Energy expert says Guilbeault’s new climate targets ‘draconian’

Lunatic

As Canada’s economy struggles under the carbon tax and threats of a production cap in Alberta, federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has announced Canada will slash C02 emissions 45 to 50% below 2005 levels by 2035.

“Guilbeault is suggesting even more draconian emission reductions for Canada by 2035 and we all know that implies production cuts in Alberta,” said Calgary-based energy expert and commentator Dennis McConaghy.

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Don’t expect Elite fostered antisemitism to be “fixed” by the Elite

Battle of Tours

Michael Higgins: Liberal government hate crime report pretends antisemitism doesn’t exist

“Hate persists when apathy prevails,” reads a new report on hate crimes by a federal government ombudsman who is supposed to be the “voice of the victim.”

Hate also persists if you just ignore it. For example, the report by the victims’ ombudsman specifically does not mention any attacks on Jews, Jewish institutions, or the alarming number of antisemitic protests in this country.

The Office of the Federal Ombudsperson for Victims of Crime reports that there was a 32 per cent increase in 2023 in the number of hate crimes reported to police but ignores the fact that attacks on Jews increased 71 per cent that year.


This report is the product of an Elite which seeks to exonerate itself. Trudeau’s Liberals and the NDP support Islamist immigration, anti-zionist universities, schools and unions. Not to mention the demonetization of White Canadians under racist DEI and affirmative action programs. They kowtow to our enemies for their votes. They are criminals. Stupidly groups such as B’nai Brith embrace DEI as a means of working within the system. The system that assigns White people the role of perpetual villain as the apex oppressor of all humanity. Uh Huh.

B’nai Brith Policy for Combatting Antisemitism in Schools (PCAS) – Politique pour lutter contre l’antisémitisme dans les écoles (PLCAE)

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With Trudeau and his Finance Minister at war, it’s clear: this government is done

When Chrystia Freeland rises in the House Monday to deliver the Fall Economic Statement – if she does – the country will be presented with a remarkable and disturbing sight.

The Finance Minister will read out a document that it is now known she does not agree with, charting an economic course she does not believe in, and that will repudiate promises to which she nailed her credibility just eight months ago.

After which, Justin Trudeau will in all probability fire her.

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The great trolling of Justin Trudeau: Why Donald Trump won’t leave Canadian PM alone

Donald Trump waited just three weeks after his election victory last month to restart one of his favourite hobbies during his first administration: trolling Justin Trudeau.

On Nov 26, he pledged to impose tariffs of 25 per cent on Canada, alongside Mexico the US’s largest trading partner, unless the country agreed to crack down on border security.

Cue panic in Ottawa. Mr Trudeau was at Mar-a-Lago three days later to discuss the issue with the president-elect and put on a brave face to tell the media the two men had an “excellent conversation”.

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Trudeau makes fresh bid to recruit Mark Carney amid tensions with Freeland

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has made another attempt to recruit former central banker Mark Carney at a time when tensions with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland have risen over increased spending on political strategies, three sources say.

In recent weeks, as the government has struggled to overcome a 20-per-cent gap in the polls with the Conservatives, the sources say the former governor of both the banks of Canada and England was again approached to join the government, an offer which he is still considering.

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Nearly half of Canadians favour mass deportations and 65% think there are too many immigrants: poll

Nearly half of all Canadians believe that mass deportations are necessary to stop illegal migration, new polling shows.

A Leger poll done for the Association for Canadian Studies found that 48 per cent of Canadians hold that view — just once percentage point shy of Americans polled who, with the election of Donald Trump, could see such a policy enacted when he assumes office next year.

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LA Times Says Blame Orange Man! Housing crisis, economic woes and Trump – How Canada turned against immigrants

 Canada long sold itself as a beacon for immigrants, who were widely viewed as key to economic growth in a vast nation with a small and rapidly aging workforce.

“Study, work and stay” was the slogan of a government campaign to lure international students, part of a broader push that included recruiting temporary workers and resettling refugees. After President Trump banned travel to the U.S. from several Muslim-majority countries in 2017, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that Canada’s doors were open.

