LibsEatPoop

joined 4 years ago
[–] [email protected] 11 points 3 days ago

That would be a fun game. Trump’s picks and actions - real or fictional?

 

I don’t have words.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 3 days ago

Here’s hoping 🤞

 

James Cameron: Yes, humans are literally colonizing your planet for resources, destroying your cultures, enslaving your peoples, but you cannot resist the wrong way. Yes, this is inspired by my understanding of indigenous populations on Earth and their colonizations, what about it?

 

If you got letters/packages, make sure they can be delivered before Friday.

Also, I wonder how this guy is doing.

 

Keith Creel is president and CEO of Calgary-based railway company Canadian Pacific Kansas City Ltd.

Railways. Airlines. Ports. Seaways. All have experienced significant labour disruption in the past 18 months. Canada has experienced 62 work stoppages in the transportation sector alone in 2023 and 2024, involving close to 20,000 workers.

This month, Canada’s two largest ports (Vancouver and Montreal) have been completely or partially shut down due to labour disruptions. In September, a strike by grain handlers at the Port of Vancouver disrupted exports during peak shipping season. In August, the country’s two largest railways, including Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC), came to a halt due to labour work stoppages. Before that, a strike shut down one of the nation’s largest airlines and threatened to shut down another. That was after the St. Lawrence Seaway was forced to close a year ago, which happened months after the previous B.C. port shutdown that went on for two weeks in July, 2023.

These are self-inflicted harm to our supply chains. A work stoppage of any duration or even the threat of a work stoppage causes serious disruption to Canada’s supply chains and harms the country’s reputation as a stable, dependable trading partner.

The dispute at the Port of Montreal is the third in four years. Canadian labour instability has become a chronic problem. The pattern of disruption is forcing global shipping companies to look elsewhere and ship through alternative U.S. ports. Canada needs a reliable method to resolve economically damaging labour disputes; one that respects the collective bargaining process, while avoiding disruptions when negotiations fail.

As a country we place a high value on collective bargaining and firmly believe that the best deals are found at the bargaining table. But while CPKC has an excellent track record of reaching negotiated agreements with the vast majority of our unions, we have repeatedly faced bargaining with certain unions where it has become clear that a negotiated agreement is simply unachievable.

While CPKC did lock out Teamsters workers back in August, that had come after the union issued a strike notice. The company had little choice in the matter. This is not our unique problem but one faced by companies across the country.

In such situations, Canada needs a mechanism to maintain industrial peace that does not repeatedly disrupt and damage the supply chains Canadians depend on every day. Other countries do this effectively. It can – and must – be done in Canada.

The federal government must step in to protect the clear national interest by putting an end to the frequent disruptions and mandating the parties to resolve their differences through binding arbitration when deadlocked. While this did happen with CPKC less than 24 hours after the labour disruption, there had been no certainty of that. And that one day is costly. One day of stoppage is three to five days of recovery.

Canada must prepare for the USMCA review by addressing its chronic labour instability now. It should start by rapidly resolving the current port strikes. Then, there needs to be a serious national conversation about improving the legal tools the federal government has available to prevent – or rapidly end – a labour disruption that is threatening Canada’s national interest.

 

Decent article for the more pro-Israel family members (unless they’re Islamophobic). A lot of information that others that are more focused on the riot itself don’t go into, simply by providing a lot of context for things happening in Israel.

 

Inshallah, you shall attain your freedom.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Yep, work to the bone, it your still part-time so you don’t get any benefits. Your schedule sounds absolutely awful. You should look into compression socks if you haven’t yet. They help you if you’re on your feet all day.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 5 days ago

It helps that I’m an introvert so I don’t need that much interaction but still…it does get kinda lonely. The occasional after work hangout or family time is good tho. And I try to get in some reading time or something in between everything else.

[–] [email protected] 22 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Bro I just want to make enough for rent, groceries and utilities. I don’t want anything else 😭😭😭

 

I know this seems like baby numbers for some of y’all. It is baby numbers for some of my coworkers who’ve been doing what I’ve been doing for a lot longer - I’ve somehow managed to not get my two jobs to schedule me on the same day so I haven’t had to work too much on a given day. Everyone else I know does that tho.

I finally have a couple days off. But I have so much pending shit to do during then. I don’t have energy for anything.

Revolution soon pls.

 
[–] [email protected] 20 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

After a year of cheerleading genocide, now these news agencies are finding their humanity. Just like they do with every atrocity of the west.

 

Its analysis found around 44% of verified victims were children and 26% women. The ages most represented among the dead were five to nine-year-olds.

[–] [email protected] 31 points 1 week ago (9 children)

It is important to note that exceeding 1.5C in a single year is not equivalent to breaching the Paris Agreement limit. The goal is generally considered to refer to long-term warming – typically over two or three decades – rather than annual temperatures that include the short-term influence of natural fluctuations in the climate, such as El Niño.

Fucking lmao. So by the time the politicians are ready to say we’ve breached 1.5, we’ll all be dead. Good to know.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I will be depressed. I will be sad. I will be angry. I will blow up at liberals and conservatives.

Oh, you meant about Trump?

Trump will begin implementing some policies from Project 2025, especially around restrictions surrounding abortion/reproductive health, LGBTQ rights, and immigration/refugee policies.

You’ll also see a reversal of many of the good Biden-era domestic achievements surrounding labour and consumer protections (maybe by gutting the NLRLB, but that may be a longer term project) and definitely getting rid of Lina Khan.

More Trump-appointed judges at the lower levels, even if not at the Supreme Court (within the six-month timeframe) and beginning the process of staffing federal agencies with Trump loyalists.

Begin the rollback of EPA and environmental standards, maybe gesture towards leaving the Paris Accords.

Probably some more stuff too.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (8 children)

People really underestimate climate change (esp. wrt its impact on global south vs on north).

Also I don’t like his policy towards Iran. And let’s see if he is worse on Palestine or not. Plus it’ll give a boost to fascist parties everywhere.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The only thing I’ve found that numbs this feeling is one that also numbs everything else - depression.

But then that leads to other issues, especially, you know, suicidal thoughts. So, it’s not a solution.

Best to just focus on your loved ones. I don’t even follow this advice myself tho lol.

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