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Cake day: August 7th, 2023

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  • Left alone, as in “colonize” a bit more on the land they are stealing? Ah but we must understand Israelis, they just need a little Lebensraum to “defend themselves” from the people they stole land from.

    Israel just need to “colonize” and expand on other people’s land by killing those already living there. They obviously just want to be left alone doing their “colonizing” and bringing civilization to otherwise barren lands.

    I’d show you images of Israel expanding and taking more Palestinian land over the decades but you’ll probably say those are propaganda and that since Palestine is not recognized, killing their people and stealing their land is totally fine and in the line of wanting to be “left alone”.



  • The last liberal government in Québec did that, but for a transit line (the REM).

    They killed the only profitable commuter train line (DM) and literally gave it to a for profit entity (CDPQ) so they can transform it into a metro line. So now the public transit entities cannot compete with the private one, and even has to pay it royalties for something like 99 years.

    I repeat, the public transit entity (ARTM) cannot compete against the for profit one, AND must pay it royalties for every passenger.

    So now the ARTM doesn’t have the revenues from its defunct most popular commuter line, and must pay royalties on top of that. Public money, going straight into a for profit organization.

    The new light rail line was not even working in 2023 and the public already had to pay $2.4 million to the CDPQ.

    And those defending that model say that the CDPQ is a retirement investment firm that is profiting Quebecers, but their goal is still to make money. Unprofitable lines will be cut or never developed, even if needed.

    They are literally privatizing public transit and some people are encouraging it saying that’s how we now have to build transit. It’s the way of the future!

    Meanwhile the public transit entity says it’s not sure it can now maintain some of the other commuter lines and will have to look into cutting expenses and/or service.

    Sigh…

    EDIT: Source for the price the ARTM has to pay: https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/rem-hikes-per-passenger-payment-from-artm-even-before-it-starts-running



  • When I saw the title through my news feed, I knew exactly what it was about.

    And it’s totally ridiculous and unrealistic to expect her to allow every right wing asshole on X formally known as Twitter to send her heinous messages and ad hominem. She should just quit that cesspool.

    I went there for a while and every fucking post that I tried to make, or follow, within my “community” and followers, ended up being flooded by hateful messages, the worst ones being from paying accounts and highlighted by Twitter itself. I really liked the small community of people that were progressives and pro-cycling on Twitter, for Montreal. But every time they comment or if you dare reply something nice, you or them will get flooded by loads of insulting, hateful, shitty replies. I gave up. It’s untenable.

    If you spend just a few minutes through her posts and their replies, you can see exactly why some of them are being blocked. The people criticizing her are unrealistic. They are not receiving personal threats and insults as “messages from their constituents”.

    Again, I think she should just quit the cesspool that is X formally known as Twitter. There is nothing to gain there.


  • Yeah, I can understand as I have been car free for over 20 years. At least this route does have a baggage car allowing you to do this. It would be impossible in the Corridor as they don’t take baggage anymore.

    With VIA you can bring a bike and lots of checked baggage with you between Toronto and Vancouver, because they have a baggage car and serve smaller communities that need it. But this is not possible between Windsor and Quebec City.

    I can’t even bring a bike with me from Montreal to Drummondville, even if their new trains have bike racks. And they can’t say when it’s gonna be possible.

    I also sometimes have no choice but to use VIA Rail, and that’s why I’m so critical of them.

    Good luck. Bring snacks and water with you, just in case.


  • They are pretty rare. However, he doesn’t seem that much aware.

    As you know, since we lost Greyhound [bus service], people have very few passenger transportation options in northern B.C. and right across rural Canada.

    Not everyone can afford the cost of flying across the country, and so we need to have a better balance between the need to ship goods, which is a very real need and connected to the health of our economy, and the need to transport passengers and provide people with safe, convenient, affordable and low carbon transportation options.