“To those fleeing persecution, terror and war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith,” he wrote on the platform now known as X. “Diversity is our strength.”

But in recent months, Canada has changed course.

Don’t harsh my mellow man!

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Michael Taube: Trudeau’s ‘feminist’ criticism of American voters is delusional

It’s official: Justin Trudeau has finally given up on being the prime minister of Canada.

There have been plenty of previous warning signs. During the NAFTA renegotiations, for instance, Trudeau pressed the United States and Mexico to include progressive concepts like gender rights and Indigenous rights, which have nothing to do with free trade.

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Committee’s endorsement of ‘anti-Palestinian racism’ report splits Liberal caucus

Tensions were apparent in the Liberal caucus Wednesday after a committee chaired by Liberal MP Lena Metlege Diab released a report endorsing the disputed concept of anti-Palestinian racism.

Attorney General Arif Virani said he was “alive to concerns” about the notion of anti-Palestinian racism, but stressed the need to confront the rise in hatred since the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in southern Israel.

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DELOREY: Trudeau said he needed new mandate to fight COVID — why not Trump’s tariff threat?

In the summer of 2021, Justin Trudeau argued that he needed a new mandate to lead Canadians through the COVID-19 pandemic.

It was a curious move — calling an election in the middle of a public health crisis, with lockdowns still in place, masks mandatory, and uncertainty gripping the nation.

Yet his justification was clear: leading through an extraordinary challenge required fresh validation from the people.

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Beijing’s 2021 Election Report Highlights Sikh Leaders’ Voter Pressure on Trudeau, Sets Blueprint for Chinese Diaspora Influence

OTTAWA, Canada — A sensitive analysis from a key arm of the People’s Republic of China’s overseas influence operations, published just weeks after Canada’s 2021 federal election, reveals Beijing’s strategic interest in the comparative success of Chinese and Indian immigrant communities in Canada’s 2019 and 2021 votes, particularly the extraordinary influence wielded by Sikh leaders, who reportedly pressured Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government to amend an extremist threat report linked to the 1985 Air India bombing by warning that failure to comply would cost the Liberal Party financial backing and access to Sikh voters.

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Trudeau presents premiers with plan to address Trump’s border concerns as tariff threat looms

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met with Canada’s premiers on Wednesday to discuss Ottawa’s plan to address U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s concerns about the Canada-U.S. border.

This is the second time Trudeau has met with premiers since Trump threatened to hit Canada with steep tariffs last month — and the first meeting since the prime minister’s dinner with Trump at Mar-a-Lago.

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John Ivison: With our ‘post-national’ leader it’s no wonder Trump thinks we aren’t a real country

While taking part in a geography student awards ceremony in 2016, Vladimir Putin corrected a schoolboy who said Russia’s border with the U.S. ended at the Bering Strait.

“Russia’s borders have no end,” Putin said, before clarifying. “This is a joke.”

It was the same kind of mirthless, menacing crack that permeates Donald Trump’s repeated reference to Canada as the 51st state of America .

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One in three Canadians say government response to COVID was overblown: poll

What surprises bioethicist Kerry Bowman isn’t that more than a third of Canadians think governments overreacted to COVID, according to a new national poll. It’s that the sentiment isn’t higher.

“I think a lot of Canadians have doubts,” said Bowman, who teaches bioethics and global health at the University of Toronto. “What we didn’t do as a nation was think about, in a mature democratic society, how far can we go with restrictions, and how far can we go, quickly, in the absence of clear evidence.”

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Trudeau will have to ‘kiss the ring’ to achieve smoother bilateral relations with Trump: John Bolton

If Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wants to get on U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s good side for the sake of a smooth bilateral relationship, he’ll likely have to be openly deferential, says former U.S. National Security Advisor, John Bolton.

“It’s always possible, if somebody kisses the ring. I mean, that’s what Trump likes,” Bolton told CTV Power Play host Vassy Kapelos in an interview airing Wednesday, when asked if he thinks it’s possible for Trudeau and Trump to forge a better relationship than during the former president’s first term.

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