[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 13 points 2 weeks ago

I thought her family is Zionist. She spent her whole term as VP providing diplomatic protection for Israel, and in part served a meaningful role in one of the worst man made famines in human history and the destruction of Gaza. Maybe she's not explicitly genocidal, but her actions are what brought the world to this exact global mess. Whether one blames Trump or not, there's a sequence of actions taken to get here - I'm just saying Harris and the surrounding network is a part of that.

I suppose the world may be in the process of coming to terms that the Americans can no longer solve the issue internally. At some point, I wouldn't be surprised as more countries just negotiate directly with Iran, and without the US.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 18 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

He [Lt. David Collins] said CoreCivic “did not request our involvement” for any cases last year.

“Because no criminal investigations were initiated by the Sheriff’s Office, no reports were forwarded to the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office for consideration of charges,” he said.

Outsider Canadian here, but is this not your red flag - among many red flags - that the private prison facility is now a lawless zone and perhaps the Sheriff's office and prison operators are now shockingly open to criminal and civil liability? Under what authority would a Sheriff's office have to enter an understanding with a private company as far as who is responsible to investigate crimes?

In some jurisdictions, the police would act as basically an office holder when they decide when a piece of legislation was violated, and to lay charges against an individual. Police are agents or employees of the state when they are not exercising this special authority to charge people with offences. When the charge is laid, the prosecutors take over the file. But now you're saying that the police no longer want to use that special function - the reason why they exist - and they hand it to a private company with their own interests beyond the Justice System?

This isn't the Justice System any longer, this is collapse.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 16 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

In all, ShinyHunters claims to have stolen close to 1 petabyte of data belonging to the company and many of its customers, many of whom use Telus Digital as a BPO provider for customer support operations. BleepingComputer has not been able to independently confirm the total size of the stolen data.

The threat actor shared the names of 28 well-known companies allegedly impacted by the breach. However, BleepingComputer will not disclose the names of these companies, as we have been unable to independently confirm whether they were impacted.

The threat actor says that much of the data for these customers relates to BPO services provided by Telus Digital, including customer support and call center outsourcing, agent performance ratings, AI-powered customer support tools, fraud detection and prevention, and content moderation solutions.

I believe Telus also handles healthcare data for Alberta and beyond. Do we know if that's impacted?

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 18 points 1 month ago

I suspect that the US and others may have operated on the assumption that Iran was weak or on the verge of collapse. But, I also believe that the truth is coming out that Iran is actually much more prepared and robust than the US wishes to admit.

At this rate, the petro-states may end up suffering massive losses, creating knock-on impacts on the US economy. Everyone should be moving with urgency. This is actually a consequential war not in the bogus religious sense with references to "Armageddon", but rather a power shifting moment from the age of superpowers to multipolarity. Only trouble is...no one advertised how destructive and violent that age shift would be.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 15 points 2 months ago

Canada is harming its relationship with the US?

Are we talking about the Americans electing a criminal felon as President, who appears to be facing allegations of decades long pedophilia, and seems to be part of a global scale honey pot and blackmail operation that targeted people around the world? Did that damage trust and credibility? And did we mention the Americans who seem involved in the debauchery, death, trauma, and abuse from trafficking vulnerable underaged girls around the world for this operation for decades are also not facing any justice? Instead, they all appear to be closing ranks and maintaining an iron curtain of silence?

Oh, and world leaders and dignitaries have to grapple with the knowledge that these same Americans remain in positions of power and gatekeeping positions throughout the US government system?

Plus this same US President is extracting wealth for his billionaire friends? Wealth that the Western powers created a rules based order together to generate?

By the time the Americans manage to uncollapse their justice system, and maybe codify some laws to avoid the total collapse of their society in their legislative branch, it will be decades.

Canada is not throwing a hissy fit, we're literally working around a gasping goon where an ally should be, and we're trying to keep the lights and the heat on for the rest of us until this blows over.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 17 points 3 months ago

Anyone have any experience with that meshtastic idea? Issues and hype?

19
submitted 4 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

Did the premier of Alberta attack the constitutional role of the courts in Canada’s democracy? Yes, she did, and in no uncertain terms.

