Mark Carney flew to Ireland and warned the rules-based order is "breaking down."
Days later at the G7, Trump proved him right — cracking Iran after 47 years and handing Syria the Hezbollah job, over Israel.
Carney calls it a rupture. We call it the future. 👇
@elonmusk Just came across this screen shot I saved. How long are you going to make us wait up here?#CarnageCarney is infinitely worse for us than Castro Jr ever dreamed of being! Help a Queen's alum out, would ya?! 😎🙏🏻❤🇨🇦✌
Richard Werner, the ex WEF young global leader shocked me yet again with his chilling insights.
You may recall in 2023 he revealed that the purported end game was CBDCs implanted under the skin, using universal basic income to force acceptance.
Now we’re being told UBI will be needed due to AI taking our jobs.
And here’s the clincher!!
He believes the real reason they’re building massive centralised AI data centres is for the implementation of CBDCs.
If this is true, an agenda we thought we had defeated is still coming together in plain sight.
🚨🇨🇦 The Liberal narrative just collapsed…
Fraser Institute President Niels Veldhuis is setting the record straight:
🇨🇦 Canada’s economic decline isn’t a 🇺🇸 "Trump Tariff" problem….it’s a made-in-Canada crisis.
Stop blaming the neighbors 🇺🇸 for the mess we created at home. 🇨🇦
#cdnpoli #Economy #Canada #Trump #USA
To Mark Carney & Those Applauding Him:
I am a Canadian paying for a country that doesn’t include me.
I live in the part of the country your map forgets.
About 2,600 kilometres from the nearest stop on your proposed $90 billion train.
I am an overtaxed, under-served Canadian.
I heat my home with rising costs.
I fill my vehicle at almost $2 a litre, depending on the day and my luck.
I watch a country with 163 billion barrels of oil behave like it’s on a meagre allowance.
And you want me to pay for a train I will never use.
How thoughtful.
I am a hard-working, falling-behind Canadian funding infrastructure I will never touch.
It runs roughly 800 to 900 kilometres, depending on how creatively it detours around reality, from Toronto to Quebec City.
Seven stops.
All neatly contained within Ontario and Quebec.
Top speed, 300 km/h.
National reach? Let’s just call it selective.
I am a Canadian treated like a revenue stream, invited only by invoice.
Roughly $90 billion. About $8,000 per household.
For a ticket I will never hold.
From where I sit in Saskatchewan, your high-speed rail corridor might as well be interstellar travel.
Two thousand plus kilometres away circling the station, and still billing me.
I am a Canadian bereft of a stop on this train.
Close enough to fund it. Far enough to never use it.
I am an overextended, nickel-and-dimed Canadian.
I am fixing my own road access.
Paying more for groceries.
Driving farther for basic services.
And now funding new infrastructure for people who already have airports, highways, and existing rail.
At this point, I would settle for a train that delivers affordable groceries.
No need for 300 km/h. Just cost-saving reliability.
I am a Canadian squeezed by government-made inflation, where every errand costs more than it did last week and every explanation from you sounds rehearsed.
I am a Canadian quietly recalculating the future, trying not to downgrade my retirement to a leaky camper on wheels, while the country accumulates debt it cannot repay and prints money to pretend it can.
I am a rural Canadian watching how this works.
Not on my land. Not this time.
But close enough to understand the mechanism.
Because an 800 plus kilometre corridor does not meander politely.
It cuts. Straight. Fast. With purpose.
Through farmland. Through properties. Through communities.
I am a watchful Canadian taking note of precedent.
Survey stakes. Expropriation powers. “Public interest” to be explained after.
It is not my yard today.
But it is someone’s.
And tomorrow, it will be called "necessary" for something larger.
Something urgent. Something climate-related. Something that cannot wait.
I am a wary Canadian noticing how easily "necessity" is declared to match your agenda.
And how quickly my rights become flexible once it is declared.
I am an observant Canadian with a long memory for names.
And somehow, the same SNC-Lavalin lineage Canadians were told to forget is back, rebranded as AtkinsRéalis, positioning itself for one of the largest public contracts in Canadian history.
