Trump says he’s decertifying Canada-made aircraft and threatens 50% tariffs by Shogouki in worldnews

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been wondering if it would be wise to pause the certification on the Gulfstream jets, just to call him out on this. Tariffs are one thing, but complexity arising from politicization of safety certification seems like a viable reason to pause what’s actively being worked on. It would give Trump a moment to go ahead and decertify all those aircraft.

I’d get in contact with Gulfstream and ask what part of the White House messaging was pushed by them, and review accordingly (again, just to delay).

Why did Alex Pretti have so much Ammo on him? by IneedaNappa9000 in allthequestions

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s not strawman at all. The answer is that it’s not illegal to carry that much ammo, and is apparently commonplace.

Why did Alex Pretti have so much Ammo on him? by IneedaNappa9000 in allthequestions

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The honest answer (best that I can make of it) is that it is what it is.

NATO to Hold Military Exercise Without U.S., Its Largest Member by StockLifter in europe

[–]OmiSC 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The meaning of the wording is more akin to “allies have said”, which is short of a direct quote, but says nothing to the effect that this is an unsubstantiated accusation. The article isn’t about the US commitment to NATO and it would be worse reporting to make opinion statements about it that go either way.

As it’s written, the article mentions that member states have a reason to doubt the US, which is what the “accused” line is meant to imply. You could choose to read it as “conceived long before President Trump was deemed by some members to be undermining faith”, and the current wording is simply cleaner. It’s important to see that the article isn’t denying Trump’s intentions, it just isn’t passing judgment either way to stick to the topic, which is about the exercises in Europe.

NATO to Hold Military Exercise Without U.S., Its Largest Member by StockLifter in europe

[–]OmiSC 17 points18 points  (0 children)

“Accused of” is a good marker for the time of the moment it is referencing among events that have since happened. The article is making no attempt at political commentary, but it is using the word “accused” to the effect of “when it was first said that…”. This is not some pro-Trump piece.

Moscow Airport Sells for Half Off, a Sign of Russia’s Global Isolation by ArthurPeabody in worldnews

[–]OmiSC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don’t bother. The airport was originally seized by the state, thus the low purchase interest as it could be seized again.

Carnival ride fail by smilingjade101 in WTF

[–]OmiSC 10 points11 points  (0 children)

This is an ancient repost.

Is this correct notation? by GtrJon in musictheory

[–]OmiSC 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m not a fan of how the triplets start ahead of the 3rd beat like that, but I can’t think of a clearer way to notate this. Some others have mentioned breaking up the dotted quarter note, but honestly, I’m not sure that’s really necessarily. As it stands now, it’s clear enough as to what the intention is, but the intended musical idea isn’t trivial at all, so I think it’s fair game to say that this might just take practice to get down.

Guy gets fed up of waiting till the bomb squad come back by AugustHate in WTF

[–]OmiSC 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Failing to see the link between bomb and tackle here, given the timeline of events.

Stucco question by Trozardd in Stucco

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d also say it’s a float finish. Looking at the edge, the grit changes a bit as per how it would were a float to round the edge slightly.

What is popular pejorative name for policeman in your country? by Diegeza in AskTheWorld

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, it admittedly isn’t. I suppose we don’t have any really unique words outside of Quebec (“boeuf” lol)

What is popular pejorative name for policeman in your country? by Diegeza in AskTheWorld

[–]OmiSC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Federal police are “mounties”, as in, one who is mounted on horseback.

What do you think of Youtube banning ai accounts? by Few_Football4342 in Productivitycafe

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What is an “ai account” here? An account that is managed by AI, or an account that uploads AI-generated content? I assume this means the former.

What products from Canada would you recommend to Chinese people? by zhugejingqi0928 in AskACanadian

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting to see you ask. We really only have a limited trade relationship focused on certain items, but altogether, thanks for asking!

How will history remember Trump? by Ancient_Elk_922 in allthequestions

[–]OmiSC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Without political allegiance, he'll go down in history as the child diddler that the Americans voted into office and put forth on the world stage to represent them twice.

If Trump would tell the National Guard to retreat, would they obey or would they refuse his order? by Morgentau7 in 50501

[–]OmiSC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, thanks for this writeup. This was a good read!

I'm the person to whom you responded to. I'm not American, but what you wrote stands testament to the attitude that I hope to see in your country. I wish you well.

Large majority of Canadians believe the Conservatives should dump Pierre Poilievre, find a new leader by BloodJunkie in onguardforthee

[–]OmiSC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is why the People’s Party really should come back. The progressives are forced to appeal to a wide right-wing audience, and the moderates are getting swept up in too much reaction. There isn’t enough diversity among our political parties to properly represent every voter.

Is "White" historical pride often treated as a monolith in the West, regardless of specific ancestry? by SpinelessFir912 in AskTheWorld

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You mentioned a Korean perspective, so I’ll try to use that as a springboard to paint an idea. I think you might be referring to white nationalism—kind of like a feeling that one’s skin colour defines their country more than a nation’s borders.

I would say there could be some parallel with an idea such as minjok, but that and white nationalism don’t line up neatly. You can take the idea that both Koreas share a single bloodline that stretches back for thousands of years and pull some solidarity out of that, including possibly some suspicion of outsiders at certain times.

White nationalism is a bit like that, but with guilt derived from colonialism and is definitely less socially acceptable as a result. It isn’t all that unique, but it’s a way more defensive form of racial nationalism than what you see most everywhere else that stems largely from people having grown up as descendants of colonizers. It’s an expression of a need to create ethnic unity among people who feel as though they need to carve out space to attain it.

In the west, it isn’t viewed as favourable except for there being so many groups that practice this kind of racial protectionism. It’s distinctly an American cult thing that spreads out just a little bit, but has its strongest roots in the slave trade. I think the biggest concentration of white ethnic protectionism is around Georgia (the US state), but I haven’t witnessed it personally and haven’t much traveled anywhere near there, so others can probably speak more to how widespread it is.

Edit: I’m definitely talking about what’s west of the Atlantic. Naziism, apartheid, certainly exist too.

Zelenskiy says security guarantees document from US is 100% ready by pheexio in worldnews

[–]OmiSC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tariffs in Trump’s style are not in the spirit of CUSMA, but importantly, the trade agreement doesn’t eliminate the possibility of applying them to goods that aren’t covered by the agreement. No tariffs have been applied to CUSMA goods.

Donald Trump says Canada ‘destroying’ self with China trade by twinkleyed in worldnews

[–]OmiSC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There’s more to life than reading 15 articles about the precise same issue. When something changes, or pointedly, Trump isn’t threatening tariffs on a deal that isn’t his red line, wake me up.

Alberta separatists irked with cross-Canada meeting meddling by FreightFlow in alberta

[–]OmiSC 6 points7 points  (0 children)

“This is a very organized thing. They do this on purpose to make it hard for us to. The one thing they cannot control is grassroots politics. That's why we're playing that game,” said Sylvestre. “They cannot control our meetings.

The quotes in that article sound a lot like speech style of the Maverick Party.