Eye In The Sky said:
So you are against the portion in yellow? And speaking out against it. Yes?? Did you vote Liberal and/or support that party?
Think about it for a minute, in terms of what is happening right now in Canada.
1. It wasn't my generation, or my fathers, who 'racked up the debt'; it was the government of that time who did.
2. Cost of living is higher, so are wages/salaries Inflation of wages hasn't kept up with the inflation of everything else, one fully qualified machinist I know who is about to retire says the point he made the most for his money was in the 1970s, 40 years ago..
No I did not vote Liberal, I honestly see them as a fairly corrupt political party. Personally I am a Classical Liberal (the beliefs of which Canada and most modern democracies were born), and as such there is no real party that represents what I believe in. If you must know I voted Conservative, I am just not tied to one particular party, I see the good and bad in all.
What I want from government, is less control in peoples lives, less regulations, no corruption, removal from the UN, lower taxes*1, less restrictive firearms laws, some direct democracy*2, yearly elections*3, legalization of pot*4, fixing of the trades system *5, proper financial management (i.e. having a deficit should be illegal), and a home buying loan*6. If you can find me a political party which wants these beliefs let me know.
For those that are saying acknowledging that we do have a shorter end of a stick is whining, then yeah we are whining. Personally I am doing what I can to actually get a job which is not government dependant, however acknowledging we have some broken systems (like the trades) is a step towards actually solving problems facing my generation (and future generations). My generation will work longer hours, longer years (pensionable age is only going up), and receive less benefits for those jobs. Maybe I am a little bitter that a fair bit of our discomfort is caused by the previous generations. Things like the exporting of jobs thanks to the free trade agreements (free trade equalizes the playing field, however until our standard of living drops, or it shoots up in other countries, those jobs won't be returning with out government help), changing of the trades system (less qualified people means you can make more money as a individual), chasing the all mighty dollar (caused companies to cut back on benefits, and training to increase profit margins), and national and provincial debt.
George Wallace said:
Cry me a fucking river.... I worked my way through university. I had to go looking for a job. I landed up joining the CF. Your sense of entitlement and "whoa is me" is a sign of weakness on your part; and not the fault of my, or any other, generation.
Congrats. I am currently working my way through my education as well, and I have no student debt as I have paid for all my education myself. Working in the CAF isn't a great accomplishment to be 100% honest. It is fairly easy to get in, remain in, and it pays very well (not to mention great benefits). Not saying it isn't difficult (trust me I know it can be absolute hell), but there is a reason some civvies call it working welfare. I am not against the military by any means, just noting that it can be a much easier path to follow (I did it when I was 18 with only high school, so will many others).
So as you can tell I am not the average youth voter. I have made plans to get into decent paying jobs through proper education (as much as they will let me take), and realistically I don't care about many of the same issues my generation does (I am actually starting to turn into a Luddite, tempted to get rid of my cellphone, I am making quite a few things by hand without power tools, and I still read paper books).
*1 which are simplified preferably in a flat tax manner say 20% of income for all levels past about 25,000 a year, no tax reductions for any specific group, either everyone receives a tax reduction or no one does
*2 I would love to see a system much like Switzerland, you collect 50,000 signatures within say a one month time period you can have a referendum on any law currently in existence, and once the referendum is held, if the majority of people want the law gone the government gets one month to try and re-write it if they wish to, another referendum is then held on the re-written law and if it fails the law is stricken down.
*3 Every year elect a quarter of the government, that way you have stable government changes and you can hold the government accountable as they do things, instead of waiting 4 years and having a big election, by which time issues that were important say 4 years ago (maybe a corruption scandal, maybe something else) have been forgotten.
*4 I personally don't smoke it, and I have no interest in smoking it, but the amount of tax money lost, and amount of money spent on prosecuting someones poor choices is ridiculous
*5 The trades system is broken, how is it we are desperately short skilled trades people yet people refuse to take apprentices? Countries to look at for a successful trades system are Germany and Britain.
*6 We are willing to give people student loans for 100k for a Liberal arts degree (something I would also like to see changed, place a system where in demand trades and courses are given for free, well the other ones are no longer subsidized), why not make a loan for those who do not go to school and waste the money, and instead let them buy a reasonable priced home. Worst case scenario they default on it, and the government gets the collateral aka the house. Best case scenario someone who would have been unable to afford a house through the traditional route, can now get one. You are also not screwed like if someone with 100k of student debt defaults as there is no collateral.