If you’re wondering why they’re so nuts about the ArriveCAN app.
We Are Coming.#RESIST
January 2022:https://t.co/9t2ZTf80Qi https://t.co/7RObkaOFvE— أبو عمّار (@MaajidNawaz) July 16, 2022
Apparently Ukraine will be leading the way.
If you’re wondering why they’re so nuts about the ArriveCAN app.
We Are Coming.#RESIST
January 2022:https://t.co/9t2ZTf80Qi https://t.co/7RObkaOFvE— أبو عمّار (@MaajidNawaz) July 16, 2022
Apparently Ukraine will be leading the way.
To not fulfill its promises.
CBC- Ottawa closes special Afghan immigration program to new applicants
Less than halfway to its goal of bringing 40,000 Afghans to Canada, the federal government is no longer taking new referrals for the special immigration program meant to prioritize former employees of the Armed Forces or Canadian government and their families.
Global- Why is Ottawa turning away from Afghans who helped Canada? ‘We’re failing them’
On to the next photo-op. Featuring -The Latest Thing™ -.
When people wonder how the whole Nazi Germany “machine” was able to operate as efficiently as it did, many historians have pointed towards the legion of bureaucrats who faithfully “followed orders” without ever questioning any of them. Though not to the same degree yet, do you think this small-minded passive aggressive bureaucrat at Toronto’s Pearson Airport, is questioning ANYTHING he does at work?
Four shots is not enough.
https://twitter.com/jenniferelle_/status/1548326705055485953
Itz de rulz!
Where the brownshirts meet you at the airport.
Mark Crispin Miller- What it’s now like for humans going “home” to bio-fascist Canada
Huge fines, long delays and lots of prissy scolding face the non-compliant under Klaus Schwab’s Fidelito (and his Queen)
Francisco- Hmm, the link seems to have disappeared. I’ll see if I can find it again.
Update: Here is a slightly shorter version of the video.
Ripudaman Singh Malik, the man acquitted in the 1985 Air India terrorist bombing, has been killed in a targeted shooting in Surrey, B.C.
An employee who works at the car wash near the site of the shooting said he heard shots and ran outside to find Malik unconscious in his car.
“There was three gunshots. One hit on the neck, that’s it. And I just took him out. He was alive,” said the man, who didn’t want to be named because of safety concerns.
I don’t know if this is a legitimate question — but it’s a good one.
h/t anton
And they won’t be chasing after them to get it back.
Statistics Canada says hundreds of thousands of teenaged students received payments of up to $5,000, which was money intended for COVID relief aid for jobless taxpayers facing eviction or foreclosure, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.
Access to Information documents show in 2021 a total $636 million was paid to high schoolers. […]
In March 25, 2020, Parliament enacted the Canada Emergency Response Benefit Act to issue $2,000-a month cheques to jobless taxpayers.
The act allowed payments to teenagers as young as 15 but they needed to provide a tax return the previous year.
Blacklocks say records showed federal authorities gave payments without confirming applicants were tax filers.
Because that money is spent, and those children are their future. Instead, they’ll come chasing after us.
National Post- Canada bringing back mandatory random testing of travellers arriving at main airports
The government now says testing will resume as of July 19 for fully vaccinated travellers arriving at the Vancouver, Calgary, Montreal and Toronto airports.
Reaction: They’ll huff and they’ll puff… and then they’ll comply.
Now is the time at SDA when we clown country!
h/t Ron
Canada’s Health-Care System is supposedly on the Brink of Disaster:
Canadian nursing leaders say they’ve sent a message to the premiers as they meet this week that patients and nurses are suffering through a “dire staffing crisis” that threatens the sustainability of public health care.
A statement from Linda Silas, president of the Canadian Federation of Nurses, says the system is “on the brink of disaster” and nursing leaders shared proposed solutions today as the premiers start their Council of the Federation meeting.
