Americans, go home: Tension at Canada-US border

vostok

Well-Known Member

As the pandemic continues to sweep the US, Canadians are getting more and more concerned
about what American visitors could be bringing with them over the border.
Built directly on the border of Blaine, Washington and Surrey, British Columbia, the
Peace Arch is a 67-foot high (20 metres) testament to the close ties between Canada and the US.
Inscribed on one side are the words "May these gates never be closed", a reminder of the nearly
8,891 km (5,525 miles) of un-militarised border that separates the two nations.

For almost 100 years, those words have been heeded - until the coronavirus pandemic
effectively shut the border indefinitely.
The closure came into effect on 21 March, and was agreed upon by both governments.
After being extended several times over the summer, it remains in effect until 21 August -
although most expect it to be extended again.
"I never thought I'd be sitting here mid-August and that border is still closed,"
says Len Saunders, a dual citizen who lives in Blaine.
"It just seems to be dragging on and on and on with no end in sight."
While the border closure has had significant economic and personal repercussions
for the millions of people that live along it or have loved ones on the other side,
the vast majority of Canadians want it to stay shut.


A July poll by Ipsos Reid found that eight in ten Canadians wanted the border to stay closed
until at least the end of 2020.
And as the pandemic has continued to spread across the US, so have tensions between
American drivers and Canadian residents.
While non-essential travel is forbidden, commercial drivers delivering goods and people
who work across the border in essential services are permitted to cross.
People with American licence plates have reported being harassed and having their
vehicles vandalised, even if they have every right to be on the Canadian side.
Mr Saunders, an immigration lawyer who has many clients who cross the border
regularly in order to work, says many people are afraid.
"They're all scared of driving their cars in the lower mainland because of vandalism, dirty looks
and just getting treated as some 'horrible American'," he told the BBC.
One of his clients, an architect who was allowed to practise in Canada during the shutdown,
says he was told to "go back home" because of his car.
The tensions are so high that British Columbia Premier John Horgan
suggested that Canadians with out-of-province licence plates should take the bus or ride bikes instead.

In the Muskoka region of Ontario, where many people have summer homes,
the hostility has garnered police attention.
Ontario Provincial Police say a Canadian in the town of Huntsville filed a complaint
after two men allegedly accosted him over his Florida licence plate.
"Most recently this weekend, there was a gentleman up towards Huntsville getting gas
in his vehicle, and two gentlemen approached him and said, 'you're American go home.' And he said,
'I'm Canadian. I live here.' And they literally said, no, we don't believe you show us your passport,
" Phil Harding, the mayor of nearby Kuskoka Lakes, told CP24.
"It just becomes a little bit aggressive, and they fear for their lives a little bit."
Those caught breaking the rules can face serious consequences.

In Grand Forks, British Columbia, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police spent over two hours
chasing a man, who allegedly had crossed illegally in a stolen vehicle on 24 July, down a river.
The "float chase" ended where the river narrowed, when police, with the help of bystanders,
were able to wade into the river and escort him back to shore.


Charges are pending, but anyone caught breaking the border restrictions can be fined
up to C$750,000 ($566,000; £434,000) and be sentenced to six months in jail, or C$1m
and three years if their actions "cause risk of imminent death or serious bodily harm".
Those hefty fines aren't just for wilful rule-breakers.

On Wednesday, police warned Americans participating in an annual float down the St Claire River
near the Michigan border that even accidentally crossing into Canada could lead to a hefty fine.
In 2016, during more carefree times,
Canadian police congenially escorted about 1,500 floaters back to the US side after winds blew them off course.
Still, the effects of the border closure on the small towns along either side are not insignificant.
Before coronavirus, around 300,000 people crossed the border every day,
including Canadians who routinely made daytrips to score a deal at US outlet malls
or petrol stations, and American tourists exploring the wonder of Niagara Falls

Since March, non-commercial land border crossings to Canada have dropped by nearly 95%,
according to the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA).
"It's going to decimate everything up there," Mr Saunders says.

