Same House, Different Furniture – The Trudeau/Carney Shuffle

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Humor for the day? Or truth?

Carbon tax. Trudeau puts it in, says it’ll clean the air. Carney comes along, drops the part that hits consumers, keeps the industry stuff. Same smell in the room, just moved the chair a bit.

Taxes and social programs. Trudeau builds a bunch of things, childcare, dental, whatever. Carney slides a sofa over, cuts a few taxes, gives first-time buyers a break. Room’s the same, cushions just feel softer.

Immigration. Trudeau throws a huge party, 500,000 guests. Carney trims it slowly—smaller party, same music.

Trade. Trudeau slaps on tariffs like stickers on a mailbox. Carney peels some off, keeps the important ones. Still the same mailbox.

Environment. Both like electric cars. Trudeau says, “Drive electric by 2035.” Carney nods, whispers, “Yeah, maybe a pipeline too.” Wallpaper hasn’t changed.

Labour. Trudeau keeps the Labour office around. Carney knocks down the door and handles strikes his way. Furniture’s shifted again, ceiling’s still there.

Takeaway: the house hasn’t changed. Walls, roof, floors… all Trudeau. Carney’s just moving the furniture and calling it new.


Old-Timer’s Take

Well… I’ve been around long enough to see the paint peel and floors sag. Never voted Liberal. Every time someone talks like Trudeau or Carney is some genius saving the country, I think, “Been there, seen that.” They’re not building a new house. They’re moving furniture, making people think it’s a renovation.

And Canadians? They clap. “Look at the new sofa placement!” Meanwhile, the leaks are still dripping, termites in the basement.

“Until the next time, keep your minds open and your stories alive.” GW

All my books are available on my Amazon Author Page.

If you purchase a book, a brief Amazon review really helps new readers discover my work—it means a lot.

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In Closing, I Would Like to Wish You Well!

George Walters | [email protected]

Ontario’s Job Losses: Who’s Really at Fault?

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You know, I saw a headline the other day that says: Ontario lost 38,000 jobs in a single quarter, and the story blames it all on U.S. tariffs. Forty thousand jobs gone, just like that. You’d think the sky was falling.

Except it’s not that simple. Most of the losses are in manufacturing, and factories which have been trimming workforces for years. The thing is… machines can do more work with fewer hands, that’s just the way the modern world rolls. Add high energy costs, global competition from places willing to work for a fraction of what we pay, and supply chain headaches still lingering from the pandemic, and yeah, jobs disappear. Pointing the finger at tariffs alone is like blaming the wind for a roof that’s already rotten.

Then the government throws a few billion at training programs and emergency loans, acting like it’s going to fix everything. It helps a little, sure, but mostly it’s a band-aid over a problem that’s been building for years. And the stories you read want you to think there’s some villain out there huffing and puffing to blow down our houses. Meanwhile, the real pressure is coming from right here at home, from our costs, our outdated ways, and the stubborn refusal to adjust to a changing world.

It’s funny how news works. The simpler the villain, the better the story. Scares a few people, stirs a little outrage, maybe sells a few clicks. Meanwhile, the messy truth sits quietly in the corner, doing all the work, ignored and unpolished.

So here’s what I think: Before we shake our fists at tariffs or point fingers at anyone else, maybe take a look at what we can actually fix ourselves. Jobs don’t vanish because someone across the border decided to play mean. They vanish because we’re not paying attention, because costs run wild, and because we’re still using yesterday’s methods for today’s problems.


Until the next time, keep your minds open and your stories alive. GW

All my books are available on my Amazon Author Page.

If you purchase a book, a brief Amazon review really helps new readers discover my work—it means a lot.

Support my writing: Support My Writing

In Closing, I Would Like to Wish You Well!

George Walters | [email protected]

When Protecting Your Home Feels Like a Crime

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Premier Doug Ford said it best the other day, that something is broken. Relating to what? Well, a homeowner in Lindsay, Ontario, was charged with aggravated assault after a man broke into his home. The fellow that did the breaking-in was already wanted by police, yet the man who defended himself is the one now facing charges. That doesn’t sit right with me.

Now, I’ve always believed in being reasonable. If someone breaks into your house in the middle of the night, you don’t go looking for trouble, and you sure don’t go further than you have to. But… at the same time, you don’t get the luxury of sitting down and calmly weighing your options. In those moments, you’re thinking about your family and your own safety. Now here’s the thing, If you can get everyone out safe without a fight, then that’s the road to take. But… if you’re faced with harm, maybe even death, well then… you do what has to be done. Simple as that.

And the law here in Canada agrees to a point, as sections 34 and 35 of the Criminal Code say you can defend yourself, others, and your property, but the force you use must be “reasonable in the circumstances.” On paper that makes sense, but here’s the problem… what’s “reasonable” is usually decided later in a courtroom, by people who weren’t the ones waking up to a stranger standing in their living room.

