Devin Ruttan-Stokes (@ColonelKernel21): Attacks on Sir John A. Macdonald are a push to delegitimize Canada.
There is no middle ground. For every statue toppled, put up two more.
https://t.co/lvEpLrDa8B
Alan Danesh: Kari Levitt's monumental 1970 book Silent Surrender reveals how multinational corporations and US economic imperialism undermine Canadian sovereignty.
https://t.co/XF6tPMjK1l
Brian Graff: The Albertan separatist worldview is based on a misreading of Canadian history. Confederation has long been a benefit for Alberta, and still is today.
https://t.co/fuEWMNKV2r
Riley Donovan: Conservatives blame high food prices on the industrial carbon tax, while Liberals blame climate change - but neither major party mentions the grocery monopolies. https://t.co/iLJImRTtJv
My article published on @DominionReview explaining our campaign. Thank you @valdombre
Time To Return The John A. Macdonald Statue To Kingston https://t.co/EhihF1Vqel #Culture
Rodrigo Garfinkle: Kingston's historic statue of Sir John A. Macdonald was removed in 2021 during Canada's statue toppling frenzy. Now is the time to bring it back.
https://t.co/vZ6TK2wSkh
“The pro-American stance taken by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney signalled a different attitude towards the US than many Tories had taken in Canadian history. The change in the Canadian understanding of conservatism from Mulroney to Preston Manning to Stephen Harper was a shift from Red to Blue Toryism, from a distinctive nationalist Tory vision of Canada to more of an annexationist/integrationist position.” (SOURCE: Ron Dart, Keepers of the Flame).
My latest for @DominionReview:
Poilievre's "baffling" political decision to oppose high-speed rail becomes even more so when you break it down to brass tacks. This isn't about whether to spend $90 billion, this is about whether anyone will invest in Canada.
Link below⬇️
Poilievre says Canada's immigration problem started in 2021.
The truth is mass immigration has been imposed on us since the early '90s by both Conservative and Liberal governments. https://t.co/zvymI16X2u
Alan Danesh: We must rediscover the wisdom of old Toryism, as expressed by great Canadians like George Grant and Walter Gordon. https://t.co/PAr8CzFHKa
Connor Shaw: Poilievre's opposition to high-speed rail lacks any basis in fact, and points to a deeper problem - Canada has become unwilling to invest in its own development.
https://t.co/IEt5Wi657k
Riley Donovan: Selling off Canada's newspaper industry to Postmedia - owned by an American hedge fund - was a spectacularly bad idea. https://t.co/AWHYBkGxHT
Brian Graff looks at Carney’s Davos speech and the implications of international law being pushed aside by the US in Iran and Cuba.
https://t.co/cz9pBTEstL