If Canada doesn’t improve, I don’t expect my children to stay

If Canada doesn’t improve, I don’t expect my children to stay

At the risk of sounding melodramatic, I do not expect that my sons will choose to stay in Canada when they are adults. Certainly not if this country stays on its current trajectory — namely, on our slow and agonizing decline.

Swathes of Canadians seem unbothered, at best, by the country’s first unelected majority government, made possible by five dubious parliamentary floor crossings. Yes, the majority technically didn’t happen until three byelections, two occurring in Liberal stronghold ridings, clinched the deal; however, Prime Minister Mark Carney would not have a majority government without those floor crossers. That is incontrovertible.

Share

Would-be Palestinian suicide bomber is APPLAUDED as she appears before woke Berkeley students

Would-be Palestinian suicide bomber is APPLAUDED as she appears before woke Berkeley students

A would-be Palestinian suicide bomber was met with raucous applause as she appeared before University of California Berkeley law students.

Israa Jaabis, who was released from an Israeli jail in 2023 as part of a prisoner exchange for 26 hostages taken on October 7 of that year, made the virtual appearance as part of a ‘teach-in’ organized by the student-run UC Berkeley Students for Justice in Palestine.

The event, which came just one day before Israeli Independence Day, was described as a chance ‘to hear experiences of Palestinian torture survivors and prisoners of conscience.’

Share

Parliamentary committee on assisted dying biased, not focused on mandate, expert says

Parliamentary committee on assisted dying biased, not focused on mandate, expert says

OTTAWA – An expert on Canada’s assisted dying laws says a parliamentary committee studying MAID in cases of mental illness is not focused on its mandate and has not been balanced in its approach.

Jocelyn Downie is a professor emeritus of law at Dalhousie University who has studied assisted dying laws for decades.

She was a witness at the first meeting last month of senators and MPs studying whether Canada is ready to extend assisted dying to people whose sole underlying condition is a mental illness.

Share

Soldier won big on Polymarket using classified information to bet on Maduro’s ouster, U.S. says

Soldier won big on Polymarket using classified information to bet on Maduro’s ouster, U.S. says

A U.S. Army soldier who participated in the operation to capture Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela has been charged with using classified information to bet on the mission on Polymarket, a prediction marketplace, federal authorities said on Thursday evening.

The soldier, Master Sgt. Gannon Ken Van Dyke, who was stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, made more than $400,000 by betting on different outcomes related to Venezuela after learning of the operation, federal prosecutors and the F.B.I. said.

Share

Ottawa spends $43M on health care for rejected asylum claimants sparking backlash

Ottawa spends $43M on health care for rejected asylum claimants sparking backlash

Federal figures show Ottawa spent more than $43 million last year providing health care benefits to illegal immigrants and rejected refugee claimants, fuelling criticism from Conservatives who say taxpayers are footing the bill for services many Canadians struggle to access.

Blacklock’s Reporter says data released by the Department of Immigration indicates 19,771 individuals whose asylum claims were denied still accessed coverage through the Interim Federal Health Program, including prescriptions, clinical care and transportation to medical appointments.

Share

John Ivison: Washington’s set to eat Canada’s digital sovereignty for lunch in the CUSMA talks

John Ivison: Washington’s set to eat Canada’s digital sovereignty for lunch in the CUSMA talks

Canada’s trade negotiator, Janice Charette, told a business audience this week that our trade agreement with the U.S. is “the envy of the world.”

The consensus in Ottawa seems to be that if Canada can emerge from the renegotiation process with much of the current trade deal intact, it will be a win.

But there is a minority view that looks at the Canada-U.S.-Mexico agreement through the lens of digital sovereignty and prosperity. From that perspective, Canada is not the most privileged of America’s trading partners: rather, it is the most captive.

Down Mexico Way …

(more…)

Share

How Europe is wargaming an invasion

How Europe is wargaming an invasion

The four frogmen in black wetsuits emerged almost noiselessly from the murky depths. No tell-tale stream of bubbles betrayed their approach.

Assault rifles at the ready, they surfaced in enemy-held territory, using “rebreather” scuba gear developed for special forces that recycles each exhaled breath.

Minutes earlier, they had checked the lake for mines; now they began probing the surrounding woodland for snipers. Their water-resistant weapons were ready to fire.

Share

A visit with Occam’s Razor

A visit with Occam’s Razor

Rumble Link

Share

How Tommy Robinson won the battle for Maga’s heart

How Tommy Robinson won the battle for Maga’s heart

When Sir Christian Turner, a career diplomat, was made Britain’s new US ambassador after Lord Mandelson’s sacking, his priorities were clear. First, he was to act as a safe pair of hands, preserving what was left of the special relationship. Second, he was to dispel the notion that Britain had become a woke hellhole, where knife gangs and Islamists run amok, and where critics are locked up.

“I won’t shy from debate,” Turner vowed in his opening speech in February. “I will tell you why London is the safest city in the G7 – fact – why we’re not curtailing free speech – fact– and I want to hear how you see it too.”

Share

Prime minister should be required to divest assets, says committee

Prime minister should be required to divest assets, says committee

Prime Minister Mark Carney and other Canadian prime ministers should be required to divest their investment portfolios when they assume office, not just put them in a blind trust, the House of Commons ethics committee recommends in a new report.

In its report made public Thursday morning, the committee said putting assets in a blind trust isn’t good enough, recommending instead “that the Government of Canada amend the Conflict of Interest Act that, for the application of subsection 27(1) the prime minister, as a reporting public office holder, is fully divested from their controlled assets through sale, since placement in a blind trust does not constitute true divestment.”

Share

German Schools Block Students From AfD Work Placements

German Schools Block Students From AfD Work Placements

Schools in the eastern German state of Saxony-Anhalt have barred pupils from undertaking work placements with the regional parliamentary group of the Alternative for Germany (AfD), triggering a row over political neutrality in education.

The restrictions apply to the annual “Girls’ and Boys’ Day” (also known as Zukunftstag), a nationwide initiative that allows students to gain short-term work experience in businesses, public institutions, and political offices.

Share

MACLEOD: Carney’s anti-American fantasy will cost Alberta

MACLEOD: Carney’s anti-American fantasy will cost Alberta

Mark Carney’s YouTube video is being praised in the usual circles as sober, statesmanlike realism. It is nothing of the sort. It is the same old Ottawa delusion in a better suit.

Carney says Canada’s close economic ties to the United States (US) have become a weakness that must be corrected. That may sound sophisticated in Toronto and Liberal campaign war rooms, but from Alberta, it sounds ridiculous. Alberta’s relationship with the US is not a policy mistake. It is the basis of our prosperity.


Sad cuz it’s true.

Share