Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
Hey now don't go getting all ageist on us now!
I think that he's right to point out that the British Isles Canadians (generally English, Scottish and Irish) did merge into a large Anglo-Canadian mass where the original differences matter little. Sure a lot of people may play up their Irish or Scottish heritage, but most of these have a lot of English in them as well. I have kids in my extended family who have tartans and such to play up the Scottish roots of their anglo parent, but in reality that parent is actually half-English. And of course these kids also have French and some other origins due to my side of the family.
French Canadians are also the result of a historical mix of peoples that were fairly distinct in old France: Bretons, Normands, Parisiens, Basques, Picards, Angevins, etc.
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My maternal grandparents had to
elope because it was downright scandalous that my
Protestant (English/Irish heritage) grandmother married my
Catholic (Scottish/French heritage (Alsace-Lorraine) grandfather in the 1940s

My grandmother was 1 of 3, my grandfather was 1 of 12 kids (Catholic stereotype)
I'd like to do a DNA test to see how much French I have.
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back to the thread topic
Canadians Lose Trust in Grocers While Wanting More Price Freezes and Competition [Survey/Op-Ed]
By Sylvain Charlebois
April 4, 2023
Quote:
A total of 30.3% of Canadians think grocery chain price gouging is the main reason food prices have been rising in Canada recently. A total of 29.9% believe inflation (or monetary/fiscal policies) are to blame as the main contributing factor for higher food prices. In fact, both Quebec and Saskatchewan are the only provinces where the highest percentage wasn’t grocer price gouging, but rather inflation/monetary/fiscal policies. A total of 36.1% of Quebecers believe monetary policies are the main factor for higher food inflation, and 32.1% of people in Saskatchewan think the same.
We asked questions about what grocers can do to help consumers. While 46.6% would appreciate more price freezes, 44.2% expect more transparency related to food sales specifically. While 36.4% of respondents wish loyalty programs would be more generous, a total of 33.4% of respondents would like more competition in Canada.
We asked questions about what governments can do. A total of 44.0% of respondents believe that governments should intervene and regulate the price of some staples at the grocery store
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I'm surprised only 30% think price gouging is main cause when clearly grocers are taking advantage of inflation to charge way more and make record profits.
https://retail-insider.com/retail-in...-survey-op-ed/
Anecdotally, I have an acquaintance on twitter that used to be an extreme couponer. She has grocery receipts dating back to 2017. A $
70 (pre tax) dollar grocery trip to
No Frills in
2017 should be according to the
Bank of Canada inflation calculator approximately $83 dollars today.
She priced out all the items and found that $
70 2017 trip today in 2023 is closer to $
158! (pre tax)
Westonianflation, mon dieu
No wonder Galen is getting a salary boost.