Report Raises Serious Concerns About FBI’s Surveillance of Religious Organizations and Journalists

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Roughly translated, this means “Who guards the guardians?”

While many attribute the phrase to the Roman poet Juvenal, I first heard it in an episode of Justice League Unlimited, a kids’ cartoon about the adventures of Superman, Batman, and their assorted costumed friends. It’s an apt phrase for contextualizing the recent news concerning the FBI and its use of assessments to surveil and investigate Americans at whim.

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UK Police Officers Worked With Muslim Assault Gang

Victims of Muslim rape gangs in the UK also accuse local police of not only helping to traffic the girls to their abusers, but raping the girls themselves.

While the overwhelming majority of police in the UK are British, based on government data, the UK police also specifically brag about “How we’re creating a diverse and inclusive police service.” Between corrupt British police and immigrants with cultures or religions that endorse rape, the issue of police complicity in rape gangs could be much worse than woke British authorities ever want us to know. After all, UK authorities want to pretend that Islam is culturally enriching, even though Islamic sacred texts explicitly approve and even encourage rape, especially of non-Muslim women.

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Carney’s bid to forge the world’s largest trading bloc will be an uphill battle

No one can accuse Prime Minister Mark Carney of lacking ambition.

But high on the agenda for a three-country trip that will take him over the next week to the eastern reaches of the globe is what may be his most audacious gambit: trying to forge the world’s largest trading bloc as an antidote to U.S. President Donald Trump.

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‘High levels’ of illegal family voting in Gorton and Denton by-election

Nigel Farage has claimed a report of high levels of illegal family voting in the Gorton and Denton by-election “raises serious questions about the integrity of the democratic process in predominantly Muslim areas”.

An election observer group on Thursday night raised concerns over what it called “concerningly high levels of family voting” in the constituency.
Democracy Volunteers said they attended 22 of the 45 polling stations in the constituency, spending 30 to 45 minutes in each, and witnessed family voting in 15 of the 22 polling stations observed.

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The mountain of evidence over weight-loss drug damage

THE UK’S drug regulator has warned doctors of the ‘small risk of severe acute pancreatitis’, a potentially fatal condition, in patients taking weight‑loss and diabetes drugs linked to around two deaths per week in the UK. Meanwhile, Novo Nordisk, maker of Ozempic, faces more than 1,800 lawsuits alleging the drug has caused not only acute pancreatitis but also stomach paralysis, vision loss, kidney injury, gallbladder disease and other permanent harms. If successful, the claims could cost the company up to $2billion.

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Indigenous man who cleaned up after murder bragged Gladue ‘discount’ would half his sentence

An Indigenous man who bragged to an undercover cop about the Gladue “discount” that would cut his penalty in half for helping to clean up after a Calgary murder has been sentenced to 6.5 years in prison, even though the Crown was looking for as much as 10.

A jury convicted Jason Leo Tait of being an accessory after the fact to murder in the death of Keenan Crane. He was acquitted of manslaughter.

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Canada’s global performance rankings are in freefall

There is an ongoing debate over whether Canada is doing better economically than Alabama, based on their relative GDP per capita, with many on the Canadian Left arguing that our country’s economic performance and quality of life look much better when other factors are taken into account.

Unfortunately, this argument misses the mark. When we expand our comparisons beyond Alabama, it quickly becomes apparent that GDP per capita is, if anything, overstating the relative state of our economy and wellbeing relative to our global peers.

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