Why some Canadians are choosing Trump over their country … or… Ignore my TDS brainwashed daughter

His immigration rhetoric and nationalism are luring some “far-right” conservatives in Canada.

While getting my Ontario driver’s license in 2023, I was asked to write a description of the vehicle and then wait in my car for the examiner to find me. I had to use my mother’s car, so, red-faced, I wrote “Chevy SUV, ‘WWG1WGA’ bumper sticker.” The acronym stood for “Where We Go One, We Go All,” the far-right, QAnon-inspired slogan that became a battle cry of the Jan. 6, 2021, riots.

In mainstream Canada, these slogans were virtually unheard of, and the examiner didn’t seem to notice the sticker’s connotations. My mother and other conservative pro-Donald Trump Canadians, however, were parroting these slogans from online conspiracy-fueled echo chambers and what they saw as enviable nationalism. With a brewing trade war between the United States and Canada, pro-Trump Canadians, like my family, are now being forced to choose between the president or their country — and, disturbingly, some are choosing Trump. In his latest volley, the president on Friday abruptly ended trade talks with Canada, saying he would issue new tariffs soon.

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Early Iran bomb damage spin falls apart

EARLY IRAN BOMB DAMAGE SPIN FALLS APART. You know the basics of the story. After U.S. bombers hit Iranian nuclear sites, President Donald Trump quickly announced that the raid had “obliterated” the Iranian facilities. At that moment, some of Trump’s opponents in the Democratic Party, plus their allies in the media, said no, no, no. The U.S. bombing didn’t obliterate anything. Instead, it did minimal damage — so minimal that the Iranian program could be up and running again in a “handful of months.”

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Trans student, 19, who ‘torched two Tesla Cybertrucks’ faces HUGE sentence thanks to Trump’s AG Pam Bondi

A transgender teenager accused of firebombing two Tesla Cybertrucks faces spending the remainder of his youth behind bars thanks to very harsh federal charges.

Owen McIntire, 19, is staring down 30 years in prison for the March 17 Molotov cocktail attack on two of the EVs at a Tesla dealership in his native Kansas City.

The teen, who was receiving so-called gender-affirming care at the time of the attacks, has denied federal charges of malicious destruction of property and unlawful possession of an unregistered destructive device.

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Carson Jerema: Globe writers’ hatred of Trump blinds them to Iran threat

U.S. President Donald Trump finally acts like the leader of the free world he is supposed to be by bombing Iran’s nuclear sites, and his critics in the media are giving themselves a concussion trying to spin it as a bad thing.

There has been the usual chorus of complaints from left-wing and some conservative (ugh) commentators, along with Democrats. The arguments are largely recycled from the opposition to former president George W. Bush’s 2003 invasion of Iraq, or any argument marshalled against the U.S. doing anything useful in the world whatsoever: Trump was acting unilaterally; the strikes were unlawful or unconstitutional; the consequences are unpredictable; there was not enough time for diplomacy; Israel is just as bad as Iran; or my personal favourite, Trump did the right thing, but it is now the wrong thing because Trump did it.


The NATPO has its own roster of the TDS afflicted, Ivison, McParland, Selley to name just 3 couldn’t put together a column on watching grass grow without an anti-Trump rant.

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Trump Taps Palantir to Compile Data on Americans

In March, President Trump signed an executive order calling for the federal government to share data across agencies, raising questions over whether he might compile a master list of personal information on Americans that could give him untold surveillance power.

Mr. Trump has not publicly talked about the effort since. But behind the scenes, officials have quietly put technological building blocks into place to enable his plan. In particular, they have turned to one company: Palantir, the data analysis and technology firm.

The Trump administration has expanded Palantir’s work across the federal government in recent months. The company has received more than $113 million in federal government spending since Mr. Trump took office, according to public records, including additional funds from existing contracts as well as new contracts with the Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon. (This does not include a $795 million contract that the Department of Defense awarded the company last week, which has not been spent.)


This NYTimes hit piece seems very concerned that Trump will use the program to track their precious illegal aliens or Deep State fraudsters.

The Times never objected to the FBI surveilling Catholics to my knowledge.

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Coast Guard sharpshooter Peter Stinson who made threats to kill Donald Trump is freed from prison

The former US Coastguard lieutenant charged with making online threats to kill Donald Trump has been bailed on condition that he declares his home gun-free and pays for his internet use to be monitored, DailyMail.com can reveal.

Trained sharpshooter Peter Stinson, 63, was arrested on Friday charged with making a slew of disturbing social media posts against the President, including saying he needed to be ‘Luigied,’ a reference to Luigi Mangione, the man accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in cold blood on a New York City street.

But in a hearing on Wednesday, federal magistrate judge Ivan Davis said he will order the self-declared Antifa activist released on home detention provided he reveals the whereabouts of his father’s 22 rifle, among other conditions.


