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1 year, 5 months ago @MapleCountry905 Jan 8 Elvis Presley was born 90 years ago today. Everyone loved him. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @MapleCountry905 Dear Tyler we all love you---but Trump is making our countries relationships very bad! 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @MapleCountry905 I was on a bus trip to Tennesee one time and when we crossed the border back into Canada everyone broke out in our Anthem O Canada. It was exhilarating. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @SueMeighan American's are not well liked around the world. I have been to a few countries and when I'm asked if I'm American, I tell them I'm Canadian. Their attitudes change toward me immediately. Until then, they don't really give much respect or treat me very well. This is very unfortunate and says a lot about American's. 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @mikelegault9344 Politics used to be a niche thing? McCarthyism and the red scare was… a thing I guess. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @BonnieFournier-x7p There is no place like home.!! 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @jacquelineallen816 Tyler,problem is,school shootings are happening in small towns 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @jacquelineallen816 Too much smog in California,been there 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @jacquelineallen816 Most of your food is filled with preservatives,milk,meat,ours isn’t ,taste totally different 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @jacquelineallen816 We can yell at our neighbours and not get shot 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @jacquelineallen816 I agree every place has something wrong,especially your country,I live in a city,people are normal and friendly 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @jacquelineallen816 A lot of your ins plans don’t cover everything 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @jacquelineallen816 Nope,not a prayer in hell,we have healthcare,I can walk down the st at nite,not get shot 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @susan67868 Tyler, you aren't concerned about your fellow citizens health care ? 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @carolburgess5192 That would never happen 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @dianelap67 This is the guy we need fot Prime Minister in Canada 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @dianelap67 https://youtu.be/CsnzmM7bEAU?si=nde_K_0l7pSXCHl3 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @TrueNorthStrong-x6s Any smart country would have free medical care as it gets the tax payer back to work making tax dollars for the government! 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @RiaVersteeg Never ever would I move to the US, I probably would go bankrupt on medical bills and I like to live in a country where they do have gunlaws! 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @BERNADINEPEREIRA WE HAVE WAY TOO MANY ILL AMERICANS COMING TO CANADA FROM THE USA, \nTO GET HEALTH CARE FOR CHEAP OR NOTHING, \nPUTTING A STRAIN ON THE CANADIAN HEALTH SYSTEMS, \nI KNOW THIS FOR A FACT, \nAS THIS IS MY JOB. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @BERNADINEPEREIRA ??????\nI KNOW DOCTORS WHO WORK IN ?? USA, TO MAKE BIG MONEYS ?, \nON THEIR PATIENCE \nYET WHEN THEIR FAMILY NEEDS MEDICAL TREATED, \nTHE RUN BACK TO CANADA ?? ?? 1 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @angieprice7206 I have had two neurosurgeries. I imagine I would not have a house if I lived in the US. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @denisedejose718 When I was young, everyone wanted to move to the US. Definitely not like that anymore! We just shake our heads and hope the crazies don’t happen to us! 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @jakemiller6028 My daughter was born in philippines in usd was only 1,200 vs America not pay 10 k 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @5Cdarkwing Toronto is not Canada 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @olivetherrien3023 I am a senior and live in Vancouver, BC and my son who has dual citizenship lives in Seattle, WA. His wife and him will move back to Canada when he retires. I visit Seattle and enjoy going there. The shopping is great fun especially with all the big store headquarters being there and we can't forget Trader Joe's. I don't drink alcohol anymore, but the cost, volume and availability is crazy. He also lived in New York and lived a train ride away to the suburbs (great system) and was a lovely area to raise a family. Visited NYC and loved it. I've lived in Montreal and just love big cities. In saying all that, I think were all basically the same, however I could never permamentally live in the US. I can no longer afford the outrageous travel health insurance to travel to the USA because of my age and health issues. I have a primary doctor and four specialists that I see on a regular basis, waiting for a hip replacement and none has cost me a cent. Oh yes, I get free dental care. I wouldn't move to the states, but would sure like to visit again. Politics is a whole other subject. 1 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @joyceshepherd2286 I lived in the Florida Keys and loved it but the bumper stickers that said Yankees go home made me wonder how they felt about Canadians. I was injured at work and was taken to the hospital were work paid the hospital bill but when the nurse said go to the drugstore and buy a bandage they will be cheaper then if I put one on you. That was a rude awaking as to where I was.