

I’m neither Canadian nor live in Canada.
I did, however, live in Britain when Mark was the head of the Bank Of England.
His policy during his tenure there, which started a bit after the 2008 Crash, was to sacrifice workers and income from work in order to protect and even grow at a faster pace the wealth of Asset Owners and Bankers.
During at least several years of his period there (can’t talk about the entirety of it, since I left the country before he left his job), real incomes of the lower 90% of the population were falling at around 1% a year, whilst for the top 10% they were rising at over 20% per year.
Mark Carney was the Bank Of England Governor of Austerity, a widespread pain which almost certainly was decisive in causing Leave to win the Leave Referendum and thus Brexit.
Unless, he has massivelly changed as a persom since the days when he was getting paid a massive salary to in a time when everybody was suffering, make sure the ultra-rich and sleazy bankers not just kept their riches but actually saw them grow faster than before (doing so by sacrificing the working class and the income from work), he doesn’t give a shit about people losing their jobs unless they’re his mates.








Just avoid like the plague brands that sponsor World Cups.
I’ve been doing it since the last one in Qatar (because of the slave-like conditions for workers there) and am doing it for the current one also (because, well, mass-murdering Fascists supporting the XXI century version of the Nazis whilst they activelly mass-murder children because of the “crime” of not being White Jews).
As it so happens, a happy side effect is often that not consuming products of those brands (which are invariably large brands) means you produce less disposable stuff and/or consume more local products. You even end up saving money because you either stop consuming something that you don’t actually need or you replace it with a store brand, and those are cheaper.
Win-win-win.