3
CanadianRighty 3 points ago +3 / -0

They unfortunately won't kick Remple to the curb, but she's likely not to have nearly as prominent of a voice.

4
CanadianRighty 4 points ago +4 / -0

That's the selling on virtues I was referring to. I'm not suggesting we change people's priorities or values, but that conservatism is likely (at least at this moment) a better match for the values of many Canadians who don't view themselves as "conservative".

We have different opinions on the utility of small parties. Insulting PPC, or referring to them as fringe has no effect on me. I like that they're a threat to CPC.

If CPC chooses to continue to not serve my "views/opinions/interests", I have a place to park my vote to send the message home.

Although after today I'm very hopeful they'll get back on track.

6
CanadianRighty 6 points ago +7 / -1

This is a big chance to sell Canadians on the virtues of conservatism and a return to normal.

I'm signing back up for a CPC membership now.

If they choose to move back to right of centre I'll even let my PPC membership lapse.

4
CanadianRighty 4 points ago +4 / -0

Nice, but is Ford even weaker than Kenney?

3
CanadianRighty 3 points ago +3 / -0

I like Polievre, I think he would be a lot better than the last few guys.

Certainly better than Trudeau.

I voted Bernier over O’Toole because I didn’t want the conservatives to win and govern as liberals.

If Polievre takes the leadership I’ll almost certainly vote CPC in the next cycle.

3
CanadianRighty 3 points ago +3 / -0

Liberal wearing cloth mask is convinced he can control an aerosolized virus after two years of failure continues to get upset when other person also fails to control virus.

Same Liberal thinks pandemics last longer the faster everyone gets infected.

Liberal then screams “trust the evolving science!” while ignoring research indicating lockdowns did noting, cloth/paper masks do nothing, social distancing does nothing and the vaccines do not prevent spread.

4
CanadianRighty 4 points ago +4 / -0

The angus poll had intense momentum in it, if that’s real and sustained I strongly suspect things are going to get a lot more interesting quite quickly.

4
CanadianRighty 4 points ago +4 / -0

Fully agreed, just had to comment on the incompetence

5
CanadianRighty 5 points ago +5 / -0

What a dummy, he had his second chance and he blew it

Full article: https://archive.ph/oDrbh

4
CanadianRighty 4 points ago +4 / -0

Pointed out that you gave Trudeau a pass on countless racist Blackface incidents, then attempted to spread false information about multiple Nazi flags.

It’s who Liberals are to the core, hypocritical liars.

9
CanadianRighty 9 points ago +9 / -0

Per typical leftist spreads misinformation. I saw one flag, where are the photos of the rest?

Unlike the countless times Trudeau wore Blackface I saw one nazi flag, where are the other flags you mentioned?

3
CanadianRighty 3 points ago +3 / -0

Nah they were too busy burning down native owned churches

4
CanadianRighty 4 points ago +4 / -0

They’re pathetically afraid of the woke mob.

They need to grow some balls and run a conservative candidate.

At some point people will be ready to vote conservative and Erin Tool will get caught once again with his pants down playing a liberal.

3
CanadianRighty 3 points ago +3 / -0

Tuchodi’s political narrative has crumbled.

He was wrong on everything related to natural immunity because he trusted the media and big tech, and wouldn’t follow the science.

Will a crack in his husk form, will he wonder about the possibility he’s wrong about everything else too?

3
CanadianRighty 3 points ago +3 / -0

Public-health officials ruined many lives by insisting that workers with natural immunity to Covid-19 be fired if they weren’t fully vaccinated. But after two years of accruing data, the superiority of natural immunity over vaccinated immunity is clear. By firing staff with natural immunity, employers got rid of those least likely to infect others. It’s time to reinstate those employees with an apology. For most of last year, many of us called for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to release its data on reinfection rates, but the agency refused. Finally last week, the CDC released data from New York and California, which demonstrated natural immunity was 2.8 times as effective in preventing hospitalization and 3.3 to 4.7 times as effective in preventing Covid infection compared with vaccination.

