Canadians Are Watching Their Savings Evaporate

Any society that wants to achieve durable, long-term success must incentivize saving.

Savings represent both the ability of a society to be productive and generate excess value, and confidence in a better future.

Smart societies thus seek to reward those who save, because those savings are the investment that drives a society forward.

By contrast, foolish and broken societies punish those who save.

They reward irresponsibility and incentivize debt – often by making it nearly impossible for many to hold onto their standard of living without it. They devalue the national currency, destroy confidence in the future, and push a kind of thinking that is increasingly short-term and destructive in the long-run. They bail-out those who fail at the expense of those who succeed, and concentrate economic power in the hands of the state and those affiliated with it.

What type of society do we have today?

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Liberal ‘Plan’ To Balance The Budget Is Based On A Fantasy

In the 2015 federal election campaign, the Liberals said they would run “small” deficits for three years, before returning to a balanced budget.

That promise was broken almost immediately, with the deficits far exceeding what the Liberals had promised, and with no plan whatsoever to return to balance.

Then, the Liberals responded to the covid-19 pandemic by pushing for draconian lockdowns, while extending support programs long-beyond the initial crisis.

The result was the largest budget deficit in Canadian history, and long-term projections of red ink as far as the eye can see.

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GUNTER: Here’s what Trudeau’s fertilizer reduction plan will mean

On one side, my mother was the daughter of the Ford dealer and, on the other, the granddaughter of the GM dealer in the same small Saskatchewan town (which made for some interesting family dynamics).

No farmer, she.

Still, she used to warn that when the majority of Canadians no longer had any connection to farming, the result would be very bad for food policy.

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Trudeau’s Gun Confiscation Mimics Fascist Policies Of 20th Century

In the years following World War I, the Weimar Republic passed strict gun control laws in an attempt to comply with the Versailles Treaty of 1919 – laws that required the surrender of all guns to government.

“The laws remained in effect until 1928, when the German parliament relaxed gun restrictions and put into effect a strict firearm-licensing scheme. These licensing regulations foreshadowed Adolph Hitler’s rise to power.”

In her 2011 book, Professor of Criminal Justice Dyan McGuire wrote that “it is frequently argued that these laws, which resulted in the confiscation of weapons not belonging to supporters of the Nazis, rendered disfavoured groups like the Gypsies, Jews, homosexuals, Poles, and their potential allies defenseless.”

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Canada sanctions Russian military officers over atrocities in Bucha

OTTAWA – The Canadian government is imposing sanctions on dozens of Russian military officers whose troops are accused of committing atrocities against Ukrainian civilians.

Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly announced the new sanctions against 47 Russians this morning, as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continues nearly six months after it began.

Canada is also adding 17 Russian companies and entities to its sanctions list for supporting the invasion of Ukraine.

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Anti-Catholic Hate Crimes Surged 260% in 2021 – Probably due to Trudeau’s encouragement of Church Burning

Hate crime reports in Canada surged during COVID-19 pandemic: StatCan

Hate crimes reported by police are on the rise in Canada amid the COVID-19 pandemic as lockdowns and other virus-related measures disrupted everyday life.

A new report released by Statistics Canada on Tuesday showed that 3,360 hate crimes were reported by police last year, representing a 27 per cent increase compared with 2020 and a 72 per cent jump over the span of two years.


You have to love how the surge wasn’t even mentioned by Trudeau’s lackey press. I have no doubt it was in large part due to Trudeau’s tacit approval.

How many prosecutions have their been? Over 50 churches burned at last count.

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Canada abandoned Ukrainian embassy employees despite their likelihood of being on Russian hit list

Before pulling Canadian diplomats out of Ukraine weeks ahead of the Russian invasion, Global Affairs Canada received intelligence confirming that Russia intended to wage war against its neighbour, and that Ukrainians who worked for the Canadian embassy were likely on lists of people Moscow intended to hunt down.

Despite the apparently dire situation, Ottawa told Canadian embassy leaders in Kyiv to withhold this information from those Ukrainian staff members and leave them behind.

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Court Documents Reveal Canada’s Travel Ban Had No Scientific Basis

In the days leading up to the mandate, transportation officials were frantically looking for a rationale for it. They came up short.

On August 13, 2021, the Canadian government announced that anyone who hadn’t been vaccinated against Covid would soon be barred from planes and trains. In many cases, The Backward could no longer travel between provinces or leave the country. If you lived in Winnipeg and wanted to visit your mother on her deathbed in London or Hong Kong or, perhaps, Quebec City, you’d better get jabbed—or resign yourself to never seeing your mother again.

Jennifer Little, the director-general of COVID Recovery, the secretive government panel that crafted the mandate, called it “one of the strongest vaccination mandates for travelers in the world.”

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Is The Fat Lady Singing For Justin Trudeau?

From Trudeau’s Star: “In diplomatic circles, Canada is no longer seen as a reliable partner.”

Chrystia Freeland is right on ‘friend-shoring.’ Our allies need Canada to help reduce dependence on Russian energy

During Janet Yellen’s first visit to Canada in June as U.S. treasury secretary, she and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland again discussed “friend-shoring” — the idea Canada must prioritize trade with countries which share our values.

Freeland’s remarks deserve more attention than they’ve received. She did more than talk about an economic concept; she gave concrete examples and a call to action. “What we can really contribute to a world of friend-shoring is critical minerals and metals and energy,” she said. “We owe it to our allies as good partners to really step up.”

… She’s also correct in suggesting we owe it to our allies to step up and do more. In diplomatic circles, Canada isn’t seen as a reliable partner these days. Far from being viewed as nice and dependable, we are now viewed by many as a country that talks a big game — but often can’t match its words with action.


Is the Fat Lady singing for Justin Trudeau? This article reads like a PR piece for a Freeland run for PM.

Under Trudeau our shared values mirror those of Communist China, Cuba and North Korea.

Freeland comes across as almost sensible. What’s up with that?

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Negative Impressions Of Trudeau Reach New High As Conservative Lead Grows

As Canadians continue to suffer under Liberal economic policies, and as our freedoms continue to be under sustained attack, Justin Trudeau is less and less popular.

In a new Abacus Poll, 51% of Canadians say they have a negative view of Trudeau, compared to 31% who have a positive impression of him.

That 20 point gap is the largest ever recorded in an Abacus poll, demonstrating the extent to which Trudeau’s popularity has fallen.

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Is Trudeau Pursuing A Communist-Style Canadian Land Grab?

Liberalism built its political order on private property, consecrating it as a natural right, while Communism emerged as liberalism’s political rival and historic arch-enemy.”

Thus it is that land ownership is a defining factor in systems of governance. The socialization of property in  20th century communist regimes such as Soviet Union, China, and Cuba was fundamental in their transition to authoritarianism.

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