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With the NATO job not changing over until 2027, we're a bit premature in calling out person X or Y as the next CDS.

He's the next Supreme Court Justice.So it wont be @FJAG being called out of retirement?
So it wont be @FJAG being called out of retirement?
You two have never been more wrong about anything.He's the next Supreme Court Justice.
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Prime Minister Carney announces members of the Independent Advisory Board to help select the next judge of the Supreme Court of Canada
Today, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, announced the Chair and members of the Independent Advisory Board for Supreme Court of Canada Judicial Appointments.www.pm.gc.ca
Only because contracting for legal advice / legal support is even more convoluted than every other form of contractingYou two have never been more wrong about anything.
There are a lot of burned bridges behind me.
Not to mention that I am the only CAF officer having spent 3 years on Class B in Ottawa who didn't turn in his uniform for a consulting job. I revel in sleeping in and spouting nonsense when the mood strikes me.
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I must admit in all honesty that when I retired we went to live in a house by the lake and my only thoughts were about doing construction on it and taking off to Florida four months of the year. Working more was the last thing on my mind.Only because contracting for legal advice / legal support is even more convoluted than every other form of contracting![]()
We should as it is clear the reason for the initial building of those locks still exists.An interesting , and expensive, fantasy-type project, particularly given the comparatively small tonnage few Canadian ports vs the US (it's hard to find clear data - one site classifies the likes of Parry Sound and Midland as 'major' shipping ports, which is touch laughable). Maybe we could enlarge the Canadian lock at SSM.
At any given point in time I have a fair bit of karma to balance out, so I won’t reply to the retired lawyer with a crack about ‘depends’.I must admit in all honesty that when I retired we went to live in a house by the lake and my only thoughts were about doing construction on it and taking off to Florida four months of the year. Working more was the last thing on my mind.
Since getting back into this writing and the gunner community - half of whom seem to be contractors - I have momentary thoughts. But even though I'm staying away from Florida I still like sleeping in and building the railroad.
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I am tired of Canada being insistant on being someones puppet state. Our country is the most gifted on the planet in terms of location, resources, and population. Yet somehow we squander that.
The only thing to fear, is the fear of success!Bang on.
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I'm very confused.We should as it is clear the reason for the initial building of those locks still exists.
We created the Canadian side locks because the Americans denied us transit of our ships with troops on them to go fight the Northwest Rebellion so they had to completely disembark with all the stores and equipment, portage the equipment above the rapids, and re-embark after the locks.
Nation building is expensive, but maintaining sovereignty comes with a cost.
I am tired of Canada being insistant on being someones puppet state. Our country is the most gifted on the planet in terms of location, resources, and population. Yet somehow we squander that.
Considering the States is currently upgrading their side of the locks and we want to open up the ring of fire, yes that is nation building. There is demand, if we choose to be a part of it is the question.I'm very confused.
Spending billions to build infrastructure that doesnt currently exist but would get a fair bit of use is too expensive for some (HSR), but spending billions to build infrastructure that is redundant and will likely not be used except in the most extreme of circumstances is nation building?
Although the arguement can be made some projects are nation building when they have duel use. Example shipyards, portsDefence expenditures aren't nation-building; they're nation-preserving. The necessary and sufficient conditions for a society are the means and will to defend it.
We might have to cede some of the usual ground here to secure the assets against sabotage and other attack. I would rather place large areas completely off-limits than expend a bunch of resources trying to find ways to fit dual-use in without compromising security.Although the arguement can be made some projects are nation building when they have duel use. Example shipyards, ports
Yeah good in theory, corporate welfare says differently in practice.As for railways, we had more, then they became uneconomical. The major carriers can move more in a 2km long train that it predecessors could even dream of. So long as they are private, for-profit companies, they will build or expand when their current infrastructure is maxed-out. Passenger rail could be better, but with our population distribution and density, we ain't going back to the 'golden age of train travel' anytime soon.