Could definitely use more sustained for a reasonable amount of time, that much I'm sure of.
Cracks_InTheWalls
I mean we have at least two study trials, Mincome in Manitoba in the 70s and the Ontario Basic Income Pilot Project in 2017 (though that one was cancelled after a few months due to a change in government).
List your useless shit on a buy nothing group. Chat with the people who pick up said shit and learn about their circumstances. If they're not psychos/grifters, set up means to keep in touch. Repeat this process. Pay attention to things those people need/their circumstances, and connect people who can help each other. Encourage others you meet to do the same.
Keep it up long enough, and bam, you have the bones of a mutual aid group.
I'm talking out of my ass here, but hmm...
My gut says fuck no. My brain says have a frank, balanced discussion with your kid and decide from there.
I know my own answer would still be fuck no, but I don't know you or your kid.
It's normal, and frankly as old as the internet (any of y'all remember the term 'flame wars'?). A lot of people here have made great points as to why it happens.
My suggestion? Ignore the attacks, and speak to the content in as even a tone you can manage if you feel the topic is worth discussing. If it gets to a point where the meat of the discussion is lost in the attacks, disengage. Recreational discussion on the net doesn't need to be a combat sport.
The worst you'll get with this approach is an accusation of 'sea-lioning', which makes some assumptions around intent you can't really correct all that well if someone's decided that's what you're doing. Though I welcome any suggestions - good faith is hard to prove online when people are so used to attack/counterattack discourse.
Big subgenius energy in anon's post.
The subgenius MUST have slack!
On a CRT? Sure, probably a lot haven't seen it. On a modern TV? Still possible for some - mine does this if I hit the channel button rather than volume accidentally.
420/Yes please/Your mother's bedroom
(I understand the curiosity, but come on now)
Fuck that, give me another version of Pokemon Master Trainer.
My take has always been that we have strong regional cultures over a unified Canadian cultural identity. The U.S has a little bit of this as well, but not in the same way/with more stuff to point to in terms of national identity.
Edit: Actually, here's a good experiment for anyone who wants to think about this more. Take a look at some of the Canadian TV shows and movies that have actually been successful, and people abroad may point to as representative of Canadian culture. What about them is distinctly Canadian, over [x]-Canadian? Can start with the obvious (Trailer Park Boys, Letterkenny, Schitt's Creek, Kim's Convenience, FUBAR), but I'd bet folks may find this holds across some less obvious ones too.
Not a local, but as someone who joked "We could go to Regina! There's..." and trailed off as I saw stuff on Google Maps, here's some suggestions:
-The Regina Floral Conservatory.
-The Mackenzie Art Gallery
-The RCMP Heritage Centre
-Government House
-Royal Saskatchewan Museum
There's some other stuff too, particularly if you're willing to drive out of town. Enough to make me go "Huh, that could be mildly fun/interesting".
Lemmy, lose terribly at pinball, excessively long walks when I have the time, check out live music if something cool is happening that won't bankrupt me, pot (due for a long break soon), drink (same), read random stuff online, watch movies (usually hilariously bad ones), maybe clean my house.
Kinda need to branch out, tbh.