Muslim terrorist mom of 6 dies in deportation centre after Canadian government refuses to repatriate her from Syria

A Quebec mother of six, once detained in northeast Syria, has died while waiting for repatriation. The Canadian woman was known only by her initials F.J.

The federal government refused to repatriate her, but brought home her two daughters and four sons to Montreal earlier this year.

Global Affairs Canada’s position was that F.J. posed a security risk, and that there were no means to control her behaviour once she entered Canada.


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ISIS Bride: Defense needs more time to review evidence in case of idiot convert’s terrorism trial

A Squamish woman charged with alleged ISIS-related terrorism offences will return to Vancouver Provincial Court Nov. 7.

The RCMP’s Federal Policing Integrated National Security Enforcement Team said in July it had arrested and charged 51-year-old Kimberly Polman.

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Jamie Sarkonak: Your rising Spotify bill is paying for the Liberals’ diversity agenda

The Online Streaming Act, rushed through Parliament as Bill C-11, isn’t in full force yet. Already, though, it’s begun to claw back a generous cut of streamer revenues — and we’re already worse off for it.

In June, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) announced that it would be taking a five per cent cut of Canadian revenues from major foreign streaming services, such as Netflix and Youtube, starting in 2024, supposedly to invest in Canadian programming. In dollars, that’s supposed to bring in $200 million per year.

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Anonymously funded anti-Poilievre ad campaign has links to former Liberal, NDP staffers

OTTAWA — A third-party group run by former NDP and Liberal staffers has launched an advertising campaign against Pierre Poilievre, in an attempt to go “dollar for dollar” with the Conservatives on ad spending.

The campaign comes as the prospect of a snap election grows and as Liberals gripe over what they see as slow and inadequate attempts to contrast the Conservative leader’s record with the Trudeau government through advertising.

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Majority of Canadians would vote for Kamala Harris in U.S. election: poll

If Canadians could vote in the U.S. election, a majority would choose to send Kamala Harris to the White House.

In a new survey from polling firm Leger, 64 per cent of Canadian respondents said if they could cast a ballot, they’d put their support behind vice-president Harris, while 21 per cent would support former president Donald Trump. Fifteen per cent weren’t sure what they would do.

They elected her non-binary Canadian counterpart.

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Business community laments loss of means to depress wages & reap profits from shortages associated with mass import of cheap foreign labour reports CBC

Immigration prevented a recession last year, but looming changes could stall growth: economists

Reducing the number of new admissions to the country could have negative consequences for the economy and pose challenges for commerce, according to business advocates and economists alike.

Economic measures such as the gross domestic product (GDP) have been moving in a positive direction, economists say, in part because Canada’s population has continued to increase due to rising immigration levels.

Statistics Canada reported in March that the country’s population grew in 2023 by about 1.3 million, and 97.6 per cent of that growth was the result of immigration.

(more…)

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Quebec suspends 11 teachers for promoting ‘Islamist’ beliefs at Montreal public school

Eleven teachers in Quebec have been suspended for promoting what Premier François Legault referred to as “Islamist religious concepts” at a Montreal public school.

The now-former faculty members of Bedford Elementary included a mixture of men and women and many were of North-African descent.


Whoever made the decision to import Islamists to Canada should be jailed for life.

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Poilievre not buying Trudeau’s ‘about-face’ on immigration

Tory leader Pierre Poilievre told reporters the Trudeau Liberals’ Thursday morning immigration announcement was a desperate attempt to gain support ahead of the next election.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Immigration Minister Marc Miller this morning announced an immigration cap, with 2025 quotas for 2025 falling from 500,000 to 395,000. Trudeau also confirmed he has every intention to stay on as prime minister and leader of the Liberal party.

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Canadian grandmother repeatedly offered euthanasia while undergoing cancer treatment

A Nova Scotia grandmother has said that doctors offered her euthanasia three times while she was undergoing cancer treatment, making her feel that she was “better off dead.”

In an October video for the Christian Medical and Dental Association, a 51-year-old Nova Scotia woman anonymously revealed that her doctor asked if she knew about Canada’s Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) euthanasia program just before she underwent her first mastectomy for breast cancer in 2022.

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Amy Hamm: Let the terrorists speak, so we know who they are

I am a free speech absolutist. I am glad that Samidoun chanted, “Death to Canada,” and “Death to Israel,” on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery, because they unmasked themselves despite the keffiyehs hiding their faces.

I do not believe that Canada — or any country or jurisdiction — should have laws to criminalize speech — at all. So, it would be unprincipled and hypocritical were I to suggest that Canada’s growing population of antisemitic terrorist cheerleaders be told to shut up under threat of arrest and imprisonment.

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Ex-terror suspect suing Canada for $27M tears up while describing detention in Sudan

OTTAWA — Abousfian Abdelrazik wiped away tears as he told a court Tuesday about being imprisoned in Sudan two decades ago.

He is suing the Canadian government for $27 million, claiming officials arranged for his arbitrary imprisonment, encouraged his detention by Sudanese authorities and actively obstructed his repatriation to Canada for several years.

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Trudeau government claims it’s going to slash immigration levels …

OTTAWA — The Trudeau government will announce a dramatic immigration cut Thursday, reducing new permanent resident numbers by almost 100,000 in 2025 after years of consecutive increases to the country’s immigration targets.

Barring any last-minute changes, information obtained by National Post shows the government is planning to decrease permanent resident intake from 485,000 this year to 395,000 in 2025. It is then expecting to further cut intake to 380,000 in 2026 and 365,000 in 2027.


These so called cuts are Bullshit given the damage done and the numbers here already.

They’ll find some other program to juice migrant intake and pretend it accidentally got away when found out.

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Tom Mulcair: What’s Justin Trudeau’s track record on Quebec separatism?

With the old threat of Quebec separatism rearing its head with the Parti Quebecois on the rise in the polls and its leader promising a referendum on Quebec sovereignty if he’s elected, thoughtful commentators have been fretting of late about the possibility of a third referendum(opens in a new tab).

I’ve got good news for them: it’s not going to happen.

That’s not to say that separatism is dead. It ain’t. What is worth noting, though, is that it’s still stuck in the 33% range(opens in a new tab) where it’s been for decades.

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National security cited as B.C. drone engineer’s devices seized

A B.C. Supreme Court judge has granted an extraordinary order to seize electronic devices from a former employee of a Lower Mainland company specializing in anti-drone technology — citing fears China or Russia might be trying to access military secrets.

Documents contained in a partially sealed civil court file detail a scene in early September in which nine people — including bailiffs, lawyers, and representatives of Burnaby-based Skycope Technologies — descended on the man’s home to seize laptops, phones and storage cards.

Skycope got the order against its former employee — known as XL — in a closed-door hearing where the company alleged the electrical engineer had handed a foreign competitor confidential information sought by unfriendly state actors.

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CBC practically chokes discussing Montreal Muslim teacher controversy

A Montreal elementary school is at the centre of a secularism debate. Here’s how we got here

In the last few weeks, an elementary school in Montreal’s west-central Côte-des-Neiges neighbourhood has been mired in controversy.

This past weekend, 11 teachers were suspended for allegedly creating a toxic environment for students and staff that goes back to 2016. On Tuesday, their teaching licences were also suspended.

The allegations are the subject of a 90-page government report.


They’re going to tolerate us all to death.

Please! Don’t draw any cultural conclusions!

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