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809
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Makes sense to me. I was at my most sedentary during the pandemic. That sedentariness kind of became a new normal. I'm still trying to change that

  • BMI isn't a valid indicator of health for (young) people with lots of muscle mass from weight training (e.g., competitive athletes). Those people are a relatively small group in society, however. BMI is a somewhat valid indicator of health for most members of society, which makes it a reasonable population health metric. It has its drawbacks and there's plenty of nuances to argue about but it's very easy to use, and that handiness earns it its popularity

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    The Frightening Lesson from Texas

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    B.C. nature corridors get $8 million to help boost protections

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    RCMP apprehend Quebec terrorists after discovering manifesto written only in English

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Musicians fight uphill battle as AI infiltrates streaming platforms, cutting into royalties

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Measles spread 'like wildfire' among unvaccinated children in northeast B.C., health officer says

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    New Brunswick reports first case of measles this year, says more are likely

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Ottawa not on track to meet 2026 deadline for $10-a-day child care: report

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Rogers Turns to AI Chatbot, Cuts Partner Call Centre Jobs

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Alberta Health Care in Staffing Turmoil Following Premier Smith’s Reforms, Says New Report

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    CIJA should not influence public policy on hate crimes

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Kanehsatake 35 years later: Remembering the day Canada sent in the military to violently clear Mohawk land for a golf course

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Death, Taxes, and Building Canada’s Social Infrastructure

  • Fair. But it is 'just' journalism. This isn't an opposition party press release

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Snap out of denial—Mark Carney’s rightward-rushing agenda is just getting started

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Not just a few bad apples: The Canadian Armed Forces has a nagging far-right problem

  • I edited it per your suggestion. I appreciate the feedback

  • Our current political climate of the Carney Liberals, PP, and weakened NDP reminds me a lot of the US two-party system that only benefits the uber wealthy. I really hope we don't continue down that path.

    I don't see the Liberals changing course, unfortunately. (The Carney Liberals feel a lot different from the Trudeau Liberals.) I think corporate-owned news and social media keep pushing people to the right. So, the Liberals can make a strategic argument to right-shift to try and steal Conservative voters (and appease corporate donors) while taking most left-of-centre voters for granted as ABC (anyone but Conservative) voters who'll still vote for them as the party drifts right. Their future slogan: at least we're not the CPC.

    It seems like it's up to the NDP to save Canadian politics from becoming a big-money scheme like south of the border and give working class people a voice in parliament again. My gosh do I wish they find a Zohran Mamdani or someone who can reinvigorate the party.

    I've seen this go far enough after 6 months or so of Carney. I hope he redeems himself in the eyes of working class Canadians, but I am not betting on it. I think this is closer to how he'll govern (like a US moderate Democrat) than the "elbows up" nationalism he advertised himself as.

    (edited to add paragraphs)

  • With COP30 climate negotiations coming up later this year in Belém, Brazil, “this will hamstring international climate cooperation at the worst possible time,” one official told Politico. It’s “just strategically fucking dumb when it comes to China,” they added, creating a leadership vacuum that China could fill (as they’ve consistently said they would).

    But that doesn’t mean Canada or other countries can walk back their climate commitments, says David Crane, former economics editor at the Toronto Star, in a post for The Hill Times. “When the history of this era is written, it will be the Trump administration’s reckless undermining of urgent global efforts to address climate change that will stand out as one of its greatest failings,” Crane writes. At some point, “the U.S. will again become a ‘responsible stakeholder’. But in the meantime, its failure to assume responsibility is no excuse for Canada or any other country to slack off. The climate challenge cannot be put off to tomorrow. It is an urgent challenge for today.”

    At some point, “the U.S. will again become a ‘responsible stakeholder’.

    I hope so. I hope that happens before other countries join them as 'irresponsible stakeholders'

  • Wow, this is big. I mean, I didn't think things were going to get any more affordable, but this deepens my belief in that prediction quite a bit. "Over 50% by 2035" sounds like a fiefdom, because people got a lot more bills than rent/housing - or at least that's my oldthink perspective lol. It's also sobering that this report was published in June and failed, insofar as I know, to make any splash in any Canadian mainstream news. I'm grateful for the Fediverse

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Central Saanich councillor calls on leaders to 'elbow up' on social media

  • Reminder: Calgary Herald is owned by Postmedia, which is owned by Republican-linked American private equity. Regard Postmedia articles with immense suspicion. To say they don't represent Canadians' interests is an understatement.

  • Incredibly well said about corporate harms, thank you!

  • To save some a click (as time-saving; I don't have anything against the Guardian): no ideological basis other than "anti-government" has been revealed by the RCMP.

  • These companies have also devastated local news media markets, peddle propaganda and disinformation in our societies which they claim is not their job to moderate, through their investments in AI are poised to become some of the biggest polluters, and many of them profit a lot from the ongoing genocide in occupied Palestine which is being used as a warfare and AI training lab

  • I agree with the Nobel Laureate in economics, Joseph E Stiglitz, who wrote this.

    Of course, when the most profitable companies in the world don’t pay their fair share of taxes, it just shifts the burden on to others.

    Apple was so successful in avoiding taxes in Europe that it is estimated that it paid in some years a tax of just 0.005% on its European profits.

  • Our (Lib under Trudeau) government banned TikTok to appease the US after they did the same under Biden. But Trump has since nullified the TikTok ban in the US. Why are we still going through with this? As a nice gift to the US tech oligarch (after we backtracked the Digital Services Tax on them)? Is the platform too leftwing for the government's liking?

  • It should be of little surprise that Ford has since fiercely pursued his dream ‘Fortress-AmCan’, at a devastating cost to Ontarians.

    There's almost no realistic threat China could pose to us right now that warrants us getting closer to the US and doing more to benefit Trump. My priority right now is to get as independent from the US as possible and fast

  • Oilsands giant Suncor has been fined $5,000 for burying known habitat for bank swallows during mining operations in northern Alberta three years ago.

    Also: Suncor's 2023 revenue was $53 billion CAD

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Hogan still silent on agency nurse healthcare scandal

  • To me, the probability of free and fair US presidential elections in 2028 is certainly less than 50% at this point, 6 month into his presidency

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Charlie Angus: American Dachau

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Ford government proposes new powers to control who gets electricity access

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Fin spotted close to Nova Scotia beach forces swimmers out of water

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Ontario health agency begins informing patients about months-old data breach