\nThe next was I was living with a nurse and at the hospital they brought in a person that had no ID on him. He had been in a terrible car accident but with no ID they would not treat him ,so he died. Turned out he was a Doctor from Key West driving to Miami . The hospital staff were in shock they had let one of their own die. In Canada they would operate first and worry about money or insurance later. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @gizel4376 well it migth be 10k to birth a child in the US, but average salary is 20k(USD) higher, if it was just an economic question, i would choose the US without a doubt 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @moestietabarnak Remember, many around the world want to go to the USA.... but it's because of HOLYWOOD misrepresentation mostly. \nIf you have a good job/skill it's 'fine' .. but if you come from poor country, you don't know what you miss from other destination. \nAnd you know, a poor life is better when you live where everyone around you is as poor, it SUCKS when everyone else is not... 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @wandalear3549 Oh, no… our emergency room wait times average is probably around 3 hours (give or take). While 15 to 20 minutes sounds absolutely awesome, it’s not happening here, unfortunately. And that’s because we don’t have enough medical doctors in emergency care. The majority of them are in private practice, (because it pays better) and even then, there aren’t enough doctors for our growing population. I will admit, though, if you don’t want to go to a hospital emergency room to be seen you can always access walk-in clinics which are all over the place. You don’t have to pay. You just show your OHIP card (Ontario Health Insurance Plan) and the wait is probably less than an hour to be seen. Our Walmarts have walk-in clinics, for example. Easy access, less wait times. Of course, these clinics are not for major emergencies such as heart attacks, bleeding, broken bones, etc., but they definitely come in handy if you don’t have a family physician. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @JohnMilller-p8r Yes I was, after Trump got elected no. Disabled human rights are horrible here and as compensation for lawsuits can be capped in cases that is unlikely to change. I should state the government had to pay me $25,000 dollars for violating my rights (this cost me $35,000+ in legal fees!) so I know of what I speak. It was the same when I moved provinces. In terms of mobility my fate was better in the 4 third world countries I visited after my stroke, there are no busses in loads of places here as we can’t “afford” them. Also I should state the government tried to make me site an NDA that would not allow me to state their behaviour, this should be illegal where government money is concerned! On to health care…. Why do disabled people struggle to get a family doctor when they move provinces? Also why did the mother of a Ukrainian disabled kid have to go back to a country that had been invaded to get help for her child that was having convulsions? She got no help here and her child was in our system by then and her husband has been paying taxes since I got him a job here 3 day a after landing. Yes there are a lot of good Canadians but this situation has become much worse and Canadians are masters at ignoring things. There is a Ukrainian flag flying from my cabin not a Canadian one. We are NOT the 51st state and will never be but I’ve been made to feel betrayed 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @eabryn The major problem in many places is the limited education and knowledge of world history and of the rest of the world which causes a lot of problems -silo info creates views leading to unfounded fears of others and the unknown. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @BurtClarke Thank you for your honest attempt to understand our culture our history, our sense of humor, and what makes us Canadian; rather than American. Our general acceptance of immigration brings richness and change to our culture. We have a more cooperative than competetive attitude,I believe. There is a huge American influence, but still a European, British Isles and French component. History had taught us a lot. 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @lindaostrom570 topics to avoid anywhere; politics, religion, your finances, your sexual orientation. inquiring about any of these topics is considered beyond rude and say more about you than the person you are speaking with. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @lindaostrom570 you can be poor without being trashy. manners help. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @janetzvaniga6079 Absolutely not. 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @elodietagliomonte857 I went to the US to support a friend suffering a serious life threatening health situation. I asked what the survival rate was for the condition and the doctor literally looked at me and said what does her bank account look like. I was gutted. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @Sunmoonandstars123 I lived in LA for 6 years. I don’t miss the trash and smog. I don’t miss the underlying feeling of suspicion of everyone and everything. I don’t miss the ridiculous healthcare system. I don’t miss the inequitably funded education. Been back a decade and I’d never live there again. And I brought an American husband back here with me! 