+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445

FSW WORLDWIDE

GandiBaat

VIP Member
Dec 23, 2014
3,708
2,991
NOC Code......
2173
App. Filed.......
26th September 2021
Doc's Request.
Old Medical
Nomination.....
None
AOR Received.
26th September 2021
IELTS Request
Sent with application
File Transfer...
11-01-2022
Med's Request
Not Applicable, Old Meds
Med's Done....
Old Medical
Interview........
Not Applicable
Passport Req..
22-02-2022
VISA ISSUED...
22-02-2022
LANDED..........
24-02-2022
Hey guys, will you support me if I become Conservative?
-Lower taxes
-Support Oil and gas industry
-Build more housing
-Punish Foreign home buyers + hedge fund real estate speculators
-Less regulation.

This is a Canada i could live in
Hello USA! You map is in another castle! Down south!
 

GandiBaat

VIP Member
Dec 23, 2014
3,708
2,991
NOC Code......
2173
App. Filed.......
26th September 2021
Doc's Request.
Old Medical
Nomination.....
None
AOR Received.
26th September 2021
IELTS Request
Sent with application
File Transfer...
11-01-2022
Med's Request
Not Applicable, Old Meds
Med's Done....
Old Medical
Interview........
Not Applicable
Passport Req..
22-02-2022
VISA ISSUED...
22-02-2022
LANDED..........
24-02-2022
  • Haha
Reactions: wonderbly

GandiBaat

VIP Member
Dec 23, 2014
3,708
2,991
NOC Code......
2173
App. Filed.......
26th September 2021
Doc's Request.
Old Medical
Nomination.....
None
AOR Received.
26th September 2021
IELTS Request
Sent with application
File Transfer...
11-01-2022
Med's Request
Not Applicable, Old Meds
Med's Done....
Old Medical
Interview........
Not Applicable
Passport Req..
22-02-2022
VISA ISSUED...
22-02-2022
LANDED..........
24-02-2022
Russia. Here's the language learns you *just imagine I said this with the Russian accent*
Russian language is like AK-47. To the point, masculine, very little confusion and does not get jammed unlike other more "sophisticated" languages (Yes French I am looking at you!)

English : I want to know how to find a girlfriend!
French : je cherche comment trouver une petit amie!
Russian : блин!

PS : No prejudice intended.
 

GandiBaat

VIP Member
Dec 23, 2014
3,708
2,991
NOC Code......
2173
App. Filed.......
26th September 2021
Doc's Request.
Old Medical
Nomination.....
None
AOR Received.
26th September 2021
IELTS Request
Sent with application
File Transfer...
11-01-2022
Med's Request
Not Applicable, Old Meds
Med's Done....
Old Medical
Interview........
Not Applicable
Passport Req..
22-02-2022
VISA ISSUED...
22-02-2022
LANDED..........
24-02-2022
@dankboi ,is there a decrease in the rate of ppr yesterday after the new variant?, usually you post a lot saw few yesterday,just curious
Look, this Canadian bureaucracy we are talking about. These guys cannot switch from processing CEC to FSW (with fairly similar workflow) for more than a month or so due to inertia... Do you really expect them to track a real world situation and act accordingly? That too when they are near Christmas?
 
Last edited:

GandiBaat

VIP Member
Dec 23, 2014
3,708
2,991
NOC Code......
2173
App. Filed.......
26th September 2021
Doc's Request.
Old Medical
Nomination.....
None
AOR Received.
26th September 2021
IELTS Request
Sent with application
File Transfer...
11-01-2022
Med's Request
Not Applicable, Old Meds
Med's Done....
Old Medical
Interview........
Not Applicable
Passport Req..
22-02-2022
VISA ISSUED...
22-02-2022
LANDED..........
24-02-2022
I agree with that 3 gender thing in german that was hard for me.
We have that in Hindi too... Somethings are arbitrarily masculine or feminine. A machine gun or a cannon afflicts verbs in feminine manner but rocket does it in masculine manner... Bus feminine but truck masculine. Window feminine but door masculine. Day masculine and night feminine. why? Don't know. I instinctively pick up correct form for verb but my Bengali friends are always confused.

Then there is this weirdness in Sanskrit. There is singular, dual and plural. So case tables of sanskrit are fun! So do verb form tables. Concept of dual is hard built into language and grammar.
 

PRANIT01

Champion Member
Apr 12, 2021
1,332
1,499
We have that in Hindi too... Somethings are arbitrarily masculine or feminine. A machine gun or a cannon afflicts verbs in feminine manner but rocket does it in masculine manner... Bus feminine but truck masculine. Window feminine but door masculine. Day masculine and night feminine. why? Don't know. I instinctively pick up correct form for verb but my Bengali friends are always confused.

