Exactement ce que je dis. Ca veut pas dire que c'est pas partiellement vrai. La seule verite dans ses videos, c'est qu il prends les gens pour des purs imbeciles.
ya ya drop ur 'im a retard' bs & then say 'im out' r u 12 :dunno:I listened to this one.
Seriously? LOL
Have some faith in humanity. Thinking that everyone that has a certain power wants you to be a zombie or die... is just FUCKIN stupid.
Tell me I'm blind, tell me I'm ignorant... you know what...? I'm just going to live my life like I would if I didn't know the ELITE wants to REDUCE THE EARTH POPULATION TO 500 MILLION OMG OMG OMG...
I don't know how you live your life believing all this bullshit? I am not saying you are not an intelligent man... I mean eDT has proven again and again he is not an ignorant... but seriously, I think you guys waste waaay too much time on internet. I wonder what kind of life you live if you're not drinking water, not eating gum, not brushing your teeth... by fear of being controlled like a zombie? Please let me lol
Rich get richer, poor get poorer, census results show
The Canadian Press
Date: Thursday May. 1, 2008 8:55 AM ET
OTTAWA — Now more than ever, Canada's rich are getting richer while the poor get poorer and the middle class stagnates, according to the latest census data released Thursday by Statistics Canada.
Between 1980 and 2005, median earnings among Canada's top earners rose more than 16 per cent while those in the bottom fifth saw their wages dip by 20 per cent.
"Most people, most of the time, are interested in who is getting poorer, not necessarily who is getting richer. At least from a policy perspective,'' said Michael Haan, a sociology professor at the University of Alberta.
"One of the things that stands out over the last 20 years... is young lone-parents, immigrants, visible minority groups, they're going to continue to be hard hit.''
Still, Haan suggested credit has made it possible for struggling Canadians to have many of the same luxuries as those who are better off financially.
"If you're poor or relatively poor, it's possible to have many of the things the middle class has,'' he said. "It's just that you have to pay for them for a longer period of time.''
Median earnings among those in the middle remained status quo, registering a mere 0.1 per cent increase over the course of 25 years.
Recent increases to basic personal tax exemption amounts are likely to benefit the middle class, Haan suggested, noting they may see higher earnings in the future.
As for the country's top earners, the number hitting $100,000-plus nearly doubled to 6.5 per cent in the last quarter century. Meanwhile, the number of full-time workers earning upwards of $150,000 rose one per cent, accounting for some 2.2 per cent of workers.
The majority of those earning hefty salaries were highly educated with some 57 per cent of $100,000-plus earners and 65 per cent of $150,000-plus earners holding university degrees.
The 2006 census also shows a marked increase in the number of top earners in the previous five years alone.
In 2005 there were 601,510 full-time workers raking in $100K-plus salaries -- a 26 per cent jump over 2000.
The jump was even more pronounced among the 206,160 full-time workers who earned $150,000-plus salaries. Their numbers were up nearly 30 per cent in 2005.
The Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Alberta had the largest and fastest growing proportion of six-figure salaried workers, followed by Ontario and Newfoundland.
Men between the ages of 45 and 64 accounted for roughly two-thirds of the increase in both high-earner groups.
Those earning at least $150,000 tended to work in management, finance, oil extraction, health and law.
According to the 2006 census, nearly 3.5 million Canadians, or 11.4 per cent of the total population, are living in low-income households. Nearly 15 per cent of them, some 879,955, are children under the age of 17.
The low-income rate was higher for children in female lone-parent families, regardless of their mother's employment status, and for recent immigrants
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080501/rich_poor_080501/20080501/
Est-ce que il y a juste moi qui ne ressent aucunement la crise économique et qui n'a pas personne dans son entourage qui semble ne ressentir d'impact négatif non plus??
C'est drôle, depuis 2 ans mon salaire n'a qu'augmenter et j'ai reglé des vieilles dettes que je traînais depuis longtemps, ce qui fait que depuis le début de la crise, j'ai un meilleur salaire et suis moins endetté. Je regarde autour de moi et je vois personne sur le bord du gouffre. La seule chose que je vois c'est les placements des gens qui ont perdu 30-50% de leur valeur pis qui sont en train de remonter aussi vite qu'ils sont tombés.