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @williamhall7459 Canada ?? and America ?? Both are great countries.. \nBoth not perfect 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @lindamlittle When living in the USA in a small college town the scariest part of Halloween was the police in their riot gear for no reason at all. \nCame back to Canada with American husband and we both like it better.\nAlso if I was a Mom in the USA I would be terrified to send my child to school. Too many school shootings. In Canada we have ZERO school shootings. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @Migmaw Tyler there are 600 mass shootings in the U.S each year which is almost 2 a day per average and while they do not all take place in schools, how many mass shootings are tolerable? As long as Americans like yourself dismiss all the data to the contrary the U.S will continue to have the tragedies it does, When you look up mass shootings which is where there are more than 2 victims per incident you'll find Canada doesn't even register in those statistics because where the U.S has 600 mass shootings a year Canada hasn't had 600 in its last 100 years. So that is why Canadians mention school shootings as a reason, because the potential is real for it to happen. It is preventable tragedy but Americans as a whole need to want that change, until it does the rest of the world will always bring up gun violence and school shootings when the U.S is in the discussion. The U.S is great but it could be better. Stay blessed ?? 0 O0gJtVar7_E
1 year, 5 months ago @ANNESCOTT-m7y I worked as a nurse in Florida when I first graduated. It was devastating to see how stressed people were about being hospitalized because they knew how their life finances were going to be wiped out. In Contrast Canadian patients only need to concentrate on being well again. \nWomens rights are being rapidly eroded in America. Childbirth is covered in Canada,abortions are legal and women get 1 year of paid maternity leave.\nOur children don’t have to participate in active shooter drills because of our tight gun laws. Our taxes are higher but the social networks are covered by these taxes. \nThe Canadian way of life is generally ,slower and ,I find, more accepting of immigrants, LGBTQ folks, and marginalized people.\nPersonally I moved back to Canada because I missed the change of seasons and the slower pace. I enjoyed my time living in America and have many fond memories of the time I spent there.Moving back to Canada was the right move for me 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @judes1948 You know why there is more “availability” to US healthcare? Because NO ONE can afford it so they don’t go to the doctor! In Canada, more people go because we can and still have our house when we leave. \n\nBooze is cheaper than Canada’s because taxed booze goes into our healthcare. Win! Win! 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @nolabachiu7690 Tyler is it true that the #1 reason for bankruptcy in the USA is healthcare bills 1 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @alexanderalexander7404 I don't think that the comments that you are looking at are intended to be harsh, but I do think that they do reflect the honest experiences and feelings (without malice) of those Canadians that tried to adjust to life in the US. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @alexanderalexander7404 My brother accepted a tech job with a firm in the US. He always expressed his belief that Canada was not up to the US. He was elated to move to the US. Two years later he limped back to Canada, without his job, and without his love for US culture. He seldom speaks of his time in the US.\n\nThis is not to say that his experience is the experience of every Canadian moving to the US, or that it is even typical, but it was his experience for whatever than counts.\n\nI think that this may be a much different experience for US citizens born and raised in their own culture. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @rekeating1 HI Tyler, i enjoy your work. I moved to the USA, I move to the USAWashington DC then Racine WI. I am studying to be a I am studying to be priest . All these things are true about Canada. Living in the USA I didn't change my behavior. I've had some of the best conversations in lineups in the USA ... 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @QuantumBeeWellness The person that had foot surgery in Toronto appears to have had an elective/optional surgery, that is the only reason they would pay out of pocket. Or if you are no longer a resident, you have no provincial health card if you are not living in Canada. 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @katysimard8397 9:25 it is true that it can take some Time to be able to see a doctor/specialist but any Canadian will be treated, an American may die if his/her insurance company refuse to cover test and/or treatment 0 zJycj8c73sQ
1 year, 5 months ago @TheMJGetchell I worked for a major Canadian public service, where a Boston CEO came to run the company. He ran out it into a toxic cesspool because of his attitude and the way he worked with people. The way of doing businesses in the states is different then the inclusionary way of businesses here in Canada. 0 O0gJtVar7_E
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