“The will of Albertans is not expressed by a single judge appointed by Justin Trudeau and never faces any kind of recall campaign, never faces any kind of election,” stated Danielle Smith on Dec. 6.

She continued by saying, “The people have told us through our consultation, through our elections, the kinds of things they want us to do, and then we go and do them, and then the court can override it. And again, most of the judges are appointed by Ottawa and not by us. An unelected judge is not synonymous with democracy. Democracy is when elected officials who have to face the electorate every four years get to make decisions. That’s what democracy is.”

If you listened only to Smith, you’d think Canada is ruled by a shadowy cabal of “unelected judges” bent on bending “the people” to their progressive whims.

9
submitted 4 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

https://archive.is/i5cR3

The Globe and Mail's Tom Cardoso, Carrie Tait, Mark Mackinnon, and Stephanie Chambers have the deep dive on Sam Mraiche. I'll include some highlights, but this deserves a good read because it provides an overview with additional information about some of the relationships between Sam Mraiche, Danielle Smith, Jitendra Prasad, and Mickey Amery.

Her former chief of staff, Marshall Smith, hired multiple relatives of Mr. Mraiche at the same time as he was living in a home owned by one of Mr. Mraiche’s sisters.

...

“All of my family is in Canada now,” said Jamil Omairi, a pharmacist in the nearby town of Lala, another springboard for people destined for Alberta. Mr. Omairi is related to Mickey Amery, Alberta’s justice minister, himself a long-time friend and relative of Mr. Mraiche.

“All the young people here, people between 16 and 20, they have two ways to go,” he said. “If they find work, they stay. If there’s no work, they travel, and Brazil and Canada are the first destinations.”

...

Mraiche may be a capable import/exporter, but his world view could be mercenary. An exchange between Mraiche and BTNX, a supplier of COVID rapid tests, highlights this view.

The following week, Mr. Mraiche proposed a solution: He did “a lot of business” in Turkey, he explained, and suggested the BTNX executive use those contacts to obtain additional tests.

Mr. Mraiche also returned to the idea of diverting tests, this time from the federal government. “They’re really going to notice that a million is missing?” he asked.

“They will, yes,” responded Mr. Sunderani.

As deliveries fell further and further behind, Mr. Mraiche, who told Mr. Sunderani he was under intense pressure from Mr. Prasad, became increasingly frustrated.

“Do you know what you’re doing to me, Iqbal?” Mr. Mraiche said in an early February call. “I don’t only sell rapid test kits. I’m one of the biggest constructors here, too. Do you know what you’ve done to me? I’ve had so much mud thrown on my face, it’s not even funny.”

“You better hope there’s another wave that needs rapid tests,” he continued later in the call.

“Sam, that’s – that’s a bad thing to hope for,” Mr. Sunderani said.

“Is it? Me and you are in the business.”

“Sam, you know what? At the end of the day I don’t know about you, but I’ve made enough money. I don’t want to wish –”

“Has Jeff Bezos made enough money yet?”

“I don’t care who Jeff Bezos is,” Mr. Sunderani replied. “He has – I mean, I don’t want to wish –”

“No one’s wishing anything. It’s just going with the flow,” Mr. Mraiche said.

A month after that call, BTNX sued MHCare for $7.5-million, alleging Mr. Mraiche’s business failed to pay for more than 200,000 test kits and refused to pay for a truckload it received in error. MHCare countersued for $62.5-million, alleging BTNX overcharged, caused the company to lose money and tarnished its reputation. The two companies remain locked in litigation, and neither party’s allegations have been proven in court.

...

By the spring of 2022, the government’s response to the pandemic left Premier Jason Kenney battered. A scant majority of United Conservative Party members supported him in a leadership review in May, 2022, and he agreed to step down after the party selected a replacement.

Danielle Smith, then a party leadership hopeful, campaigned on COVID-19 grievances, railing against mask mandates and vaccine passports. Within a few months, she’d established herself as a front-runner.

A copy of Ms. Smith’s private calendar obtained by The Globe shows she took meetings during the campaign with everyone from physicians to executives – including Sam Mraiche.