La crise économique actuelle n'est qu'un état normal dans un cycle économique. en 1980 c'était dû à l'inflation, celle qu'on vit présentement c'est dû à la bulle immobilière qui a éclaté.. Les choses sont déjà en train de se replacer tranquillement.
Aux États-Unis, ce n'est pas la fin du monde non plus. Ils sont une des puissances économiques de la planète, c'est normal que quand ça va mal, les chiffres soient énormes. Ils vont se replacer prochainement, peut-être avec quelques changements dans leur système qu'on pourraient qualifier d'importants.
C'est qui cet enfoiré qui VEND ses DVDs pour dire d'la bullshit de même? Haha
The economic problem in Canada is not at all like the one in the USA. We didn't lose thousands of jobs and our banks didn't go under. The problem here is starting or owning a small business. Just walk downtown. how most of the small stores are either closing or closed. Even big names like 5th avenue had to close down. Another problem is the lack of qualified jobs. Quebec hasn't had a job boom in ages. also a lot of the big names moved or closed down way b4 the economic recession.
Canada's job losses in January surpassed anything seen during the previous economic downturns in the 1980s and 1990s, Statistics Canada said Friday.
With the economy staggering in recession, Canada's unemployment rate shot up by 0.6 percentage points in January to 7.2 per cent as 129,000 jobs were lost. Almost all of the job losses were in full-time work.
Since October, the battered Canadian economy has lost 213,000 jobs.
Between January 2008 and January 2009, overall employment across the country was down by 88,600 jobs
The job losses far exceeded the drop of 40,000 that economists had been projecting. "Horrible" and "shockingly poor" were some of the words they used in reaction to the January jobless figures.
"Everybody is prepared for a pretty weak first quarter, but these numbers are probably surprising the more bearish views," said Royal Bank chief economist Craig Wright.
"Unfortunately we will see more job losses," said Sal Guatieri, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. "This is the start of a wave of job losses that will likely extend through the first half of this year."
BMO economists expect the Canadian unemployment rate to break through eight per cent by the end of this year. To combat the softening economy, the Bank of Canada is expected to announce another interest rate cut in March, BMO said
Manufacturing meltdown
The manufacturing sector lost 101,000 jobs during January, the most on record for the industry. The bulk of January's losses in manufacturing were concentrated in Ontario, which lost 36,000 positions; Quebec, which lost 30,000; and British Columbia, which shed 18,000 manufacturing positions.
Losses in manufacturing were most pronounced in motor vehicle manufacturing. Employment also fell in January in the production of furniture; computers and electronics; appliances and components; and clothing manufacturing.
Employment also fell by 30,000 in transportation and warehousing, largely in truck transportation in Ontario, while employment in business, building and other support services declined by 22,000.
The health-care and social assistance sector continued to see strong job gains, as it added 31,000 jobs during the month.
Ontario plunges
Ontario lost 71,000 jobs last month, the largest monthly drop in more than three decades, Statistics Canada said. The drop pushed the province's unemployment rate up by 0.8 percentage points to eight per cent — its highest level since November 1997.
British Columbia shed 35,000 jobs as its unemployment rate also increased by 0.8 percentage points to 6.1 per cent.
Quebec's employment fell by 26,000 jobs, with all the losses coming in part-time work. The province's unemployment rate rose to 7.7 per cent. January saw large declines in public administration, following gains in December associated with hiring for the provincial election
http://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2009/02/06/januaryjobs.html
ya ya drop ur 'im a retard' bs & then say 'im out' r u 12 :dunno:
yes yes live your life like you don't know - this is whats wanted. please go back to sleep, work hard pay your 50+% taxes on income, then get taxed again as you spend it. so whats that like 75+% annual tax actually or higher?
watch your Bigbrother, dancing with the stars drink lots of diet soda, live your life. finally around 55 you feel a little down & start to Enjoy our Awesome free Health care. just live your life (avec illness) while you wait 6+ months to see that 'specialist' for your rapidly spreading cancer..
might be a longer wait in 20+ years though eh, Cancer is through the roof!
they say now that 2 out of 3 (or 66.6%) will get it in their lifetimes.
but you're right you just live your life bro - right on a hiway in an industrial area please *tu*
:dunno: So what's so great about your life that us average people don't have
apparently haiti is sitting on a shit load of oil too.