Now, I don’t blame the police for laying charges in cases like this. As truth told, a lot of the time their hands are tied too. They’re required to follow the process laid out by the law, even if they might understand where the homeowner was coming from. The trouble is, the system leaves them stuck in the middle, catching flak from both sides. That’s not fair on them, either.

So maybe what really needs to change isn’t how the police do their job, but the laws themselves. I personally believe that we need laws that protect the innocent first, and hold the guilty accountable without loopholes that let them walk right back out the door. Too often, we see criminals caught red-handed, only to be back on the street before the ink on the paperwork is dry. That’s not right, and it leaves good folks feeling like the system cares more about procedure than people’s safety.

I’m not saying homeowners should have free rein to do whatever they like in those situations. But I am saying that if a man or woman defends their home when they truly believe their life or their family’s lives are at risk, the law ought to stand behind them, not against them.

Any way, at the end of the day, Canadians should feel safe in their own homes. And when someone forces their way in, the person defending their family shouldn’t be the one treated like the criminal. That’s not justice, and it’s something we need to fix.

Until the next time, keep your minds open and your stories alive. GW

All my books are available on my Amazon Author Page.

If you purchase a book, a brief Amazon review really helps new readers discover my work—it means a lot.

Support my writing: Support My Writing

In Closing, I Would Like to Wish You Well!

George Walters | [email protected]

When Being Nice Isn’t Enough

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You know… somewhere along the way here in Canada, being polite started to look a lot like being brave, but it isn’t. The thing is. people today are scared of offending anyone, afraid to ask questions, worried more about feelings than facts. And you know what? That’s exactly what the powers that be want. If nobody challenges anything, the folks in charge can do whatever they want, like lining their pockets and calling it progress. The truth is, we’ve traded backbone for manners, and it’s not a good trade.

Take doctors, for example, not all of them, but some. Walk into an office today, and you’ll find them glued to their laptops, typing away like they’re drafting the next great American/Canadian Novel, barely looking at you. You sit there, waiting, finally they glance up and ask a question, and then, as if announcing lottery numbers, they say, “We should run some tests to find out what’s wrong.” You come in for a headache, you leave with a full scan and a new anxiety disorder.

Now… years ago, it was a hell of a lot different. Doctors shook your hand, asked how you were, and actually listened. They watched you, talked to you, and by the end of the conversation, they pretty much knew what was going on without sending you off for a dozen expensive tests. The thing that most don’t understand is that those tests don’t just check your body, they stress your mind and can leave you sicker than when you came in. The older doctors had patience, compassion, and understanding, the kind of care that actually fixed things before a machine got involved.

And let’s be honest… the system is so obsessed with screens, machines, and protocols, it forgot the simplest part: paying attention. Today, people are treated like data points, not human beings. Efficiency over empathy, and the results show.

We’ve got to stop confusing politeness with courage. Speaking up, asking questions, holding people accountable… that’s bravery. Compassion is priceless. Blind compliance is deadly. You can be nice, but if you’re too scared to say what’s true, you’re just helping the system run over you with a smile.

Bottom line… yes, I am a bottom line kind of guy. Life doesn’t get better just because we’re polite. Being nice won’t fix a broken system, heal a sick body, or protect your wallet. Things improve when someone actually pays attention, asks questions, and takes the time to care. That’s the kind of action that makes a real difference. It’s a lesson most of us could use before we hand over our health, our money, and our voices to people who don’t notice or don’t care.


“Until the next time, keep your minds open and your stories alive.” GW

All my books are available on my Amazon Author Page.

If you purchase a book, a brief Amazon review really helps new readers discover my work—it means a lot.

Support my writing: Support My Writing

In Closing, I Would Like to Wish You Well!

George Walters | [email protected]

Canada Needs to Mind Its Own Backyard

You know... I’ve watched governments come and go, promising the moon and handing out a lot of paperwork instead. With the age I am, you start seeing through the speeches and the charts. Here in Canada, we could be doing a lot better if we paid attention to our own people instead of chasing numbers and headlines.

Look south at the U.S. Right now… these folks are putting their people first, and it seems to be working for them. Now, I’m not saying we should copy everything, but it’s a good reminder: a country that forgets its own workers and families isn’t going anywhere. “Too often, jobs and opportunities get tallied like baseball cards, while the people doing the work get forgotten.”

Now here’s the thing; “Canada could do great, but it takes more than useless chatter from some of the powers that be.” We need policies that actually help families, create good work, and keep opportunities close to home. “And yes, some people will always bitch and complain, point fingers, and turn it into political theater, but the truth is simple: if we don’t look after our own, nobody else is going to.”

Until the next time: Keep Your Minds Open & Your Stories Alive. GW

All my books are available on my Amazon Author Page.

If you purchase a book, a brief Amazon review really helps new readers discover my work—it means a lot.

Support my writing: Support My Writing

In Closing, I Would Like to Wish You Well!

George Walters | [email protected]