Then there is this weirdness in Sanskrit. There is singular, dual and plural. So case tables of sanskrit are fun! So do verb form tables. Concept of dual is hard built into language and grammar.
That is why I don't know hindi lol.I learned at school but I still don't understand why you guys use ka,ki,ke and all those.
In malayalam and Tamil we don't have that .I can understand tamil ,if I am in TN for a month or 2 I will speak fluently but hindi is too much for me lol
 

VVV62

Star Member
Feb 11, 2021
174
227
Category........
FSW
AOR Received.
15-10-2020
Med's Done....
26-11-2020
Russian language is like AK-47. To the point, masculine, very little confusion and does not get jammed unlike other more "sophisticated" languages (Yes French I am looking at you!)

English : I want to know how to find a girlfriend!
French : je cherche comment trouver une petit amie!
Russian : блин!

PS : No prejudice intended.
The word "блин" literally means "a pancake" :cool: but as a slang word it's used as an expression of slight disappointment. A socially acceptable analog of the word " blyad' "
 
D

Deleted member 1050918

Guest
Inland-only already started. There used to be a slow but steady flow of MEPs until a few days ago when omicron became a thing.
 
  • Sad
Reactions: Bathna33

dankboi

VIP Member
Apr 19, 2021
3,687
11,099
London, United Kingdom
Category........
FSW
A 20-year spike in inflation could put the bite on the Trudeau Liberals
While the experts say it's not Ottawa's fault, it's still the government's problem

Heath Krevesky is a self-confessed political junkie — and a bit of a nerd.

That's his way of explaining why he's been tracking his weekly grocery bill for years now. And why he's worried that inflation is taking a bigger and bigger bite out of his food budget.

"In 2019, it cost me $9,826 to feed myself. In 2020, that cost of feeding myself went to $11,994, an increase of 22 per cent," he said.

"I can't wait to find out how this year wraps itself out. It appears as though it's going to be close to $14,000 for a single individual to feed themselves."

Food prices. Gasoline. A meal out. The cost of many everyday items is going up after inflation hit 4.7 per cent last month — the highest rate in nearly twenty years.

For Krevesky, higher prices means scaling back the menu and adjusting his tastes.

The resident of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island said he buys less meat these days, and when he does, he leans to beef ribs rather than steak.

"It's sort of like your poor man's choice of beef, if you will," he said during an interview for a special segment on inflation airing on this weekend's edition of CBC's The House.

"Everybody would like to be able to afford a prime rib, you know, on a semi-regular basis, I cannot afford that ... Ideally, I like to eat a little bit of beef or chicken, fish, throughout the week, so I get a balanced diet, but it's becoming increasingly more [expensive]."

Droughts, lockdowns, bottlenecks
It's hard to point to a single factor behind rising prices.

Droughts in Canada and other countries reduced crop yields. The pandemic reduced production in manufacturing plants as consumers emerged from lockdowns with money they're both willing and able to spend.

"What we're seeing around the world is supply chain bottlenecks," Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said this week when asked by a reporter if the Liberals' plan to spend another $100 billion on post-pandemic programs is to blame for the jump in inflation.

"We are seeing higher energy prices. Energy is a global commodity. When those prices are higher in one country, they are higher around the world. We're seeing a basic challenge that shutting down the world's economy turned out to be a much simpler process than turning the global economy back on."

But for a government that remains relentlessly focused on what it likes to call "the middle class and those working hard to join it," inflation isn't some abstract economic concept. It's making life less affordable for those very same people.

Kathy Wainberg is the owner of Pita Ikram. She has two locations, strictly take-out, in the northwest corner of Toronto. Like many small restaurateurs, she struggles to hire staff and serve a steady stream of customers.

A few months ago, she put up a notice letting customers know the prices of their favourite shawarma meals were going up by about 20 per cent.

"Things like oil that we use for frying food have, like, tripled in price," she told The House. "We waited to raise prices for as long as we possibly could … but in the restaurant industry, the margins are razor thin, so we were unable to absorb maybe as much of the costs as the customer would have liked to have seen."

It's stories like these that make inflation a convenient target for any opposition politician intent on linking government policy to rising prices.

Conservative finance critic Pierre Poilievre led the opposition charge this week. He accused the Liberal government of wanton spending, saying inflation is worse in this country than most other democratic countries because, like the United States, the Liberals have been "printing money to pay their bills" instead of controlling spending.

"The cost of government is driving up the cost of living. Almost a half a trillion dollars of inflationist Liberal deficits mean more dollars chasing fewer goods, driving higher prices," he said.

Poilievre is one of those politicians who can boil down complicated issues like fiscal policy into easily-understood soundbites, packaged with claims that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is entirely out of touch with Canadians' lives.