But the economic impact of closing the border to travellers is nothing
compared to what would happen to Canada if another wave of coronavirus
forced a second shutdown, says Ambarish Chandra, a professor of economics at the University of Toronto.
"This travel does have a lot of economic impact on the communities where travellers go to," he says.

"But given the pandemic in the US, and the number of cases there,
it makes sense to restrict travel to the US - potentially indefinitely."
Prof Chandra says government should provide aid to border towns whose economy
relies heavily on foreign tourism, but hold steady with the border closures until the pandemic is over.
"In the long run it's way cheaper to bail out all of Niagara Falls, Ontario,
than to close down Toronto for even another three or four weeks," he says.
After months of shuttering most businesses,
Canada's coronavirus cases are dropping and the country is in the middle of re-opening its economy.
Daily cases have dropped from a high of 2,760 on 3 May to a few hundred.
Restaurants and shops have been open for at least a few weeks in most major cities,
and so far, cases are still trending downwards.

Meanwhile, the US is trying to tame its outbreak,
which reached a peak of 75,821 on 17 July and is seeing about 40,000 new cases a day.

Those numbers are what's fuelling the unease many Canadians have with American travellers.
"Montana is directly south of us, is having a second spike of cases right now, and
I don't feel sorry for anybody that gets stopped at the border, let's put it that way," says Jim Willett, the mayor of Coutts, Alberta.
"I'm afraid if we opened up the border too soon, we might have more of a problem like what's going on down south."
His town is one of the five border towns where US residents travelling to Alaska
can enter Canada, since the CBSA cracked down on the so-called "Alaska loophole" at the end of July.

Since Alaska shares no borders with other US states,
Americans who drive there on land have to go through Canada, hence the "loophole".
After the border closed, many have expressed concern that drivers have been exploiting the loophole
to explore some of the country's most scenic places, like Vancouver Island and Banff, Jasper, and Lake Louise.
In June, RCMP issued seven tickets worth $1,200 ($906, £694) each to Americans who broke the rules by sightseeing in Alberta.
"Do not pass go. Go directly to Alaska," Premier Horgan said during a news conference in July.


Complaints about the loophole and the lack of enforcement led to the crackdown.
At the end of July, the border authority announced that Alaska-bound travellers
had only limited points of entry, must take the most direct route to their destination,
and should display tags in their vehicle identifying them as US drivers going to the northern state.
They are also limited to a "reasonable period of stay" in Canada, and are forbidden from
visiting national parks, leisure sites and other tourist destinations, with rule-breakers facing the stiff penalties.

Since the tougher rules have been enacted, Mr Willett says he's not "too concerned" about the traffic coming over the border.
"[We] get quite a few people through all times of the day and night.
Most of them are quite co-operative," he says.
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
This ain't the fucking "China" virus anymore, it's the USA's virus now as far as the World sees it
We're a pariah & for good reason
Good work Trump, you idiot/scumbag/POS/asshole/wanna be daughterfucker/lying sack of shit, you, on your own, because of your sheer stupidity & insanity has almost destroyed this country.
 
Last edited:

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

As the pandemic continues to sweep the US, Canadians are getting more and more concerned
about what American visitors could be bringing with them over the border.
Built directly on the border of Blaine, Washington and Surrey, British Columbia, the
Peace Arch is a 67-foot high (20 metres) testament to the close ties between Canada and the US.
Inscribed on one side are the words "May these gates never be closed", a reminder of the nearly
8,891 km (5,525 miles) of un-militarised border that separates the two nations.

For almost 100 years, those words have been heeded - until the coronavirus pandemic
effectively shut the border indefinitely.
The closure came into effect on 21 March, and was agreed upon by both governments.
After being extended several times over the summer, it remains in effect until 21 August -
although most expect it to be extended again.
"I never thought I'd be sitting here mid-August and that border is still closed,"
says Len Saunders, a dual citizen who lives in Blaine.
"It just seems to be dragging on and on and on with no end in sight."
While the border closure has had significant economic and personal repercussions
for the millions of people that live along it or have loved ones on the other side,
the vast majority of Canadians want it to stay shut.


