Why didn’t the West condemn Trudeau for debanking his citizens?

The outrage at the Coutts/NatWest debanking scandal in the United Kingdom does not align with the complete disinterest in Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s debanking of an entire political caste.

It was entirely appropriate for people to express their horror upon discovering banks were routinely passing moral judgment on the politics of their customers. It was correct for the British government to panic and swear to fix the problem (even though they low-key endorsed ESG practices for years). If restrictions are placed on banks in the future, especially relating to their licences, this will mark progress in the protection of citizen rights.

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Justin Trudeau is under fire for Ottawa’s lacklustre response to the housing crisis. Here is what’s going so wrong

Sure, it’s advertised at more than $82 billion in loans and cash. But the federal government’s national housing plan is little help to Pastor Alexander Wilson.

He and his dwindling congregation at St. Stephen’s Presbyterian Church in Scarborough want to raze their long-standing site of worship and build an apartment complex in its place. It wasn’t an easy decision, but Wilson said some in his flock have turned their minds to what they might leave behind “once they’re finished here on Earth.” Their latest plan is for 111 units, with about a third of them offering rents below market rates. They also hope future residents might join them in a new church space on the main floor.

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Trudeau’s ‘free-range’ approach to criminals has sentenced our cities to lawlessness

The recent cabinet shuffle should have been an opportunity for the Liberals to reset their priorities and take action on issues affecting the lives of Canadians — notably crime. Unfortunately, in the same breath as our new justice minister, Arif Virani, pledged to address the growing sense of insecurity among Canadians, he downplayed the problem, saying it’s “unlikely” that crime is becoming a bigger problem than it used to be.

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GUNTER: Passing judgment on Trudeau’s vow to be ‘above partisanship’

It’s no shock an eight-month investigation by the National Post and the Investigative Journalism Foundation (IJF) uncovered that, of the 1,308 judicial and tribunal appointments made by the Trudeau government since 2016, “an overwhelming majority — 76.3% — of appointees had previously made political donations had given to the Liberal Party of Canada.”

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Months After Closure of Quebec’s Roxham Road, More Asylum Seekers Arriving by Air

The closure of a rural southern Quebec road used by thousands of asylum seekers to enter Canada from the United States hasn’t stopped would-be refugees from arriving, federal data shows.

The number of people claiming asylum in Canada dropped sharply after the end of March, when the government negotiated a deal with the United States to turn away asylum seekers at unofficial border crossings like Quebec’s Roxham Road. However, the numbers have been climbing back up in recent months, propelled by an increase in arrivals at Ontario and Quebec airports.

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GOLDSTEIN: While our carbon taxes increase, so do global emissions

Every time the Trudeau government levies a new charge on Canadians to pay for greenhouse gas emissions, it’s useful to keep in mind that global energy-related emissions rose to their highest level in human history last year.

As reported by the International Energy Agency, at 36.8 billion tonnes, global emissions in 2022 were 0.9% or 321 million tonnes higher than in 2021, when emissions totalled 36.5 billion tonnes.

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CTV Reveals Vast Poilievre Conspiracy – The first rule of WEF is don’t talk about WEF.

Poilievre’s Conservative party embracing language of mainstream conspiracy theories

… “It’s far past time we rejected the globalist Davos elites and bring home the common sense of the common people,” said a Saturday fundraising email.

The Conservative party also recently sent out mailers with a poll asking people to tell Prime Minister Justin Trudeau who they think the prime minister should stand with: working Canadians or the World Economic Forum.

The wording implies Trudeau’s cabinet is beholden to the latter.


Junior’s handlers have him hopping aboard every democracy destroying Globalist bandwagon there is.

Conspiracy theories aside, there is something fishy about the Great Reset

It’s a corporate takeover of global governance that affects our food, our data and our vaccines

… The idea of stakeholder capitalism and multi-stakeholder partnerships might sound warm and fuzzy, until we dig deeper and realise that this actually means giving corporations more power over society, and democratic institutions less.

