Pipeline Protesters’ Violent Attacks in BC a Ticking Time Bomb

While the world’s eyes were on Ottawa as the standoff between the Truckers Convoy protest and authorities hit its peak, one of the boldest acts of domestic eco-terrorism ever seen in Canada was committed against a construction camp in Northern BC. Just after midnight on Feb. 18, 20 masked attackers armed with axes attacked staff at a Coastal GasLink (CGL) site, terrorizing workers and causing millions of dollars in damage.

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Trudeau weighing ‘all options’ on notwithstanding clause use amid CUPE Ontario strike

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government is weighing “all different options” when asked Friday whether Ottawa will seek to amend the use of the controversial notwithstanding clause.

Trudeau’s comments come as 55,000 Ontario education workers took to the picket lines on Friday in defiance of the provincial government, which passed a law Thursday pre-emptively using the notwithstanding clause to make job action “illegal.”

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Tucker: NBC News ‘Jeffrey Epsteined’ its own Paul Pelosi story because it ‘was true. There’s no question’

A week removed from the alleged attack on Paul Pelosi in his home, questionable reporting on the incident hasn’t abated. In fact, NBC News just “Jeffrey Epsteined” their own coverage and Fox News host Tucker Carlson led off his program with the most logical conclusion as to why.

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Doctors Advised to Suggest Suicide to Patients as Canada Runs Out of Basic Painkillers

The Canadian healthcare system is experiencing an acute shortage of basic painkillers, particularly acetaminophen and ibuprofen, which are commonly used to relieve pain and fever in children during flu season.

Canada’s Association of Medical Assistance in Dying Assessors and Providers (CAMAP) chose this perhaps awkward moment to roll out a webinar for healthcare professionals that advised them to offer assisted suicide to their suffering patients.

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Gunfight at the Bouncy Castle proves dad opened fire at son’s Toronto birthday party, Crown says

Less than ideal choice of cover. Deceased Bouncy Castle lower right.

A prosecutor is urging a Toronto judge to find that Kevin George was one of four men who engaged in a gunfight at a birthday party for his one-year-old son, saying the accused advertised his involvement by wearing a custom-made “Daddy Shark” T-shirt.

George opened fire amid “a sea of innocent people,” prosecutor Paul Zambonini said Friday in the west Toronto courthouse at 2201 Finch Ave. W.

“This is absolutely shocking, outrageous, disgusting behaviour. It’s incredible that these men chose to fire some 20 shots when there’s a children’s birthday party,” he said, directing the judge’s attention to a “bouncy castle” visible in video surveillance images.

Well at least he showed for his son’s birthday. Now it’s time to harass some legal gun owners!

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Ottawa residents to tell their side of the ‘Freedom Convoy’ protest in new hearing

A public hearing will be held Saturday to allow Ottawa residents to describe their experiences during last winter’s “Freedom Convoy” occupation downtown.

The Ottawa People’s Commission on the Convoy Occupation has been conducting an inquiry of its own into the convoy. The group says it wants to put the spotlight back on what Ottawa residents endured during the three-week protest.

Ottawa is a foreign country populated by grifters on the public tit.

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The number of Mexican asylum seekers in Canada has increased dramatically

MONTREAL – Canada has seen a spike in the number of Mexicans seeking asylum here this year, with the vast majority of them coming to Montreal. They say they are fleeing Mexico in search of jobs and safety, but statistics show most applicants from the country are rejected.

Ricardo Santos, 28, arrived at Montréal-Trudeau International Airport on Oct. 4. He says that although he did not know much about Canada, there was a direct flight to Montreal from Mexico City.

“I left because there is no work and there is a lot of violence,” Santos said in a recent interview outside a downtown YMCA, where he was staying while his refugee application was processed. “Mexico is becoming a more dangerous country.”

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Should you save a dying stranger if you know they eat MEAT? Oxford philosopher controversially argues that it can be ethical to let them die

Letting meat eaters drown is ethical because of the suffering they cause to animals, an Oxford University academic has controversially argued.

Dr Michael Plant, a philosopher focusing on happiness, who eats meat himself, claims that, according to some moral philosophies, it can be justifiable to let people like himself die.

His argument stems from a conflict of what he says are two commonly held beliefs.

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£27m of taxpayer money ‘wasted’ on woke projects such as ‘decolonising 120,000 dried plants’

A taxpayer-funded quango has spent millions of pounds on “woke” projects including decolonising a collection of 120,000 dried plants, it has emerged.

UKRI, the government body responsible for funding research and innovation, is accused of spending £27 million of public funds on “embarrassing” and “low-grade” projects.

This includes research that aims to decolonise collections of music and sculptures and a project that will explore the representation of gender and LGBTQI+ people in castle histories.

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David Icke is banned from entering most of Europe after Dutch government deemed the ‘lizard people’ conspiracy theorist a ‘threat to public order’

The government of the Netherlands has banned British conspiracy theorist David Icke from entering most of Europe for two years amid fears his planned presence at a weekend demonstration in Amsterdam would spark unrest.

Icke, 70, is a prominent advocate of the belief that a race of lizard people have taken over the Earth by posing as human leaders.

He was previously kicked off Twitter for spreading misinformation surrounding Covid-19, with some of his wild claims suggesting that Jewish people and 5G mobile phone towers were behind the pandemic.

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Now private messages can land you in prison

The jailing of two police officers for offensive WhatsApp messages sets a terrifying precedent.

Section 127 of the Communications Act 2003 makes it a crime in the UK to post anything ‘grossly offensive’ on a ‘communications system’. The law essentially covers anything sent over the internet or with a mobile phone. In recent years, police and prosecutors have jumped at any opportunity to enforce it, whenever someone complains that they feel hurt by what they have seen online or on social media. People who have been caught out by this law include: YouTuber Count Dankula, who was fined by a humourless Scottish sheriff for a joke video; Caroline Farrow, a journalist who was threatened with a criminal record for the ‘crime’ of misgendering a trans activist; and Joseph Kelly from Glasgow, who was given 150 hours of community service for a Twitter post, in which he rejoiced at the death of Captain Sir Tom Moore.

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NBC: Paul Pelosi ‘Did Not Immediately Declare an Emergency or Leave His Home’ When Police Arrived

Update: Here’s Why NBC News Deleted a Report on the Paul Pelosi Attack

New details have emerged about the attack on Paul Pelosi, which (again) raises more questions about the incident.

Sources familiar with the investigation told NBC News that when officers responded to the high-priority call, they were unaware they’d been called to the home of the Speaker of the House.

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