A remarkable comeback. Truly.
No apology tour. Just a new logo and a larger taxpayer subsidized opportunity.
Seems history doesn’t repeat. It follows a predictable pattern.
I am an unimpressed Canadian watching familiar #Lavscam players return under reimagined branding.
The script is the same. Only the cover has changed.
I am an exasperated Canadian you included in your sales pitch.
I am told it will create 50,000 jobs.
I am told it will add $35 billion to GDP.
And I am sure it will.
In the corridor.
Where the stations are.
Where the density is.
Where the benefit is.
I am a shunned Canadian excluded from the outcome.
Included in all the arithmetic. Excluded from all the access.
I am a cynical Canadian being told this is nation-building. Though the nation appears to exist along a very specific set of coordinates.
I am the depleted Canadian who:
Reads grocery receipts like an audit.
Choreographs fuel stops around paydays not plans.
Measures distance in cost, not kilometres.
I am an overburdened, last-in-line Canadian.
Essential when it is time to pay. Optional when it is time to benefit.
I am an impoverished Canadian whose citizenship now resembles a pre-authorized debit agreement.
The withdrawals are national. The benefits are regional.
I am an exhausted, overlooked Canadian.
You’re not building this for me or my family.
You're just sending me the bill.
Signed,
Your most reluctantly reliable revenue stream,
Melanie in Saskatchewan
Today, I rose in the House to speak on Bill C-9.
Bill C-9 is a direct attack on fundamental freedoms in this country.
I will stand with the Canadians who wrote to me and with faith communities across this country.
I cannot and will not support Bill C-9.
There is an epidemic of transgender violence spreading across the West. Today, a transgender school shooter murdered 9 innocent victims and injured 25 more in Tumbler Ridge, BC. My heart breaks for the victims, their families, and the community. But I can’t stop at condolences — we need solutions.
Look at the pattern:
Aberdeen Rite Aid Facility in Maryland.
Club Q in Colorado.
Highlands Ranch School in Colorado.
Annunciation Catholic School in Minnesota.
Covenant School in Tennessee.
Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia.
This epidemic of violence will continue until we change our society’s response to transgender ideology.
When people are a danger to themselves and others, the common sense solution is to treat their mental illness rather than affirm dangerous delusions.
I encourage parents and teachers to help fight the transgender violence epidemic themselves — since their government is obviously uninterested in doing so.
This issue is entrenched at every level of our education and healthcare systems.
If a minor in your care expresses a desire to transition their gender identity, help them. Offer compassion. Affirming delusions is neglect, not care.
Our kids are perfect just the way they are. So tell them plainly: they don’t need to change their name or experiment with harmful drugs and surgeries to be loved.
Real compassion is affirming their real identity — affirming that they don’t need to change.
I pray for the victims and their families. I pray that Tumbler Ridge’s community can recover from this traumatic event. I hope that one day Canadians can feel safe again in their schools, homes, and workplaces.
Let today’s senseless tragedy become a catalyst for love and healing.
heart-rending | ˈhärtˌrendiNG
adjective
The Father (and Mother) of one of the victims of the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting share their thoughts and feelings as parents:
"[0:36] Sorry, can I just say something? I just want to touch on this ... When I open social media, I'm seeing lots of stuff about the shooter. I am seeing ideology stuff and I don't think any of that matters when there's nine (9) other souls that were lost that day: 7 kids, 2 adults. And we need to put their pictures up on social media."
AS A FMR RCMP (Ret'd), I hope that @BCRCMP@BCRCMPMedia@CommrRCMPGRC@rcmpgrcpolice see this video.
I am at once ⟨ANGERED and APPALLED⟩ by the utter tone-deafness and insensitivity of the recent statements made by Deputy Commissioner Dwayne McDonald, BC RCMP Commanding Officer and by the ludicrous word construct ("Gunperson") of Superintendent Superintendent Ken Floyd, BC RCMP North District Commander/Officer-in-Charge OIC).
