The thing about a Crown corporation that employs 62,000 people—and that in 2024 reported a loss of $841 million—is that when it eventually goes bankrupt and shuts down for good, those 62,000 people will no longer have jobs. Not only that, but they will likely never find work with the same pay or benefits again—if they can even find meaningful employment at all.
Canada Post has been bleeding money for years, and the losses keep growing:
• 2024: Loss of CAD 841 million
• 2023: Loss of CAD 748 million
• 2022: Loss of CAD 292 million
• 2021: Loss of CAD 246 million
This isn’t just one company or institution in Canada, and it isn’t a “capitalism problem.” It’s a systemic, structural problem. This isn’t “end-stage capitalism.” It’s the final stage of an unsustainable socialist model—a system where the working class had it so good for so long that complacency took hold. People let their guard down, allowing mismanagement to flourish.
Now the system is run by a mix of corrupt thieves and incompetent buffoons—some seeking to feel delusionally virtuous, others simply looking to steal. The result: not only is one Crown corporation bleeding money without end, but the entire Canadian government has become a free-for-all, teetering on the edge of bankruptcy.
Because most Canadians have been indoctrinated to believe in government socialism, they only double down—demanding more government “solutions,” which accelerate the decline. The government, in turn, keeps chasing whatever capital remains, driving away meaningful long-term investment. With less investment and ever-heavier taxation, Canadians are being pushed to the brink of personal bankruptcy.
That leaves only one option: printing money—devaluing the Canadian dollar, eroding purchasing power, and leaving more and more people unable to pay their bills each year. When the eventual crash comes, whether in a few years or a few decades, the economic instability—combined with the infiltration of international criminal cartels and terrorist organizations—may force the United States to intervene, perhaps even to take over.
That is, if America isn’t already consumed by its own civil conflict.
Man, I hope I’m wrong.
— Samson
