Canada is crying out for an anti-woke leader

Canada’s hated prime minister announced he was resigning last month. Most Canadians rejoiced at the apparent end of Justin Trudeau’s reign. His Liberal Party was facing death. Support had fallen to just 16 per cent by the end of December – an all time low.

In truth, Trudeau had not actually resigned. He merely announced he planned to resign. He was aware he was facing a non-confidence motion, which would force him to resign and force an election, which Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives were practically guaranteed to win. To avoid this, he froze parliament. He was essentially holding Canada hostage so he could buy time. This gave him two and a half months, approximately, until parliament would resume in March. An election is now not likely to happen until October, though what might happen in the meantime is concerning.

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U.S. controls key equipment on new warships, putting Canada in a potential ‘hostage’ situation over military procurement

The United States controls many of the key systems onboard Canada’s new warships, allowing the Americans to hold this country hostage over future upgrades or even the provision of spare parts, defence industry officials warn.

Taxpayers are spending as much as $80 billion on a new fleet of Canadian Surface Combatants to be constructed at Irving Shipbuilding.

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Think Again – Pro-Canadian shouldn’t mean anti-American

President Donald Trump just imposed 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum and may soon place similar tariffs on all other products entering the United States.

These tariffs will devastate our economy. In fact, they may throw us into a recession. It’s imperative we do everything we can to stop these tariffs from happening.

However, it’s interesting to see so many Liberal and NDP politicians suddenly beating the drum of Canadian patriotism. These are the same politicians who, until just a couple weeks ago, often referred to our country as “so-called” Canada and denounced it as a genocidal state.

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Donald Trump’s 51st state threats a ‘wake-up call’ for Canada’s European allies, seasoned diplomat Melanie Joly says

OTTAWA—U. S. President Donald Trump’s 51st state annexation threats are a “wake-up call” to many of Canada’s European allies who have remained publicly silent and oblivious, says Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly.

Although Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was captured on hot mic 10 days ago telling Canadian business and union leaders that Trump’s desire to subsume Canada into the United States is “a real thing,” Joly said even now U.S. senators and representatives she met in Paris, Munich and Brussels continue to joke about it, while allies appeared unaware.

Joly changed her mind upon realizing she could shop with US dollars and never pay duty again once annexation was accomplished.

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Opinion: Patients dying on waitlists are finally getting political attention

In the past four months, politicians from across the political spectrum have started talking about something really important — patients dying on waiting lists. It’s about time.

In Alberta, the NDP’s health critic raised concerns about SecondStreet.org research that found the provincial government has stopped tracking data on patients dying while waiting for health services. During B.C.’s fall election, the Conservative Party campaigned on carefully tracking and disclosing data on waiting-list deaths.

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Ottawa spent record amount on outsourcing despite vow to rein in practice

Federal spending on outsourcing reached a record high of $17.8-billion last year, despite the Liberal government’s vow to cut back on the use of outside help.

It’s an increase of 13.5 per cent over the previous fiscal year. Spending in the broad category of professional and special services – which includes contracted work in categories such as lawyers, architects, training and maintenance, as well as various types of consultants – has more than doubled since the Liberals formed government in 2015.

Sounds like parting favours.

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Trump’s musings on ‘very large faucet’ in Canada part of looming water crisis, say researchers

Water sharing between Canada and the United States has long been a contentious issue.

In 2005, former Alberta premier Peter Lougheed warned against sharing Canada’s water supply with the United States, suggesting Alberta’s most important resource was water, not oil and gas.

“We should communicate to the United States very quickly how firm we are about it,” Lougheed said.

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Canada as the 51st State? In Electoral Terms, Trump’s Idea Favors Democrats.

As President Trump looks north and repeatedly presses his case to absorb Canada as the “51st state,” politically minded Democrats who are otherwise outraged by almost everything else about his agenda find themselves contemplating a potential electoral boon should it ever happen.

Few in Washington take the prospect all that seriously, of course. Canada has made clear that it has no interest in joining the United States, and Mr. Trump seems unlikely to send in the 82nd Airborne Division to force the matter. But if the idea appeals to Mr. Trump’s grandiose sense of himself as an empire-building historic figure, it could also undercut his own party’s prospects.

We are a stereotype in the NYT’s world view.

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I’m all busted up about this …

Serial rapist Sofyan Boalag sues after being stabbed in N.B. prison, left unable to walk

A man who terrorized women in St. John’s in 2012 is now suing the federal government, saying he’ll never walk again after being stabbed at a prison in Renous, N.B.

Sofyan Boalag’s statement of claim says he was incarcerated at the Atlantic Institution on Feb. 3, 2023, when prison staff opened the doors to all cells in one corridor simultaneously so inmates could line up for medication.

Boalag says he was attacked from behind and stabbed repeatedly.


Yup you guessed it …

‘Gill said that when Boalag came to Canada, he was married to a woman in Algeria named Nadia. Gill said that Boalag told her that his wife was “respectful” of him, and that she stayed at home and only associated with family, and that’s the way he liked it.’

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CHARLEBOIS: Why Canadians still reject online grocery shopping

Despite the digital transformation reshaping industries worldwide, grocery shopping in Canada remains deeply rooted in traditional in-store experiences.

A recent survey by Dalhousie University and Caddle, which polled 2,501 Canadians, found that 57.8% of respondents still do all their grocery shopping in-store without using grocery apps, while only 2.5% rely exclusively on digital platforms. Additionally, 3% primarily shop online but still visit physical stores occasionally. This data underscores a clear divide between technological adoption and consumer preferences, reflecting deeper economic and behavioural trends in food retail.

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Where’s our king amid Trump’s ‘51st state’ threats? Charles stays frustratingly silent as Canada gets bullied

A king outranks a potentate or a mountebank shilling from his Oval Office soapbox.

And we’ve got one of those — a king, I mean.

So where is King Charles III when Canada needs him? Not a peep out of His Majesty since U.S. President Donald Trump has been blathering and bloviating about this country becoming the 51st American state, repeated ad nauseam, any time he can wedge in a dig. Stony silence as well from the useless Governor General. For that matter, where are the 55 other nations in the Commonwealth that was so vitally important to the late Queen? They haven’t said boo in defence of their beleaguered fraternal member. Or … hello, Europe?

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Germany and Norway offer Canada early access to new submarines in pitch to join project

A joint German-Norwegian project to build new diesel-electric submarines is pitching Canada to join the program, with one of the selling points being that Ottawa would get early access to a boat on the initial production line so it could meet targets for acquiring these new vessels.

In September, Canada formally began looking for up to 12 new under-ice capable submarines, as part of an effort to demonstrate to NATO members that Ottawa is boosting defence spending.

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Mark Carney is changing the game for Pierre Poilievre, and maybe Donald Trump, too

If Mark Carney is the next prime minister who has to deal with Donald Trump, the U.S. president may need to change up his game on the insults he’s been tossing in Canada’s direction.

Calling Carney “governor” won’t exactly have the same sting, given that the man increasingly seen as the front-running Liberal leadership contender has actually been a governor of two national banks — Canada and the Bank of England.

 

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Élie Cantin-Nantel: Almost half of my generation wants Canada to join the U.S. Here’s why

In recent weeks, U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly called for Canada to become America’s 51st state.

The proposition, understandably controversial and borderline farcical, has been overwhelmingly rejected by the vast majority of Canadians—with one exception: younger Canadians. That includes Gen Z Canadians and younger Millennials.

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