Silas says nurses have been “struggling through extreme staffing shortages, forced overtime and cancelled vacations, with no end in sight” to untenable conditions.
h/t James McMaster
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, November, 2021;
Canadians have given us an extremely ambitious climate mandate. That in itself is a sign of progress. As a lifelong environmentalist, I feel the responsibility of those expectations. […] International climate conferences just raise the stakes. I’ll be travelling across the country by train early in the new year to speak with as many Canadians as possible about taking our country’s climate ambitions to the next level, here in Canada and for the next COP.
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, July 2022;
Guilbeault’s office confirmed Tuesday that the minister’s ambitious early-2022 train tour plan didn’t happen in part because of the sixth COVID-19 wave, but also because Via Rail simply was not offering the required service levels to make it possible.
Preston Manning has written a superb op-ed about the persecution of Tamara Lich:
Since the attitude of the Trudeau government toward individual Canadians very much depends on their gender and race, let the record show that Tamara is female and of Metis heritage. With these characteristics, and if she was being hounded by a Conservative administration for involvement in a left-wing protest, Tamara would by now have been lionized by the Trudeau Liberals as a freedom martyr, made the subject of a sympathetic full-length documentary by the CBC, granted an honorary degree by some university, and nominated for the Order of Canada.
h/t James MacMaster
Does anyone honestly believe that this isn’t coming to Canada in the near future? Who precisely is going to push back? The Canadian Sheeple certainly won’t say a word.
HK's new health minister Lo Chung-mau announced that from Friday all #Covid patients under home quarantine will have to wear an electronic bracelet in order to prevent them from leaving home. pic.twitter.com/XVHO31CQ1Q
— Xinqi Su 蘇昕琪 (@XinqiSu) July 11, 2022
All of the bought and paid for media were excited that our Dear Leader was in Calgary today. There was one lone protester who was quickly removed. Global News reports that Justin was mobbed by adoring fans.
Dear Leader decided to walk through the prison yard that is his Canuckistan:
People tell Trudeau he’s “nothing but a communist pig” and that he should free political prisoners during his visit to Sudbury.pic.twitter.com/1xrYc2uUhj
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 9, 2022
In the Democratic Peoples’ Republic of Trudeaupia, everyone has a job – Based on today’s Labour Force Survey, 92% of jobs created since February 2020 are in the public sector.
One of the major questions of the pandemic-induced recession was about the magnitude and mix of the subsequent economic recovery. Would it be a U-shaped recovery? Or a W-shaped recovery? Or an L-shaped recovery? And where would the jobs come from? Which sectors would ultimately drive the recovery?
That Canada’s economy fully restored the jobs lost during the pandemic by late 2021 seemed to answer these questions. Headlines and commentaries declared that “Canada’s pandemic jobs recovery has been remarkable” and “Canada’s labour market bounces back.”
The Trudeau government was even more affirmative: its 2021 economic and fiscal update, for instance, boasted that the economy was “roaring back” based on recouping 106 percent of the jobs lost during the pandemic.1
Yet these top-level claims require a deeper dive into what’s really behind Canada’s post-pandemic recovery. The data tell us a less favourable story than the prevailing narrative in the media or from the government. Much of Canada’s post-pandemic jobs recovery—indeed, nearly 85 percent since February 2020 — has actually been concentrated in the public sector. We have experienced a G-shaped recovery: a government-centric recovery.
When one company’s service outage takes down everything in a country from 911 calls to The Weeknd’s concert, that company has too much power. #Rogers
— Gerald Butts (@gmbutts) July 9, 2022
CBC: Canada unexpectedly lost 43,000 jobs last month
Rav Arora is a young, independent journalist in Metro Vancouver. An op-ed of his was published in the New York Post. Then strange things started happening.
If you’re curious why the vast majority of Canadian “journalists” are frightened to deviate from the Official Narrative™, now you understand why.
A very good interview here with ex-NHL hockey player Theo Fleury. As a youth Fleury was raped over 150 times by a coach. As one can imagine this led to all sorts of dark places. Trauma, addiction and various mental health problems. Covid, Trudeau and Canada’s brutal response to the pandemic retraumatized Fleury and others in ways we never thought possible in what’s supposed to be one of the nicest most peaceful countries in the world.