insunrace
these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer
trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca |
insunrace
wrote in message ... these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca Because most of us that have insurance are covered in Canada. And we would buy from somebody who could actually spell if we need to purchase insurance. Might mean their brain works and had not been affected by SPAM. |
insunrace
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insunrace
Hatunen wrote:
On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 18:16:42 -0800 (PST), wrote: these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca Canadians sure do talk funny. And they can't type their URLs correctly, either. ;-) But they make great Lo Mein. -- =========================== Sawyer Nicknames http://sawyer.xtreemhost.com/ Seinfeld Trivia, Lists, and Scripts http://seinfeld.xtreemhost.com/ =========================== |
insunrace
"MI" wrote in message ... On 1/2/08 10:19 PM, in article , "Hatunen" wrote: On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 18:16:42 -0800 (PST), wrote: these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca Canadians sure do talk funny. Ever consider English as a second language? He probably speaks French. We are a bilingual country you know. Now that brings up an interesting point. I've made a number of trips to Canada, the early ones to Bristish Columbia and Alberta. Strolling along the grocery shelves, I was amused to find that each and every labeled item had both English and French descriptions/writings. Clearly, thought I, the influence of the French in Canada...even though I heard no French spoken...truly the mark of a bilingual country. Then I some years later happened to visit Quebec province and took a similar stroll in the groceries there. Lo and behold - the same items labeled in both English and French in the wesern provinces were labeled only in French! So - what gives? A dual standard? |
insunrace
On 1/3/08 1:56 PM, in article , "Lawrence Akutagawa" wrote: "MI" wrote in message ... On 1/2/08 10:19 PM, in article , "Hatunen" wrote: On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 18:16:42 -0800 (PST), wrote: these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca Canadians sure do talk funny. Ever consider English as a second language? He probably speaks French. We are a bilingual country you know. Now that brings up an interesting point. I've made a number of trips to Canada, the early ones to Bristish Columbia and Alberta. Strolling along the grocery shelves, I was amused to find that each and every labeled item had both English and French descriptions/writings. Clearly, thought I, the influence of the French in Canada...even though I heard no French spoken...truly the mark of a bilingual country. Then I some years later happened to visit Quebec province and took a similar stroll in the groceries there. Lo and behold - the same items labeled in both English and French in the wesern provinces were labeled only in French! So - what gives? A dual standard? You got that right. I live in British Columbia and Federal law says groceries must be bilingual. Companies are supposed to have a bilingual employee and all government offices do. But we do have a double standard. One language rule for Quebec and another for the rest of us. Actually Quebec is supposed to do it too, but they won't and the Fed's don't want to upset them in case they go on another secession kick. -- Martha Canada |
insunrace
"MI" wrote in message ... On 1/2/08 10:19 PM, in article , "Hatunen" wrote: On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 18:16:42 -0800 (PST), wrote: these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca Canadians sure do talk funny. Ever consider English as a second language? He probably speaks French. We are a bilingual country you know. -- Martha Canada If you are selling insurance, I do not care what your primary language is. I would find out how to spell correctly for an advert. I used to do Biomedical software, and we paid money to get accurate translations. |
insunrace
"Lawrence Akutagawa" wrote in message ... "MI" wrote in message ... On 1/2/08 10:19 PM, in article , "Hatunen" wrote: On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 18:16:42 -0800 (PST), wrote: these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca Canadians sure do talk funny. Ever consider English as a second language? He probably speaks French. We are a bilingual country you know. Now that brings up an interesting point. I've made a number of trips to Canada, the early ones to Bristish Columbia and Alberta. Strolling along the grocery shelves, I was amused to find that each and every labeled item had both English and French descriptions/writings. Clearly, thought I, the influence of the French in Canada...even though I heard no French spoken...truly the mark of a bilingual country. Then I some years later happened to visit Quebec province and took a similar stroll in the groceries there. Lo and behold - the same items labeled in both English and French in the wesern provinces were labeled only in French! So - what gives? A dual standard? No, just hypocrisy. The ****ing idiots in the Quebec government get all whacked out over English, but have no trouble at all decreeing French only;....all over the place, The SOONER, that Quebec GETS THE **** out of MY CANADA, the better. |
insunrace
On Thu, 03 Jan 2008 21:25:17 GMT, MI
wrote: On 1/2/08 10:19 PM, in article , "Hatunen" wrote: On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 18:16:42 -0800 (PST), wrote: these days people do not buy insurances for a day trip or even longer trip. I have seen many people saying that is just a insurance, but still that is why people do need insurance for just in case. Why people coming to Canada (not just only Americans, but other people) stoped to buy insurance?? If you need some, there are so many packeages you can purchase without waiting time. http:www/biis/ca Canadians sure do talk funny. Ever consider English as a second language? He probably speaks French. We are a bilingual country you know. When I lived in Montreal in the mid-1960s I never heard a French Quebecker that had that bad English. Maybe it's those language laws. -- ************* DAVE HATUNEN ) ************* * Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow * * My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps * |
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