In August, 2022, she was scheduled to dine at his north Edmonton home, the calendar shows.

Five days later, she was booked for a 30-minute Zoom call with Mr. Mraiche and Mr. Prasad, who retired from Alberta Health Services in the spring but stayed on as a consultant.

Ms. Smith, Mr. Prasad and Mr. Mraiche did not respond to questions about the meetings.

8
submitted 4 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

https://archive.is/w03hg#selection-2755.80-2755.96

The elections regulator’s director of compliance and enforcement said in an affidavit that Mr. Mraiche was being investigated in connection with an alleged straw donor scheme – an illegal practice in which an individual circumvents donation limits by providing money through others.

“Mr. Mraiche is alleged to have given funds to other people for the purpose of having those people make contributions to a registered party,” Diane Brauer, the official, said. The alleged donations were made in the two months prior to the May, 2023, provincial election, according to her affidavit, which was filed in support of the contempt request.

Besides Mraiche joining the UCP's Smith in a hotel suite to watch provincial election results in May 2023, and the Edmonton Oilers hockey games with the notorious skybox photo, keep in mind that Mraiche has also allegedly been tied to McFee, Public Safety Minister Mike Ellis, and Dr. Jayan Nagendran.

https://thetyee.ca/News/2025/02/14/AHS-Scandal-How-Tight-Dale-McFee-Sam-Mraiche/

https://thetyee.ca/News/2025/02/26/UCP-Mraiche-Business-Partner-Edmonton-Police-Commission/

22
submitted 4 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

The UCP continues its open siege of Alberta's government system. I'm not the first to say so, and I've said it before, Canada faces an unprecedented threat to its democracy due to the lack of regulation on the Politicians. Canadians, don't look away at what's happening in Alberta. Our system of checks and balances between the three branches of government is under attack. Once one branch fails, the others fail together.

The UCP has been captured. Canada has no formal check on the unbridled power of a renegade political party. Operation Total Recall is not just a union movement for fair wages and working conditions, but one to protect the democracy we have left. This is not business as usual. We are facing exactly the egregious, unethical conduct that even Kenney claims the Recall mechanism was intended for.

The UCP has attempted to silence the Justice system, disarmed Elections Alberta and the Ethics Commissioner, and has essentially removed any check on its own power.

We have to understand that the UCP has literally taken the mask off to reveal the dictator within.

28
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

The UCP was called out by the Court for trying to silence the Justice System on the issue of the proposed referendum on Alberta separating from Canada.

An Alberta judge says a proposed referendum question on Alberta separating from Canada is unconstitutional, in a decision given less than 24 hours after the provincial government introduced legislation that would have ended the court proceeding.

Once Bill 14 came into force, the court action would have been discontinued, preventing Court of King's Bench Justice Colin Feasby from issuing a decision, even though several days of arguments had already been presented.

...

He added what he called an "epilogue," which specifically addressed the impact of the proposed legislation.

"The legal consequence of discontinuing this proceeding prior to a decision would be to silence the Court," he said.

The judge called the move to change the legislation antithetical to the rule of law and democracy.

"The public is entitled to the fruits of this process that has been conducted largely at their expense so that if they are asked to vote on Alberta independence, they have a tool that may help them make sense of the legal dimensions of the secession of Alberta from Canada."

Feasby noted that the court case had been prioritized at the expense of other justice system participants waiting for their cases to be heard.

"Alberta’s cavalier disregard for court resources and lack of consideration for the parties and First Nations intervenors who participated in this proceeding in good faith is disappointing to say the least."

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 13 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Axon's rep basically says that their mass surveillance cameras don't see colour, just people. Then follows with the main factor is skin tone (??). A problem that was essentially noted as far back as...2019. What development in the technology is she talking about?

According to Ann-Li Cooke, Axon Enterprise’s director of responsible AI:

In response to the report, Cooke said there has been a development in the technology since 2019.

“There are gaps in both race and gender at that time,” she said. “As we did our due diligence on evaluating multiple models, we were also looking to see if there were race-based differences, and we found that in ideal conditions, that is not the case.