A July poll by Ipsos Reid found that eight in ten Canadians wanted the border to stay closed
until at least the end of 2020.
And as the pandemic has continued to spread across the US, so have tensions between
American drivers and Canadian residents.
While non-essential travel is forbidden, commercial drivers delivering goods and people
who work across the border in essential services are permitted to cross.
People with American licence plates have reported being harassed and having their
vehicles vandalised, even if they have every right to be on the Canadian side.
Mr Saunders, an immigration lawyer who has many clients who cross the border
regularly in order to work, says many people are afraid.
"They're all scared of driving their cars in the lower mainland because of vandalism, dirty looks
and just getting treated as some 'horrible American'," he told the BBC.
One of his clients, an architect who was allowed to practise in Canada during the shutdown,
says he was told to "go back home" because of his car.
The tensions are so high that British Columbia Premier John Horgan
suggested that Canadians with out-of-province licence plates should take the bus or ride bikes instead.

In the Muskoka region of Ontario, where many people have summer homes,
the hostility has garnered police attention.
Ontario Provincial Police say a Canadian in the town of Huntsville filed a complaint
after two men allegedly accosted him over his Florida licence plate.
"Most recently this weekend, there was a gentleman up towards Huntsville getting gas
in his vehicle, and two gentlemen approached him and said, 'you're American go home.' And he said,
'I'm Canadian. I live here.' And they literally said, no, we don't believe you show us your passport,
" Phil Harding, the mayor of nearby Kuskoka Lakes, told CP24.
"It just becomes a little bit aggressive, and they fear for their lives a little bit."
Those caught breaking the rules can face serious consequences.

In Grand Forks, British Columbia, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police spent over two hours
chasing a man, who allegedly had crossed illegally in a stolen vehicle on 24 July, down a river.
The "float chase" ended where the river narrowed, when police, with the help of bystanders,
were able to wade into the river and escort him back to shore.


Charges are pending, but anyone caught breaking the border restrictions can be fined
up to C$750,000 ($566,000; £434,000) and be sentenced to six months in jail, or C$1m
and three years if their actions "cause risk of imminent death or serious bodily harm".
Those hefty fines aren't just for wilful rule-breakers.

On Wednesday, police warned Americans participating in an annual float down the St Claire River
near the Michigan border that even accidentally crossing into Canada could lead to a hefty fine.
In 2016, during more carefree times,
Canadian police congenially escorted about 1,500 floaters back to the US side after winds blew them off course.
Still, the effects of the border closure on the small towns along either side are not insignificant.
Before coronavirus, around 300,000 people crossed the border every day,
including Canadians who routinely made daytrips to score a deal at US outlet malls
or petrol stations, and American tourists exploring the wonder of Niagara Falls

Since March, non-commercial land border crossings to Canada have dropped by nearly 95%,
according to the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA).
"It's going to decimate everything up there," Mr Saunders says.

But the economic impact of closing the border to travellers is nothing
compared to what would happen to Canada if another wave of coronavirus
forced a second shutdown, says Ambarish Chandra, a professor of economics at the University of Toronto.
"This travel does have a lot of economic impact on the communities where travellers go to," he says.

"But given the pandemic in the US, and the number of cases there,
it makes sense to restrict travel to the US - potentially indefinitely."
Prof Chandra says government should provide aid to border towns whose economy
relies heavily on foreign tourism, but hold steady with the border closures until the pandemic is over.
"In the long run it's way cheaper to bail out all of Niagara Falls, Ontario,
than to close down Toronto for even another three or four weeks," he says.
After months of shuttering most businesses,
Canada's coronavirus cases are dropping and the country is in the middle of re-opening its economy.
Daily cases have dropped from a high of 2,760 on 3 May to a few hundred.
Restaurants and shops have been open for at least a few weeks in most major cities,
and so far, cases are still trending downwards.

Meanwhile, the US is trying to tame its outbreak,
which reached a peak of 75,821 on 17 July and is seeing about 40,000 new cases a day.

