Women who supported the mainstreaming of trannies deserve all the tranny shenanigans they get (I'm not saying this specific nurse did that). I also don't appreciate trannies being called men as though they're somehow just as representative of men as I am.
Wait times to see specialists are absurd but variable, and you're required to get referrals from GPs in order to see specialists in the first place. And if sufficient time lapses (in some cases, literally two months), you're required to see your GP for a referral to the same specialist again for the same issue.
Another problem is some people won't get treated for some issues, even if its in their best interest. A nurse friend of mine had to travel to the US for surgery on her ACL because the Canadian doctor she saw decided not to operate because she could allegedly walk fine without her ACL intact.
You don't know what it's like to live under the same roof as the person who's making your life miserable.
Yes, we do, just in a broader sense. Immigrant hordes ruin Western countries in the same way a single one ruins a home.
I'm about halfway through and would put it between okay and good, probably closer to okay. I thought the opening scene was quite weak, some of the audio compression is really strange, and some of the camera work is a bit too over-the-top/hamfisted and fourth-wall breaking. Otherwise, I do enjoy the circumstances and the two main characters. Their story seems to carry the film. Again, I'm only halfway through. I generally don't like the lead actor but I like him in this.
Two-tier justice, and for child sex crimes. Pathetic.