Yet the CDC spun the report to fit its narrative, bannering the conclusion “vaccination remains the safest strategy.” It based this conclusion on the finding that hybrid immunity—the combination of prior infection and vaccination—was associated with a slightly lower risk of testing positive for Covid. But those with hybrid immunity had a similar low rate of hospitalization (3 per 10,000) to those with natural immunity alone. In other words, vaccinating people who had already had Covid didn’t significantly reduce the risk of hospitalization. Similarly, the National Institutes of Health repeatedly has dismissed natural immunity by arguing that its duration is unknown—then failing to conduct studies to answer the question. Because of the NIH’s inaction, my Johns Hopkins colleagues and I conducted the study. We found that among 295 unvaccinated people who previously had Covid, antibodies were present in 99% of them up to nearly two years after infection. We also found that natural immunity developed from prior variants reduced the risk of infection with the Omicron variant. Meanwhile, the effectiveness of the two-dose Moderna vaccine against infection (not severe disease) declines to 61% against Delta and 16% against Omicron at six months, according to a recent Kaiser Southern California study. In general, Pfizer’s Covid vaccines have been less effective than Moderna’s. The CDC study and ours confirm what more than 100 other studies on natural immunity have found: The immune system works. The largest of these studies, from Israel, found that natural immunity was 27 times as effective as vaccinated immunity in preventing symptomatic illness. None of this should surprise us. For years, studies have shown that infection with the other coronaviruses that cause severe illness, SARS and MERS, confers lasting immunity. In a study published in May 2020, Covid-recovered monkeys that were rechallenged with the virus didn’t get sick. Public-health officials have a lot of explaining to do. They used the wrong starting hypothesis, ignored contrary preliminary data, and dug in as more evidence emerged that called their position into question. Many, including Rochelle Walensky, now the CDC’s director, signed the John Snow memorandum in October 2020, which declared that “there is no evidence for lasting protective immunity to SARS-CoV-2 following natural infection.” Many clinicians who talk to other physicians nationwide had have long observed that we don’t see reinfected patients end up on a ventilator or die from Covid, with rare exceptions who almost always have immune disorders. Meanwhile, public-health officials recklessly destroyed the careers of everyday Americans, rallying to fire pilots, truck drivers and others in the supply-chain workforce who didn’t get vaccinated. And in the early months of the vaccine rollout, when supplies were limited, we could have saved many more lives by giving priority to those who didn’t have recorded natural immunity. The failure to recognize the data on natural immunity is hurting U.S. hospitals, especially in rural areas. MultiCare, a hospital system in Washington state, fired 55 staff members on Oct. 18 for being out of compliance with Gov. Jay Inslee’s vaccine mandate—and that was in addition to an undisclosed number of staffers who quit ahead of the vaccination deadline. The loss of workers contributed to a full-blown staffing crisis. It got so bad that the hospital summoned staff who were Covid-positive to return to work even if they were sick, according to an internal memo obtained by Jason Rantz of KTTH radio. The memo stated that “positive staff with mild to moderate illness” could work, so long as they wear appropriate personal protective equipment, don’t take breaks with others, and agree to stay home “if symptoms worsen.” Managers were recommended to assign Covid-positive staff to Covid-positive patients and vaccinated patients, but not immunosuppressed patients. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services took the hospital mandate national by decreeing that all medical facilities under its jurisdiction require vaccination for employees, including those with natural immunity. The Supreme Court upheld the rule on Jan. 13, the same day it issued a stay against a similar mandate from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which OSHA formally withdrew Tuesday. Connecticut has suspended its vaccine mandate for state employees, and Starbucks is rehiring employers fired for being unvaccinated. Other states and businesses should follow their lead. Politicians and public-health officials owe an apology to Americans who lost their jobs on the false premises that only unvaccinated people could spread the virus and only vaccination could prevent its spread. Soldiers who have been dishonorably discharged should be restored their rank. Teachers, first responders, and others who have been denied their livelihood should be reinstated. Everyone is essential. Dr. Makary is a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and author of “The Price We Pay: What Broke American Health Care and How to Fix It.”

2
CanadianRighty 2 points ago +2 / -0

Exactly, your politics.

I’m in the politics of diversity of opinion, respecting the charter of rights, free speech, free movement, freedom of religion, freedom of assembly etc.

You’re on the side of regimes like CCP former USSR etc

3
CanadianRighty 3 points ago +3 / -0

It’s one of the easiest ways to expose how deeply political and unscientific your positions/opinions are.

Of course you can’t comprehend why some people would thing differently to you, and you want them punished regardless of the science.

When a medical expert says “we can’t ignore natural immunity” and that “Europe got it right”, and you disagree with her. That’s unscientific politics.

Your politics of discrimination and division tactics is reminiscent of some of the worse regimes.

1
CanadianRighty 1 point ago +1 / -0

Should people lose rights if they don’t make other choices to maximize their health?

If the fatties, drinkers, druggies, etc lived healthier lives hospitals would be better equipped to deal with pandemics, more ability to focus on research, resources to speed up surgery wait times.

Fact is the hospitals were overwhelmed before covid, as everyone remembers.

If this is how it’s going to be, I want them declining the cookies at the cash for fatties, and mandating treadmill time until they’re not overweight.

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