Those numbers are what's fuelling the unease many Canadians have with American travellers.
"Montana is directly south of us, is having a second spike of cases right now, and
I don't feel sorry for anybody that gets stopped at the border, let's put it that way," says Jim Willett, the mayor of Coutts, Alberta.
"I'm afraid if we opened up the border too soon, we might have more of a problem like what's going on down south."
His town is one of the five border towns where US residents travelling to Alaska
can enter Canada, since the CBSA cracked down on the so-called "Alaska loophole" at the end of July.

Since Alaska shares no borders with other US states,
Americans who drive there on land have to go through Canada, hence the "loophole".
After the border closed, many have expressed concern that drivers have been exploiting the loophole
to explore some of the country's most scenic places, like Vancouver Island and Banff, Jasper, and Lake Louise.
In June, RCMP issued seven tickets worth $1,200 ($906, £694) each to Americans who broke the rules by sightseeing in Alberta.
"Do not pass go. Go directly to Alaska," Premier Horgan said during a news conference in July.


Complaints about the loophole and the lack of enforcement led to the crackdown.
At the end of July, the border authority announced that Alaska-bound travellers
had only limited points of entry, must take the most direct route to their destination,
and should display tags in their vehicle identifying them as US drivers going to the northern state.
They are also limited to a "reasonable period of stay" in Canada, and are forbidden from
visiting national parks, leisure sites and other tourist destinations, with rule-breakers facing the stiff penalties.

Since the tougher rules have been enacted, Mr Willett says he's not "too concerned" about the traffic coming over the border.
"[We] get quite a few people through all times of the day and night.
Most of them are quite co-operative," he says.
You should provide a link to the source of the text, also attribution, or are we to assume you wrote it yourself?

So, post a link to the source of the text, or claim authorship yourself. If it is from another source, how are we to know it was not altered in some way, even subtly? Did you copy and paste selected text from multiple sources, or insert some of your own?
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
This ain't the fucking "China" virus anymore, it's the USA's virus now as far as the World sees it
We're a pariah & for good reason
Good work Trump, you idiot/scumbag/POS/asshole/wanna be daughterfucker/lying sack of shit, you, on your own, because of your sheer stupidity & insanity has almost destroyed this country.
He had help too, don't forget who they were and someone needs to keep a big spreadsheet with several thousand names on it and linked to document and video resources on each one of them. A public criminal record for politicians of sorts, to be thrown in their faces and to prove them morally unfit. Make it like wikipedia for patriots, a rogues gallery of dangerous public miscreants.

With in 60 day of Joe assuming office the border restrictions will be gradually lifted as the American national rate of infection goes down. This is war level, existential stuff, make no mistake Joe will jail governors and local officials responsible for public health under emergency powers, if required, he will not fuck around, the defence procurement act will be evoked and signed on the inauguration podium. Other measures announced that day will be encouraged among the populace before then though. Leadership begins the day after the election, Donald is gonna see what that looks like, much to his surprise, much due to a president is traditional, not law. You'll see what I mean after November, so will Donald as power slips out of his hands almost immediately, especially if Joe and the democrats have a really big mandate. Donald shit on honor and tradition he abused every prerogative given him, so be it after november as Joe takes control in a national emergency from an incompetent fool.

Joe and Kamala know that greatness awaits, if they quickly and efficiently solve this covid problem and can get the economy back up and running. The glory is proportional to the service to the nation rendered, as it should be and was meant to be. Both of these people know the path to greatness, it lies on the other side of great difficulties, the bigger the challenge, the greater the glory in it's conquest, that is the game they will be playing, egos used the right way.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
You should provide a link to the source of the text, also attribution, or are we to assume you wrote it yourself?

So, post a link to the source of the text, or claim authorship yourself. If it is from another source, how are we to know it was not altered in some way, even subtly? Did you copy and paste selected text from multiple sources, or insert some of your own?
wrote it himself; here to stir up trouble..did miss any other points?

i used to think kindly of him..can't trust a russian. ever.

i'd put him on ignore but then i can't see what the fvcker is up to..notice how many russians are here since Wednesday?

