• dwazou@jlai.luBanned from communityOP
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      3 months ago

      Thank you so much. This means a lot to me.

      I come from a third world country with tremendous inequality. I was born in the most privileged classes.

      In my country, poor people who don’t pay a lot of money die like DOGS in hospitals. Private hospitals don’t hesitate to overcharge sick people as much as they can. If you are not happy, if you protest, they just let you die. We have mostly free elections. But they are useless. Because most of the time, useless and ignorant politicians get elected. Very few people read investigative journalism. In fact, our newspapers are mostly dead. I’m one of the very few people trying to financially support quality journalism in my country.

      I used to think our problems were specific. We are dumb. We are fools.

      Our problems are actually surprisingly common. I lived in many nations around the world. I noticed that in some countries, some cities, politicians can achieve absolutely amazing things in public health, labor rights, housing. They can really take great decisions. And I noticed that in some rich countries, like the United States, incredibly dumb and corrupt politicians can get massive popular support. And ordinary people always pay the price:

      https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2025/02/10/inhaler-cost-death-optum-rx-walgreens/

      My conclusion was simple. At the end of the day, everything stems from the people. In corrupt places, like my country, people don’t pay attention to politics. They don’t educate themselves about policies. They don’t read quality newspapers. Few people get involved in the local community. As a result, they can be easily lied to by oligarchs.

      In democracies that work great, like Denmark, you have ordinary people that educate themselves and actively get involved in their local community. They support strong independent newspapers. They join community organizations pushing for change. They pay close attention to their MPs and their votes.

      If my comment helps people pay closer attention to politics, then I would have achieved my goal.

  • dwazou@jlai.luBanned from communityOP
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    3 months ago

    Understanding the politics.

    After the last 2021 election, Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party didn’t have enough seats in Parliament.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Canadian_federal_election#Results

    Jagmeet Singh (NDP) asked Justin Trudeau for 3 laws:

    • A law creating Dental Care

    • A law creating Pharma Care

    • A law protecting striking workers against scabs.

    In exchange for these 3 laws, the NDP signed an agreement where they promised to not bring-down the minority Liberal Government.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-60837941

    The 3 laws were voted by Parliament.

    Liberals agree to launch dental care program in exchange for NDP support

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/trudeu-jagmeet-singh-deal-government-1.6393021

    Liberal, NDP bill to cover diabetes and birth control medication receives royal assent

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/pharmacare-bill-passes-senate-1.7349433

    Liberals table bill to ban replacement workers, fulfilling a key NDP demand

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/anti-scab-labour-federally-regulated-workplaces-1.7023020

    The agreement between Justin Trudeau and the NDP ended prematurely in 2024. Singh noticed that Trudeau was becoming politically toxic. But Dental Care was adopted. Pharmacare was adopted. That’s what’s important.

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/jagmeet-singh-ndp-ending-agreement-1.7312910

    This is why I love multiparty politics. It forces governments to be more responsive.

    Countries with proportional representation often end up with better governments than country with 2-party politics. My dream is for Canada to change the first-past-the-post voting system. The First-Past-The-Post (FPTP) voting system is the reason why some countries only have 2 powerful political parties.

    I have my fair share of criticism with Jagmeet Singh. But I’m very happy about what the NDP parliament members achieved. Politics can be very ungrateful and brutal.

    In this election, the NDP was crushed.

    To quote this recent article:

    A bitterness is emerging from the results of that agreement which the NDP undertook to get solid benefits for Canadians The NDP were propping up Trudeau’s minority government as the tradeoff for getting those results for Canadians. But for the most part that commitment and effort is falling short of recognition and did not produce electoral results for the NDP in the April 28, 2025 election.

    https://islandsocialtrends.ca/ndp-made-canadas-dental-plan-possible-now-carney-promotes-it/

    https://islandsocialtrends.ca/ndp-made-canadas-dental-plan-possible-now-carney-promotes-it/

    (Alistair MacGregor is an NDP MP who just lost his seat)

    Most Canadian voters may not be aware of it - sadly - but you guys made Canada a better nation.

    Thank you so much.

    Why are you saying all this?

    Results are important. But it’s also very important people understand how we got there.

    So. What now ?

    Children under the age of 18 are now covered by the recently created Canadian Dental Care plan.

    https://www.mcgill.ca/channels/channels/news/expert-canadas-dental-plan-expands-cover-children-people-disabilities-357790

    This month, the Dental Care Plan is expanding again.

    Citizens earning less than $70,000 are eligible for coverage:

    https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/news/2025/03/canadian-dental-care-plan-expands-to-include-millions-of-new-eligible-canadians.html

    The Canadian Labor Unions have called Mark Carney to expand Pharmacare immediately:

    https://canadianlabour.ca/canadas-unions-call-for-immediate-expansion-of-universal-pharmacare/

    I urge people to resist any propaganda from insurance companies like Sun Life. For these corporations, this is a direct threat to their business :

    https://www.sunlife.ca/sl/cdcp/en/

    The Canadian Insurance Companies publically called Canadian lawmakers to NOT vote Pharmacare :

    https://www.insurancebusinessmag.com/ca/news/life-insurance/clhia-governments-pharmacare-plan-set-to-be-more-burdensome-479479.aspx

    They did it anyway.

    The campaign finance system isn’t as corrupt as the US (thank god), but they still have allies and friends. They can pay youtube influencers to lie. They can buy ads in newspapers. They can pay shady “think-tanks” that don’t disclose their source of funding. So be on your guard. If you can afford it, please support quality journalism. We need it more than ever.



    The hard thing is going to be managing DentalCare and Pharmacare properly. It will require honest and determined leadership. It will also require funding. Hopefully, the Carney government will keep rolling them out.

    Mark Carney tried to politically capitalize on them during the election. This means they will hopefully be safe.