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Joined 18 hours ago
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Cake day: March 30th, 2026

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  • Like I guess its cool if its possible, I mean it would be fantastic, but I have some questions and some doubts.

    Where is the margin appearing, if grocery store profits in Canada are mainly due to real estate and their owned REITS then where are the savings coming from? How do we even know the government can do a better job?

    Another question is how if theyre paying union wage, which they would as a left leaning policy, where do the efficiencies and low prices come from. If the person person buying food makes minimum wage as a pizza maker or walmart greeter is he subsidizing a union wage for someone providing him food?








  • We printed 40% more money supply during Covid debasing peoples salaries.

    We did mass immigration into an existing housing shortage as corporations lobbied for cheap labor, to depress wages after we had inflation from the aforementioned money printing.

    We now buy half of all mortgage bonds to make borrowing cheaper to further drive up asset prices, as Carney just announced he is buying up unsold condos in Ontario at an inflated price using borrowed public money.

    So did capitalism do any of this, or do we keep voting in corrupt governments who continue debasing peoples salaries, enriching those holding inflation resistant assets like real estate and equities?


  • The problem with grocery stores in Canada is their margins on food are tiny, less than 4%. So a government run entity cant be appreciably cheaper.

    Where Loblaws makes its real margin is real estate, which is a monopoly our government fosters and calls peoples nest egg, and they state openly that real estate prices cant be allowed to fall. As a franchise they lease this land out and profit off appreciation of their REIT, and have benefited tremendously from price appreciation like everyone else who owns land in Canada; appreciation caused by sprawled zoning laws, slow permitting time, mass immigration, and a massive greenbelt.

    So you’re calling on the entity that makes things unaffordable to make it affordable, which we just voted back in the same people who made things far more unaffordable the last decade. People had their say during the election, and they wanted higher asset prices; goods inflation is then collateral damage of high real estate prices.