Suspected terrorist and illegal alien India allegedly killed used Canada as a doormat like Trudeau does

What we know about the man India allegedly killed on Canadian soil

… He came to Canada in 1997, Global reported, and claimed refugee status, having used a false passport to enter the country.

His refugee claim was rejected, but 11 days after that, he married a woman who sponsored him for immigration. That, too, was rejected, although Nijjar called himself a Canadian citizen, and Trudeau referred to him as such in the House of Commons on Monday.


Not a Canadian citizen, just a suspected terrorist and murderer on the run who used Canada as a doormat just like Trudeau does.

Many other nations have assassinated troublesome types abroad. Some Canada considers allies.

Few complain that Israel offed the Munich terrorists wherever they found them.

Trudeau’s selective faux outrage is disingenuous given Canada chose sides in this conflict and offered a safe haven to Khalistani separatists.

Trudeau hoped this announcement would deflect from his horrid domestic predicament and it will but only to illustrate what a sorry hypocrite he is for having sought to wrap himself in the flag in a desperate attempt to boost his flatlining popularity and divert attention from the LPC’s corrupt links with Communist China.

Given the animosity between China and India it is reasonable to wonder if Trudeau isn’t acting on Xi Jinping’s intruction or on his own initiative to embarrass India and score Brownie points with his ChiCom friends.

After all it is alleged the CSIS China leaks were due to the Trudeau government’s efforts to restore “normal relations” with Communist China despite their having taken two Canadian citizens hostage and resolute commitment to undermine Canadian sovereignty. 

When it comes to Trudeau no motive is too low to be ruled out.


Lots of reaction …

Watch: Trudeau’s big charge against India, calls terrorist ‘Canadian citizen’

India-Canada row: How world reacted to Canada’s allegation against India

‘Absurd, motivated:’ India rejects Justin Trudeau’s charge over killing of Sikh separatist leader

On Justin Trudeau’s Khalistani leader killing claim, US’ response

Here’s what Congress said after Canada PM Justin Trudeau accused India for killing Khalistani terrorist Nijjar

The Unbearable Tightness of Being Justin Trudeau

 

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Ottawa urges U.S. appeals court to reverse order threatening to shut down Enbridge’s Line 5 pipeline

Ottawa is urging a U.S. appeals court to reverse a Wisconsin judge’s order that threatens to shut down the Line 5 cross-border pipeline by June 2026.

Forcing a shutdown would violate Canada’s treaty rights, government lawyers argue in an amicus brief filed today with the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

A Wisconsin court ruling in June gave Calgary-based Enbridge Inc. an ultimatum: reroute the pipeline around an Indigenous reserve within three years or shut it down.

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Chinese ‘influence’ and ‘intelligence threat’ outlined in declassified 25-year-old CSIS-RCMP report

OTTAWA – A joint report into Chinese interference in Canada drawn from an RCMP and Canadian Security Intelligence Service investigation found evidence of foreign agents working in this country to “influence…important leaders” and “neutralize” criticism of China.

The report was written 25 years ago.

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NDP Crank complains that money spent to erect Queen Elizabeth II statue could be better used to fund fake graves grift

Queen Elizabeth’s statue goes up at Queen’s Park, despite misgivings of Indigenous MPP

The queen has landed after years in limbo.

A 3,500-pound bronze statue of Queen Elizabeth II was hoisted into place in front of the legislature Monday while Premier Doug Ford hosted Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow at a meeting inside.

… The board includes New Democrat MPP Sol Mamakwa (Kiiwetinoong), who objected to the installation, saying the money would be better used finding the unmarked graves of Indigenous children at residential school sites.

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Indian government linked to murder in B.C. of Sikh leader wanted for terrorism says guy who plays footsies with Communist China

Trudeau says Indian government linked to murder of Sikh leader in B.C.

OTTAWA – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday that Canada has credible information that the Indian government agents were involved in the murder of a Canadian citizen in Surrey, B.C. earlier this year.

Hardeep Singh Nijjar was shot on June 18 outside a Sikh temple in Surrey. He was a prominent Sikh leader and backed the establishment of a separate state, called Khalistan, for Sikhs in India

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COVID-19 Vaccines Revealed to Be ‘Neither Safe, Nor Effective’: Watchdog

COVID-19 vaccines were authorized in Canada during 2020 and 2021 without being subjected to the country’s safety tests as required under established drug regulations, revealed an accountability watchdog.

