the loopholes it gives into your privacy. Of course the Canadian government and governments elsewhere are concerned!
Already, to hold a CIBC credit card here, you must accept that your personal information will be freely shared with the US government upon request.
As usual though, the ultra-protectionist bullshit laws will bite you americans back. The many companies based in the US that act as specialized centers for accounting, human resources, data management or anything else will be loosing massive amounts of business as the business gets pulled back to the side of the border where rights are not just proclaimed, but protected.
Now, you dumbasses, It is your responsibility as citizens of the US to defend the rights given to you by your constitution, you fight so hard for the imaginary right you think you have to bare arms
George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
That actually got a rating of informative, anyone who needs to read that also needs to get a rating of "5 - Get a clue"
Check this out
End of the day, hope someone sees this: Right To Privacy Campaign, a website with links and documents related to the risk to privacy posed to Canadians by the U.S. PATRIOT Act.
There is no such law. He asked for your passport because you wanted to pay with creditcard and he though you look like the kind of guy that might try to present him a stolen card. I have been to some 30 different countries in business and private travel and the us is the only place that routinely asks for and copies your passport. I never showed any passport or ID when staying at hotels in Spain, Portugal, Italy, France, Germany, Greece, Slovenja, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Ireland, Austria, Poland, Switzerland. I did show my passport once in England though.
Oh, thats not entirely correct. Hotels in mainland china ALWAYS take your passport for a day or two.
We get some things right, and we get most things wrong, but when push comes to shove, life up here is mighty sweet (unless you hate snow).
Canada boils down to this: we're willing to make personal sacrifices for those who aren't as fortunate as we are.
America boils down to this: everyone is on their own. Those who succeed make the emperors of old look like paupers. Those who fail are... fucked.
How do you like your bell curve? Low and wide, or thin and high?
The afganistan has been re-captured by the warlords except pockets of territory near kabul, that Hamid Karzai rules. The afganistan government doesn't even rule most of the afganistan and who do you think rules those territories - wait let me guess taliban/alqaida?? You were asying something about alquida and war on terror ??
What is your news source? The New York Times? CBS? ABC? Flush out your headgear nubie! The Afghanistan war has been a resounding success. How you can maintain otherwise is beyond comprehension. Yes, there are still wild regions left in the country where Taliban hide in caves. They are mopped up regularly. Afghanistan was basically overrun in 2 months by 20 airforce spotters. The US has never encountered as inept an enemy as the Taliban. IT has never had such a successful exercise in nation building.
an ill wind that blows no good
You confuse the issue. Your company pays you based on your skill. It takes no skill to get a mimimum wage job. Just show up and do waht you are told. Everything asked of you is pretty basic. There are a lot of people that can do that though, and you are incompetition with them.
Next, look at me. I went to school for 4 years, got an advanced degree. I just seperated myself from 98% of all other job seekers. Next, with some experience, I now have a skill that is desired, and people are willing to pay quality money for. I remain in competition with those with the same degree and expereince.
Your company pays you as little as they can to be cost competitive. If they paid yu the same as a CEO, they'd have to charge more for whatever service or product they sell. They would lose out to competition. You contribute directly to the bottom line! How? The more efficient you are the more work you do in less time, meaning less labor expense. If you can do the work of 2 people for the price of one, as long as you are cheaper than two people, the company is saving money. You can compete and get a higher salary in your own job market by proving you are worth the expense.
Lets take a look at a paralell job market. People who have clearences like Secret and TS get paid at least $15,000 more than those who do not. And that is on a skill-for-skill experience-for-experience level. These people do not contribute more tot he bottom line, but they are a limited resource.
One day (maybe today) you will learn that employees are subject to the exact same market conditions as the products they make.
So if you are a contruction worker and want to be paid more, you have to make yourself a limited resource. This is done by specializing in something. Expanding foam instuation, or radiant heating, etc. Usually you can just pick a new technology and adopt that.
This is the reason for a certifcation industry. If you have all the desired certs, you can ask for more money than the guy with no certs or only one.
The reason that your construction workers are not monetarily appreciated is because anyone with very little training can pick up a hammer and saw. Hell, you don't even need to measure to build a house (true it does make it a lot easier) but basic geometery is all that one needs.
So when I said "work hard, get ahead" it did not mean it literally - to only use muscles. It implied a level of working smart. You can work hard to move a mountain, but if you're not smart about it, it will never move.
It is like this: work hard: brute force sort numbers using an O(n^2) algorithm. Yeah it is really easy to code. But if you work smart you can code a O(N log2 N) algorithm that will outperform the easy to code n^2 algorithm. You can eaither work hard (smart) before you start working on the task, or you can work hard after going to task. Such is the difference between a $60k and a $90k programmer. It is about where you move the coefficients. For example. In SQL select queries, it is vastly mroe efficient to have the most restrictive selected set evaluated first. This elimates a lot of databrocessing that will be thrown away at a later stage.
