CBC lectures about Canada’s toxic political culture … conveniently forgets the callous Trudeau gov’t is the cause having inflicted generational harm on citizens

We had good reasons to worry about our political culture even before the Trump shooting

The attempted assassination of Donald Trump has led, inevitably and justifiably, to calls for reflection on the state of Canada’s political culture. But such calls for reflection predate the latest outbreak of political violence in the United States.

“The level of threats and misogyny that I’m subject to, both online and in person, is such that I often fear going out in public,” Liberal MP Pam Damoff told a House of Commons committee in May. “That is not a sustainable or healthy way to live.”


An honest appraisal of our political culture would portray the plight of citizens pushed to brink by the Trudeau government’s hateful policies.

Mass immigration from incompatible cultures has harmed our society in multiple ways.

People cannot afford to rent let alone buy a home.

They cannot find a doctor as healthcare along with all other public services are overwhelmed by the 3rd world invasion Trudeau has inflicted upon Canadian citizens.

People are attacked as “racist” for pointing out they don’t appreciate Justin’s invader migrants using our beaches as public toilets.

Canadian society has been deliberately balkanized by Trudeau’s identity politics and short of mass deportations it will never be repaired.

Ethnic conflicts by imported parallel societies are fought out in our streets.

Anti-White hatred is virtually institutionalized, Antisemitism is so rampant our cities now resemble 1930’s Germany.

Diversity is conflict and multiculturalism its petri-dish.

Punitive tax grabs and the deliberate strangulation of profitable economic sectors are purpose built to destroy Canada.

Our enemies could not have dreamed of so effective a 5th column as the Liberal Party.

Never has a Canadian government behaved in so evil a manner to its own citizens.

May they all rot in hell.

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Canadian Grandparents Use Retirement Savings to Support Adult Children, Grandchildren: Survey

Canadian grandparents are being looked upon to help financially support adult children and grandchildren, according to an RBC survey.

The July 17 survey found that 21 percent of those aged 55 and older are supporting at least one adult child who is over 25 years of age. Thirty percent said they have provided money to grandchildren.

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Michael Taube: It’s up to Pierre Poilievre to clean up Trudeau’s NATO mess

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) set a target in 2014 for member states to earmark two per cent of their national GDP for defence spending, noting that allies below this level would “aim to move towards” reaching the guideline “within a decade.”

Of the 31 NATO member states, only one still hasn’t met this reasonable target. Take a wild guess as to which country it is.

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Former safety minister wants ‘protective zones’ for MPs’ offices as threats increase from that vote bloc the Liberal party covets

Marc Miller Pallie Love Recipient

OTTAWA – Former public safety minister Marco Mendicino is calling for the creation of “protective zones” around political constituency offices to shield members of Parliament and their staff from a rising tide of threatening behaviour.

Mendicino, a Toronto Liberal MP, said under the plan anyone who intimidated or otherwise harassed people within the buffer zone of perhaps 50 to 100 metres would be subject to harsher criminal penalties including jail time.

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Immigration minister Marc Miller’s Montreal office vandalized by Liberal party

The Montreal offices of Liberal MP and federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller suffered what appeared to be thousands of dollars of damage after being vandalized on Thursday.

The St-Jacques St. office’s windows were smashed and covered with pink paint and vandals wrote: “Marc Miller Child Killer” in spray paint across the office’s facade.

h/t Mauser

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John Ivison: Trudeau’s signature pot legalization is failing on all fronts

Isaac Newton said he lost money on the South Sea Bubble financial collapse because, although he could track the movement of stars, he could not calculate the madness of men.

In Canada, the legalization of cannabis in October 2018, unleashed a mania that has seen nearly 1,000 companies receive federal production licences and retailers open nearly 3,500 stores selling cannabis products across the country. It is a short street indeed that doesn’t have a pot shop on it.

The Cannabis Act was a cornerstone piece of legislation for the Trudeau government — a welcome end to 94 years of failed prohibition and an attempt to make Canada safer by closing down the black market in unregulated pot.

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Please shit on our beaches … but please do not throw feces at Liberal Party canvassers next election

Please shit on our beaches … but please do not throw feces at Liberal Party canvassers next election

WTF?

If a Liberal Party Canvasser shows up at your door throw feces at them.

h/t Patti Jo

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I’m a lifelong Toronto renter. I live in constant fear of being forced onto the street

I’ve lived in apartments in Toronto my whole life. I’ve been in my current apartment for nine years — and I’ve watched in horror as apartments around me doubled, then tripled in price. For the past five years, I’ve lived with the terrifying knowledge that if I had to move tomorrow, there would be nowhere for me to go. As a struggling creative and small business owner, even prices in Etobicoke and Scarborough are beyond my reach.

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Canada’s housing crisis is fuelling a population crisis

Canadians now spend more of their incomes on housing than almost any other country in the world. Between 1980 and 2020, housing prices in Canada rose by 746 per cent, far outpacing the median household income, which grew by less than half of that. Then housing prices soared another 50 per cent during the pandemic.

Meanwhile, the country’s fertility rate has been falling steadily, hitting historic lows in each of the past five years it was measured. As of the latest tally in 2022 – when inflation was red hot – Canada’s fertility rate fell to just 1.33 children per woman. For reference, a country requires a fertility rate of 2.1 to keep its population stable, without relying on immigration.

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Jamie Sarkonak: Expect more injustice from the Liberals’ forthcoming Black Justice Strategy

The following are essential components of a racially fair Canada according to a pair of federally appointed brainstormers: dedicated Black courts and federal departments, racial “decarceration” targets … and, possibly, reparations for slavery.

These measures, numbering 114 in total, were recommended to the federal government by a steering group at the end of June to shape the Liberal government’s forthcoming Black Justice Strategy. It’s an initiative that will be sure to promote disorder and advance the well-being of a select few, if the guiding material is any indication.

Toronto’s Most Wanted Reparations Applicants
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Labour minister Seamus O’Regan leaving cabinet

Federal Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan is resigning from cabinet, CBC News has learned.

O’Regan, 53, is stepping down for family reasons, sources said. The Newfoundland and Labrador MP is planning to stay on as a member of Parliament until the next federal election but won’t seek re-election, the sources added.

The government is expected to announce his replacement in cabinet on Friday.

A steady trickle.

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ANALYSIS: Why Challenges to Trudeau’s Leadership Aren’t Anything Like the Chrétien/Martin Era

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau so far appears to have weathered the storm after the surprising June byelection upset in the longtime Liberal riding of Toronto–St. Paul’s. He has said he is committed to staying on as prime minister, and there are a number of factors working in his favour.

Back in the early 2000s, Paul Martin managed to displace Jean Chrétien as prime minister at a time when the Liberal Party had a comfortable majority in the House of Commons and had up to that point faced a fractured opposition.

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Doug Ford says provinces need Ottawa to pay ‘fair share’ of costs for asylum-seekers

HALIFAX — Ontario is asking the federal government to pay up and cover the costs of supporting and housing asylum-seekers, as Quebec’s premier said his province is willing to give up some funding so that other provinces can take in larger numbers.

Speaking at the final news conference at the Council of the Federation’s annual summer meeting — this year hosted by Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston — Premier Doug Ford said Ontario spends $1 billion a year and that asylum-seekers are often left in limbo by the federal government.

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Canada undershot military equipment spending each year since 2016, while half of military vehicles aren’t fit to deploy

While Justin Trudeau faced sharp scrutiny from world leaders and domestic analysts towards past and planned defence spending at the recent NATO summit, The Hub found that Canada’s spending on military equipment and national defence is far below previous projections, resulting in arguably the worst recent spending record of NATO members.

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