    AFAIK flying across the country is cheaper than taking a train, priority over freight or not. A flight from Vancouver to Toronto take less than 5 hours, there are daily departures, and is around $150 depending on the transporter. A train from Vancouver to Toronto is $685, takes days, and only has two departures a week. And if you plan a month in advance, it’s “only” $514.

    From my point of view, nobody really wants to cross the country on a train, except those doing it for the trip itself. To me, what is lacking is, as he stated, intercity services. Going from one city to another, without a car, is a horrible experience in Canada right now. I’m not even talking about rural places, like he dares. Just cities. Even if we give priority to VIA’s trains, they are still going to require planning your trip weeks in advance to get anything other than exorbitant prices. They will still only have a few departures a day, or a week.

    It’s a very good first step to prioritize passenger trains, but it’s going to take much more than that!


  • The country, especially the central and western parts, was populated by the railways. When looking at old railway maps, it’s just fascinating to see how every little town and village was connected by a rail line.

    It’s understandable that through the years the network will shrink and consolidate, but passenger trains have not been consolidated, they’ve been butchered. Freight is king. Even old abandoned railways can’t be converted to bike paths because freight companies, while not using the line, will also not relinquish it. The government gives freight companies like CN and CP(KC) everything they want, and even lowers safety standards and regulations so those companies can make even more profit. Yet, VIA Rail and their passengers have been reduced and cut to pathetic levels.

    I doubt that any minister have to take a train on a regular basis or they would be painfully aware of how bad it is. Just the airline model is making me fume a little bit every time that I board a VIA train. VIA (and Amtrak) prefers to make passengers form a long line in the station and insists on scanning every ticket before even being allowed on the platform, then checks tickets AGAIN once the train is moving. I wish they would do like in Europe; allow passengers to board like a metro, and just validate tickets once in the train.

    It’s all sad and disappointing that we can’t have ‘normal’ intercity services. Even coaches are bad. The message from our leaders, whether it’s provincial (in my case), or federal, is “get a car, loser”. But get an EV! You know, for the environment,



  • And thus, nothing will change.

    As someone that has been living without a car for more than 20 years, I’m tempted to buy one. I’m so tired of shitty intercity services in this country. The minister is outraged now but was he also outraged when this happened last year? Or the year before?

    I was in Europe for the two previous weeks and was ‘stressed’ when I didn’t have a ticket booked for the next day, but it didn’t matter at all. There are plenty of trains and if you miss one, just take the next one. Yet, while being there, I had to plan a trip from Montreal to Drummondville the weekend I got back, for my nephew’s birthday. I checked for tickets with VIA Rail FIVE days before and they were already $60 for the economy class. Guess I had to plan this three weeks in advance, because the five trains a day between Montreal and Quebec City are already “full”.

    As for the passengers being stranded, the article mentions it already happened, VIA was supposed to have a plan in case of breakdown, and we can see how it went.

    So I took a coach from Montreal to Drummondville. They have a whopping three departures a day.

    The investigation will not change the fact that we have to plan an intercity trip WEEKS in advance otherwise it’s going to cost an arm and a leg. It will not make VIA more on time. It will not make them take bikes on the corridor. It will not move them away from their damn airline model.

    I don’t like to drive, I don’t like cars in general, but I’m thinking about it. Great job from our leaders. I’m sure others that could also live without a car ended up getting one because we suck so badly at this.



  • pedz@lemmy.catoCanada@lemmy.caCanada is not broken.
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    2 months ago

    Without mentioning any political party, I can point out one thing that is clearly a problem and will prevent our country from going forward; the constitution.

    Want to make electoral reforms? Let’s open the constitution and see if every provinces agrees.

    Want to change how anything works in the country, let’s open the constitution and see if all the provinces agree.

    Every time we tried to fix that, the country nearly imploded. It’s a ticking bomb that we just ignore. We sweep that constitutional impasse under the rug every election, and ‘everything is fine’.



  • Where I live temperatures can reach -30C in winter and 30C in summer, so storing anything “sensible” in a shed is a very bad idea. Everything has to be stored in a controlled environment or it will quickly get moldy and rusty.

