Mr. Gold seems to have made up his mind that Winnipeg Transit is dangerous and then goes out of his way to find danger on transit and then report on it. This is called confirmation bias.
I for one applaud transit’s policy of non-confrontation and non-violence, what would be the benefit of confronting people who are unable to pay to use transit? Making transit more dangerous and in turn less usable? People who use transit are not Mr. Gold’s children, and so he should save his paternalistic lessons and let the professionals with the Transit Safety Team do their jobs. Mike Edwards Do Canadians ever feel like what goes on in Canadian politics is like a daycare centre? When it comes to the foreign interference inquiry, you have Pierre Poilievre, who doesn’t want to be security-cleared so he can tell the rest of the schoolyard about issues that make him feel like the big man on campus (or big man of the daycare).
Then you have Justin Trudeau saying he has names, but he’s not going to tell anyone because he wants to control the daycare. As this playground king of the hill plays out, one thing is forgotten: the taxpayer who funds these antics. The names of the MPS implicated or affected by foreign interference should be revealed.
It has nothing to do with security, it has to do with betrayal of the Canadian public. Delicate issues can be blacked out, but the names are the key. Time for politicians of all the parties to leave the daycare and be responsible and respectful to Ca.