The plan from which the Great Reset originated was called the Global Redesign Initiative. Drafted by the WEF after the 2008 economic crisis, the initiative contains a 600-page report on transforming global governance. In the WEF’s vision, “the government voice would be one among many, without always being the final arbiter.” Governments would be just one stakeholder in a multi-stakeholder model of global governance. Harris Gleckman, senior fellow at the University of Massachusetts, describes the report as “the most comprehensive proposal for re-designing global governance since the formulation of the United Nations during World War II.”

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Canadian govt wants fossil fuels mostly gone by 2035, put out by mostly “NO” reaction

It seems that Steven Guilbeault, the Environment Minister of Canada, isn’t a popular as he thinks he should be, what with saving the world and all. His “suck it up, Shriners” message, announced yesterday as part of the Trudeau government’s draft regulations to move Canada ever closer to NetZero, have really ruffled some feathers.

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Setback for housing starts: 13 of Immigration Minister Miller’s carpenters caught fleeing Trudeau’s shithole state for the U.S. via Akwesane

Akwesasne Mohawk police say they recently detained 13 people who were allegedly attempting to cross illegally into the United States from Canada.

Police say they received a call on Saturday regarding foreign nationals on the American side of the territory in the village of Kana:takon, also known as St. Regis.

Officers found a family of four walking down the road and another family of nine in a private home, and turned them over to Canadian authorities.

It’s bad when the illegals are bugging out.

Now who will build our houses?

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GUNTER: Alberta the big loser in federal Liberals’ clean electricity plan

When you’re listening to the federal government’s eco-propaganda on its new clean electricity plan (especially when you’re listening to their bumf on how the plan will save your family money), remember these are the very same politicians, activists and bureaucrats who told you the carbon tax would make your family money when rebates were included.

Sure, sure.

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Foreign interference inquiry must get access to all cabinet confidences, former spies say

An organization representing retired Canadian spies says a public inquiry into Beijing foreign-interference operations must be given access to all cabinet documents and transcripts of discussions to determine whether Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was ever informed of China’s attempts to meddle in the 2019 and 2021 elections.

The Pillar Society, which represents retired Canadian Security Intelligence Service officers and former members of the RCMP Security Service, has joined calls for a public inquiry and expressed concern that further delay could end up scuttling one.

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Housing might not be Trudeau’s sole responsibility, but it’s his problem

Justin Trudeau’s recent observation that housing isn’t a “primary federal responsibility” was something of a Kinsley gaffe — the act of inadvertently telling the truth or inconveniently confessing some private thought.

The prime minister was not wholly wrong, per se, when he said housing was not something the federal government has “direct carriage of.” Housing is not like national defence or foreign policy or international trade — areas of policy for which the federal government has sole responsibility. It’s a matter of shared jurisdiction and many of the policy levers and regulations exist at the provincial and municipal level.

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David Krayden: How Serious Do Beijing’s Threats Against Canadian Lawmakers Have to Get Before Ottawa Acts?

Even as the Trudeau government had its “special rapporteur,” David Johnston, supposedly investigating foreing interference in Canada’s electoral process, China was harassing MP Michael Chong.

This is incredible and demonstrates how little China cares about any repercussions of its surveillance, interference, spying, and intimidation of Canadians who dare to question Beijing’s dictatorial and genocidal policies.

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Freeland touts home savings account for 1st time buyers .. says 300 years will fly by!

TORONTO – Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland says the uptake of a new savings account for first-time homebuyers is exceeding expectation, though she acknowledged the limits of what it can do to address affordability.

Speaking after meeting with constituents in Toronto who want to buy a home, Freeland said the First Home Savings Account is just one tool to help people get into the market.

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Ottawa’s new plan to force fossil fuels out of electric grid slammed as costly, ‘unrealistic’

OTTAWA — Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault’s newly announced plan to largely phase out the use of fossil fuels to generate power in Canada over the next 12 years is being criticized as costly and unrealistic, despite his claims that higher electricity costs would be offset by savings on oil and gas.

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