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Bandit's avatar

Thanks for including the fact that Canada already has high firearms ownership rates without a second amendment. It goes to further another point I'm glad you brought up; Canada was formed through reaction. Canada is an inherently traditionalist, conservative nation.

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Sol Hando's avatar

"Were you expecting to leverage your résumé or skill set and hurl it into the United States’ job market post-annexation? Guess what; you’d find yourself in a more saturated and competitive job market... The U.S. unemployment rate, at 4.1%, is also notably lower than Canada’s 6.7%, indicating fewer available positions relative to the number of jobseekers."

This is just wrong, and shows a fundamental lack of understanding of unemployment.

More unemployed workers relative to the number of positions means a more competitive job market, not a less competitive one. The higher Canadian unemployment rate means there are more unemployed Canadians chasing fewer jobs. If it was otherwise, people in Canada would be employed and the unemployment rate would be lower. The lower US unemployment rate means there are less unemployed people seeking employment, making the market for labor more competitive for the employers, and less competitive for the employed.

You seem to have a simplistic understanding as if there are a fixed number of jobs in the economy, and fewer unemployed people means there are fewer empty jobs, when that's not at all how unemployment works. Think of it like this, if Canada went through a major recession, and the US didn't, with Canada's unemployment at 25%, and the US's at 4%, in what market do you think it will be easier to find a job?

And that's not even considering the higher wages in the US vs. Canada. Lower wages, means labor is more competitive (all else being equal).

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