Trudeau’s Canada: Global Study Deems Vancouver & Toronto Housing “Impossibly Unaffordable.”

Global study ranks two Canadian cities high on list of most expensive places to buy a home

As Canadians continue to struggle with the extremely high cost of buying a home in some of the country’s major urban centres, a new global report is underscoring just how expensive some of those markets are.

A study by Demographia, which examines international housing affordability, has deemed Vancouver and Toronto as “impossibly unaffordable.”

David MacDonald, a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, says the findings of the study aren’t surprising.

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GUNTER: Calling a federal election would end our misery

The revelation this week that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s carbon tax will cost the Canadian economy $25 billion in lost Gross Domestic Product growth by 2030 shows that the tax is a failure – by the government’s own standards.

News that the government’s figures confirm a 1% reduction in GDP over the next six years – a calculation the Liberals tried for weeks to hide from Canadians – has been greeted with something of a ho-hum. The attitude of a lot of observers has been, “It’s only 1%.” When the government was covering up its study, the assumption was that it must be really bad. One per cent seems tiddly.

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Trudeau’s Girlfriend insists there are no ‘traitors’ in Liberal caucus

Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly insists there are no “traitors” in the Liberal caucus, after a report from the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP) alleged there are MPs and senators who are “semi-witting or witting participants” in foreign interference efforts.

“Listen, if that was the case, they would be out of the Liberal caucus, and they should be out of every single party,” Joly told CTV Question Period host Vassy Kapelos in an interview airing Sunday.

This from the woman who didn’t know her boss sent a Canadian navy vessel to celebrate his Dad’s country Cuba.

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Liberals split on giving illegal alien invaders status says stooge posing as immigration minister

Canadians — and Liberals — split on giving the undocumented status: immigration minister

Immigration Minister Marc Miller says the federal government is continuing to investigate options for giving status to some undocumented people in Canada — but he doesn’t see consensus on the issue in the country or in the government caucus.

In an interview airing Saturday on CBC’s The House, Miller spoke positively about the idea but cautioned that the ongoing debate over the prospect prompted him to “reflect” on taking any action.

“I think from a humanitarian perspective it makes sense. From an economic perspective, it makes sense,” he told host Catherine Cullen.

How about thinking of your own citizens from a ‘humanitarian perspective’ for a change asshat?

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Habitual Liar Trudeau calls into question findings of stunning watchdog foreign interference report

FASANO, ITALY – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he has concerns with how conclusions were gathered in a spy watchdog report.

Speaking after the conclusion of the G7 summit in Italy, Trudeau told reporters that he has concerns with the way the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians came to its conclusions that some parliamentarians were “semi-witting or witting” participants in efforts of foreign states to meddle in Canadian politics.

“We made clear some concerns we had with the way that NSCIOP did, drew conclusions,” he said. “I think that is an important part of the process.”

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This isn’t just another byelection in Toronto — it might reveal the future for Justin Trudeau and Pierre Poilievre. Here’s what’s at stake

It’s a fascinating political petri dish under the microscope by parties, pollsters and pundits alike.

Candidates and campaign volunteers will tell you what really matters to voters in the Toronto-St. Paul’s federal byelection is: housing, the high cost of groceries and staples, or how to tackle acts of rising antisemitism in a midtown riding that has the fifth largest Jewish population in the country.

But ask voters on the street, and they’ll tell you what really matters is Justin Trudeau and Pierre Poilievre.


They’re trying to spin that a win for the Libs in next week’s byelection is simultaneously a national endorsement of the worst Prime Minister ever and a repudiation of Poilievre.

But it’s an ultra safe riding in the heart of Canada’s most progressively stupid city.

The only story will be a loss for Junior’s candidate.

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Why Transitioning to Electric Vehicles by 2035 Is Unrealistic

The federal government has mandated that all new light-duty vehicles be electric by 2035. Achieving that goal would require vastly more electrical generation capacity and an enormous expansion of charging stations.

A Fraser Institute study published in March found that handling the higher load would require either 13 large new gas plants or the equivalent of 10 new mega-dams the size of B.C.’s $16-billion hydro Site C. Just one problem: almost all viable hydro sites have already been dammed. Plus, it took 10 years to get environmental approval for Site C and another 10 to build it.

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Global Elites Think You Are an Idiot. Don’t Let Them Control Your Life

To fight globalism, we need more sovereignty — strong nations. Nations that are great again.

National leaders need to be far enough away that they can’t stick their snouts in your business, but close enough that we can give them a good ass-kicking. All the globalist pretensions from a world government presuppose the idea that they would do it better. Governing is like driving. We always think we drive better than the guy next to us. And they think that, being rich or powerful, they know better how to decide — from Washington, from Geneva, or from Brussels — what a farmer from Illinois, a car mechanic from Berlin, or a cattle farmer from Almeria needs and wants for his life. Why? For the same reason you think you drive better than everyone else — because everyone else is an idiot.

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As Dictated To The Star By Katie Telford On Behalf Of Xi Jinping …

In Justin Trudeau’s paranoid Ottawa, insiders say treason allegations are being carelessly tossed around

By Justin Ling Contributor

Eighty years ago, cipher clerk Igor Gouzenko walked out of the Soviet embassy in Ottawa with a briefcase full of documents and a plan to defect. When he finally got an audience with the RCMP, he revealed the most extensive espionage and influence campaign Canada had ever seen.

Gouzenko’s defection spurred a series of investigations, a public inquiry, and a media frenzy. Revelations of how Moscow sought to steal secrets and infiltrate Ottawa gripped the nation and woke Ottawa up to new realities of the Cold War.

The gall.

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Suck-Up Singh says Han Dong shouldn’t be allowed back into Liberal caucus

After reading an unredacted report from one of Canada’s intelligence oversight bodies, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he now thinks that Independent MP Han Dong shouldn’t be allowed back into the Liberal caucus.

Last week, the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP), a cross-party committee of MPs and senators with top security clearances, released a heavily blacked-out document alleging, based on intelligence, that some parliamentarians have been “semi-witting or witting” participants in the efforts of foreign states to interfere in Canadian politics.

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TAYLOR: The truth at last… CSIS reveals story of Chinese spies who got away with it

Justin Trudeau Xiangguo Qiu Keding Cheng – Everybody say Xi

Spy novelist John Le Carré established his reputation with 1963’s The Spy Who Came in From the Cold. Set at the height of the Cold War, it describes washed-up British spy Alec Leamas’ attempt to infiltrate East German intelligence as a double agent. It’s a grim tale of hidden identities, uncertain alliances and spymasters prepared to sacrifice their own men in pursuit of bigger game. According to Le Carré — who worked for Britain’s MI6 in Germany while writing the book — the modern world of espionage is unpleasant, unglamourous and devoid of loyalty. Unhappy endings are inevitable.

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Increasing number of Canadians hold negative view on immigration, poll finds

With Canadians continuing to face a housing crisis and high living costs, a new survey has found a growing number of residents view immigration as having a negative affect on the country.

The Research Co. poll, which was released Wednesday, found 44 per cent of respondents believe immigration is having a mostly negative affect on Canada, up six per cent from last year.

“This is not something we saw a year ago or two years ago,” said Mario Canseco, Research Co. president. “It’s been slowly bubbling.”

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Trudeau still mum on whether Liberals among ‘witting’ MPs who helped foreign states

SAVELLETRI DI FASANO, Italy — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau would not say Saturday whether Liberal MPs are among those accused in a recent spy watchdog report of helping foreign states.

The refusal comes after NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh and Green Party Leader Elizabeth May have both offered new, though somewhat conflicting insight into the findings of the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians.

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