"The prime minister says he doesn't think much about monetary policy," he said. "That's no surprise. After all, it's 'Justin-flation.'"
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/inflation-trudeau-poilevre-pandemic-supply-chains-1.6261611
But economist Trevor Tombe of the University of Calgary said Poilievre is stretching the data by suggesting inflation is worse in Canada than in places like Switzerland.

"I can cherry-pick countries, too. Israel has among the highest rates of money supply growth in the developed world, but among the lowest rates of inflation," he said.

"So overall, across all developed economies, there really isn't a strong relationship between the money supply growth and observed inflation."

Economist Armine Yalnizian acknowledges the Liberals aren't immune to the political impact of rising prices, even if the inflation rate now is more of a short-term spike than a long-term trend.

"Of course the Liberals are vulnerable to people feeling like they're losing purchasing power," she said.

 
D

Deleted member 1050918

Guest
A 20-year spike in inflation could put the bite on the Trudeau Liberals
While the experts say it's not Ottawa's fault, it's still the government's problem

Heath Krevesky is a self-confessed political junkie — and a bit of a nerd.

That's his way of explaining why he's been tracking his weekly grocery bill for years now. And why he's worried that inflation is taking a bigger and bigger bite out of his food budget.

"In 2019, it cost me $9,826 to feed myself. In 2020, that cost of feeding myself went to $11,994, an increase of 22 per cent," he said.

"I can't wait to find out how this year wraps itself out. It appears as though it's going to be close to $14,000 for a single individual to feed themselves."

Food prices. Gasoline. A meal out. The cost of many everyday items is going up after inflation hit 4.7 per cent last month — the highest rate in nearly twenty years.

For Krevesky, higher prices means scaling back the menu and adjusting his tastes.

The resident of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island said he buys less meat these days, and when he does, he leans to beef ribs rather than steak.

"It's sort of like your poor man's choice of beef, if you will," he said during an interview for a special segment on inflation airing on this weekend's edition of CBC's The House.

"Everybody would like to be able to afford a prime rib, you know, on a semi-regular basis, I cannot afford that ... Ideally, I like to eat a little bit of beef or chicken, fish, throughout the week, so I get a balanced diet, but it's becoming increasingly more [expensive]."

Droughts, lockdowns, bottlenecks
It's hard to point to a single factor behind rising prices.

Droughts in Canada and other countries reduced crop yields. The pandemic reduced production in manufacturing plants as consumers emerged from lockdowns with money they're both willing and able to spend.

"What we're seeing around the world is supply chain bottlenecks," Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said this week when asked by a reporter if the Liberals' plan to spend another $100 billion on post-pandemic programs is to blame for the jump in inflation.

"We are seeing higher energy prices. Energy is a global commodity. When those prices are higher in one country, they are higher around the world. We're seeing a basic challenge that shutting down the world's economy turned out to be a much simpler process than turning the global economy back on."

But for a government that remains relentlessly focused on what it likes to call "the middle class and those working hard to join it," inflation isn't some abstract economic concept. It's making life less affordable for those very same people.

Kathy Wainberg is the owner of Pita Ikram. She has two locations, strictly take-out, in the northwest corner of Toronto. Like many small restaurateurs, she struggles to hire staff and serve a steady stream of customers.

A few months ago, she put up a notice letting customers know the prices of their favourite shawarma meals were going up by about 20 per cent.

"Things like oil that we use for frying food have, like, tripled in price," she told The House. "We waited to raise prices for as long as we possibly could … but in the restaurant industry, the margins are razor thin, so we were unable to absorb maybe as much of the costs as the customer would have liked to have seen."

It's stories like these that make inflation a convenient target for any opposition politician intent on linking government policy to rising prices.

Conservative finance critic Pierre Poilievre led the opposition charge this week. He accused the Liberal government of wanton spending, saying inflation is worse in this country than most other democratic countries because, like the United States, the Liberals have been "printing money to pay their bills" instead of controlling spending.

"The cost of government is driving up the cost of living. Almost a half a trillion dollars of inflationist Liberal deficits mean more dollars chasing fewer goods, driving higher prices," he said.

Poilievre is one of those politicians who can boil down complicated issues like fiscal policy into easily-understood soundbites, packaged with claims that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is entirely out of touch with Canadians' lives.

"The prime minister says he doesn't think much about monetary policy," he said. "That's no surprise. After all, it's 'Justin-flation.'"
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/inflation-trudeau-poilevre-pandemic-supply-chains-1.6261611
But economist Trevor Tombe of the University of Calgary said Poilievre is stretching the data by suggesting inflation is worse in Canada than in places like Switzerland.

"I can cherry-pick countries, too. Israel has among the highest rates of money supply growth in the developed world, but among the lowest rates of inflation," he said.

"So overall, across all developed economies, there really isn't a strong relationship between the money supply growth and observed inflation."

Economist Armine Yalnizian acknowledges the Liberals aren't immune to the political impact of rising prices, even if the inflation rate now is more of a short-term spike than a long-term trend.

