
Poilievre has connected over-spending & money printing to the surging cost of living, a message that needs to be heard in an era when spending is out of control.

Poilievre has connected over-spending & money printing to the surging cost of living, a message that needs to be heard in an era when spending is out of control.

According to an ideology of self-hatred, Canadians must loathe our society. We must together hang our heads in shame as we weep over the history of our nation. Repeat after Jagmeet Singh: “we are a racist, bigoted, homophobic and xenophobic society.”
The People’s Party of Canada reject this vision. Therefore, they are to spend every living moment in the media doghouse. They are right-wing bigots. They hate “racialized” Canadians. They are but one goose-step removed from 20th Century Fascist Europe.

With growing western alienation and the oil and gas sector in decline under Justin Trudeau, the Maverick Party — formerly Wexit Canada — is seeking to put the western agenda front and centre as the Bloc Québécois has for Quebec. Maverick interim leader Jay Hill joined The Andrew Lawton Show to explain.

Since 2019, Trudeau has only commanded a minority in parliament, leaving him dependent on other parties to govern. Trudeau argues the pandemic has changed Canada like World War Two did and Canadians should now choose who they want to make important decisions for decades to come.

Last week, the province outlined its guidelines for businesses required to make the checks. Patrons at dine-in restaurants, nightclubs, gyms, sports facilities and other venues must present a receipt of full vaccination and identification. Doctors’ notes for medical exemptions will also be accepted.
With vaccines at 39% effectiveness, you’ll be back in lockdown within 30 days. We should be concentrating on treatment and natural immunity instead of vaccines.

Trudeau overlooked the volcano of frustration, fear and, yes, hate that would erupt by thrusting the nation into weeks of campaign rhetoric and resurfaced wedge issues.

While there are still many people who are in denial about the momentousness of this current moment we’re living through, Trudeau clearly realizes we are at a historical inflection point. And he wishes to seize the moment.

Janet Clarkson knows what happens when Canadian voters have “unrealistic expectations” about a politician’s leadership in office: “They vote you out. Period. And that can happen to Prime Minister Trudeau in Monday’s election.”

The election campaign that ends on Monday has been unnecessary — a $610-million distraction in the middle of the worst public health crisis in a century. The vast majority of Canadians, according to recent polls, do not believe it should have even been called in the first place.

Canada’s 44th election campaign is rounding the final turn. With what little time they have left to sway voters, the two leading parties find themselves largely where they left off at the end of the last election.

In an interview released this month, the last surviving architect of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms expressed outrage at the state of democracy in Canada.
Brian Peckford, former premier of Newfoundland, was part of the group of lawmakers and politicians who formulated the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the early 1980’s.
In the interview, Mr. Peckford states that he “cannot believe what is happening to our country. I am extremely saddened by government enacting measures that clearly violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.”

On Thursday, the United States, U.K. and Australia announced the formation of a security pact to counter China’s growing ambitions in the Indo-Pacific region.
Much of the coverage has centred on a deal that would see the U.S. sell Australia the technology to build nuclear-powered submarines.
But the pact covers far more than Aussie subs. It includes close co-operation on cyberintelligence, artificial intelligence, quantum computing and undersea surveillance. Since cyberspying and hacking are increasingly dangerous forms of state-to-state espionage, this three-way exchange is huge.
It’s also huge that Canada was not included — and it was no accident.

According to a video report hosted by Erin O’Toole, Chinese scientist Xiangguo Qiu sent 30 vials of 15 strains of deadly virus samples to the Wuhan Institute of Virology. At the time, the scientist was working under contract at National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg, Canada.

“… Canada, on the other hand, often performs weakly in these areas. Ottawa devotes fewer resources toward cultivating relationships with its most important security partners. Indeed, there seems to be a belief that our proximity to the United States in particular means that our relationship can sometimes be taken for granted.
Moreover, Canadian officials are more reluctant than their Australian counterparts to bring a specifically Canadian voice to the table. Too often, we prefer to listen than to diverge from our allies’ assessments. This has given rise to the belief – one that is increasingly pervasive in Washington – that Canada is a free rider: that it takes much more than it gives from its security and intelligence partnerships.”

It turns out that Canadians from all political spectrums dislike how Justin Trudeau and the Liberals handle these sensitive issues. No thinking citizen should be surprised. Based on careful observation, one could almost believe the state-of-affairs to be intentional.