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210
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Your comment is a great example of a car-centric mindset, in that everyone has or wants to have a vehicle which is not true at all.

    If bylaws require supplying parking lots for each suite/tenant, then that extra cost of buying the land (and more often removing land because the lots have to go underground) is tacked on to the total rent.

    So you're comment is factually untrue and honestly makes no sense.

  • what if my garage is full of crap and i can't park my car

    what if i have more then one car and i can't park my car

    what if i can't park my car right in front of an intersection

    cyclists should use the shitty alleyways meant for parking cars because the people that own cars don't park there

    Why don't drivers park in the alleyways? There's little car traffic there.

    Also, the alleyways in Edmonton rarely connect to anything as they are meant for... parking cars.

  • In this case there would never be "won by a single vote" because any party that gets a minimum percentage of the vote already has a seat. More importantly, the people that voted for the "losing party" would have better representation as more of the vote would go to smaller parties (that better represent the minority of people) thereby making the house of commons a better representation of Canada. In contrast FPTP means any party that get's >50% of the votes has most of the power which means anyone that didn't vote for them is essentially left without a voice in the HoC, or at least a greatly diminished voice.

    Personally I just really hate seeing policy whiplash with liberal and conservative PMs undoing each others bills when one or the other is elected (especially on a provincial level). 🤦

    ...this is also not to mention PR would likely increase voter turnout by a lot.

    https://www.fairvote.ca/what-is-proportional-representation/

    *I think there would be no single MP for any one riding, but rather each MP in that riding that has a minimum amount of votes has a seat. I'm not too well versed in how it would be implemented in Canada so I would check out fairvotes website rather then listening to a tired biochem student.

  • We really need proportional representation... IMO it's good that the riding isn't conservative anymore, but I wish that ~half the population of that riding didn't just essentially elected no one.

    Listen, betting on which horse will when the campaign race is no basis for a system of government.

  • I have a slightly more positive view of manga because it's more likely to be hand drawn (March Comes in Like a Lion, Made in Abyss) but one of the things I really don't like about manwha/manhua is that it's always (as far as I've seen) a continuous strip which means I have to scroll a lot. I have an auto-scroll extension but it makes me dizzy after a while. I do appreciate how each of them have their own unique style, I think that's pretty cool.

    Also my first "manga" was Scott Pilgrim. Author's Canadian and IIRC it was read right to left but everyone still called it a manga.