Alberta Fires a Shot at Freedom

  • Thread starter Thread starter Geo
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Panties were WAY bunched. Go ask AI why leaving Canada is a bad idea for Alberta. I don't have time to waste on idiots like you. Educate yourself.

Are you some shitkicker from the sticks in bumfuck rural Alberta?

Oh, my hair is blonde and grey.

EDIT: I checked. Your first nations poll numbers are pure bullshit.
I haven't succumbed to brain rot, and still know how to Google things the old fashioned way, lol. Has AI been telling you how smart you are, and how everyone but you is stupid?
Also, you say you don't have time to waste on idiots like me, yet here you keep responding. Interesting.
Sorry to disappoint, but I live in a city.
Sure they're bullshit, if you ask the federal gov funded media who are totally 100% honest and unbiased. Do you know any first nations people? You're not from here; I'm guessing you don't. I do, and all the ones I know want to separate.
Lastly, why do you give a shit? It's no skin off your nose either way
 
Democratic People's Republic of [Insert Nation] is code for Communist State isn't it?

Congo... Nth Korea... Angola...
 
Well let’s hear your evidence that the communist party that controls China isn’t communist.
Some cut 'n paste for you. Narrowly defined, you are correct. In practical terms, you're not correct.

Whether the country is genuinely "communist" depends on how the term is defined:
  • Politically: Yes. The country is officially recognized as a communist state. The CCP holds a monopoly on political power, and its leading role is enshrined in the state's constitution.
  • Economically: No. While the state still controls major sectors of the economy and strategic industries, China transitioned to a "socialist market economy" in the late 1970s. This model allows for extensive private property, entrepreneurship, and integration into global capitalist markets.
Guess what, and this might shock some posters here...the US has some Socialist elements in its makeup. Scary, huh?
 
Some cut 'n paste for you. Narrowly defined, you are correct. In practical terms, you're not correct.

Whether the country is genuinely "communist" depends on how the term is defined:
  • Politically: Yes. The country is officially recognized as a communist state. The CCP holds a monopoly on political power, and its leading role is enshrined in the state's constitution.
  • Economically: No. While the state still controls major sectors of the economy and strategic industries, China transitioned to a "socialist market economy" in the late 1970s. This model allows for extensive private property, entrepreneurship, and integration into global capitalist markets.
Guess what, and this might shock some posters here...the US has some Socialist elements in its makeup. Scary, huh?
Yeah, this isn't the gotcha you think it is...

China is a communist regime with a select few capitalist programs the same way the US is a capitalist representative republic with a couple social programs.

Bottom line China is a communist society.
 
Some cut 'n paste for you. Narrowly defined, you are correct. In practical terms, you're not correct.

Whether the country is genuinely "communist" depends on how the term is defined:
  • Politically: Yes. The country is officially recognized as a communist state. The CCP holds a monopoly on political power, and its leading role is enshrined in the state's constitution.
  • Economically: No. While the state still controls major sectors of the economy and strategic industries, China transitioned to a "socialist market economy" in the late 1970s. This model allows for extensive private property, entrepreneurship, and integration into global capitalist markets.
Guess what, and this might shock some posters here...the US has some Socialist elements in its makeup. Scary, huh?
Some people think Google is real life.
 
Some cut 'n paste for you. Narrowly defined, you are correct. In practical terms, you're not correct.

Whether the country is genuinely "communist" depends on how the term is defined:
  • Politically: Yes. The country is officially recognized as a communist state. The CCP holds a monopoly on political power, and its leading role is enshrined in the state's constitution.
  • Economically: No. While the state still controls major sectors of the economy and strategic industries, China transitioned to a "socialist market economy" in the late 1970s. This model allows for extensive private property, entrepreneurship, and integration into global capitalist markets.
Guess what, and this might shock some posters here...the US has some Socialist elements in its makeup. Scary, huh?
You’re not that asinine dude.
 
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