An investigation into COVID vaccines found that the jabs were “neither safe nor effective,” said the nonprofit National Citizens Inquiry (NCI) in a Sept. 15 post on X. The organization published a report Thursday detailing the flawed mechanism through which the vaccines were granted “approval” in Canada.

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China’s ‘CEO Whisperers’: Chinese Communist Party Takes Over Canada

 

“When I look… at the subtle but intense influence of China on Canadian institutions — parliaments, provincial governments, local governments, universities, the intellectual community, the policy community — it makes me deadly worried,” said Australian professor Clive Hamilton, author of Hidden Hand: Exposing How the Chinese Communist Party is Reshaping the World (co-authored by Mareike Ohlberg), speaking to Canada’s National Post in 2019. “I’ve met some very well-informed Canadians who aren’t sure Canada will be able to extricate itself from this situation.”

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David Krayden: Lich, Barber Trial Is a Reminder That We Will Not Return to COVID Mandates

It was the second week of what I am calling the Freedom Trial of Tamara Lich and Chris Barber, two peaceful protesters who came to Ottawa during the Freedom Convoy demonstration of January to February 2022. This prosecution and persecution of course is not just about Lich and Barber—it’s about the whole Freedom Convoy and everyone who dared to support it. Especially those who had their bank accounts frozen by the government for doing so.

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Empty shelves, desolate minds: Canada’s ‘equity book-weeding’

At least in previous centuries a trail of smoke loitered in the air after the censors were done burning books. The smell of information dying could not be escaped, nor could the haze be hidden.

In the digital era, information is deleted and edited by millions of invisible hands. Entire works of fiction are rewritten by publishing houses given custody of their survival, while historical records are misplaced if they invalidate the ‘current thing’. One wonders how much we have lost in the last 5 years…

These are dangerous times for knowledge.

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New hurdle signals more cost overruns for Trans Mountain’s controversial pipeline

There is a new and significant hurdle facing the massively over-budget and contentious Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project running through Alberta and British Columbia.

The Stk’emlúpsemc te Secwépemc, a First Nation in the Interior of B.C., near Kamloops, is disputing a proposed change by Trans Mountain to the pipeline route through an area known as Pípsell.

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Workers at Detroit’s big three auto firms General Motors, Ford and Stellantis strike in battle for 40% pay increase and a four-day work week

About 13,000 US auto workers at Detroit’s big three firms stopped making vehicles and went on strike Friday after their leaders couldn´t bridge a giant gap between union demands and automakers in contract talks.

The United Auto Workers (UAW) union’s labor contract with Detroit’s big three automakers expired at 11.59pm on Thursday, with it is demanding a 40 per cent pay rise for its 146,000 members over four years and a four-day work week not met.

Automakers have countered with offers that are roughly half of that increase. Starting workers are currently paid around $18.04 an hour.

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Still no date for Canada’s retail gun buyback as amnesty deadline nears

The group the federal government called “the primary source of information for industry” in the retail-banned firearm buyback says it still does not know when the program will begin.

This comes as the amnesty on banned firearms is set to expire on Oct. 30.

I hear they’re working on a racialized gun owner exemption for urban thugs.

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Not everything is awesome, Justin Trudeau concedes

“There is discontent across the country.”

That is a phrase you might expect to hear from Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, whose speeches focus on the hardships caused by the high cost of living and the general brokenness of Canada.

But it was Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada for the past seven years and 11 months, who was talking about disgruntlement in the land on Wednesday. Or, as he termed it in French in response to a reporter’s question, “la grogne.”

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Public health officers are still oblivious to their self-destructed COVID credibility

Throughout the pandemic, polls have shown a decline in confidence in public health: Researchers at McMaster University and Vox Pop Labs found that in March 2020, 59 per cent of Canadians had “a great deal of trust” in public health officials. Two years later that had plummeted to 37 per cent.

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Junior talks tough to grocery barons …

Ottawa summons major grocery CEOs to talk lowering food prices — or else

The federal government is summoning the heads of Canada’s major grocery chains to Ottawa this fall to begin discussions on a plan to lower food costs for Canadians, as inflation continues to impact grocery bills.

The companies are being tasked with coming up with a plan to stabilize prices by Thanksgiving, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said as he marked the end of the Liberal cabinet retreat in London, Ont., on Thursday, ahead of Parliament’s return next week.

Between Trudeau and Chow’s sales tax Toronto should be grocery store desert in no time.

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