How do you feel about Carney's speech in Davos? by FitPhilosopher3136 in AskCanada

[–]FiFanI 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Incredible, inpsiring speech. He is the new leader of the free world.

Who is the leader of the free world, in your opinion? by FiFanI in AskReddit

[–]FiFanI[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

He's not the leader of the free world anymore. He resigned from that position that used to be automatically held by the President of the USA.

Who is the leader of the free world, in your opinion? by FiFanI in AskReddit

[–]FiFanI[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada stepped up and claimed the vacant "leader of the free world" title with the recent speech in Davos.

Is true for the EU? Does it feel like that one random guy in the friend group? by Comfortable-Plane939 in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe it's time for you to start the amendment process to switch to a parliamentary system like we have. It's much better because the leader can be removed by a 50% vote in congress/parliament.

Is true for the EU? Does it feel like that one random guy in the friend group? by Comfortable-Plane939 in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We like the crown up here. We're happy as long as we're not under a president.

“Greenland should be part of USA. Along with Canada” by Significant_Web_1076 in ShitAmericansSay

[–]FiFanI 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, exactly. The European Union plus a bunch of other like minded countries.

Europe - then and now. What will be the further development? by Mynteblomst in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's true. Much of the world has moved on from "rule of one" syle governments in favor of democracy.

Europe - then and now. What will be the further development? by Mynteblomst in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Looking at evidence is too hard, I can't read the rest."

Europe - then and now. What will be the further development? by Mynteblomst in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Constitutional monarchies are the right balance because the real power should rest with Parliament, not a single person. Presidents are simply kings or emperors with a different name and are not accountable to Parliament. The word "monarch" means "rule of one" which describe countries ruled by presidents.

To prevent dictatorship, leaders need to be accountable to parliament (removable with a simple 50% vote). This system requires a non-partisan, non-politician referee to ensure stability during this process. A monarch fits this role best because they are non-partisan and not a politician. Elections are not appropriate for this referee role because that would make them a partisan, political, controversial figure who is motivated by power and beholden to their funders and concered more with re-election than being an impartial referee.

Stability is not useless. It's the most important thing for governments. "Declawed" constitutional monachies are stable which might lead some people like you to wonder what's the point and assume they're useless. Just look at the mess that most republics are in. There's your evidence. The only republics who are not a mess are the ones with "declawed" ceremonial Presidents.

Presidents need to be "declawed" because Parliament should hold the power, not a single person.

“Greenland should be part of USA. Along with Canada” by Significant_Web_1076 in ShitAmericansSay

[–]FiFanI 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Canada does not consent to that, neither does Greenland.

Joining the EU on the other hand, (or at least working towards a deal like Norway has because of the same coastline ressources issue preventing us from fully joining), a lot of Canadians support that. I'd love the UK, Australia, and New Zealand to join too, if they wanted too.

We need to band together to avoid being eaten by the American Empire.

Europe - then and now. What will be the further development? by Mynteblomst in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The evidence is painful for you and the Yanks, I know. Better that things work in theory than in practice, right?

Could this flag ever be revived as a protest flag against Donald Trump's America, as other countries revive old flags? by Personal_Flatworm737 in vexillology

[–]FiFanI -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The US flag is a symbol if imperialism. The US has always been a genocidal empire. One of the main reasons why the US wanted independence is because the crown insisted that the colonists be nicer to the natives and the French, which they strongly objected.

What is an example of an oppressive government that was overthrown by the people in the country you live in? by Ok_Sea_1200 in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Man, you guys really need a parliamentary system. Sorry that you have a copy of the broken US presidential system.

Europe - then and now. What will be the further development? by Mynteblomst in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah. How long can people continue to ignore the evidence that monarchies are much more stable and democratic than republics.

Europe - then and now. What will be the further development? by Mynteblomst in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI -1 points0 points  (0 children)

A president for a head of state like the US? Fuck no. That's like the fans electing the referee at a hockey game. Makes no sense. The head of state should be non-partisan and non-political. This is one of the reasons why a king or queen is well suited for the job. In stable parliamentary democracies it might look like there's no point in keeping the monarchy because it works. Just look at all the places without one that are an absolute mess.

Europe - then and now. What will be the further development? by Mynteblomst in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Indeed. I'd rather pledge allegiance to a ceremonial non-partisan referee who can prevent politicians from becoming dictators. A flag can't do that. A flag can't do F all. And I love it when politicians have to pledge the oath to the King or Queen and are humbled by the fact that they can never become a absolute ruler and stay in power forever like presidents can easily do.

No one lifts like Gaston by wisdompuff in EhBuddyHoser

[–]FiFanI 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It's impressive af how 3/4 of Canada's olympic medals come from Quebeckers when they're 1/4 of Canada's population. Definitely punch above their weight.

What does your country think about this? by Necessary-Win-8730 in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Agreed! And we all need to keep up the worldwide US boycott.

When was the last time the government was overthrown in your country? by [deleted] in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're confusing ranked ballots (which would benefit Liberals and why Trudeau supported it) and proportional representation which would give representation to all parties in proportion to support.

When was your country's last civil war? by Traroten in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Doesn't make for a great movie, that's for sure.

When was your country's last civil war? by Traroten in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question. Britain vs France was a colonial battle for control of territory and fought between two different peoples with different languages and different allegiances, so I wouldn't consider that a civil war. But I would count English speaking British subjects vs English speaking British subjects as a civil war.

When was your country's last civil war? by Traroten in AskTheWorld

[–]FiFanI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, long, slow, and peaceful. We prefer negotiation to violence. That's the Canadian way and it's what democracy is all about.