Since coming to power in 2015 the Liberals have appointed over 740 of our roughly 1000 federal judges, 7 of the 9 Supreme Court judges, and 100 of the 105 senators.
The government also pays roughly 30% of every reporter’s salary in Canada.
The best measure to implement is stop taking Muslim islamic immigrants. There is a direct cause-effect corelation between the forever increasing antisemitism and the growing population of muslim islamic people. Politically correct, or not, the correlation is undeniable.
I am appalled by the attempted arson of Temple Emanu-El-Beth Sholom in Montréal overnight. I am relieved nobody was injured and that a suspect has been apprehended. Law enforcement has our full support as they work to bring justice to the community.
Across our country, antisemitism has surged. Nothing can justify the hate, discrimination, and violence that Jewish Canadians are experiencing right now. It is up to all of us to name this hate and confront it.
We will continue to bring forward concrete measures to combat antisemitism, using all of the tools at our disposal. We must build a better, more just country in which Jewish Canadians will always be able to live their lives safely, openly, and freely.
@AlainPatenaude7 Tres bien ecrit et enonce. La grande majorite voit la meme chose. Il y a beaucoup de corruption qui n'est pas denoncee. Il faut que le peuple demande des actions tres strictes des gouvernant. Un contrat. Rien de plus. Rien de joins.
Un Québec qui déraille
Il paraît que les politiciens travaillent pour nous. Oui, bien sûr. Et moi je suis astronaute les fins de semaine. On nous répète qu’ils ont ‘’ la situation des citoyens à cœur ’’. Tellement à cœur qu’ils ont décidé que réparer les routes, c’était optionnel, mais parler de l’apocalypse à longueur de journée, ça, c’est essentiel. Rien ne dit ‘’ gestion responsable ’’ comme un nid-de-poule capable d’avaler une Toyota.
Pendant que les ponts menacent de s’effondrer à cause de la rouille évidente, on nous annonce fièrement pour la ville de Québec, un tramway à plusieurs milliards$$$. Parce que rien ne règle un réseau routier en ruine comme un projet qui n’utilise… aucune route.
La bourse carbone, elle, reste bien en place. C’est important : comment financerait-on autrement les conférences internationales où l’on explique aux citoyens qu’ils doivent se serrer la ceinture pendant que les délégations voyagent en classe affaires pour sauver la planète et qu’ils dépensent 524,000$ pour du caviar et des bouteilles de vins à 10,000$, seulement dans l'avion?
Et puis il y a les dons internationaux. Des milliards envoyés à l’autre bout du monde, pendant que les gens d’ici comptent leurs sous pour acheter du beurre. Mais attention : c’est pour notre bien. On ne comprend juste pas encore comment.
Les médias, eux, continuent leur dissonance cognitive avec la grâce d’un danseur étoile qui trébuche. Ils savent très bien qui paie leurs factures (les gouvernements), mais ils jurent qu’ils sont indépendants. Bien sûr. Comme un chat qui jure qu’il n’a pas mangé le poisson, alors qu’il sent la morue.
Et pendant que tout le monde peine à suivre l’inflation, eux s’accordent des augmentations de salaire. C’est normal : gérer un chaos qu’on a soi-même créé, ça demande une compensation émotionnelle.
Quant à la Charte des droits, elle semble maintenant servir surtout de décoration murale. Très jolie, mais strictement décorative.
La justice? Nomination politique oblige.
La police? On dirait parfois une brigade de relations publiques pour le gouvernement.
Mais rassure-toi : tout va bien. On nous l’a dit à la télé.
Bref, le Québec avance. Vers quoi? Mystère. Mais ça avance, comme un chariot d’épicerie avec une roue coincée : ça bouge, mais pas dans la bonne direction.
If Satan has a residence on Earth, it is in Russia: the story of former Kherson mayor Volodymyr Mykolayenko, who survived Russian captivity.
After seeing Russia from the inside, he described it as a moral void, completely incompatible with Ukraine.
In captivity, he survived purely through willpower—holding on by sheer determination. When he finally returned home on August 24, 2025, it felt as though he had grown wings.
What struck him most was the way Ukrainians welcomed the released prisoners. From the Belarusian border all the way to Chernihiv, crowds stood along the roads waving Ukrainian flags. For the first time in a long while, he felt genuine respect and love.
Mykolayenko neither hid nor fled, even though he had the opportunity. He joined the Territorial Defense Forces because he asked himself a simple question: who else would protect his family?
He was given an assault rifle, but quickly realized that rifles alone cannot stop tanks.
The Russians lured him to a meeting under false pretenses, threw him into a car trunk, and took him away.
In captivity, he was beaten almost daily and suffered a broken rib. The occupiers offered him the position of head of the occupation administration, but he refused.
They demanded that he publicly condemn Roman Shukhevych, yet Mykolayenko instead called him a Hero of Ukraine.
Later, he was transferred between detention facilities—first to occupied Crimea, then to Russia’s Voronezh region, where the beatings became even more severe.
He never received a single letter from his family. He even refused prisoner exchanges, insisting that wounded young soldiers should be released in his place.
