Deport them both … problem solved

‘Sleepless nights’: Migrant worker says immigration lawyer owes him $24K

With the hope of starting a new life in Canada alongside his wife and children, Dattaray Avhad paid a lawyer over $24,000 to help him find a job as a cook in Newfoundland and Labrador and obtain permanent residency.

But more than a year later, he is on a work permit for vulnerable workers and is picking up shifts as a cab driver, with no clear path toward permanent residency.

He’s still fighting to get his money back.


Canada needs more 3rd world cooks buying citizenship according to CBC.

Share

Greta Thunberg cheered at Athens airport after deportation

Greta On Drugs

In one arm, Greta Thunberg clutched a yellow and red posy, while her other was bunched into a fist, raised above her head in defiance.

Unbowed, despite being deported by the Israeli authorities after her aid flotilla was met with force on its way to Gaza, the activist was welcomed by cheering crowds as she touched down at Eleftherios Venizelos airport in Athens.

Share

Desperate North Koreans hunting animals to edge of extinction

Hungry and impoverished North Koreans are hunting, eating and selling animals from tigers to badgers, threatening the survival of endangered species, a new study has found.

A team of British and Norwegian scientists concluded that the North Korean government and black marketeers profit from the trade of wildlife products for food, skins and furs, and the sale of bones, paws and dried organs for use in traditional remedies.

Share

‘Dirty hippies’ lose 25-year battle to save their homes after their community was deemed a 12-acre bio-hazard

A California commune filled with ‘dirty hippies’ is closing down after losing a 25-year battle with its local government.

The so-called ‘Yee Haw’ commune is a 12-acre makeshift settlement in Trinidad, California, a remote seaside town with a population of about 300 residents.

Its supporters said the commune’s longtime owner Charles Garth provided a makeshift option to combat Trinidad’s steep housing costs. About ten people currently live at the commune.

Share

‘Smirnoff’s next’: Ford said Ontario will look to remove more booze from LCBO shelves following Crown Royal plant closure

Premier Doug Ford says more booze may be stripped from LCBO shelves if a plan to shut down a Crown Royal bottling facility in southwestern Ontario goes forward.

“Who in their right mind, any business person with half a brain, would go after their largest customer in North America?” Ford asked during a news conference following the The Great Lakes St. Lawrence Governors and Premiers Leadership Summit in Quebec City.

Share