🚨 BREAKING
It’s a very dark day in Canada today.
The Liberals just voted down ALL FOUR Conservative public safety bills.
Bill C-246: consecutive sentences for sexual predators. So they serve time for EACH offence. Not a bulk discount.
VOTED DOWN.
Bill C-220: stop judges from giving lighter sentences to rapists and child predators because deportation might be a consequence.
VOTED DOWN.
Bill C-243: end the cycle that forces victims to relive their trauma at parole hearings year after year. Victims begged for this.
VOTED DOWN.
Bill C-242: the Jail Not Bail Act. Repeal catch and release for repeat violent offenders.
VOTED DOWN.
Tougher sentences for sex offenders? No.
Accountability for foreign criminals? No.
Mercy for victims? No.
Keeping dangerous people locked up? No.
Four bills.
Four chances to protect Canadians.
They said NO to all of them.
This is what they stand for.
NOTHING.
PS. What they will do tonight, is vote in favour of their own hate bill.
Because words matter more.
@JeffreyRWRath Probably good. Middle voters will see how he bribed his way into majority govt, just like his former puppet did with the NDP/terrorist sympathizer coalition
Not what the majority of Canadians voted for, let alone Albertans. Hopefully it will be an eye opener for the slower folks
@TheBuckYouWill This isn't some minor capital inefficiency. This is supressing evidence pertaining to the misappropriation of funds (large-scale FRAUD). @cathmckenna should be personally held responsible and face the consequences of such actions.
🚨BREAKING: I officially tabled the Stand on Guard Act.
This bill would clarify the legal standard for self-defence to add a clear presumption that when someone knowingly and unlawfully enters your home, the force you thought necessary to defend yourself and your family is presumed to be reasonable, unless the facts show otherwise.
Your home should be your safe place, not the place where the law turns against you for protecting the people you love.
#cdnpoli
Banking apps can now see which apps you have installed and where they came from. Let that sink in.
Install something they don’t approve of? Suddenly it’s “sorry, you can’t access your money until you fix your wrongthinking.” No court order. No warning. Just a locked screen and zero options.
This isn’t about security anymore, it’s about control, compliance, and surveillance baked into everyday tech. Convenience was the bait. Dependence is the trap.
We’re not entering a golden age of technology.
We’re sliding into the digital dark ages.
@Tyr__MacAirt@CalgaryDave Typical, Canadian liberals think there's only 3-4 countries that exist and if you oppose their ideas you're automatically a Putin sympathizer. Notice how they'll place you in the boat with Putin but never with their grand master, Xi Jinping.
There’s a strange contradiction in how Alberta independence is criticized.
When people are criticizing Canada, we often hear that treaties were signed under duress, that Canada is a colonial project, and that its authority over the land is illegitimate.
But the moment Alberta talks about independence, the argument suddenly changes. Now the treaties are described as sacred, permanently binding, and something that must prevent Alberta from ever leaving Canada.
Those arguments pull in opposite directions.
Either the treaties are illegitimate colonial impositions, or they are binding agreements that define relationships between governments.
They can’t logically be both at the same time.
Yet despite completely different premises, the political conclusion never changes:
Alberta must remain in Canada.
That contradiction is worth thinking about — especially now.
With the Alberta independence petition likely collecting well over the required signatures, a referendum is looking increasingly likely. That means Alberta may soon face one of the most important political conversations in its history.
And that conversation must include Indigenous nations in Alberta.
Three questions are worth discussing:
1️⃣ Could independence reset the relationship?
Treaties were originally signed nation-to-nation with the Crown. If Alberta became independent, could that create an opportunity to renegotiate how those agreements are implemented — with Indigenous nations having a stronger role in shaping the relationship going forward?
2️⃣ Could decisions made closer to home work better than federal bureaucracy?
Right now many Indigenous programs are controlled by federal departments in Ottawa. Would governance closer to the communities affected allow faster solutions for housing, infrastructure, and economic development?
3️⃣ Could Alberta’s resource economy create stronger Indigenous partnerships?
Many Indigenous communities in Alberta are already equity partners in major energy and infrastructure projects. If Alberta had full control of its economic policy, could that expand Indigenous ownership, revenue sharing, and long-term prosperity?
But there’s an even bigger possibility.
If Alberta ever chooses independence, it would also be a chance to rethink the system itself.
Canada’s current framework was built in a very different era, and many people — Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike — feel it has failed to deliver fairness, accountability, or lasting prosperity for everyone.
A constitutional reset could be an opportunity to sit down together and ask a bigger question:
What would a truly fair system look like if we designed it today?
One built on real partnership.
One that respects Indigenous self-determination.
One that promotes economic opportunity.
One that protects freedom and prosperity for everyone who calls Alberta home.
If a referendum happens, Indigenous nations shouldn’t just be spectators in that discussion.
They should be partners in shaping what Alberta’s future looks like.
@RealAlbanianPat This man is literally a terrorist sympathizer and an animal abuser. You only have idiots like this left to defend your state funded slop propaganda @CBC
@Iuvnriki@lorden_eth HFT/HPC spread capture bot - potentially specific hardware, kernel network bypassing, etc. Its highly competitive against other quants, if not quant teams.
And unlike MEV, it's not atomic - so you can and will get stuck with bags if a competitor beats you
@FreedomMemesIRL@jackmallers@Strike If the lender doesn’t get paid they get your bitcoin and also collect 13% annually from you. You can get unsecured LOC for 10-11%
Bitcoin is being treated as a credit risk for retail but not for institutions
A Ukrainian living in Canada finally saying what we all knew was going on in his Country.
He also does not support our Government handing them billions of our tax dollars.
@JonFromAlberta@jeneroux Reminds me of the trucker protest. Everybody I met was so friendly, optimistic during a dark time. MSM portrayed the opposite. The only ones voicing hate were the ones who disliked us being able to voice our opinions.
Great to see that same good spirit keeps shining