This is so important! It means much more, and has much greater influence than you think. We need three AB flags flying for every "Forever Canada" maple leaf.
🚨 Ambassador Pete Hoekstra (@USAmbCanada) warns Make Carney that he will REGRET making an alliance with the Chinese Communist Party
FULL INTERVIEW LIVE NOW 👇
🚨 CARNEY BLOCKING NEW BILLS 🚨
Mark Carney's Liberals are blocking MPs from tabling legislation.
Not just Conservatives. MPs from all parties — even Liberals.
This is not how Parliament is supposed to work.
@GarnettGenuis breaks it down.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney tells me he's one of the few people who has seen the MOU between the U.S. and Iran. Our full interview airs at 9 p.m. ET.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney tells me he's one of the few people who has seen the MOU between the U.S. and Iran. Our full interview airs at 9 p.m. ET.
This story should make everyone absolutely furious, for a bunch of different reasons.
An 8-year-old girl named Nina Napope was killed in 2023 in Edmonton. She suffered terrible, long-term abuse and died from blunt force trauma. Her body was found in a hockey bag.
The woman caring for her, Ashley Rattlesnake, was originally charged with first-degree murder. But the the Crown later agreed to a manslaughter plea deal, meaning they accepted that she caused the death but didn't plan it as murder. WTF?
In February 2026, Rattlesnake was sentenced to 8 years in prison. After credit for time already served, she’ll only serve about 3 years and 9 months more.
The Edmonton Police were very angry about the manslaughter deal. They believed the evidence showed it was murder. For the first time ever, they wrote a strong official letter to the Crown, basically saying "This is a miscarriage of justice." They viewed
the abuse as extreme, and threatened to release all their detailed evidence to the public. They wanted the case to be tied in the court of public opinion.
This was highly unusual. Oolice are not supposed to pressure prosecutors like this.
What actually happened? The Crown did NOT change the manslaughter plea. The deal stayed the same.
The case went to sentencing. The judge was furious at the police for sending that letter. She called their actions “reprehensible” and said it was wrong for police to try to interfere.
Because of the police letter, the judge reduced the sentence by 1 year as a penalty. So the woman actually got a lighter punishment than she might have otherwise.
Now, Alberta’s police watchdog (ASIRT) is investigating the Edmonton Police for their unusual letter and conduct.
Bottom line: the police tried to publicly shame and pressure the Crown to get a harsher charge/sentence, but it backfired. The plea didn’t change, and the sentence was made shorter partly because of what the police did.
Many people are upset that the punishment seems too light for such a brutal crime against a child.
If judges are willing to do this to the police, what hopes do any of us who challenge the system have?
https://t.co/1WwPiN88f6
The moral case for Alberta independence begins with accountability.
Ottawa is too distant, too centralized and too comfortable with a political culture where insiders, consultants, lobbyists and favoured interests feed off federal spending with little consequence.
The worst corruption is not always what is illegal. It is what the system permits, rewards and normalizes.
Government should be close enough to the people that citizens can see it, judge it and hold it to account. Alberta should not be ruled from a capital thousands of kilometres away by a permanent political class we cannot meaningfully discipline.
Cutting out one vast, unaccountable layer of government is not just practical. It is moral.
Canada’s reputation for being a money laundering capital is well known and well deserved. The criminal Liberal government has neutered CSIS and the RCMP. The only national justice enforcement agencies in Canada. With a manufactured majority, there is no way to remediate this. The Conservatives don’t have the political will or the political capital to produce effective change. Alberta must sever ties with Canada. It’s the only path forward.
Federal debt fuels inflation. High taxes, overregulation and interprovincial trade barriers deter investment, weaken productivity and cost jobs in every sector.
Canada too often protects fiefdoms and cartels instead of rewarding enterprise. Alberta needs the freedom to build, trade and compete.
Federal debt fuels inflation. High taxes, overregulation and interprovincial trade barriers deter investment, weaken productivity and cost jobs in every sector.
Canada too often protects fiefdoms and cartels instead of rewarding enterprise. Alberta needs the freedom to build, trade and compete.