I would hope an economist would focus on the right incentives for the market to drive demand.
Herein lies an issue: the fact that he's an economist doesn't mean that he's in for the economics of the greater good. And the fact that he himself has a few strong beliefs on what the economic solutions should be, doesn't mean he'll actually make them happen.
If I was a CBC editor, I would tone it down, yes. If that's what you meant, then I agree that we don't have to platform every little media bait he tweets. But here's Lemmy, there's no editorial.
if the police don’t have guns, who can safely respond to gun crime?
Police, with non-lethal weapons. Though I agree this is a very unbalanced scenario, so of course the police should have some gun availability until gun crime becomes very rare.
I claimed that legal gun owners rarely commit the crime, i made no claims on the origins of those guns.
The fact that you're trying to bring legal ownership to this discussions means that you are claiming that the origin of guns is an important detail. But at this point we already know that reducing the presence of guns in this world is good, and we already know that making it harder and harder to acquire guns helps reducing the presence of guns. So while true that legality matters in crime statistics, the main point still stands: gun laws can and should be more strict. There's never going to be a point in time where this sentence is not true, unless guns stop existing.
OK stupid Trump comments aside, I do think it's a diplomatic blunder for Trudeau to say that the tariff would kill the Canadian economy. Even if it would, better not to admit it, because pleading with a demon is guaranteed loss while at least a bluff could get some result. So I just hope this is hearsay and not really how things went down during those talks.
For 1 bd condos specifically prices did go down, because developers overshot the supply aiming for investors. But larger units are still very much underserved and there's too much demand.
Houses aren't expensive just because they're houses. They're expensive mostly because there's a big plot of land underneath, land that eventually will be required for a big tower that will sell like hot cakes. It's the same market because Canada has a market of land speculation.
And yet, it's not enough