    However, I kept my old 5.25" diskettes in a box where they were a bit squeezed together and they obviously didn’t like that. It could also just be time. Anyways, a few years ago I decided to copy everything on hard drives and some diskettes were now unreadable.

    I waited too long to backup them and now it’s too late for some of them.

    And even stored “properly”, I also have burned CDs from the early 2000 that are also unreadable. It’s unfortunate but there’s nothing I can do now, except to learn and remember the lesson.

    I’m always baffled by people that find old computers stored in barns and still working. Where I am I don’t think they would last more than two winters with this kind of temperature and humidity variation.


  • I work with IBM i/AS400 servers and those are not exactly the quickest thing to “reboot” (technically an IPL). Especially the old ones. I have access to the HMC/console but even this sometimes takes several minutes (if not dozens) just to show what’s going on.

    It’s always a bit stressful to see the codes passing one after the other and then it stops on one and seems to get stuck there for a while before continuing the IPL process. Maybe it’s applying PTFs (updates) or something, and you just have to wait while even the console is blank.

    I’ve been monitoring those servers for years and I’m still sometimes wondering if it hanged during the IPL or if it’s just doing its thing, because this part, even with codes, is not very verbose.

    Fortunately it’s also very stable so it pretty much always comes back a few minutes after you start wondering why the hell it’s taking so long.




  • Again? It also happened two years ago with passengers stuck on a train for 12 hours.

    I hate VIA Rail so much, yet sometimes I have no choice but to use them, as I made the stupid choice of not having a car.

    I always prepare for the worse with them. Bring snacks and water because they can’t even do that when trains are running “normally”. For example if you have not eaten before taking a VIA Rail train and count on their services, they will probably be late with the food cart and pass 3 minutes before your stop.

    And don’t forget to buy your ticket 3 weeks in advance (or more) because god forbid you think of going in another city “only” a few days before. Being last minute for them is apparently about one week before taking the train.

    I wanted to make Montreal to Drummondville saturday but I thought about it tuesday and it was already “too late”. So instead of the normal exorbitant price of $35 that it normally costs if you reserve 3 weeks in advance, it’s $60.

    They also don’t take bikes on the corridor and they can’t say if they will eventually.

    Employees will also threaten to kick you out of the train in the middle of nowhere if they want to have authority on you. Or they won’t let you out when they have an issue. You’re basically at their mercy.

    And unfortunately buses are not exactly better. Intercity travel in this country sucks soooo much if you don’t have a car.

    It’s so bad that in summer I prefer to cycle the whole 130 km to go visit my family instead of taking a VIA Rail train, or an Orléans Express bus.

    I’m in Europe right now and I’m so envious of their trains. I don’t even have to plan ahead a few weeks before! This morning I booked a ticket from Aachen to Liège about 30 minutes before the departure and it went so well. And there was another train an hour after this one. Or a high speed one too. Aaah, we suck so bad at this.


  • AFAIK the only environmental goal that we met was the Montreal protocol and the elimination of chemicals harming the ozone layer.

    As a result of the international agreement, the ozone hole in Antarctica is slowly recovering. Climate projections indicate that the ozone layer will return to 1980 levels between 2040 (across much of the world) and 2066 (over Antarctica). Due to its widespread adoption and implementation, it has been hailed as an example of successful international co-operation. Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan stated that “perhaps the single most successful international agreement to date has been the Montreal Protocol”.

    I think we also did something about acid rain for a few decades now but I can’t find any specific agreement. All I know is that I’m in my 40ies and thus old enough to remember it was an issue when I was a kid, and that the US and Canada agreed to do something about it.

    Some governments, including those in Europe and North America, have made efforts since the 1970s to reduce the release of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide into the atmosphere through air pollution regulations. These efforts have had positive results due to the widespread research on acid rain starting in the 1960s and the publicized information on its harmful effects.

    I don’t know what changed but apparently, we don’t really care about the rest now.