Old Sweat said:One advantage of Toronto is that there are no hassles getting playoff tickets in April-May.
dapaterson said:Other than pandering, there is no valid reason to provide fire/police/EMS with enhanced pension benefits. The uncontrollable spiral of pay & benefits for emergency services is nearing a tipping point for many communities.
tomahawk6 said:Would Islington work for you ? They have a join now and play 2015 for free.
http://islingtongolfclub.com/Membership.aspx
Now THAT tends to be true, no matter where you come from.s2184 said:I need people around me in my life. After you grow little bigger you want to go back, and hug the people who are there with you from the beginning. ;D
Old Sweat said:We'll excuse you for missing the irony. Drew was making the point that the Maple Leafs spend the playoffs on the golf course.
Log Offr said:Just remember that people in New York look down their noses at Toronto - small, bland, nothing to do, provincial. Just like people from Paris look down on New Yorkers. Just like people from Moscow look down on Parisians. Just like people from Hong Kong look down on Muscovites. etc.
cupper said:Every city in Canada looks down their noses at Toronto. ;D
mariomike said:But as our emergency planners used to tell us, "Approximately ten million Canadians - one third of Canada's population - live within a 160-km (100-mile) radius of Toronto." ;D
Which would explain PM Trudeau and Premier Wynne. I think I like it better when those voters had to live in fear [Xpmariomike said:But as our emergency planners used to tell us, "Approximately ten million Canadians - one third of Canada's population - live within a 160-km (100-mile) radius of Toronto." ;D
FJAG said:Incidentally for anyone above that has/had the attitude that Torontonians feel that they are the centre of the universe; well we sure had the attitude back in the 1960s that everything that mattered in the world was situated south of the 401. Not really sure if that has changed any.
:cheers:
CBH99 said:Born & raised southern Alberta.
Fairly multi-cultural. I didn't learn French though...and none of my friends from BC or Sask did either. When people from Ontario learn that, they seem to be surprised.
I'm biased, just because of where I grew up & what is familiar to me. West is Best.
I've never really "experienced" Toronto. My only experience is landing at Pearson & driving down the 401 in what always, always appears to be a post-apocalyptic scene. Every single time we land & drive to my grandmothers house, its always cloudy, smoggy, and those condo buildings NEVER END....LIKE EVER. You can drive & drive & drive, and the buildings JUST KEEP COMING
CBH99 said:Born & raised southern Alberta.
Fairly multi-cultural. I didn't learn French though...and none of my friends from BC or Sask did either. When people from Ontario learn that, they seem to be surprised.
I'm biased, just because of where I grew up & what is familiar to me. West is Best.
I've never really "experienced" Toronto. My only experience is landing at Pearson & driving down the 401 in what always, always appears to be a post-apocalyptic scene. Every single time we land & drive to my grandmothers house, its always cloudy, smoggy, and those condo buildings NEVER END....LIKE EVER. You can drive & drive & drive, and the buildings JUST KEEP COMING