Andy Ngo: Here’s What I Saw When I Got Inside the Signal Chats Used by Extremists in Minnesota

… Andy Ngo, a citizen journalist known for his unmasking of Antifa activists and their violent tactics, infiltrated some radical left Signal groups in Minnesota and discovered the rampant paranoia among the activists who didn’t trust anyone, especially other activists.

Share

Canada’s “Islamophobia” Day: The State-Backed Campaign to Protect Sharia, Criminalize Criticism, and Silence a Nation

Canada has declared January 29 a national day to combat “Islamophobia.” The event is promoted by NCCM – originally CAIR-Canada, the Canadian arm of a U.S. based lobby group with a history of foreign funding – now rebranded and federally funded in Canada. It is also authorized by the Canadian Council of Imams to collect zakat ‘in the cause of Allah’ (fi sabilillah), a doctrinal category that includes jihad.

Share

Top Gun Expert: Kyle Rittenhouse‘s Situation ‘Completely Different Animal‘ Than Alex Pretti Shooting

On Monday’s “Alex Marlow Show,” Breitbart News 2nd Amendment columnist AWR Hawkins talked about Kyle Rittenhouse and Minnesota.

Hawkins said, “It’s not a good place to walk in carrying a gun, particularly if you’re going to walk right at police officers or federal law enforcement officers. It just doesn’t make sense. Completely different animal than what Kyle was in, completely different.”

Share

Man who sexually abused kids blocked from becoming Ontario lawyer. Court of Appeal rejects ‘good character’ decision

Ontario’s top court has blocked a man who sexually abused children from being called to the bar, granting a victory to Ontario’s legal regulator after years of unsuccessfully trying to deny the man a licence.

A 2023 decision by the independent Law Society Tribunal finding that the man was of good character to be licensed was “unreasonable,” the Court of Appeal ruled Monday. The man is identified only as AA due to a publication ban.


Why was this under consideration to begin with?

Share

The complex far-left network that helped put Alex Pretti in harm’s way — including encrypted chats, street alerts

The skirmish that led to Saturday’s fatal shooting of an agitator by Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis and the response that followed were driven by a complex network of far-left organizations with a wide range of causes, a Fox News Digital investigation found.

A coordinated web of encrypted chats, street alerts and tracking of ICE “Abductors” in a sophisticated database reviewed by Fox News Digital shows that agitators were already mobilized at the scene where 37-year-old Alex Pretti was killed minutes before any shots were fired.

h/t Mauser

Share

Barry Appleton: Canada faces the most serious trade threat in a generation — and Carney’s to blame

On Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump threatened Canada with 100 per cent tariffs on all goods if Prime Minister Mark Carney proceeds with his China trade deal. The president’s language was characteristically blunt: Canada would become a “drop off port” for Chinese goods, and “China will eat Canada alive, completely devour it.” This is the predictable consequence of Carney’s reckless foreign policy.


It is alleged Carney is an intelligent man so he had to understand the consequences of his comments.

Which leads me to believe he acted to ensure China and not the US is our partner.

Trump isn’t working for Canada but neither is Carney.

Carney a two-faced Liberal? Talking Big for the Elbow People?

Share

Europe can’t defend itself without the US, NATO’s Rutte warns

BRUSSELS — Europe is incapable of defending itself without America, NATO chief Mark Rutte said on Monday, speaking just days after Donald Trump’s repeated threats to seize Greenland pushed the alliance to the brink of collapse.

“If anyone thinks here … that the European Union or Europe as a whole can defend itself without the U.S., keep on dreaming,” he told lawmakers on the European Parliament’s defense and foreign affairs committees. “You can’t.”

A “European pillar [of NATO] is a bit of an empty word,” Rutte said, arguing a European army would create “a lot of duplication” with the alliance. Moreover, Russian President Vladimir “Putin will love it,” he added.

Share

How Canada can move away from its ‘whack-a-mole’ national security strategy

Carney – Unhappy Warriors

Months ago, as Prime Minister Mark Carney was embarking on his marathon negotiations with the U.S. government, he indicated that he preferred dealing with trade and security as a package.

In practice, the paths that have developed seem to be trade talks that focus on tariffs and security decisions that focus on a significant increase in defence spending. For the short term, this approach is entirely reasonable and practical, but for the long term it will not advance Canada’s broader national security. Rather, it represents a form of “whack-a-mole.”

Share

Gunmen storm Mexico football pitch and kill at least 11 people

At least 11 people were killed and another dozen injured when gunmen opened fire on locals who had gathered at a football pitch in the city of Salamanca in central Mexico on Sunday.

Witnesses said armed men arrived at the grounds in several vehicles and shot at those gathered there seemingly indiscriminately.

Many families had stayed behind to socialise after a match between local clubs. At least one woman and one child were among those killed.


Warning very gruesome casualty photo

Share

Amy Hamm: Keep AI chatbots away from your kids

Billionaire Elon Musk — owner of xAI, which developed the Grok chatbot — took a jab at his AI competitor this week. “Don’t let your loved ones use ChatGPT,” he posted on X, above an allegation that ChatGPT has been linked to at least nine deaths.

Musk has a vested interest in bashing his competitor. But we should take his warning seriously, regardless. This is no niche concern — particularly when it comes to youth.

Share

Police to use AI chatbot to handle calls

Police are to use AI chatbots to answer calls from potential crime victims as part of an expansion in the use of technology.

The chatbots will be deployed to respond to non-urgent online queries from the public to assess their risk and determine the most appropriate police action.

The move is part of police reforms by Shabana Mahmood, the Home Secretary, that also involve the nationwide rollout of live facial recognition (LFR) cameras.

Share

Canadian ex-Olympian pleads not guilty to 17 felonies including drug trafficking

Ryan Wedding, the Canadian former Olympic snowboarder accused of cocaine distribution and orchestrating several murders, appeared on Monday in a southern California courtroom for arraignment.

The 44-year-old has been charged with drug trafficking, conspiracy to murder, witness tampering and money laundering, among other charges. Authorities allege that after his snowboarding career, Wedding “turned to a life of crime” as a narcotics trafficker and led an organization that moved cocaine from South America to the US and Canada.

Share