In his view, this war did not happen because of abstract mistakes. It happened because of geography and irresponsibility.
Russians chose Putin twenty-five years ago, and many continue to support him today. At the same time, too many members of Ukraine’s elite behave as if they have a “backup country”—Paris, Prague, New York—places they can escape to while blaming the people who were left behind.
But most Ukrainians have no alternative. There is no second homeland. There is only Ukraine.
According to Mykolayenko, the true strength of the country lies in its people—those who have survived occupation, torture, and loss, yet continue to fight.
Victory rests on two pillars: the soldiers who destroy the occupiers every day, and the civilians who do everything they can each day to ensure that the army can keep fighting.
He himself endured for the sake of his family and his faith in victory. He is proud of his daughter, who has been fighting since the first day of the war, and hopes that his grandchildren will one day be proud of both him and their country.
‼️MAJOR BREAKING
80-90% of H1-B worker visas from India contain fraudulent documents, and many are using FAKE DEGREES
....plus, 80%+ of the workers were placed into entry level jobs.
They're stealing our kids' futures!
-Fox News
Overlooked in the Stat Canada report this am by the Carneyites who are jumping for job over the 88000 jobs created in May is the fact that Stat Canada hired 32000 of the job seekers. In June and July, these folks will be going door to door across Canada to collect the 2026 Census forms that still have not been submitted. The report in Aug will show the loss of these 32000 jobs.
90% of the soldiers on the first boats to hit the beach didn't live to see the end of the day. Look at those faces. Some of them never made it to 18.
Never forget that they paid the ultimate price for our freedom. We live our lives the way we do because of them.
Imagine going on social media and bragging about how many of your constituents don’t earn enough so they need government handouts!? 🤦🏻♂️
Canada is a race to the bottom at this point.
A 24-year-old Polish tennis player arrived in Paris last week ranked 114th in the world, with no sponsors, no guaranteed income, and no certainty she could even pay for her hotel room.
She had to win three qualifying matches just to enter the French Open main draw. Prize money is only paid at the end of the tournament, so a Polish sports drink brand quietly stepped in and covered her hotel bill.
Her name is Maja Chwalinska. And today, she plays in the French Open final.
Before this tournament, she had won exactly one Grand Slam main draw match in her entire career. She had battled depression so severe that in 2021 she couldn't get out of bed. She underwent knee surgery in 2022. She spent years grinding through small tournaments across Europe just to stay afloat.
Then she arrived in Paris, won three qualifiers, and kept winning. Zheng Qinwen. Elise Mertens. Maria Sakkari. Diana Shnaider. Nine straight matches. One set dropped.
She is now the first qualifier in French Open history to reach the final. The last time a qualifier reached a Grand Slam final, it was Emma Raducanu at the 2021 US Open. Raducanu won.
By simply making the final, Chwalinska has earned more prize money than her entire career combined. The runner-up cheque alone is $1.6 million. If she wins today, she takes home $3.25 million.
One week ago she couldn't pay for her hotel room.
Carney did a photo-op in a Toronto grocery store claiming 12 million Canadians are being helped.
Did you receive anything?
Let’s fact-check him.
The “$533 grocery benefit top-up” is the maximum for a family of four.
Average payment: about $252.
He also claimed the 88,000 jobs were “all private sector.”
StatsCan:
+56K private
+20K public
That is not “all private sector.”
And while Carney sells this as help, food prices are up 27% in five years.
They put Canadians in the hole.
Now they want credit for the rope.
Le versement supplémentaire de l’Allocation canadienne pour l’épicerie et les besoins essentiels a lieu aujourd’hui.
Plus de 12 millions de Canadiennes et de Canadiens recevront un soutien concret pour les aider à payer l’épicerie et les dépenses essentielles du quotidien. 🇨🇦
Hot take: Scrap Question Period.
I know. Hear me out.
Every day, the people we elected to run a G7 nation spend 45 minutes screaming rehearsed one-liners at each other while backbenchers bang their desks like it’s a hockey game.
No answers get given. No policy gets made. No problem gets solved.
The minister reads a non-answer from a cue card. The opposition screams. Repeat 35 times. Camera cuts to someone rolling their eyes. Done.
And we wonder why voter turnout keeps dropping.
Foreign observers watching Question Period for the first time genuinely cannot believe this is how a serious democracy operates. It looks like a school cafeteria fight.
The original purpose was accountability. Ministers answering directly to elected representatives. A check on executive power. Legitimate and necessary.
What it became is theater. Purely for clips. Every question is written to go viral, and every answer is written to avoid saying anything. The actual governance happens somewhere else entirely, behind closed doors, away from cameras.
Countries like Germany, Sweden, and New Zealand have structured interpellation systems where written questions require written answers on the record. Documented. Searchable. Accountable.
You know what that produces? Actual information. Actual accountability. A paper trail.
Canada deserves better than a daily episode of Real Housewives with a peace tower in the background.
This is not World War II footage.
This is Toretsk, Ukraine — and it’s not as far away as you think.
A city that once had over 30,000 residents. Now almost completely erased.
There is no excuse for this. None.