One of these little Deep State Oswald’s will work according to plan one day.

h/t XC

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FBI emails expose Biden DOJ’s obsession with piling on Trump charges

Internal FBI emails reveal that rogue agents and prosecutors in the Biden DOJ were looking for ways to pile on new criminal charges against Donald Trump over the Jan. 6 Capitol riot — this time over his involvement with the J6 prisoner choir, based on a single partisan news article.

The 2023 emails obtained by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and revealed exclusively to The Post are an example of the nitpicking malice of anti-Trump lawfare that tainted special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation, during Joe Biden’s presidency.

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The “No Kings” Protest Is Pure Fantasy

The underlying theory is that Donald Trump is an authoritarian leader on the cusp of becoming king.

I spent Father’s Day weekend in Hood River, Oregon, and stumbled upon the local “No Kings” anti-Trump protest. The crowd was populated mostly by Baby Boomers, who appeared to be living out a political fantasy, in which they could “stop fascism” by reenacting the protest movements of their youth. One sign, typical of the genre, derided Trump as a “felon, rapist, con man”; another riffed on Mary Poppins, reading “super callous, fragile, racist, sexist, Nazi POTUS.”

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Video captures moment fed-up driver runs over ‘No Kings’ protester in Los Angeles

Dramatic footage shows the chaotic moment a frustrated driver ran over the leg of a “No Kings” protester who was trying to block the vehicle’s path in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday.

Another incident

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Somehow, Leftist Anti-Trump Protesters Cannot Be Identified as Leftist

On some days, you could call Associated Press just Associated Press Release. On Friday, they prepared everyone for the leftist protests coming on Saturday with a pseudo-explainer headlined “What to know about ‘No Kings’ protests against Trump’s policies.”

Nowhere in this 17-paragraph article is a single ideological label — liberal, leftist, progressive, socialist, not even “Democrat.” They’re just “opponents.” They certainly weren’t “extremists,” even though the PBS News website illustrated AP with a woman holding a sign that said “The Trump Fascist Regime MUST GO NOW!” That’s not how democracy works.

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Ten Years Ago, the Liberal Media LAUGHED When Trump Entered Politics

The liberal media may thoroughly despise President Donald Trump, but they cannot deny his political clout. “Trump is the heart, soul and undisputed leader of the Republican Party,” Mike Allen wrote in Axios back in 2021.

After Trump’s 2024 election victory, Time magazine admitted the President-elect was “the world’s most powerful man,” selecting him (for the second time) as their Person of the Year. “He has realigned American politics, remaking the GOP and leaving Democrats reckoning with what went awry,” pronounced senior political correspondent Eric Cortellessa.

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Donald Trump is not the only threat facing the G7

If you remember anything at all about last year’s Group of Seven summit, chances are it involves neither the location of the annual gathering of the leaders of the world’s advanced industrialized democracies nor the contents of the meeting’s final communiqué.

Coverage of the summit held in Italy’s Apulia region was dominated by viral videos that appeared to show then U.S. president Joe Biden wandering off as other G7 leaders watched a skydiving demonstration. The videos were dismissed at the time by Mr. Biden’s press secretary as “cheap fakes.” But they would end up playing a role in the 46th U.S. president’s downfall. Only days after the summit, Mr. Biden delivered the catastrophic debate performance against Donald Trump that would lead to his withdrawal from the 2024 presidential race.

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Mass protests against Trump across US as president holds military parade

Protests against President Donald Trump have taken place in towns and cities across the US in a coordinated event titled “No Kings”.

The demonstrations were held to counter a rare military parade hosted by Trump in Washington DC, and came after days of protests in Los Angeles and elsewhere over his immigration policies.

Lawmakers, union leaders and activists gave speeches in cities including New York, Philadelphia and Houston to crowds waving American flags and placards critical of Trump.

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Protests at G7 summit expected to be largely peaceful, targeting Trump policies

Protests during the upcoming G7 leaders’ summit in Kananaskis, Alta., may be starkly different than demonstrations happening this week against immigration crackdowns in the United States.

A University of Toronto research group that has been monitoring the meetings of world leaders since 1998 says its analysis shows Canadian protests are more peaceful and smaller.

But similar to the recent demonstrations in Los Angeles, they’re likely to be against the policies of U.S. President Donald Trump.


Well it will give Trump a measure of the loons he’ll inherit should he ever annex us.

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A Walmart Heiress Breaks Ranks and Joins the Anti-Trump Movement

A billionaire Walmart heiress is publicly speaking out against President Trump, breaking with the rest of the wealthy family and risking backlash for the retail empire.

Christy Walton, the widow of one of the Walmart founder’s sons, took out a full-page ad in national newspapers, calling for people to “defend against aggression by dictators” and participate in demonstrations around the country this weekend, known as the “No Kings” protests. Walton took out a similar ad at the end of March.

The latest ad has thrust the Walton family, one of America’s richest, into a spotlight that it has largely tried to avoid. The ad has sparked cries for a boycott of Walmart on social media and grabbed the attention of Trump’s supporters and detractors.

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