Russia: if you want Americah, you'll need to come and get her..and you know what i mean..oh wait! you can't..you own too much and that would be cutting your nose to spite your face.

stupid, stupid Russians it's your own GREED that did you in. :blsmoke:
 
Last edited:

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
This ain't the fucking "China" virus anymore, it's the USA's virus now as far as the World sees it
We're a pariah & for good reason
Good work Trump, you idiot/scumbag/POS/asshole/wanna be daughterfucker/lying sack of shit, you, on your own, because of your sheer stupidity & insanity has almost destroyed this country.
In January I will expect a big check quickly delivered for supplies and rent along with a national lock down for 60 days minimum and it will be vigorously enforced too. Testing and treatment options will be sorted out within 3 months and the CDC and pandemic task force headed by Ron Klain (Obama's old head of the pandemic response team), and this experienced person is already playing a prominent role at Joe's side, will give it's first briefing that day or the next. I'd look for a reassembling of Obama's pandemic team and quick implementation of their science based and guided plan.
 
Last edited:

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
This ain't the fucking "China" virus anymore, it's the USA's virus now as far as the World sees it
We're a pariah & for good reason
Good work Trump, you idiot/scumbag/POS/asshole/wanna be daughterfucker/lying sack of shit, you, on your own, because of your sheer stupidity & insanity has almost destroyed this country.
..and he's trying to stay by dismantling the post office..no one's stopping him.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member

As the pandemic continues to sweep the US, Canadians are getting more and more concerned
about what American visitors could be bringing with them over the border.
Built directly on the border of Blaine, Washington and Surrey, British Columbia, the
Peace Arch is a 67-foot high (20 metres) testament to the close ties between Canada and the US.
Inscribed on one side are the words "May these gates never be closed", a reminder of the nearly
8,891 km (5,525 miles) of un-militarised border that separates the two nations.

For almost 100 years, those words have been heeded - until the coronavirus pandemic
effectively shut the border indefinitely.
The closure came into effect on 21 March, and was agreed upon by both governments.
After being extended several times over the summer, it remains in effect until 21 August -
although most expect it to be extended again.
"I never thought I'd be sitting here mid-August and that border is still closed,"
says Len Saunders, a dual citizen who lives in Blaine.
"It just seems to be dragging on and on and on with no end in sight."
While the border closure has had significant economic and personal repercussions
for the millions of people that live along it or have loved ones on the other side,
the vast majority of Canadians want it to stay shut.


A July poll by Ipsos Reid found that eight in ten Canadians wanted the border to stay closed
until at least the end of 2020.
And as the pandemic has continued to spread across the US, so have tensions between
American drivers and Canadian residents.
While non-essential travel is forbidden, commercial drivers delivering goods and people
who work across the border in essential services are permitted to cross.
People with American licence plates have reported being harassed and having their
vehicles vandalised, even if they have every right to be on the Canadian side.
Mr Saunders, an immigration lawyer who has many clients who cross the border
regularly in order to work, says many people are afraid.
"They're all scared of driving their cars in the lower mainland because of vandalism, dirty looks
and just getting treated as some 'horrible American'," he told the BBC.
One of his clients, an architect who was allowed to practise in Canada during the shutdown,
says he was told to "go back home" because of his car.
The tensions are so high that British Columbia Premier John Horgan
suggested that Canadians with out-of-province licence plates should take the bus or ride bikes instead.

In the Muskoka region of Ontario, where many people have summer homes,
the hostility has garnered police attention.
Ontario Provincial Police say a Canadian in the town of Huntsville filed a complaint
after two men allegedly accosted him over his Florida licence plate.
"Most recently this weekend, there was a gentleman up towards Huntsville getting gas
in his vehicle, and two gentlemen approached him and said, 'you're American go home.' And he said,
'I'm Canadian. I live here.' And they literally said, no, we don't believe you show us your passport,
" Phil Harding, the mayor of nearby Kuskoka Lakes, told CP24.
"It just becomes a little bit aggressive, and they fear for their lives a little bit."
Those caught breaking the rules can face serious consequences.