"Of course the Liberals are vulnerable to people feeling like they're losing purchasing power," she said.
Really want JT and the libs to fuck off fast so we don't waste more of our youth trying to immigrate.
 
  • Angry
Reactions: Marco Mendicino

Marco Mendicino

Star Member
Nov 25, 2021
149
116
Ottawa
NOC Code......
4168
Fi
A 20-year spike in inflation could put the bite on the Trudeau Liberals
While the experts say it's not Ottawa's fault, it's still the government's problem

Heath Krevesky is a self-confessed political junkie — and a bit of a nerd.

That's his way of explaining why he's been tracking his weekly grocery bill for years now. And why he's worried that inflation is taking a bigger and bigger bite out of his food budget.

"In 2019, it cost me $9,826 to feed myself. In 2020, that cost of feeding myself went to $11,994, an increase of 22 per cent," he said.

"I can't wait to find out how this year wraps itself out. It appears as though it's going to be close to $14,000 for a single individual to feed themselves."

Food prices. Gasoline. A meal out. The cost of many everyday items is going up after inflation hit 4.7 per cent last month — the highest rate in nearly twenty years.

For Krevesky, higher prices means scaling back the menu and adjusting his tastes.

The resident of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island said he buys less meat these days, and when he does, he leans to beef ribs rather than steak.

"It's sort of like your poor man's choice of beef, if you will," he said during an interview for a special segment on inflation airing on this weekend's edition of CBC's The House.

"Everybody would like to be able to afford a prime rib, you know, on a semi-regular basis, I cannot afford that ... Ideally, I like to eat a little bit of beef or chicken, fish, throughout the week, so I get a balanced diet, but it's becoming increasingly more [expensive]."

Droughts, lockdowns, bottlenecks
It's hard to point to a single factor behind rising prices.

Droughts in Canada and other countries reduced crop yields. The pandemic reduced production in manufacturing plants as consumers emerged from lockdowns with money they're both willing and able to spend.

"What we're seeing around the world is supply chain bottlenecks," Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said this week when asked by a reporter if the Liberals' plan to spend another $100 billion on post-pandemic programs is to blame for the jump in inflation.

"We are seeing higher energy prices. Energy is a global commodity. When those prices are higher in one country, they are higher around the world. We're seeing a basic challenge that shutting down the world's economy turned out to be a much simpler process than turning the global economy back on."

But for a government that remains relentlessly focused on what it likes to call "the middle class and those working hard to join it," inflation isn't some abstract economic concept. It's making life less affordable for those very same people.

Kathy Wainberg is the owner of Pita Ikram. She has two locations, strictly take-out, in the northwest corner of Toronto. Like many small restaurateurs, she struggles to hire staff and serve a steady stream of customers.

A few months ago, she put up a notice letting customers know the prices of their favourite shawarma meals were going up by about 20 per cent.

"Things like oil that we use for frying food have, like, tripled in price," she told The House. "We waited to raise prices for as long as we possibly could … but in the restaurant industry, the margins are razor thin, so we were unable to absorb maybe as much of the costs as the customer would have liked to have seen."

It's stories like these that make inflation a convenient target for any opposition politician intent on linking government policy to rising prices.

Conservative finance critic Pierre Poilievre led the opposition charge this week. He accused the Liberal government of wanton spending, saying inflation is worse in this country than most other democratic countries because, like the United States, the Liberals have been "printing money to pay their bills" instead of controlling spending.

"The cost of government is driving up the cost of living. Almost a half a trillion dollars of inflationist Liberal deficits mean more dollars chasing fewer goods, driving higher prices," he said.

Poilievre is one of those politicians who can boil down complicated issues like fiscal policy into easily-understood soundbites, packaged with claims that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is entirely out of touch with Canadians' lives.

"The prime minister says he doesn't think much about monetary policy," he said. "That's no surprise. After all, it's 'Justin-flation.'"
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/inflation-trudeau-poilevre-pandemic-supply-chains-1.6261611
But economist Trevor Tombe of the University of Calgary said Poilievre is stretching the data by suggesting inflation is worse in Canada than in places like Switzerland.

"I can cherry-pick countries, too. Israel has among the highest rates of money supply growth in the developed world, but among the lowest rates of inflation," he said.

"So overall, across all developed economies, there really isn't a strong relationship between the money supply growth and observed inflation."

Economist Armine Yalnizian acknowledges the Liberals aren't immune to the political impact of rising prices, even if the inflation rate now is more of a short-term spike than a long-term trend.

"Of course the Liberals are vulnerable to people feeling like they're losing purchasing power," she said.
Finally, people are realizing the truth. JT's qualification as a substitute drama teacher and son of a former politician is disastrous. Freeland qualification is Master of Slavic studies.