What else do you call it when people conspire against their own country?

Of all the responses to the bombshell report of the Prime Minister’s national security advisory committee, in which it is alleged some MPs have been conspiring with foreign powers against the national interest, surely the most arresting was that of Professor Wesley Wark.

The revelations, he told the CBC, are “nausea-inducing.” The urge to vomit seemed particularly to overtake him at the story of a former MP who tried “to arrange a meeting in a foreign state with a senior intelligence official” and “proactively provided the intelligence officer with information provided in confidence.” Prof. Wark’s verdict: “textbook treason.”

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Canada can’t allow allegations of collusion with foreign powers to hang over Ottawa, former CSIS director says

Former CSIS director Richard Fadden says Canada can’t allow allegations that parliamentarians are colluding with foreign powers to remain unresolved.

He recommends federal party leaders all request classified briefings to see if they can learn the names of those federal politicians that a security watchdog report said are collaborating with foreign governments for their own benefit.


Junior is either personally compromised by the Chicoms or he is guilty of deliberately turning a blind eye to the treason of others so long as those efforts aided his Liberal party.

Either way Trudeau has committed treason IMHO.

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Century Initiative’s 100 million population goal by year 2100 was meant to be provocative – and isn’t a target – CEO says

The head of the Century Initiative, an influential non-profit think tank that wants to see Canada’s population grow to 100 million by 2100, is softening emphasis of its controversial headline goal, saying it is not a target it is aiming to reach and was created to be “provocative” and bold.

The 100 million population figure was meant to galvanize public debate about the best way to foster growth in Canada, chief executive Lisa Lalande said in an interview.

Bullshit.

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Top-secret intelligence alleges some MPs aided foreign interference. This might be a way to publicly name them

OTTAWA — MPs named by top-secret intelligence as aiding foreign interference in Canadian politics continue to go unidentified by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government, despite opposition demands to say publicly who they are.

But at least one constitutional expert says it’s possible — and entirely in line with long-established rules — for certain MPs to simply disclose the names from the floor of the House of Commons.

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Peterson calls for Canadians to oppose Online Harms Act

Prominent Canadian psychologist and author Dr. Jordan Peterson says people need to wake up to the Online Harms Act (OHA).

Peterson called this “not only the most authoritarian law ever contemplated in a Western democracy, but truly the most authoritarian law conceivable.”

“Not just the Orwellian ‘Thought Crime,” tweeted Peterson on Thursday.

“But the mere possibility of a thought crime.”

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Canada’s Jobless Rate Rises to 6.2% in May as Labour Market Disappoints Jobseekers

Canada’s unemployment rate continued its upward climb in May, rising slightly to 6.2 percent as opportunities became harder to find for prospective jobseekers.

Statistics Canada’s latest labour force survey showed the economy added 27,000 jobs last month—too modest of a gain to keep the unemployment rate from rising by a tenth of a percentage point.

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Canada’s Extremist Attack on Free Speech

A bill making its way through the Canadian Parliament would impose draconian criminal penalties on hate speech and curtail people’s liberty in order to stop crimes they haven’t yet committed.

In 1984, George Orwell coined the term thoughtcrime. In the short story “The Minority Report,” the science-fiction author Philip K. Dick gave us the concept of “precrime,” describing a society where would-be criminals were arrested before they could act. Now Canada is combining the concepts in a work of dystopian nonfiction: A bill making its way through Parliament would impose draconian criminal penalties on hate speech and curtail people’s liberty in order to stop future crimes they haven’t yet committed.

Precrime!

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Father’s desperate battle to stop his autistic daughter, 27, from killing herself through Canada’s lax euthanasia laws

A Calgary woman whose father has challenged her euthanasia request in court is starving herself to death and expects to die within weeks.

The 27-year-old autistic woman, who can only be identified as MV because of a court order, has asked judges to let her get a lethal injection — despite objections from her dad.

She’s now starving herself to death, and wants judges to greenlight her euthanasia request so she doesn’t perish in an ‘incredibly unpleasant’ manner.

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Trudeau’s Canada: Average asking rental price reaches record high

The average asking rental price in Canada surpassed $2,200 to reach a record high in May, according to a new report.

Published Thursday by Rentals.ca and Urbanation(opens in a new tab), the report found that the average monthly asking price for all residential rentals increased by 9.3 per cent year-over-year to hit $2,202 in May.

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Canadian politicians who commit treason should go to jail

Treason in Canada?

That allegation leapt off the pages of a recent report from the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP). The worst example cited, with names and details redacted in the published report, concerned a former MP who engaged in communications with a senior official of a foreign intelligence service and tried to arrange a meeting overseas with this official. According to CSIS, confidential information was passed.

There is no other word for it. This is treason.

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should ‘repent,’ half-brother says

Justin Trudeau’s half-brother says the prime minister is a loveable person but should come clean, “repent” and apologize when he leaves office for things he’s done wrong.

In an interview with right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson, Kyle Kemper said the Liberal leader, with whom he shares a mother, Margaret, is also probably disinclined to run again due to Canada’s negative opinion of him. Trudeau has a net favourability rating of -38, according to a recent Angus Reid poll.

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Canadians more likely to prefer someone other than Trudeau lead Liberals in next election: Nanos

Canadians are three times more likely to prefer someone other than Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to lead the Liberals in the next election, a new Nanos Research survey for CTV News shows.

Facing persistently poor polling numbers, questions about the prime minister’s future — and who might be the contenders contemplating runs to replace him — have been swirling for months.

Now, according to the latest survey data, considerably more Canadians would like to see him go, compared to those who say they would want him to lead the Liberal Party of Canada into the coming campaign.

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Can alleged parliamentarian colluders face consequences? CSIS chief weighs in

Canada’s spy chief says that political leaders could take steps to make sure parliamentarians accused of cooperating with foreign governments face consequences, even if they don’t face criminal prosecution.

David Vigneault, the director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), suggested to a parliamentary committee Thursday that party leaders could disallow any of their MPs suspected of collusion from running for the party again, or expel them from caucus over the allegations they cooperated with foreign states like China and India.

God forbid they face real consequences for their treason.

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McTEAGUE: Current EV strategy charging ahead to failure

For years now I’ve been saying that electric vehicles, and EV mandates, are bad for Canada.

Back in 2020, when the then-CEO of Toyota, Akio Toyoda, voiced his concerns that governments were moving too fast in their push for an all-electric car market when there were other good options available which didn’t require the same multi-billion dollar infrastructure overhaul or increase in electricity generation, I asked why we weren’t listening to a man who knows his own business.

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Generous Justin: Trudeau hands out one million raises in four years

The Trudeau government rubberstamped more than one million pay raises to federal bureaucrats since 2020, according to access-to-information records obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

The federal government gave 319,067 bureaucrats a raise in 2023. The government has consistently declined to disclose how much annual pay raises cost taxpayers.

“Taxpayers deserve to know how much all these raises are costing us,” said Franco Terrazzano, CTF Federal Director. “It’s wrong for the government to hand out a million raises while taxpayers lost their jobs or struggled to afford ground beef and rent.”

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