“Race is not the limiting factor today, the limiting factor is on skin tone. And so when there are varying conditions, such as distance [or] dim lighting, there will be different optical challenges with body-worn camera[s] — and all cameras — in detecting and matching darker-skinned individuals than lighter-skinned individuals.”

Also note that the facial-recognition technology seems to have a fatal flaw when it comes to women with darker skin.

However, Gideon Christian, an associate professor of AI and law at the University of Calgary, said the inequities attached to facial-recognition technology are too great to ignore and that he believes there is not enough recent research to suggest any significant improvement.

“Facial-recognition technology has been shown to have its worst error rate in identifying darker-skinned individuals, especially black females,” he said.

In some case studies, Christian said facial-recognition technology has shown about a 98 per cent accuracy rate in identifying white male faces, but that it also has about a 35 per cent error rate in identifying darker-skinned women.

You know what was a problem with the technology back in 2019? LLMs are coded by primarily white males, and their idea for "normal" hard codes bias into the models. These "AI" products essentially show their coders' bias by discriminating what falls outside of that normal.

For example, from "How tech's white male workforce feeds bias into AI", by Aimee Picchi:

The report highlights several ways AI programs have created harmful circumstances to groups that already suffer from bias. Among them are:

An Amazon AI hiring tool that scanned resumes from applicants relied on previous hires' resumes to set standards for ideal hires. However, the AI started downgrading applicants who attended women's colleges or who included the word "women's" in their resumes.
Amazon's Rekognition facial analysis program had difficulty identifying dark-skinned women. According to one report, the program misidentified them as men, although the program had no problem identifying men of any skin tone.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ai-bias-problem-techs-white-male-workforce/

12
submitted 4 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

https://archive.is/YP3IY

The Globe and Mail's Carrie Tait, Tom Cardoso, and Matthew Scace, reveal that Sam Mraiche, an alleged central figure in the CorruptCare scandals, had deeper ties to Premier Smith than previously acknowledged. I'll include the highlights from the article, but it's worth a read.

The Globe’s investigation, published Saturday, revealed that Mr. Mraiche’s connections to the governing United Conservative Party are more extensive than previously reported.

...

Ms. Smith, speaking to reporters at the United Conservative Party’s annual meeting in Edmonton on Saturday, maintained that she treated Mr. Mraiche just as she would any other executive.

“I have always said that I have seen him socially a handful of times, as I have with many, many individuals who want to do business with our government.”

...

In a letter MHCare sent to the government in April, it said: “The unspectacular truth is that Mr. Mraiche’s interactions with government, those in elected office and senior staff fit entirely within the established parameters of typical government relations for the CEO of a commercial entity.”

...

The investigation, for example, found that Mr. Mraiche joined Ms. Smith’s inner circle in a hotel suite to watch the provincial election results in May, 2023.

“When you are waiting for the results to come in, especially in a close race like it was in 2023, you are surrounded only by [your] absolute closest advisers,” Mr. Nenshi said in an interview Sunday. Calgarians elected Mr. Nenshi as their mayor three times before he became leader of the NDP last year.

...

The Globe’s story on Saturday revealed that Ms. Smith’s schedule included a dinner at Mr. Mraiche’s home and a Zoom call with him and a former Alberta Health Services procurement official before she became Premier.

Further, newly obtained photos show Ms. Smith, five cabinet ministers, and senior political staff with Mr. Mraiche in a box suite during the Edmonton Oilers playoff run in 2024.

10
submitted 4 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

Your Public Service Announcement that Operation Total Recall continues.

Fourteen Alberta legislature members with Premier Danielle Smith's United Conservative Party caucus are facing recall petitions from constituents.

The province's Recall Act was brought in under former UCP premier Jason Kenney as a way to empower citizens and hold politicians accountable between general elections.

Under the legislation, a petitioner must submit a reason in 100 words or less about why they feel an MLA should be recalled. The person must live in the constituency and pay a $500 processing fee. There are no set criteria on what the reasons can be.

If the petition is approved by Elections Alberta, the applicant has 90 days to collect enough names from people in the constituency to trigger a vote. The number of signatures must be equal to 60 per cent of votes cast in the constituency in the 2023 election.

