• Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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    20 hours ago

    This headline is subtly dismissive.

    “Angry” and “right now” both suggest a transient state. That’s not what we’re seeing.

    “Canada has finally had enough of the USA” would be a more apt title; or “Canada reaches its breaking point.”

    Alongside of the #Never51 hashtag is an almost equally frequent #NeverGoBack. Canada, as a nation, as a people, are making the decision to go their own way, and never be so beholden to any country as we have been to the USA since 1959.

    Never. Go. Back.

      • HonoredMule@lemmy.ca
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        3 hours ago

        Some of the public are people like me. I stopped giving any money to Blizzard back when they made StarCraft (II?) require a Battle.NET account…or was it patching out already present offline LAN support? It was also hearing about shitty labor practices and workplace harassment at some point. My memory of why is pretty spotty, but the “don’t give Blizzard money” part has stayed crystal clear for decades now. I genuinely don’t remember why I first blacklisted EA games (might be commitment to DRM, might be just because they’re such a shitty company), but it’s on that list for life.

        Heck, between 3rd-party DRM, loot boxes, and everything from “crunch time” development cycles to transphobia, I’ve been all but done with AAA gaming for several years. I could hardly be a gamer at all any more, if not for the rise of indie gaming, but that’s not really my point right now.

        The point is I remember the important, actionable bits. And I think most other Canadians will also retain their simple conclusions that won’t need re-evaluation. After this, they’ll have a solitary pedestal in their mind palace just to store one special conclusion from all of this:

        Fuck the U.S.

        And after floundering around for a bit, Canadians will find the indie trade they love; in a few years, they won’t even miss AAA trading.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          12 hours ago

          That’s about right everywhere. 2 is a big ask, only huge scandals last that long.

          Most people just aren’t that into politics. They still vote, though.

      • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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        16 hours ago

        The public’s memory is immaterial. The public really has no long term power. Decisions are made for us by politicians and businesses.

        They’re the one’s who need to remember that the US has threatened their positions.

        Voting with your wallet doesn’t make for sustained, long term change. It requires too much work, and it’s umder constant attack by marketing.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          16 hours ago

          The public really has no long term power. Decisions are made for us by politicians and businesses.

          If you had said short term I’d agree with you, it’s all politicians, but over the long term public will has made a lot of changes the Lords of old would not have approved of. Getting reelected is hard and even safe seats aren’t forever.

          We do not live in a dictatorship, and we don’t have to pay bribes to the local RCMP or say nice things about the Prime Minister like we would in a dictatorship. Hell, businesses can’t even donate the same way as voters in Canada, all they really do is whine and threaten doom.

      • m0darn@lemmy.ca
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        15 hours ago

        The other thought I had was NORAD but my quick googling points to 1958 for that, and 59 for the arrow.

        another one issue that I considered was the King-Byng affair, but that was in the 20s