So we have a situation where one must not just work hard, one must work smart as well. I thought that was obvious.
Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
Pass me a Blue and another piece of backbacon, eh. It's just us totally harmless Canadians up here.
-FL
Who said anything about 9/11 or Iraq? Do you even read comments before replying to them?
I think the benefit is the other way round buddy. History and reality prove that.
when in doubt press enter and we'll figure it out later..
Considering that most Islamic terrorists have tried entering visa vie Canada
I simply pointed out that in the most recent terrorist attack on American soil, not a single terrorist entered the states through Canada.
So tell me, which terrorists are you refering too, exactly?
Putting a 2/3 rule into effect (to constitute "most") and considering that I just provided 19 names that would work against your theory, feel free to provide the names of 38 terrorists that have entered the US through Canada.
Otherwise, go watch some more Ann Coulter and leave factual discussions to more rational individuals.
A while ago I read a report by the BC government, "Privacy and the USA Patriot Act". It's interesting to me how differently Canada seems to think about these things compared to the US.
Here are a few excerpts.
Privacy and the USA Patriot Act - Implications for British Columbia Public Sector Outsourcing
The essence of liberty in a democratic society is the right of individuals to autonomy--to be free from state interference. The right to privacy has several components, including the right (with only limited and clearly justified exceptions) to control access to and the use of information about individuals. Although
privacy is essential to individual autonomy, it is not just an individual right. A sphere of privacy enables us to fulfill our roles as community members and is
ultimately essential to the health of our democracy.
[...]
More broadly, excessive surveillance in the name of national security and public safety can threaten the freedoms on which every successful democracy depends. Awareness of widespread surveillance makes people nervous about speaking their minds, engaging in political activities, or doing anything that might arouse ill-founded or vague suspicion. Excessive surveillance herds people toward conformity and discourages the diversity of ideas and beliefs that are indispensable to the flourishing of our communities.
[...]
Due in part to its cultural and constitutional history, the US has followed a different route from Canada and Europe in the privacy field. No independent body was established to enforce the US federal Privacy Act and few US states have enacted laws regulating government use of personal information. Regarding commercial activities, the US has opted for sector-specific laws with an emphasis on self-regulation or enforcement by private litigation, rather than through independent oversight. There is ongoing tension between the US and Europe regarding the adequacy of US privacy laws. Canada's privacy laws are much more in tune with Europe's.
[...]
The balance between privacy and Canada's security and law enforcement interests is dynamic. In the ongoing quest for the right balance, it is vital that the broadening of the state's ability to take steps to satisfy our legitimate security needs does not blur into activities that are in reality the ordinary enforcement of laws. The need to deal with the threat of terrorism may appear much more immediate and easier to understand than the need to maintain the basic civil rights to which we have become accustomed. However, our measures for dealing with terrorism must be carefully guided to address real threats, instead of our fears, to ensure that we do not unnecessarily lose the safeguards of our liberties in law or in practice.
[...]
We cannot ignore the fact that US courts have upheld subpoenas ordering corporations to disclose records located outside the US, even where a foreign law prohibits the disclosure.
[...]
We do not exclude the possibility that policy or procedural safeguards exist in respect of FISA applications for disclosure of records located outside the US. In the absence of evidence of such safeguards, however, it is prudent to assume that US authorities are unfettered in their ability to seek such an order, that they may do so in circumstances that are not consistent with Canadian law and policy, and that the FIS Court might issue a FISA order for records located in Canada.
[...]
Recommendation 4
All public bodies should ensure that they commit, for the duration of all relevant contracts, the financial and other resources necessary to actively and diligently monitor contract performance, punish any breaches, and detect and defend against actual or potential disclosure of personal information to a foreign court
or other foreign authority.
[...]
Recommendation 10
The government of British Columbia should:
(a) undertake a comprehensive and independent audit of data mining efforts by all public bodies;
(b) use the a
ok but dont forget something....
Canadians are quite heavily armed. Lots of rifles up here.
The truth about Led Zep should never be told on
*sigh*
You're a troll. You answered a question not asked. Kindly go away now.
Canadians are quite heavily armed. Lots of rifles up here.
I do not doubt that Canada is a well armed populace that could provide quite a bit of resistance. They are probably the second best chance of defeating the U.S. without blowing up the world, should it come to that. Canada's advantages are much the same as those of the U.S. citizen. Canada is close to the U.S. and citizens could actually reach valid targets. U.S. troops may balk at attacking people with whom they have empathy, many see little cultural difference between themselves and Canadians. Canadians have good quality long rifles and are trained in their use. All of these are reasons why U.S. citizens are a good defense against an oppressive government, and apply to some degree to Canada as well.