If enough signatures are collected and verified, a constituency-wide vote is held within four months to determine whether the MLA should be recalled. If more than half vote yes, the member is removed from the job and a byelection is held.

https://operationtotalrecall.ca/

37
submitted 4 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

The Alberta Forever Canada petition, also known as the "Forever Canadian" petition, needed 293,976 signatures to be successful. Elections Alberta said the petition had 438,568 valid signatures counted and 404,293 verified signatures after a random statistical sampling method was applied with a 95 per cent confidence level.

The Forever Canadian petition was launched to counter Alberta separatists who want a referendum on the province's independence.

The petition, launched by former deputy premier Thomas Lukaszuk asks: "Do you agree that Alberta should remain within Canada?"

Elections Alberta said it's estimated about 13.6 per cent of electors in the province signed the petition.

While the petition could trigger a referendum, Lukaszuk has previously said that his goal is to have Premier Danielle Smith call the petition's question in the legislature and have MLAs vote on it.

Congratulations to everyone who volunteered, and to Canadians who made a stand against the UCP's siege of Alberta.

13
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

If hardworking Canadians wanted to gamble their earnings at the casino, I think they'd prefer to do that on their own terms. They certainly don't need their savings taken by an AIMCo to do that for them.

Also, if the UCP don't want Alberta to cover the losses and restore the retirement monies of Canadians, then what's the point of AIMCo? I thought the whole idea of managed retirement funds was to INVEST money set aside for Canadian workers so they had some money to live on when they are old and retired. If the UCP feel that Alberta did nothing wrong to owe this lost retirement money that was gambled away, then lay criminal charges and lay claims against AIMCo's Officers and Managers.

With my thoughts upfront, I want to make sure I understand this situation correctly, AIMCo got to play/manage with money earned by hardworking Canadians. They were able to take an investment strategy that bet on market stability - called VOLTS - which clearly did not manage risk appropriately for a fund handling retirement savings. When AIMCo finally finished gambling the money away, the house takes maybe $1.3 Bln, and AIMCo asks the Canadians saving for their retirement to HOLD THE BAG.

When Canadians say they want their money back, the UCP propose new legislation "to prevent public sector pensions from suing the Alberta Investment Management Corp., or AIMCo, for decisions made before November 2024." So what is this exactly? The UCP want to shield Albertans? If we were to be protected, if our retirement monies were INVESTED, these gambling debts wouldn't have been incurred at all. You're protecting us after the fact from what exactly? Ourselves?

Maybe AIMCo? From "The blowback of AIMCo’s gamble with market volatility", by Andrew Willis, other experts and observers of AIMCo believe that the fund persistently underperforms. Worse, at least in the view of one University of Alberta Economist's review, the senior managers and CEOs of AIMCo have given themselves great pay bumps since 2008.

Performance is a continuing problem for AIMCo. The fund’s biggest customer is the $50-billion Local Authorities Pension Plan (LAPP), which covers health-care workers. LAPP recently said AIMCo failed to meet its performance benchmark for 46 consecutive quarters, or 11 years and six months. In 2016, the University of Alberta reviewed the decision to build one provincial fund manager. “The major beneficiaries of the transformation appear to be the senior managers and particularly the senior executives of AIMCo, whose pay has increased significantly [since 2008],” said study author Robert Ascah, an economics professor.

EDIT: Link

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-the-blowback-of-aimcos-gamble-with-market-volatility/

The UCP are covering up for an underperforming AIMCo, and there's no reason for Canadians to settle for this level of underperformance. Worse, now that AIMCo was clearly seen as failing to manage risk (diplomacy speak for gambling), what's the point of their existence?

Maybe my gambling reference is debatable. How about this? How many Canadians have to choose between medical bills, food, or housing in the future thanks to the chronic underperformance of AIMCo? If you're going to prevent Canadians from laying claim against Alberta and AIMCo, then allow them the option of taking their money elsewhere at no loss or penalties

12
submitted 5 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/canada@lemmy.ca

Aljazeera brings a disturbing report that wealthy Canadians and Americans paid to hunt people during the tragic conflict of Sarajevo.

