I was just reading the CBC news article about MP Bernier criticizing Flaherty about his call to intervene over the Manulife interest rate caffufful. Some of the posted comments below the article are priceless. LOL
"Bernier is right . What Flaherty did is border line illegal and he should at least own-up to the error. Let the markets do what they have to do - we are not in a dictatorship.
Luckily that BMO did not react to this kind of intimidation. The people at ManuLife obviously lack a part of the anatomy located in the crotch area!"
Luckily that BMO did not react to this kind of intimidation. The people at ManuLife obviously lack a part of the anatomy located in the crotch area!"
" I hope Maxime likes to sit in the "nose bleed" seats of the House because that's where he's going to be once the Boss gets through with him over not following the company line!"
"Jim Flaherty should be getting his own "house" (excuse the pun) in order instead of meddling in personal debt decisions and the "free" market.
He has proven to be less than stellar at balancing the books of Ontario and Canada. It's a pathetic track record based on tax cuts to rich individuals and corporations with little or no payback.
Any Finance Minister that inherits a surplus and turns it into a structural deficit needs help with his own porfolio. It is difficult to listen to his advice to others when he won't follow it himself."
He has proven to be less than stellar at balancing the books of Ontario and Canada. It's a pathetic track record based on tax cuts to rich individuals and corporations with little or no payback.
Any Finance Minister that inherits a surplus and turns it into a structural deficit needs help with his own porfolio. It is difficult to listen to his advice to others when he won't follow it himself."
My opinion is the WHOLE HARPER GOVERNMENT STINKS
Thanks Ivan ..... that's the smell of brains rotting
Call it Generation Interrupted.
Bystanders to the economic train wreck of the Great Recession, members of Generation Y have acutely suffered the aftershocks and a painful recovery four years in the making.
Although past generations faced much more daunting challenges — global wars, deeper and more widespread economic depression — this rising crop of Canadians, also known as millennials or echo boomers, has also seen its future hijacked by events not of its own making.
Of the nine million Canadians born since 1980, about five million are over the age of 18. This should be prime time, when careers are launched, résumés built, families begun, and power assumed. Yet millennials are struggling, consumed by worries over jobs and the future, an exclusive poll conducted for The Huffington Post Canada by Abacus Data shows.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/11/20/generation-y-canada-millennials_n_2078000.html?utm_hp_ref=canada
Call it Generation Interrupted.
Bystanders to the economic train wreck of the Great Recession, members of Generation Y have acutely suffered the aftershocks and a painful recovery four years in the making.
Although past generations faced much more daunting challenges — global wars, deeper and more widespread economic depression — this rising crop of Canadians, also known as millennials or echo boomers, has also seen its future hijacked by events not of its own making.
Of the nine million Canadians born since 1980, about five million are over the age of 18. This should be prime time, when careers are launched, résumés built, families begun, and power assumed. Yet millennials are struggling, consumed by worries over jobs and the future, an exclusive poll conducted for The Huffington Post Canada by Abacus Data shows.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/11/20/generation-y-canada-millennials_n_2078000.html?utm_hp_ref=canada
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