Cunt

>Cunt
>Do your government offices explode?
Canada
Yes :(

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cbc.ca/news/canada/north/gjoa-haven-fire-1.6400353
youtube.com/watch?v=yJNZwuamwj0
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nunavut
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

whats all this then

seems to be in northern nunavut, in a hamlet of around 1300 people
cbc.ca/news/canada/north/gjoa-haven-fire-1.6400353

i wish they did
our current government is a joke that only hurts the country

why is Nunavut the most fascinating province of Canada?

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It's the least-uncolonised region, so that has a part I am sure.

*least-colonised; most-uncolonised.

it's so cold that they don't even really bother with architecture or elaborate planning
that's pretty interesting

they should bring back igloos
nobody is forcing them to live in shacks, there is plenty of snow up there to make igloos

Yukon seems pretty kino and uncolonised too.
youtube.com/watch?v=yJNZwuamwj0

are you actually a native?

imagine there was nothing to build with until very recently, the only wood there was the occasional driftwood, the only metal was the very occasional meteorite, that's pretty damn cool.

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.ua, same

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ahem

We do. When we go hunting for a few days, igloos are oft built as temporary camps.
Very true. I mean more of a cultural-aspect. But yea, nature-wise, the territories are pretty free from humans. And no, I'm not Inuit, I just live here.

Thoughts and prayers, bro

Do you still use maple syrup that far north? Has Avril Lavigne ever toured there?

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nunavut
>area: 2,038,722 km2
>population: 36,858
haha, jesus

1. I have some but don't use it often because it costs 3 whole walri for a litre.
2. No. Didn't she die and get replaced by a lizard or something? Maybe I'm confusing my conspiracies...

>There are no trees in the territory. However, other vegetation survives in Nunavut’s shallow soil. This vegetation includes dwarf shrubs, grasses, mosses, lichens and about 200 species of flowering plants.

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I think the only 'tree' we have is the arctic willow, or salix arctica. It doesn't even grow taller than one's foot, though.

the northernmost woody plant in the world, interesting, I didn't know.

It's classified as a shrub now that I recall—close enough.
Now you know.