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Government hints at boosting Canada’s military spending

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I have long said that you could fund the CAF to 4 percent of GDP, but we would still lag behind in NATO and be much the same where we are.

It's never the money, it's politics. It's procedures. It's the pork-barreling in our defence spending that makes us a paper tiger in NATO.

My only hope in all of this for the CAF and the GoC, whatever the political stripe that may be, is that it will rouse them out of the "Peace Dividend" slumber. The world has been unstable since 1945. We have used geography, proximity, and association as a Defence Policy ever since. ICBMs don't care how close to the U.S. or how far from Russia/China we are.

Don't give us a dime more, but let us spend money on defence like it matters. The fact we follow the same rules for purchasing a fighter aircraft as we do for buying office furniture for a Service Canada office is disgraceful. Don't treat defense procurement as a stimulus package for Canadian Industry. There I said it.

We spend so much money, time, and effort trying to get that money to stay in Canada; be it by awarding contracts to companies with no capability to produce items without first "retooling" and"developing the production lines", or by hamstringing perfectly competent and competitive bidders by forcing the project to be made in St. Margaret de Poutain de Champignon, QC because the ruling government either lost the seat in the election, or won it with promises.

We spend so much money and staff hours jumping through TBS regulations that are great for other departments, but are terrible for defence procurement. Some items you have to sole source, because there are technologies and capabilities no one else makes. By doing the bid process, you get companies clamoring for a project they can't deliver on, but because they tick the bright boxes on the score sheet....

I truly and honestly belief we need to split from PSPC and legislate that its not beholden to TBS, only to the PBO/PCO. The guiding principles of this new Defence Procurement department should be "Off the shelf, from somewhere else" if there isn't an industry in Canada.

BOOTFORGEN has demonstrated how well we do when we are able to actually get what we need, instead of lining the pockets of a Canadian company that got lucky.

That, but with tanks, fighters, ships, weapons systems....
 
The Canadian HP is different from UK HP...which is of course much better. I cannot eat fried eggs without HP. I have actually brought my own bottle to misguided so called breakfast places that do not have it on hand....but scrambled eggs must have Lea and Perrins, as must poached eggs. Boiled eggs need egg soldiers of course.....
I am going to have to try HP on scrambled…
 
Eggs have a flavour, which I don't find disagreeable. Putting hot sauce on anything is just a way of killing its inherent flavour by temporarily desensitizing most of your taste buds.
 
Eggs have a flavour, which I don't find disagreeable. Putting hot sauce on anything is just a way of killing its inherent flavour by temporarily desensitizing most of your taste buds.

A good hot sauce compliments flavour, it doesn't overpower.

Cheap spices burn just to be hot, good spices make favour more interesting.
 
Eggs have a flavour, which I don't find disagreeable. Putting hot sauce on anything is just a way of killing its inherent flavour by temporarily desensitizing most of your taste buds.
Eggs Benedict I agree. Most other eggs preparation have something/need that adds to it, and makes it better, IMO, whether ketchup, HP sauce, or salt.
 
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How the fuck did this get so sidetracked with chats about eggs and hot sauce???
You say that like it's a bad thing.

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or

real Sichuan peppercorn oil. Both don't hit you at first, but they have a sustained, intense building heat. Sichuan peppercorns also numb your entire mouth (like a local anaesthetic).
 
Pretty sure @Weinie bucks the trend for folks from the Maritimes as he has been gainfully employed for his adult life, so other aspects of the culture may have slipped as well ☺️

#joking....mostly
I left Nova Scotia in 1983: went back to hunt every year til 2005. I suspect that Maritime Madness came after.

I went to PEI on my 18th birthday, because it was legal to drink there.:cool:
 
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I left Nova Scotia in 1983: went back to hunt every year til 2005. I suspect that Maritime Madness came after.

I went to PEI on my 18th birthday, because it was legal to drink there.:cool:

I lived in P.E.I. from 1988 until 2014 except 2000-2003. I don't remember the drinking age ever being 18, when did it change?
I didn't care about the drinking age until the mid-90's though.
 
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