Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Calgary Man Writes New York Times' Most Popular Comment Of All Time

The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 01:54 PM
    The most popular comment ever made on the New York Times website was penned by a Calgary man.
     
    Bob from Calgary, as he is identified on the site, received some 7,040 recommendations for his comment on a 2010 column about wealth and privilege written by Paul Krugman.
     
    The newspaper, which fields some 9,000 comments each day, says Bob's is the top post "of all time."
     
    The runner-up, posted on a story about the mass shooting in Charleston, S.C., drew roughly 5,489 recommendations.
     
    In his comment, Bob praises Canada's public schools, universal health care and banking system and says his tax bill is only two per cent higher than it would be south of the border.
     
    He also says he doesn't feel Canadians are in any way less free than their American counterparts.
     
    "My household makes just over $250,000 here in Canada. One of the best bargains I get for my money is living in a place where I and everyone I know sends their kids to public schools because they are really good," his comment reads. 
     
    "We end up with few criminals, because students learn how to be productive good citizens in schools."
     
    Other "bargains" of living in Canada include health care "whenever you need it without worry about not being approved," modernized infrastructure and public universities "where my children and the children from all types of households can go to and graduate with a big debt, but not a devastating one," he writes.
     
    Paid maternity and paternity leave also "ensure that parents and kids bond and families have some time to look after one another," he says.
     
    "Lastly (there are more, but I have to get back to my work), we get governance. This includes a banking system that is there to support the economy, not end run it to make a few $$," he says. 
     
    "With all of that said, I have to say that along with this, I enjoy one of the freest countries on earth. Our business freedoms are as extensive as the USA. We are free to hunt and own guns (aside from assault weapons and who needs those anyways). In fact, I have lived in the U.S.A. and I have to say, I can't see any freedoms there that we don't have here."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash

    Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash
    Ford Rice of the Port Hastings-based Strait Regional School Board says many people have been affected by the deaths of the 26-year-old woman and two girls, ages 12 and 13.

    Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash

    OPP Launches Mental Health Strategy To Help Officers And The Community

    OPP Launches Mental Health Strategy To Help Officers And The Community
    VAUGHAN, Ont. — Ontario Provincial Police have introduced a mental health strategy aimed at helping officers deal with their own mental health as well as those they deal with on the job.

    OPP Launches Mental Health Strategy To Help Officers And The Community

    Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies

    Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies
    TORONTO — A Scottish man says he's recovering after being attacked by a grizzly bear while climbing in the Rocky Mountains. On his Facebook page, Greg Boswell says he's "OK, just a little shook up and sore."

    Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies

    Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years

    Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years
    OTTAWA — Canadians in oil-producing provinces are having a harder time paying their bills, even as the national delinquency rate improves to its lowest level in more than six years.

    Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years

    Complaints For Wireless Down For First Time While Internet Issues Rise: Watchdog

    Complaints For Wireless Down For First Time While Internet Issues Rise: Watchdog
    TORONTO — Canadians had fewer official complaints about their wireless communication services but more concerns about their Internet plans, according to the latest report from the telecom industry's consumer watchdog.

    Complaints For Wireless Down For First Time While Internet Issues Rise: Watchdog

    Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People

    Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People
    EDMONTON — A former Calgary hospital worker is facing 26 counts of accessing the health information of more than 200 people.

    Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People