Meanwhile at Toronto’s Nathan Phillips Hamas Memorial Square …

Jow Warmington is on site follow him.

The crowd looks pretty sparse so far for what was advertised as a 2 pm start.

The lunatic socialists are there as always but cold weather will keep some away, mounting public disgust will force others to lay low.

We’ll keep an eye on it but frankly I suspect my intuition will prove correct, this will not have been worth fighting Toronto traffic and a parking fee to stand in the cold.

A pretty good turnout but not “massive.”

Immediately below – One thing to keep in mind is that these are not “New Canadians.” Most are born here and in fact are second and third generation kids. Hatred for Israel is generational, it is bred in the bone and that “home schooling” is reinforced by our twisted academics and much of our media. Listen to the howls of Allahu Akbar.

This is what multiculturalism and bad immigration policy has wrought. Those responsible should burn in hell.

Twitter – Nathan Phillips Square

Share

Blackie dodges Haiti duty!

Canada on sidelines as Haiti finally gets an armed intervention against gang violence

Back in February, the Caricom group of Caribbean nations met in Nassau to discuss ways to reduce the chaos and violence in its biggest member state — Haiti.

Bahamian Prime Minister Philip Davis acknowledged that the problem was too big for the bloc of small island nations to deal with on its own.

“What we at CARICOM have come to appreciate is that we do not have the resources to be able to deal with the Haiti problem ourselves, and we do need outside help,” he said.

… The story of Canada’s involvement in Haiti over the past two years is above all a story of a government determined not to get drawn into a potential quagmire.

I find myself oddly in agreement with Bytown Blackie.

Share

Michael Higgins: Trudeau must condemn these obscene rallies that shame Canada

Ottawa, Montreal and Mississauga, Ont., saw hundreds of men and women waving Palestinian flags, honking car horns, and shouting Allahu akbar (God is great) only hours after terrorist atrocities in Israel shocked the world. More “cheerleading” rallies are due to be held today.


Obscene as they are the Hamas support marches should not be banned. 

I like my enemies in the sunlight.

Maybe a lesson will be learned by Canada’s horde of virtue signaling drones.

Maybe they’ll realize that not all cultures are equal.

That mass immigration invites societal chaos.

That identity politics, multiculturalism and diversity are dangerous weapons wielded by hateful totalitarians.

Will they learn? Maybe but not likely.

Only one thing is certain. Come next election Justin Trudeau will be licking Hamas ass for votes.

 

Share

Canada is losing friends, and it’s not just India

Blame it on its liberal immigration policies and weak counterterrorism laws

On the outskirts of Castlegar, a little town in British Columbia, a statue of Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy stands tall in the garden of the Doukhobor Discovery Centre. Much before Khalistani terrorists brought a culture of guns and gangs to British Columbia, the province became synonymous with the nonviolent and pacifist ideals of the Doukhobors. A small ethno-religious group of Russian origin, the Doukhobors fled to Canada in the 1890s, fearing persecution from the Russian church and state. Tolstoy is said to have assisted in their mass migration, and his statue stands testimony to his efforts and Canada’s tradition of welcoming refugees.

Share

‘Police said I’m in danger’: Sikh activists on edge worldwide after Vancouver killing

Two months after the Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar was shot and killed in a parking lot in suburban Vancouver, Canadian police showed up at the house of a close friend with warning: his life was also in danger.

Two officers – one of them from the federal national security team – handed Gurmeet Singh Toor a document known as a “duty to warn” paper. It required him to confirm that they had told him his life “might be in peril” – and to acknowledge that any attempt on his life might put his family at risk.

“I asked them who might be threatening me and why my life was at risk,” Toor told the Guardian. “They said they couldn’t explain the threats because of ‘security reasons’. But they told me they had information that I was in danger.”

Share

WARMINGTON: Jewish groups call for end to ‘heinous’ pro-Hamas rallies in Canada

Celebrating Hamas-led Palestinian terrorists’ evil slaughter of helpless victims in Israel is not protesting.