In Grand Forks, British Columbia, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police spent over two hours
chasing a man, who allegedly had crossed illegally in a stolen vehicle on 24 July, down a river.
The "float chase" ended where the river narrowed, when police, with the help of bystanders,
were able to wade into the river and escort him back to shore.


Charges are pending, but anyone caught breaking the border restrictions can be fined
up to C$750,000 ($566,000; £434,000) and be sentenced to six months in jail, or C$1m
and three years if their actions "cause risk of imminent death or serious bodily harm".
Those hefty fines aren't just for wilful rule-breakers.

On Wednesday, police warned Americans participating in an annual float down the St Claire River
near the Michigan border that even accidentally crossing into Canada could lead to a hefty fine.
In 2016, during more carefree times,
Canadian police congenially escorted about 1,500 floaters back to the US side after winds blew them off course.
Still, the effects of the border closure on the small towns along either side are not insignificant.
Before coronavirus, around 300,000 people crossed the border every day,
including Canadians who routinely made daytrips to score a deal at US outlet malls
or petrol stations, and American tourists exploring the wonder of Niagara Falls

Since March, non-commercial land border crossings to Canada have dropped by nearly 95%,
according to the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA).
"It's going to decimate everything up there," Mr Saunders says.

But the economic impact of closing the border to travellers is nothing
compared to what would happen to Canada if another wave of coronavirus
forced a second shutdown, says Ambarish Chandra, a professor of economics at the University of Toronto.
"This travel does have a lot of economic impact on the communities where travellers go to," he says.

"But given the pandemic in the US, and the number of cases there,
it makes sense to restrict travel to the US - potentially indefinitely."
Prof Chandra says government should provide aid to border towns whose economy
relies heavily on foreign tourism, but hold steady with the border closures until the pandemic is over.
"In the long run it's way cheaper to bail out all of Niagara Falls, Ontario,
than to close down Toronto for even another three or four weeks," he says.
After months of shuttering most businesses,
Canada's coronavirus cases are dropping and the country is in the middle of re-opening its economy.
Daily cases have dropped from a high of 2,760 on 3 May to a few hundred.
Restaurants and shops have been open for at least a few weeks in most major cities,
and so far, cases are still trending downwards.

Meanwhile, the US is trying to tame its outbreak,
which reached a peak of 75,821 on 17 July and is seeing about 40,000 new cases a day.

Those numbers are what's fuelling the unease many Canadians have with American travellers.
"Montana is directly south of us, is having a second spike of cases right now, and
I don't feel sorry for anybody that gets stopped at the border, let's put it that way," says Jim Willett, the mayor of Coutts, Alberta.
"I'm afraid if we opened up the border too soon, we might have more of a problem like what's going on down south."
His town is one of the five border towns where US residents travelling to Alaska
can enter Canada, since the CBSA cracked down on the so-called "Alaska loophole" at the end of July.

Since Alaska shares no borders with other US states,
Americans who drive there on land have to go through Canada, hence the "loophole".
After the border closed, many have expressed concern that drivers have been exploiting the loophole
to explore some of the country's most scenic places, like Vancouver Island and Banff, Jasper, and Lake Louise.
In June, RCMP issued seven tickets worth $1,200 ($906, £694) each to Americans who broke the rules by sightseeing in Alberta.
"Do not pass go. Go directly to Alaska," Premier Horgan said during a news conference in July.


Complaints about the loophole and the lack of enforcement led to the crackdown.
At the end of July, the border authority announced that Alaska-bound travellers
had only limited points of entry, must take the most direct route to their destination,
and should display tags in their vehicle identifying them as US drivers going to the northern state.
They are also limited to a "reasonable period of stay" in Canada, and are forbidden from
visiting national parks, leisure sites and other tourist destinations, with rule-breakers facing the stiff penalties.

Since the tougher rules have been enacted, Mr Willett says he's not "too concerned" about the traffic coming over the border.
"[We] get quite a few people through all times of the day and night.
Most of them are quite co-operative," he says.
what a lying sack of shit you are! none of this is real.
 

