Dearche

joined 2 years ago
[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 10 points 2 months ago

Pretty much all of Toronto voted against him, with only rural GTA voting for.

It sucks that it's those that wanted this bastard out are the ones suffering because everybody else thought he was okay because he ignored them the entire previous term, while those who had been suffering his wrath the entire time have to suffer once again because of those completely unaffected by him.

At least Norther Ontario got the message. Too bad that was like five ridings.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 months ago (4 children)

What about wired, if you're in the GTA? I remember a few years back Bell offered free hookup if you signed up for Fibe. Don't know if they still do it, or what sort of restrictions there are, but it seemed to be a blanket offer at the time.

In the first place, this is an issue for legal cases, and I think that the province providing a temporary connection to those who need virtual court services makes more sense than giving Musk 100 million to give everybody permanent internet. This doesn't stop anybody who has no viable alternatives for day-to-day use from using Starlink, just that I think it's not the province's business spending so much money for a small selection's decisions. The cities already massively subsidize rural Canadians, so I can't help but feel like this is a poor way to give a much needed service to those in need.

We don't need to give all rural Canadians free internet at a cost of 1.5% of the entire provincial budget.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago (6 children)

My bad. I guess I mixed this up with something else.

Even still, the bandwidth and latency of traditional satellite internet isn't bad enough to be an issue for this. You can still stream with latency below 1s, more than enough for streaming, just not good enough for online games.

Besides, Xplore is a Canadian provider that does this already to service these areas specifically. Why go for a foreign provider when we have a perfectly serviceable local one for such a purpose? Yes, it's not a great provider, but for this use case, it is good enough and doesn't require giving a hundred million to a guy who's helping to destroy this country.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 months ago

It's just insane that he can say these things out loud during a rally as his prime talking point, and people actually support his view.

Denying rights for the sake of what? Perceived safety? This is literally how so many of the greatest trageties happened in this world, including this country.

I'm a proud Canadian, but I am also hyper-aware of the fact that my own countrymen were rounded up, had their property confiscated, and put into detention centers less than a century ago for the sake of "safety". That was the Japanese during WWII. Happened here and in the US, despite many of them volunteering to fight the Nazis the moment Canada entered the war. Some even managed to get deployed to Europe before their family members got locked up "just in case" some of them would side with Japan.

Every time someone mentions the infringement or revocation of rights, I'm reminded of that time thousands of completely innocent people got treated as cattle because of their appearances. This can happen to any group, for any reason the moment we allow the government to hold such power against us.

Would Conservative voters like it if PP got voted in and implemented such laws, then a few elections down the line, voting Conservative in the past is enough to get you locked up? Because this is exactly the sort of powers you are giving the government by agreeing with such policies. Hell, for voting for PP in general when he's so openly pushing for such laws.

I'm not for single issue voting, but I do think when someone has this bad of an idea, that single issue should disqualify someone from getting people's votes.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago

I'm not denying the need for them for women, or that it's greater, or that there are also issues with the existing shelters or anything. It's just that half the entire country's population is denied a form of emergency service just because it's less critical for them.

Look, I did a quick search, and found listings for womens' shelters that maxed out the listings I found in several different cities. More shelters than the service I used could show. But there are zero such services for men? Across the entire country? When 20% of reported cases are for men?

Look, I'm just trying to say that why isn't there at least one per province or something? Why isn't there a single half-baked part-time shelter anywhere in the entire country? It's a complete abandonment of an entire demographic compared simply being underfunded. It's like if there was zero funding going towards prostate cancer because breast cancer research was a higher priority.

It's the difference between trying your best with what little you got against not even trying at all because you have differing priorities. One is a sad story, the other is abandonment, and that's what I think is so terrible about it.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 6 points 2 months ago (8 children)

More affordable for high use, sure, but this article is speaking about for emergency use, which means that you'll almost never use it. Besides, the smallest version of Starlink still requires you to carry a laptop sized satellite antennae, compared to internet phone which is literally just a mobile phone the size of some of the early bar phones. One you can carry in your pocket at all times, the other useless unless if you're with your car at minimum along with any other devices needed to make it work.

Besides that, latency matters for shit in this case anyways.

The only use for Starlink that isn't serviced by more traditional means is high speed high bandwidth internet, but it doesn't make any sense why the province should give Adolf Musk any money to do so, let alone a tenth of a billion. People who want that service can pay for it themselves while the province can provide something more suited for lower level or emergency use that costs only a fraction the price and doesn't require signing with an overgrown child that manically laughs as he helps put his own country into the toilet.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

But it's hard to argue that the driver isn't a participant considering that they'd be within touching distance and in no way blocked off from the conversation. Even without actually saying anything, the driver was a passive particapant, or at least it would be argued that way if it ever went to court.

Since only one side needs to give permission to record, and since that permission likely can be taken in the EULA, no matter how scummy it is, this most likely isn't illegal. It's like claiming that a a porch camera can't record a crime because the camera's owner wasn't a direct participant of the crime.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 months ago

As a streamer I've been enjoying has been saying a lot recently, "don't give someone a power you don't want your enemies to use on you".

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 11 points 2 months ago (2 children)

While the specifics are different, I think this was also tried by Harper, only to be shot down in the courts for being unconstitutional.

So PP's trying to copy his senior's old homework, forgetting that assignment got a failing grade.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 13 points 2 months ago (16 children)

Starlink isn't the only satellite phones and internet available in Canada, not to mention all the alternatives you could get.

For example, how about cell towers? If the government paid for them, then no individual company can monopolize them, so anybody could get access to their use.

Not to mention that Spain's setting up their own satellite internet services as well Starlink style, so why pay the Trumpist when we can pay an actual ally that hasn't blatantly betrayed all their alliances and agreements?

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I don't agree that's the point of DV shelters. The entire point of them is to be a way for victims to be separated from their abusers. It's entirely a short term solution to a long term problem, but it's a step that is needed to be able to have a long term solution, regardless of the gender of the victim. Not being separated from the abuser means that the victim is primed to further abuse, or be convinced that escape is impossible.

All the other services are available to both genders for sure, but that's because most of it isn't DV specific in the first place (putting aside divorce lawyers at least).

The issue I'm saying is that the first step is the most crucial and virtually a prerequisite towards a solution, yet there are zero facilities for men in the entire country? Maybe it's different now, but at least it wasn't in 2013, though I'm not knowledgeable enough on the subject to know. But you would think that at a minimum, there should be at least one such facilities in every major city in the country, right? Even if can only handle two or three people at most, with a part-time assistant to help the victims.

There's a massive difference between being underfunded, and having zero resources, and that's what I think is the biggest problem. It's not about being poorly funded, or poorly serviced, but a complete absence that's the same as saying that this isn't an issue, despite police reports themselves saying that it certainly is.

[–] Dearche@lemmy.ca 10 points 2 months ago

Apparently in some parts of that state, prices have dropped by half already. The same is happening in Texas, and a few other states, though admittedly the trend had started last year. Hard to imagine how bad it is right now after Trump.

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