Readers weigh in on Donald Trump's presidential victory, the demise of the Liberal party, terrorists among us, and more in letters to the editor
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Re: Message to Democrats: cut the toxic wokeness — Kelly McParland, Nov. 6
Pundits are telling us that Donald Trump’s victory can be largely attributed to individuals with, to quote Kelly McParland, “limited education.” Yet later in McParland’s column we read that voters were concerned about the state of the economy, stagnating wages, high food prices, diminishing hopes of owning a home, the ridiculously open border, etc. (I would add that they were probably fed up with the Democrats’ climate obsessions and war on fossil fuels, too).
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It seems to me these people were pretty smart to focus on what really matters. The woke stuff is a luxury for those “better educated” people who don’t have to worry about paying the bills.
McParland also writes that Black men couldn’t be convinced to support a Black candidate. Seriously? Someone should opt for a politician merely because they have the same skin colour? If that’s all the Democrats had, then they deserve to be on the outside looking in for a long time because Trump has shown that that ship has sailed.
Jeff Barker, Mississauga, Ont.
So a felon is heading to the White House for the second time! And we say Canada is broken. What about the U.S.A.?
H.K. Hocquard, King, Ont.
It seems to me that Donald Trump will have to deal with a number of competing interests in his upcoming term. For instance, how does his slogan “drill baby drill” jive with Elon Musk’s vision of an electric car for everyone? How does his 60 per cent tariff on goods produced in China mesh with the fact that Musk produces more than half of his cars in China? How is Trump going to sell Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s vision of no pesticides or vaccine use to American farmers, who once again overwhelmingly supported him?
Personally, I think it’s an impossible task, and Americans will soon be having buyer’s remorse.
Terry James, Vegreville, Alta.
Re: Foreign interference inquiry clashes with official languages watchdog over English-only documents — Christopher Nardi, Nov. 4
The only people paying any attention to the official “documentation” from the Foreign Interference Inquiry are the phalanx of lawyers being paid by the quarter-hour, and if they’re any good at their job they’ll use the latest browser technology to provide instant translation services. It’s the same technology anyone anywhere can use to access government documentation.
If I remember, Justin Trudeau made it very clear that it’s not 1980 anymore, so it would stand to reason that the Official Languages watchdog is about as relevant as a manual typewriter. If any government is truly interested in eliminating red tape, it can start by eliminating language commissioners and their archaic and peripheral bureaucracies.
Paul Baumberg, Dead Man’s Flats, Alta.
This........