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145
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • Bootlicker take btw.

    Canadians and the public tend to be supportive of infrastructure or spending that supports their life or provides tangible good.

    The Canadian military has time and time again proven to support the Canadian people in times of crisis. Whether that be snowfall in Toronto or record flooding in Ottawa or annual forest fires in Alberta that are getting worse.

    We can spend the money on the military to ensure its there for when we need it. Provide the military money to house, clothe and feed those soldiers, or...

    We can fund AI that most Canadians are worried about.

  • If you're lucky enough to be placed in an area that has room and board. Many new Canadian soldiers, airmen and sailors are forced to live in their cars or rely on the local economy. Base infrastructure and base housing are falling apart. Literally asbestos walls filled with rodents. Or WW1 horse barns turned into troop bays.

    The lack of funding to the military also affects housing for the general public. No money for the CAF to build houses means 10k+ soldiers per base taking housing and apartments away from the local economy.

    No funding to the CAF means less CAF owned infrastructure, means less housing for the public. Worse conditions for the military means fewer soldiers to protect our sovereignty when the call comes. Money spent on funding the military can be and is money spent on housing.

  • Nope! It's still used almost everywhere. Commonly used as a backup on demolition setups like a ring-main.

    Not so sure about civilian applications in demolitions or pyrotechnics but most global militaries still use it from what I've read.