It’s backing mass murder and it’s dangerous.


I do not blame the Jewish community for asking for the ban but nothing will be done.

Things will almost certainly get as bad in Toronto as in London, Stockholm, Brussels, Paris or Berlin and they know that. 

Possible Pro-Hamas Rally at Nathan Phillips Square Toronto 2PM Thanksgiving Day.

Share

She buys all her groceries across the U.S. border — and finds big savings

With the average grocery bill rising despite slowing inflation, Canadian shoppers are doing whatever it takes to lower food costs, including, in the case of one B.C. mom, making a run for the U.S. border.

Brandi Dustin lives in Roosville, B.C., which is located just a 15-minute drive to a supermarket in Eureka, Mont.

Even with the weak Canadian dollar and the gas she spends crossing the border twice a week, Dustin says she saves about $300 a month buying all her food in the United States.

I’m surprised Justin hasn’t called her a white supremacist.

Share

‘Here We Go Again’: A Cabinet Minister on Facing Anti-Sikh Bias

Harjit Sajjan WW II – convinces Ike to stage landings in Normandy

In the aftermath of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s assertion that “agents” of the Indian government were involved in the shooting death of a Sikh leader in British Columbia, my colleagues Norimitsu Onishi and Vjosa Isai looked into growing tensions within the Indian diaspora in Canada, ones that reflect divisions in India that have been fueled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalism.

Share

Foreign doctors take up more medical residency spots as Canadians struggle to get in

Canada has an acute shortage of doctors — a staffing crisis that is expected to get much worse in the years ahead as the number of residency positions on offer fails to keep up with rapid population growth.

Despite those challenges, roughly 1,000 Canadian doctors who went to school abroad are turned away every year because they can’t get residency spots in Canada, according to a CBC News review of medical school data. Physicians are required to go through a residency in order to be licensed to practice.

Canadian doctors who want to come home to work are routinely told it’s not possible because resources are limited and there are only so many residency positions to go around.

Share

CBC policy …

Reminder this is a long term policy …

Policy for a reason …

Share

WARMINGTON: Some in Toronto celebrating mass murder of Israelis as death toll mounts

First Canada saw cheering for a Second World War Nazi-related Waffen SS soldier, now there’s jubilation in Toronto over the mass slaughter of innocent Israelis.

Most of the dead are believed to be Jewish – just like those exterminated in the Holocaust. But some here thought this was fantastic and went public to party about it.

Share

Cost of Canada’s new flagship ocean science vessel jumps to $1.28B

The budget for Canada’s new flagship ocean research ship increased 28 per cent this year jumping from $995 million to $1.28 billion.

Construction of the offshore oceanographic science vessel is underway at the Seaspan Shipyards in North Vancouver, B.C., as part of the National Shipbuilding Strategy.

It will replace the decommissioned Canadian Coast Guard Ship Hudson — now at a wreckers yard — to provide scientific and ocean mapping missions in Atlantic Canada.

Share

Refugees moved out of Toronto churches and into hotels across Ontario

When hundreds of African migrants showed up in Toronto over the summer, there was nowhere in the city’s shelter system to accommodate them all. Many of the asylum seekers ended up sleeping on the streets.

The efforts of three Toronto churches, Revivaltime Tabernacle and Dominion Church International in North York, and Pilgrim Feast Tabernacle in Etobicoke, kept many of those men and women off the streets with food, clothing and beds.

Share

Tasha Kheiriddin: National pharmacare plan too high a price to pay to keep Liberals in power

How much will it cost Canadians to keep the Liberals in power for another two years?

Answer: at least another $23 billion to $27 billion per annum. That’s the estimated cost of a national pharmacare plan according to the Parliamentary Budget Officer — and it’s one of the NDP’s key demands to maintain its confidence-and-supply agreement with the government.

But look at the success with pot sales government has had!

Share