Joly suspends 30 permits for arms sales to Israel and will block U.S.-bound ammunition sale destined for IDF

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly said Canada has suspended 30 permits for arms sales to Israel and is taking the rare step of blocking a contract with the U.S. government to send Quebec-made ammunition to Israeli Defence Forces.

Canadian arms sales to, and in some cases, through the United States to third countries are not subject to Canada’s typical authorization procedure and weeks ago the U.S. announced plans to send Quebec-made ammunition to Israel.

Justin finds new ways to suck up to the Islamists every day.

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Trudeau is ‘radioactive,’ says NDP MP as party caucus retreat begins

New Democrats are gathering in Montreal for a strategy session before the return of Parliament next week and after distancing themselves from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, whose name one NDP MP described as “radioactive.”

Last week, the NDP scrapped their supply and confidence agreement propping up the Liberal minority government.

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Russia takes notice of Canada’s plan to buy 12 submarines that could lie silent under Arctic ice

With an aging and depleted fleet, Canada’s navy is unlikely to strike much fear in the hearts of its adversaries these days.

But a new government plan to purchase 12 modern, non-nuclear submarines that could do service under the Arctic ice has suddenly made Russia sit up and take notice.

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Freeland states ‘grave concerns’ over TIFF film about Russian soldiers

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland is denouncing a documentary about Russian soldiers screening at the Toronto International Film festival (TIFF) this year.

Speaking with reporters Tuesday, Freeland — who is of Ukrainian heritage — noted that both diplomats and the Canadian-Ukrainian community have expressed “grave concerns” about the film Russians at War.

“I share those concerns,” Freeland said.


I am not sure I get her reasoning if it is indeed an anti-war film that meets with Moscow’s disapproval.

This article offers clarity – Remove film about Russian soldiers, Ukraine officials tell TIFF

You be the judge.

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John Ivison: Scenes from a nation in no rush to defend itself

IMT Group was founded as Ingersoll Machine and Tool in Ingersoll, Ont., in 1914 in a factory designed for soap production.

The engineering firm remains headquartered in southwestern Ontario but now has six integrated businesses supplying the automotive, rail and defence industries.

One of its specialties is the production of metal casings used for 155-millimetre artillery shells. Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, it has found its services in high demand — so much so, that it will cut the ribbon on a new multi-million-dollar facility next month.

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Ontario food banks ‘cannot keep up’ as usage reaches 8-year high

Ontario food banks “cannot keep up” as usage has reached an eight-year high, a new report reveals.

Feed Ontario, a food bank network in the province, released new data Tuesday showing that 1,001,150 Ontarians visited a food bank at least once between April 1, 2023 and March 31, 2024, an increase of 25 per cent over the same time period in 2022-23.

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Immigration Without Proper Screening Is Opening the Door to Security Threats in Canada

The federal government’s immigration policy, including increasing the number of newcomers to 500,000 per year, has elicited much criticism of late. The effect so many newcomers have had on a tight housing and rental market has been noted repeatedly.

But one of the primary concerns about Canada’s refugee and citizenship system relates to national security and public safety. What has made the matter worse is a series of new revelations about alleged terrorist plots tied to the ISIS terrorist group being planned on Canadian soil.

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‘PM needs to go’: Trudeau faces growing discontent in caucus ahead of crucial party MPs meeting

Ahead of a crucial meeting with party MPs on Tuesday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is facing growing dissatisfaction within his caucus, according to a report by the Hindustan Times.

Trudeau is expected to address his caucus as a whole for the first time since several of his MPs have expressed privately and publicly that he is not the person to lead the party into the next election.

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Amazon rejects plea to stop selling taxi roof signs as cab scam spreads across Canada

After a long day at a work event in July, Kathryn Kozody was relieved when she spotted a car with a lit-up taxi sign.

She thought it was odd when the driver told her she’d have to pay her fare with a debit card. Still, a tired Kozody hopped in the car.

“I was like, ‘Fine, it’s kind of weird, but let’s go home,'” said Kozody, who lives in Calgary.

All those foreign workers gotta get paid ya know.

h/t DS

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Planned Muslim terror attack on Oct. 7 anniversary highlights insane immigration policy in Canada

Planned Muslim terror attack on Oct. 7 anniversary highlights insane immigration policy in Canada

Accusations Toronto man planned nightmare Oct. 7 anniversary attack prompt warnings over ‘dangerous trend of terrorist activity’ in Canada

Canada is becoming a “breeding ground” for some terrorists and a safe haven for others, leading Jewish organizations say, after the arrest of a Toronto-based terrorism suspect who authorities allege was en route to carry out the mass slaughter of Jewish people in New York City.

“We’re deeply concerned at the ease at which radicalized individuals are being able to enter the country,” said Richard Robertson, B’nai Brith’s director of research and advocacy.

Robertson added B’nai Brith is concerned that some of the terrorists are homegrown, with radicalization occurring within Canadian borders.


I’m going out on a limb here I know but maybe just maybe it was a deliberate act by our elites to import a death cult that hates Canada.

They hate us as much as the Islamists do.

I can’t think of any other reason to import a death cult. Can you?

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‘Too preachy’: Liberal MPs admit some of their constituents want Justin Trudeau gone

NANAIMO, B.C. — It’s become too obvious to hide. Liberal MPs publicly acknowledged Monday that some of their constituents want Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to go. Using words like “too preachy” and “tired,” a handful of MPs told the Star there is a clear appetite for change, and some worry the prime minister’s unpopularity will affect their own bids for re-election.

There’s “a sentiment of exasperation, I would say, in many people,” offered Quebec MP Alexandra Mendès. “A lot of the comments bordered on, ‘We are sick and tired of being preached to.’”

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Justin Trudeau has lost the Canadian Left

Canadian politics has been thrown into further uncertainty this week. Jagmeet Singh, leader of the Left-wing New Democratic Party (NDP), announced that he was terminating the supply-and-confidence agreement which has sustained Justin Trudeau’s Liberal minority government since March 2022, adding that the ruling party is “too weak” and “too selfish” to stand up for ordinary Canadians.

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Controversial broadcaster Adler moves closer to $178K Senate seat

Veteran broadcaster Charles Adler has inched closer to securing a $178,100-a-year position in the Canadian Senate, following a formal notice issued by the Liberal cabinet.

The announcement, made Saturday, confirmed that Adler, 70, will represent Manitoba at the request of the Prime Minister, despite his controversial history of inflammatory remarks about indigenous Manitobans.

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Former Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney to join Liberal Party as special adviser

Former Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney will be joining the Liberal Party as a special adviser.

In an official press release on Monday, the party says Carney will serve as the chair of a leader’s task force on economic growth.

“As chair of the leader’s task force on economic growth, Mark’s unique ideas and perspectives will play a vital role in shaping the next steps in our plan to continue to grow our economy and strengthen the middle class, and to urgently seize new opportunities for Canadian jobs and prosperity in a fast-changing world,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a statement.

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Liberal MP threatens National Post editor by saying feds fund her salary

Liberal MP Taleeb Noormohamed (Vancouver Granville, BC) has told National Post Comment senior editor Terry Newman stop criticizing the Canadian government.

This is because the Canadian government has been providing the National Post with media subsidies to keep it operating, Noormohamed said

I’m sure that’s how things are done in ButtFuckistan where Noormohamed likely hails from making him a perfect fit for Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party..

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