33 Replies to “May 22, 2022: Reader Tips”

  1. Well Australia voted.

    Seems we went from a charisma vacuum fence sitter who refused to actually show leadership to a charisma vacuum who can’t remember the details of his own party’s policies, runs from press conferences when questions get hard and brags about growing up a burden to the welfare system.

    The Apathy Election.

    Next three years are going to be… painful.

        1. Much like the stakeholders that government talks about. Some get the steak, most get the tube steak.

  2. Nice to see that there was a time when white men were allowed to build something that wasn’t luxury apartments for sale only to people who speak pitch-perfect Mandarin.

    1. If they tried to build it today, it wouldn’t pass an environmental impact assessment.

    1. Something tells me that you will now be seeing many more of these stories in the legacy media.

  3. Sweden’s Karolinska Ends All Use of Puberty Blockers and Cross-Sex Hormones for Minors Outside of Clinical Studies”

    A great article that also notes that Trudeau is bucking a “growing international concern over the proliferation of medical interventions that have a low certainty of benefits, while carrying a significant potential for medical harm”. “In Canada, Bill C-6 goes even further, seeking to criminalize psychological treatment modalities, which represent the primary non-invasive alternative to medical and surgical “affirmation.”
    Only in Canada you say? Pity!

    https://segm.org/Sweden_ends_use_of_Dutch_protocol

      1. Read where the two locations for possible contact are. A theatre and a bar.

        Guess which well known district in Toronto they are in?

    1. No, it only infects people who have been in very, very, very close contact with an infected person. All cases to date have been male.

      1. Within 6 feet social distance or 6 inches intimate contact? Fauci and Tam will declare it a public health threat and require a vaccine

    2. Can’t believe it’s monkey pox season already. I still have my Ukraine decorations up.

  4. Thank you for this documentary about the time when young people felt good about their future.

    Today’s kid will never know that feeling.

  5. The St. Lawrence Seaway? Prairies farmers got to pay for it, the absolute longest route to get prairie grain to salt water. Unload grain and carry it on lake freighters to Montreal or Quebec. Yorkton to Churchill, Manitoba is 1,000 km. Yorkton to Vancouver is 2,000 km. Yorkton to Montreal is 3,000 km. and includes unloading the grain from rail cars to lake freighters for half the trip. All brought to you by the Canadian Wheat Board. How did American farmers get their grain to market? The Mississippi.

    1. Trivia – Pennsylvania has 3 large ports – Philadelphia on the Atlantic; Pittsburgh on the Ohio/Mississippi; and Erie on Lake Erie/St. Lawrence

  6. Interesting item in the discussion forum at Agriville dot com – Commodity Marketing.
    Will this lead to the next “Sky-is-Falling” hysteria?
    Some of the comments are hilarious.
    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    “Air pollution from tire wear particles can be 1,000 times worse than what comes out of a car’s exhaust, Emissions Analytics has found. Harmful particle matter from tires is a very serious and growing environmental problem, and is currently unregulated.

    Non-exhaust emissions (NEE) – particles released into the air from brake wear, tire wear, road surface wear and resuspension of road dust during on-road vehicle usage – are currently believed to constitute the majority of primary particulate matter from road transport: 60% of PM2.5 and 73% of PM10.

    The 2019 report ‘Non-Exhaust Emissions from Road Traffic’ by the UK Government’s Air Quality Expert Group (AQEG), recommended that NEE immediately be recognized as a source of ambient concentrations of airborne particulate matter, even for vehicles with zero exhaust emissions, such as EVs.

    To understand the scale of the problem, Emissions Analytics performed some tire wear testing. Using a popular family hatchback running on brand new, correctly inflated tires, it was found that the car emitted 5.8g/km of particles.

    Compared with regulated exhaust emission limits of 4.5mg/km, completely unregulated NEEs are higher by a factor of over 1,000. Emissions Analytics notes that this could be even higher if the vehicle were running on underinflated or budget tires.”…

    What a crazy world… EV’s are heavier… faster… make more “pollution”…

    “What is even more frightening is that while exhaust emissions have been tightly regulated for many years, tire wear is totally unregulated – and with the increasing growth in sales of heavier SUVs and battery-powered electric cars, non-exhaust emissions are a very serious problem.”

    Irony on top of Irony… this is “tireing”…I

    1. And our city council has congratulated themseklves on saving the planet by buying electric busses.

      1. The same city that lost power this weekend. No electricity, no EVs moving.

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