Behind Canada’s Sealed COVID-19 Reports

Pandemic governance and the cost to Canadian freedom.

On Feb. 2, 2026, Blacklock’s Reporter confirmed that Canada’s Liberal government has now “sealed internal reports on vaccine and drug injuries for 15 years” and revealed that the hastily buried documents shockingly “run to several million pages.”

Unfortunately, the Liberal government’s recent effort to further conceal the unspeakable damage wrought by the COVID vaccines in Canada is merely the latest sordid example of the fascist left-wing politics and open human rights violations that have plagued Canadian society since the onset of the COVID pandemic.

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To have any chance of becoming prime minister, Poilievre needs to say Trump’s name

Silence is a decision.

And this is, effectively, where Pierre Poilievre now finds himself on the issue of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Among some Conservative party faithful, there has been a quiet hope, wishful thinking actually, that this issue would cease to be the dominant one. That crime and affordability would re-emerge as ballot-box drivers. That the Trump circus would recede to the periphery.

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Social media fuels gender dysphoria among children, says expert

Baroness Cass

Social media has misled children about the realities of transitioning, the expert who led a review into NHS child gender services has said.

Baroness Cass, whose work led to sweeping changes including a ban on puberty blockers, criticised the “unrealistic images and expectations” spread online.

She said social media had contributed to the rise in the number of cases of gender dysphoria. Children were not given enough information about “what transition would really mean and how hard it would be”, including intensive medical treatments and “sometimes quite brutal surgeries”, Cass said.

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Data suggests most Canadians believe U.S. would support Alberta separation

As discussion around Alberta separation continues, a new survey suggests many Canadians believe the United States would back the province if it chose to leave Confederation.

A Nanos Research survey commissioned by CTV News found four in five Canadians believe the U.S. would support Alberta separating from Canada. Respondents in the Prairie provinces reported the highest levels of that belief at 58.2 per cent, whereas less than 30 per cent of Quebec residents believe that it is likely that the U.S. would support Alberta separating.

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Pro-Hamas Islamist Countries, Such as Turkey, Qatar and Pakistan, Have No Place on Trump’s Board of Peace

As commendable as it may be that US President Donald J. Trump is apparently hoping that he can turn “swords into ploughshares,” the inclusion of avowedly pro-Islamist, pro-terrorist countries such as Turkey, Qatar and Pakistan in his so-called “Board of Peace” has all the potential thoroughly to undermine the American leader’s peace initiative in Gaza.

With Trump’s 20-point peace plan for ending the Gaza conflict entering a new stage, the American president is insisting that the Hamas terrorist organisation surrender all its weapons within the next two months.

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Head of military’s space division warns Russia is considering putting nuclear weapons in orbit

We have a Space Division?

The head of Canada’s military space division says the country “should absolutely be” concerned about Russia’s potential capabilities amid global fears the Kremlin is considering putting nuclear weapons in place to target satellites.

“That would be cataclysmic,” said Brig.-Gen. Christopher Horner, Commander of 3 Canadian Space Division during an interview with CBC’s The House.

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Can the US Grid Handle the Next Winter Storm Fern – or Major Solar Flares?

Blizzard of 66

US mostly dodged disaster this time. But what if Net Zero mandates aren’t adjusted or ended?

Winter Storm Fern (January 23-27) dumped heavy snow and ice on more than 240 million Americans across 40 states and 2,300 miles, beginning in Arizona and wrapping up in Maine.

Scores died, including 20 in New York City, where Mayor Zohran Mamdani refused to close homeless camps or compel “unhoused residents” to move indoors, instead letting them rely on the “warmth of collectivism.”

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Toronto is facing its worst police corruption scandal in decades. Here are three things that need to happen soon

When news broke last week of the Toronto Police Service corruption that “facilitated shootings, extortions and a conspiracy to commit murder,” it felt like an escalation of the long and sometimes fraught relationship between the city and its police force.

A difficult time two years ago came to mind. Then, as now, it was municipal budget season and the police were asking for another substantial increase. As public debate swirled with a new mayor in power, the police mounted a bully campaign that the Star’s editorial board called ”emotional blackmail.” Chief Myron Demkiw insinuated calamity would ensue if they didn’t get what they demanded.

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U.S. senators express support for trade pact as Trump questions CUSMA’s future

WASHINGTON – United States lawmakers expressed support for the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade during a Thursday committee hearing after President Donald Trump floated the idea of ending the critical continental trade pact.

Republican Sen. Mike Crapo, from Idaho, told the Senate finance committee that the trade agreement, better known in Canada as CUSMA, has protected American jobs, strengthened manufacturing and helped to expand the economy.

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Pete Davidson and Casey Affleck Film to Use AI to ‘Adjust Performances,‘ Create Set Locations

An upcoming movie by director Doug Liman and set to star Pete Davidson and Casey Affleck has published a notice that artificial intelligence will be used to “adjust” actor performances and to create set locations and backgrounds.

The film, Killing Satoshi, will follow the story of an investigative reporter who jumps into the secretive world of cryptocurrency and seeks to uncover the real identity of Bitcoin’s mysterious founder, who is only known under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto.


It’s happening so fast no one will notice in 5 years.

Live actor movies will continue to exist but maybe as a niche like Opera.

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Amid ‘Buy Canadian’ fervour, Canada’s top pension funds still heavily invested in U.S.

For all the fear over the U.S. trade war and President Donald Trump’s threats to Canadian sovereignty, this country’s biggest pension funds remain heavily invested in the U.S.

The Canada Pension Plan (CPP), the largest pension fund in the country, announced this week that it has grown to a record $780.7 billion in assets, with 47 per cent invested in the U.S., compared to only 13 per cent in Canada.

That level of U.S. ownership hasn’t budged in the year since Trump retook office, according to third-quarter results released on Friday.


But it gets better … kidding

h/t handy n handsome

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