The Part I Like Best

About the liberalization of narcotic use is the way it forced international drug cartels to leave their old ways behind to find honest work.

Seven Canadians with alleged ties to former Canadian Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding, who is considered one of the world’s most dangerous fugitives with a major drug-trafficking network operating across the Americas, have been arrested and will be extradited to the U.S. in connection to former Canadian

Wedding, who competed for Canada in the 2002 Winter Olympics, is already on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list. U.S. officials say he is allegedly responsible for dozens of murders abroad.

The 44-year-old has been charged with overseeing the operations of a criminal enterprise – including by engaging in witness intimidation tactics such as murder – and enriching himself with the enterprise’s laundered drug proceeds.

U.S. officials allege Wedding issued ordered the killing of a witness in a 2024 federal narcotics case against Wedding. The witness was shot to death in restaurant in Medellin in January 2025.

More: Gursewak Singh Bal of Mississauga, owner of @thedirtynews & an SFJ member, has now been exposed as a criminal accused of conspiracy to commit murder.

18 Replies to “The Part I Like Best”

    1. You can’t blame this poor, poor, Canadian snowboarder as snowboarding isn’t a very lucrative career path. What else could this poor man do for a living after his snowboarding career was over? Well I suppose he could have opened a weed dispensary… but he isn’t FN, is he?

      1. He started out slinging weed. Got busted for it. Got let out and moved up the drug food chain.

        1. A pre-Trudeau-weed-legalizing bust, eh? If only he had waited for the dope-endorsement movement to take hold? Then … he’d have only been killing his customers … not witnesses against him.

  1. Just think of the major impact this will have on trade negotiations and look for aircraft carriers off our coasts.

  2. Evey Canadian should hear RCMP Duheme’s word salad…brief as it is.
    “accidents”.
    82nd Airborne…hear our prayer.

        1. Due to the international sensitivity of this case, a Ranger battalion wouldn’t be used. In fact, 106 would be a very blatant use of force….perhaps CIA paras would be better.

  3. And of course, our shill talkshow host from Edmonton mocks the US government reports of large scale drug trafficking between the US and Canuckistan at every opportunity. He must be either paid or threatened to maintain the narrative.

    1. Paid. All the MSM is “paid”. And they’re paid with money extorted from you by the government. They don’t even have to be threatened – because it goes without saying that the funds and tax-breaks would vanish if they didn’t maintain the narrative.

      1. Though I wouldn’t be surprised if they were also threatened. Because, frankly, I think it would be great fun to threaten the little shits! I don’t see how the lads could resist.

  4. The part I like best about the “More” link is how people come to Canada to have a new life free from the tribal conflicts of their homeland, and how they partner with hard-working Canadian entrepreneurs like that snowboarder fellow, to bring about real change in the world.

  5. “Deepak Paradkar, a lawyer from Brampton, was arrested in connection with an alleged international drug smuggling operation and the murder of a witness, as detailed in a U.S. federal indictment. His involvement raises significant concerns about ethical standards within the legal profession.

    Good news, sometimes in the next decade, there will be one less lawyer in Canada working for the criminal organizations.

    1. Concerns indeed. Why, if this keeps up, people will start expecting the legal profession to meet ethical standards, and then where the hell will we be?

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