They made doors, gum and jerry cans. Ontario’s ‘essential’ workers in manufacturing accounted for more workplace COVID deaths than any other sector — even health care

These are some of the workers, praised by the province as essential, who succumbed to COVID infections they caught while working in factories across Ontario:

A general helper at Concord Confections, a candy factory in York Region that makes Dubble Bubble gum.

An assembler at Concord-based door manufacturer, Masonite International.

A supervisor at Diana Dolls Fashions, a baby clothes maker in Hamilton.


It was readily apparent from the start of the Scamdemic that if you knew the right people you got to make your Movie or your chewing gum while the Great Unwashed suffered economic hardship or Wuhan Flu exposure for the unfortunate in Doug Ford’s Pandemic Mills.

The lockdowns did more harm than good ultimately though it can be argued that if the time had been used to shore up the defenses of Long Term Care homes and other vulnerable institutions then their limited usage could be justified.

To my view the family of the deceased chewing gum worker and others in their shoes have a legitimate cause to sue the government for wrongful death.

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RCMP investigating Chinese ‘police’ stations in Canada

The RCMP says it’s investigating Chinese “police” stations in Canada.

This comes after the Spain-based human rights group Safeguard Defenders reported that more than 50 exist worldwide, including three in the Greater Toronto Area in predominantly Chinese communities.

They include a residential home and single-storey commercial building in Markham and a convenience store in Scarborough.

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Hundreds of Russians sanctioned over Ukraine war can still enter Canada

OTTAWA — The more than 1,200 individuals sanctioned by the Liberal government in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine are not automatically banned from entering Canada, the National Post has learned.

“The sanctions applied to date in response to the situation in Ukraine do not presently trigger inadmissibility” under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, the Canada Border Services Agency confirmed.

They’re workin on it.

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RCMP pantomime arrest of two traitors who willingly volunteered for the Mohammedan Murder Cult ISIS after they arrived in Canada from Syria

Two Canadians captured in Syria during the fight against the so-called Islamic State were arrested by the RCMP on Tuesday night after their flight landed in Montreal.

The women are the first the Canadian government has brought home from detention camps in northeast Syria for foreign ISIS members and their families.

You and I know that SFA will happen to these two monsters. They’ll likely have well paid government jobs courtesy of Justin in a year or so.

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Hail Mary By Justin’s Journos – Let’s run with that “Foreign ‘adversaries’ may have leveraged ‘freedom movement’ to ‘advance agendas’ angle … again

Unnamed foreign “adversaries” may have leveraged the Canadian “freedom movement” protests to advance their own interests, a newly-disclosed intelligence report suggest.

According to previously secret assessments by the Ontario Provincial Police’s (OPP) intelligence branch, the “available information” on Feb. 19 suggested that foreign actors may have pushed support for the movement, which fueled the convoy blockades in Ottawa and across the country, “to protect or enhance their own strategic economic and political interests.”

Again? First they did then they didn’t, now they did! Anything for Justin!

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Insiders: Ottawa Police have a problem… How to stage Constable Kristina Neilson’s public apology sessions.

What if citizens at the ‘Restorative Justice’ meetings publicly state their support for Constable Neilson?

“Insiders say the Ottawa Police will tightly control the ‘Restorative Justice’ apology sessions included in the proposed sentence for Constable Kristina Neilson – but there is an internal debate as to whether the sessions should be invitation-only or open to the public.”

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Rex Murphy: In Defence of the West: Smith Takes a Stand Against Ottawa’s Allegiance to a Globalist Agenda

In the years before green ideology became ascendant in the federal government, and when Alberta was in its most active energy phase, there were many benefits to the Confederation. Not least, and being from Newfoundland, I like to point out how many people from my province—when it was reeling from the fishery collapse—found jobs and relief in Fort McMurray and allied projects in Alberta. One province helping another. I can’t think of a better model for a country built on mutual interdependence, which is why it’s styled a Confederation.

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Harasser of Holocaust survivor nearly car rams Iran protesters in Toronto

Firas Al Najim

Canadian protesters against oppression in Iran were nearly car-rammed in Toronto on Sunday by an activist who had recently achieved notoriety for dressing as an orthodox Jew and harassing a Holocaust survivor about her position on the Israel-Palestinian conflict.

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Ryan Alford: Jagmeet Singh’s disgraceful promise to delay reckoning over Emergencies Act

Commissioner Paul Rouleau made it clear at the start of the inquiry that its focus will remain squarely on the decision of the Federal Government to proclaim a public order emergency. As weeks of sworn and cross-examined testimony bring the events of last February into sharper view, we have yet to see any evidence of the essential precondition for such a declaration: terrorism.

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At least 2 ̷C̷a̷n̷a̷d̷i̷a̷n̷ ̷w̷o̷m̷e̷n̷ traitors and their children repatriated from Mohammedan Murder Cult detention camp

Did she murder for Allah the Death Cult idol?

At least two Canadian women have left a detention camp in Syria holding ISIS fighters and their family members, CBC News has learned.

The women crossed from the al-Roj camp in northeastern Syria headed for northern Iraq on Tuesday morning with an unknown number of children, according to multiple sources.

The intention is that the women and children will be repatriated to Canada, the sources said.

A source with direct knowledge of the file said they received information that Canadian Kimberly Polman is out of the camp and her tent has been taken down.

 

They should be left to rot.

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The lesson of 2022: energy is our lifeblood – The Ukraine war reminds us we need it in abundance, whether we like it or not

This has, so far, been a year of hard lessons. Spiraling inflation has given households an expensive economic refresher course. A land war in Europe has offered an unwelcome reminder of old geopolitical and military truths. But arguably the most important lesson of 2022 concerns the point at which these economic, military and geopolitical considerations converge: energy.

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The hunt for the Abu Sayyaf militants who kidnapped and beheaded two Canadians

JOLO CITY, Philippines — Ben Tattoo stood at the jailhouse door, looking resentful as he stuck his arms through the bars. Handed an orange t-shirt that branded him a detainee, he covered his face with it.

As a member of the Abu Sayyaf Group, Tattoo used to be the one who took prisoners and made them wear orange shirts.

In 2015, he kidnapped Canadians Robert Hall and John Ridsdel from a marina in the southern Philippines. When no ransoms were paid, he coldly beheaded them, on video for the world to see.

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Armed Forces replacement of weapons sent to Ukraine will take up to 4 years, could face problems buying new howitzers

The Canadian military will replace over the next two to four years some of the equipment it sent to Ukraine but could face a problem acquiring replacements for the howitzers it donated.

The Canadian Army donated four M777 howitzers to Ukraine’s military and those guns have proven effective on the battlefield in that country’s war with Russia.

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Danielle Smith considers dropping COVID lockdown charges, apologizes to unvaccinated

The premier of Alberta, Canada, said she is working on a plan to pardon residents who were fined or arrested over breaking coronavirus protocols, and apologized to unvaccinated Canadians who faced “discrimination.”

“I’m deeply sorry for anyone who was inappropriately subjected to discrimination as a result of their vaccine status,”Premier Danielle Smith said Saturday. “I am deeply sorry for any government employee that was fired from their job because of their vaccine status, and I welcome them back if they want to come back.”

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Bank of Canada expected to go big with October rate hike as recession risks loom

Canada’s top economists are expecting the Bank of Canada to deliver another outsized rate hike on Wednesday in its continued fight against decades-high inflation.

The central bank is expected to raise the policy rate by 50 or 75 basis points as part of the Bank’s strategy of front-loading rate hikes, but comes at a time when recession calls are growing louder. Some economists are expecting the Bank to take its foot off the gas following this rate decision.

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