WintersBones

Well-Known Member
wrote it himself; here to stir up trouble..did miss any other points?

i used to think kindly of him..can't trust a russian. ever.

i'd put him on ignore but then i can't see what the fvcker is up to..notice how many russians are here since Wednesday?

Russia: if you want Americah, you'll need to come and get her..and you know what i mean..oh wait! you can't..you own too much and that would be cutting your nose to spite your face.

stupid, stupid Russians it's your own GREED that did you in. :blsmoke:
Not a troll at all folks. This is very much an issue at debate here.
 

BurtMaklin

Well-Known Member

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Not a troll at all folks. This is very much an issue at debate here.
he knows the rules- link or it didn't happen..his pattern is showing to stoke the fire therefore he's not our friend.

Russia is not a friend of America period; it's time people started remembering that fact.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member

Masks are mandatory indoors and anywhere you can't social distance. For the most part people are compliant and respectful. Safest place in North America to be, baby!! Restaurants and bars have been operating at full capacity for at least a month now, so fingers crossed and stuff.

So, America, stay away!! You aren't welcome


I have lived about a half hour or so from Canada my entire life and I only found reason to go there once when I was 18.

But thank you for Yzerman.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Masks are mandatory indoors and anywhere you can't social distance. For the most part people are compliant and respectful. Safest place in North America to be, baby!! Restaurants and bars have been operating at full capacity for at least a month now, so fingers crossed and stuff.

So, America, stay away!! You aren't welcome
If they have a clean sweep and elect Biden, I would expect to border restrictions to start lifting by the first day of spring and mostly gone by the first day of summer. When artificial antibody treatments are more available ( less sick people because of NPI's) perhaps international airline travelers could be given them to create a couple of months immunity, pay a surcharge for it.

In Canada if you were to get covid here in NS, because there are so few cases, by this fall you would probably be whacked with convalescent plasma therapy or artificial antibodies upon testing positive or showing symptoms. There are so few or no cases, you'd have a lot of first class doctors on yours and they'd have the therapies available to make a difference too! You'd also have a lot of unemployed contact tracers making life miserable for everybody ya got near. :D
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member


I have lived about a half hour or so from Canada my entire life and I only found reason to go there once when I was 18.

But thank you for Yzerman.
If Trump gets in again you might be coming to Windsor as a refugee, PM me for sponsorship! :D
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Masks are mandatory indoors and anywhere you can't social distance. For the most part people are compliant and respectful. Safest place in North America to be, baby!! Restaurants and bars have been operating at full capacity for at least a month now, so fingers crossed and stuff.

So, America, stay away!! You aren't welcome
If they can work the swab bugs out of that spartan testing cube and get it deployed, it will make reopening schools much easier, one tests takes a half hour to get results, so 40 people or more can be tested a day with one gimo and the governments ordered more than a million of them.

Has health Canada done everything possible to speedily deploy this proven technology? Partnering with the company if required and expediting quality assurance? I'd like to know, I'm a liberal, but some answers would be nice, so would lighting a fire under somebody's arse, or replacing them with someone properly motivated and qualified. Thousands of businesses are waiting for this service, with a mobile unit of several, you could randomly test everybody in a bar or restaurant for instance and give results to them before they leave. Test nail salon and hairdressers, workers and other front line people too, this device along with masks can protect working people and the economy.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Masks are mandatory indoors and anywhere you can't social distance. For the most part people are compliant and respectful. Safest place in North America to be, baby!! Restaurants and bars have been operating at full capacity for at least a month now, so fingers crossed and stuff.

So, America, stay away!! You aren't welcome
One more thing, since masks were made mandatory here in NS, compliance went way up to over 95%, even with no covid in the province. I feel much more comfortable about shopping now and I'm willing to go out and do some, masks are better for the economy than many people realise. They are also good for other more obvious reasons, they save lives and livelihoods and allow people to get back to the most normal live possible.

Knock it down by locking down, then test, case isolate and make masks mandatory, intern those who refuse to comply if required, jail public health officials and governors who refuse to follow the law (new if required) and national public health regulations. The supreme court can hear the case in 2 or 3 years if they wish (trump's timeline), meantime there is a country and many lives to save.
 
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