22
submitted 5 months ago by runsmooth@kopitalk.net to c/alberta@lemmy.ca

Lund, who still lives and ranches in Taber area, near the banks of the Old Man River, downstream from the coal mines would be located, says he’s been fighting against coal mining for more than five years, but the campaign took on new urgency with news the government is developing a new coal mining policy.

“It’s called CIMI, it’s called the Coal Industry Modernization Initiative, which so far has only been consulting industry and not conservation groups, not the public,” said Lund.

259

Food for thought

According to the lawsuit and interviews Garza gave to local media, the claims stem from a recorded meeting between Garza and Campbell’s Vice President and Chief Information Security Officer Martin Bally. Garza, who began working remotely for the company in September 2024, said he met Bally at a restaurant in late 2024 believing they would be discussing his salary.

Instead, Garza alleges the executive delivered an hourlong tirade criticizing the company’s products, disparaging employees and customers, and making racially offensive remarks about Indian colleagues.

Local 4 News in Detroit broadcast portions of the recording. In it, a speaker identified as Bally is heard saying, "We have st for fking poor people. Who buys our st? I don’t buy Campbell’s products barely anymore. It’s not healthy now that I know what the f*‘s in it."

He also referenced "bioengineered meat," saying, "I don’t wanna eat a piece of chicken that came from a 3D printer."

The recording, which lasted longer than an hour and 15 minutes, included what Garza said was a "disgusting" rant alleged to be made by Bally about his coworkers: "Fing Indians don’t know a fing thing," and "Like they couldn’t think for their f***ing selves," it said in part.

The recording also allegedly captured Bally admitting he came to work after consuming marijuana edibles.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 15 points 5 months ago

Why do we have to listen to what this guy says his words meant back then? Is he an esteemed author? Do we have to analyze his intent? WHERE IS JA??

And you know people are getting nervous when the brother has to crawl out and “set the record straight”.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 16 points 5 months ago

I still say this is part of the larger American scam for AI. AI's just a tool, and certainly not autonomous as the stuff of movies. US companies are just using the concept of AI to layoff workers, and they're trying to lock in their AI services contracts before the bubble bursts.

This article falls into the scam pile for me.

Plus I'm fairly certain Zuckerberg should be charged for Crimes Against Humanity, but that seems to be an issue for another day.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 14 points 5 months ago

Actively look to "give glory" or kudos to people around you.

On a practical level, be it an opposing force opponent, or even someone on your own squad - like a family member - looking to give glory encourages me to engage with my environment on a real level when I'm drifting off or getting lost. I'm trying to connect with the intentions of others while still trying to achieve my own. These don't have to be lose-lose situations, and they shouldn't be either.

If I can compliment someone on a tactic or a response committed under stress, I'm trying to say I see the other person. I'm also saying honestly that the action was valid, and others can understand my position without guessing. In a world where some feel they have to live by deception or seek glory for themselves exclusively, simply validating someone else gives strength and encourages others to tough out their positions in the face of toxicity.

You're also forcing a change of perspective, and refraining from dwelling on the faults of others or yourself.

Even if the kudos goes to the opposition, I'd rather compliment someone I believe I can work with, and build mutual respect.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 17 points 5 months ago

Almost sounds like fintech similar to what one might see in Singapore in their NETS system. I think this Konek system is designed to give Canadians an alternative payment system independent of Visa and Mastercard, while offering businesses and customers reduced transaction rates.

[-] runsmooth@kopitalk.net 15 points 6 months ago

The UCP is short-circuiting democracy. They're supposed to be elected to represent the people. Their role is to carry the constitution and the legal protections afforded within. But here, the government is acting in bad faith.

They're not negotiating with the teachers. There may even be good grounds to suggest that the government never intended to negotiate in good faith because they contemplated the use of the NWC.

By invoking the NWC, as you say, the UCP are not pushing parties to further negotiations or arbitration. They're just telling the teachers and the students that you have no rights, you have no other choice, and there's no option to go to court.

The UCP have committed an affront to freedom of expression, and collective bargaining across the country. There may not be any other logical choice but to strike.

view more: ‹ prev next ›

runsmooth

0 post score
0 comment score
joined 6 months ago