Canadians infest Costco

Maybe the people should be more concerned about stopping the devaluation of the U.S. dollar, than worrying about Canadians.

As I recall, Canadians were quite willing to sell Americans prescription drugs and Americans took mighty advantage of it. Also, as I recall, it was our own government that stopped it; not Canada.

So, this event is more than a bit hypocritical.

In all fairness, I kind of understand why they would be complaining. Many of the Canadian shoppers that go down there are Asian immigrants (Vancouver is full of them) where their sense of personal space and mannerisms can be quite different than what we are used to in the West. Some of the frustrations they may be experiencing are ethnic ones, rather than national ones. I recently moved out of the city and don't miss that part of it either.
 
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I'm a robot programmer for the Big 3 as well as other tier 1 suppliers. I have found that the Canadians will not let you into their country to do work unless you have all the paper work they require, a labor force study proving that there is no one in Canada that can do the job you're going to do there, and they heavily scrutinize your entrance into the country. Meanwhile I have Canadian friends that come over here to do work when ever they want to without so much as a work visa.

I was going to move to Canada when I turned 18 (2005) until I found this out.
 
I'm a robot programmer for the Big 3 as well as other tier 1 suppliers. I have found that the Canadians will not let you into their country to do work unless you have all the paper work they require, a labor force study proving that there is no one in Canada that can do the job you're going to do there, and they heavily scrutinize your entrance into the country.

Same for Canadians going to US in most cases. I was considering an internship with a coroner in the US, so have gone through the procedure.


Meanwhile I have Canadian friends that come over here to do work when ever they want to without so much as a work visa.

I'd like to know who they know or who they blow. I couldn't even go to my bank in the USA without having to prove I wasn't an illegal alien though endless electricity bills, mortgage statements, bank papers, etc, even though I'd lived within walking distance from the US most of my life.
 
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Same for Canadians going to US in most cases. I was considering an internship with a coroner in the US, so have gone through the procedure.

I'd like to know who they know or who they blow. I can't even go to my bank in the USA without having to prove I'm not an illegal alien though endless electricity bills, mortgage statements, bank papers, etc, even though I'd lived within walking distance from the US most of my life.

I missed a family reunion on the Canadian side recently.
I remember when the border crossing was a polite formality,, unintrusive either way.
Fuck the War on Drugs, War on Terror and the War on Human rights.

One cousin commented that it is just a couple hundred dollars to get the paperwork filed (bribe) for an exception,, but it ain't worth the money to do.
 
I missed a family reunion on the Canadian side recently.
I remember when the border crossing was a polite formality,, unintrusive either way.
Fuck the War on Drugs, War on Terror and the War on Human rights.

One cousin commented that it is just a couple hundred dollars to get the paperwork filed (bribe) for an exception,, but it ain't worth the money to do.

A family friend gets hassled for visiting his grandkids an hours drive from his home in Canada to the Washington town. He made the mistake of saying he was going to "babysit" his grandkids. "Oh, so you are taking American babysitting jobs away?" Now he's on a LIST.

I really miss the old days where we'd go to the quaint taverns across the line, meet some friendly American guys, dance and party - those days are gone.
 
I really miss the old days where we'd go to the quaint taverns across the line, meet some friendly American guys, dance and party - those days are gone.

How My mom and Dad met,, She was over ice skating.
Mom was a hottie.

432021_10150967774656493_1010319567_n.jpg
 
I missed a family reunion on the Canadian side recently.
I remember when the border crossing was a polite formality,, unintrusive either way.
Fuck the War on Drugs, War on Terror and the War on Human rights.

One cousin commented that it is just a couple hundred dollars to get the paperwork filed (bribe) for an exception,, but it ain't worth the money to do.

If your mother was born in Canada, you are already a Canadian citizen. The law was changed in 2009. As Canadian citizen, it is your constitutional right to enter Canada. You will, however, first need to supply proof of your citizenship and can get the package here:

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/proof-how.asp

I think it costs 75 dollars, but once it's done, it's done and you can come and go as you please.
 
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If your mother was born in Canada, you are already a Canadian citizen. The law was changed in 2009. As Canadian citizen, it is your constitutional right to enter Canada. You will, however, first need to supply proof of your citizenship and can get the package here:

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/proof-how.asp

I think it costs 75 dollars, but once it's done, it's done and you can come and go as you please.

Pete, you should do that just to piss them off!
 
The US dollar is persistently falling against the Loonie. This is driving people in droves to the US to buy whatever. Recent history has always had the Canadian dollar at huge discounts to the US dollar which for many years led to the opposite effect. The higly discounted exchange rate caused US tourism in Canada to flourish.

Your dollar is weakening which is causing this effect.
 
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If your mother was born in Canada, you are already a Canadian citizen. The law was changed in 2009. As Canadian citizen, it is your constitutional right to enter Canada. You will, however, first need to supply proof of your citizenship and can get the package here:

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/proof-how.asp

I think it costs 75 dollars, but once it's done, it's done and you can come and go as you please.

But can you marry in?
 
I missed a family reunion on the Canadian side recently.
I remember when the border crossing was a polite formality,, unintrusive either way.
Fuck the War on Drugs, War on Terror and the War on Human rights.

One cousin commented that it is just a couple hundred dollars to get the paperwork filed (bribe) for an exception,, but it ain't worth the money to do.

I remember that too, quite clearly.

A family friend gets hassled for visiting his grandkids an hours drive from his home in Canada to the Washington town. He made the mistake of saying he was going to "babysit" his grandkids. "Oh, so you are taking American babysitting jobs away?" Now he's on a LIST.

I really miss the old days where we'd go to the quaint taverns across the line, meet some friendly American guys, dance and party - those days are gone.

It's sad, sad time we are in. This is bullshit.
 
I suggest sending drones to the north, as opposed to overseas. I mean, we have to wage war somewhere, continually, so let's do it efficiently.
 
I'm a robot programmer for the Big 3 as well as other tier 1 suppliers. I have found that the Canadians will not let you into their country to do work unless you have all the paper work they require, a labor force study proving that there is no one in Canada that can do the job you're going to do there, and they heavily scrutinize your entrance into the country. Meanwhile I have Canadian friends that come over here to do work when ever they want to without so much as a work visa.

Canada has it pretty good not sharing a border with Mexico.
 
I suggest sending drones to the north, as opposed to overseas. I mean, we have to wage war somewhere, continually, so let's do it efficiently.

Name one thing the Government has ever done effciently? Well...except corner the presidential debates.
 
In all fairness, I kind of understand why they would be complaining. Many of the Canadian shoppers that go down there are Asian immigrants (Vancouver is full of them) where their sense of personal space and mannerisms can be quite different than what we are used to in the West. Some of the frustrations they may be experiencing are ethnic ones, rather than national ones. I recently moved out of the city and don't miss that part of it either.

Ah, that explains the part of the video about bad parking. ;)
 
In all fairness, I kind of understand why they would be complaining. Many of the Canadian shoppers that go down there are Asian immigrants (Vancouver is full of them) where their sense of personal space and mannerisms can be quite different than what we are used to in the West. Some of the frustrations they may be experiencing are ethnic ones, rather than national ones. I recently moved out of the city and don't miss that part of it either.

It is also very common for Costco to be the main hub of cultural/ethnic interactions. As a generalization, many groups (Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Indian, etc.) have their own businesses that they frequent, including grocery stores. Costco is the one place that everyone goes, and that is a place where cultural differences are evident. The great American melting pot...Costco.
 
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