IT IS ABSOLUTELY INEXCUSABLE THAT both of these senior ranking RCMP Officers managed to not only irretrievably fumble the intent of their messaging but (and I'll say this as 'politely as possible ' ) with their ham-fisted and misplaced deferential treatment shown toward the shooter (and gender identification) INSTEAD OF endeavouring to consciously extend genuine human empathy to the victims and their families, friends and the small, tightly-knit and now grieving community of Tumbler Ridge, BC forever changed by this horrific crime.
Listen to this father.
His 12-year-old daughter was murdered.
And his message to police is simple:
Focus on the victims.
Not on using the KILLER’S preferred pronouns.
Canada deserves so much better
Calling a male mass murderer "she" while families plan funerals for their children is nothing short of disgusting and infuriating
The regime media’s delusion is downright dangerous , a full deep dive into this madness tonight @rumblevideo 6 pm et
There will be thousands of court cases of children who were mutilated by evil doctors, modern day Mengeles.
The schools, psychologists/psychiatrists and state officials who facilitated this will pay dearly too.
I have fought land acknowledgements for years. Now the Kamloops band is demanding half of the city and half the city’s revenue because STUPID WHITE PEOPLE have convinced them the land is unceded.
Mr. Carney,
You stood at a podium yesterday and told Canadians that this country thrives because we are Canadian.
It was a beautiful line. Polished. Applause ready. It was also insulting.
Because it confuses thriving with surviving, and only someone who has never had to do either could make that mistake so confidently.
Canadians do not thrive the way you describe.
We endure. We adapt. We make do. We get through.
We get up early not because it is inspiring, but because bills do not care about speeches. We work late not because it is fulfilling, but because standing still is not an option. We shovel our own driveways because help is expensive, unreliable, or nonexistent, and we still show up on time.
That is not thriving, Mr. Carney. That is survival with dignity.
We survive when systems fail. We adjust when costs rise. We absorb broken promises and carry on anyway. There is no applause line for that, because survival does not photograph well.
We survive because farmers plant knowing Ottawa might change the rules halfway through the season. Because tradespeople build while being taxed, regulated, and lectured by people who have never risked payroll on a slow month. Because parents budget groceries like a tactical exercise and still manage to raise decent kids without permission from a federal narrative.
We survive because Canadians are practical. When something breaks, we fix it ourselves. Not because we want to, but because waiting for government help usually means waiting forever. Or being told the service exists on paper.
You speak of thriving while Canadians quietly ask which services you are referring to.
Healthcare that exists in theory. Housing plans that never house anyone. Affordability programs that arrive long after the damage is done.
We survive because communities step in when institutions step back. Not because systems are strong, but because neighbours are. We rely on each other because experience has taught us not to rely on governments that measure success by how well they explain failure.
We survive because small businesses stayed open through lockdowns, fines, shortages, and paperwork that multiplied faster than revenue. Because families absorbed inflation while being told it was temporary. Because seniors adapted quietly to shrinking purchasing power while politicians assured them relief was coming.
You call this thriving.
Canadians call it getting through.
We survive because we know how to get through winters. Literal ones and political ones. We stock up. We brace ourselves. We do not expect rescue, especially from people who have never had to wait for it.
We survive because we question authority. Just ask the Freedom Convoy. Canadians have an instinctive allergy to being ordered around by people who exempt themselves from the consequences. We remember what happens when compliance is mistaken for unity.
We survive because we do not confuse slogans with reality, no matter how high the elbows go or how loudly we are told to clap. We know the difference between leadership and performance. Between patriotism and appropriation.
And while governments waste money, restrict rights, censor speech, divide citizens, and congratulate themselves, Canadians quietly keep the country functioning anyway.
That is not thriving. That is resilience under pressure.
So when you tell Canadians they thrive because they are Canadian, it lands differently on those of us who have actually lived it.
Because confusing survival with thriving is easy if you have never had to survive.
And that is the problem.
Mark Carney speaks of thriving from a life buffered by boards, institutions, and global forums. A life spent above the consequences does not teach you the difference between getting ahead and just getting through.
Those who have never had to survive often mistake endurance for success, and then try to take credit for it.
So no, Mr. Carney.
Canadians are not thriving because of you.
We are surviving despite a government that made life harder, more expensive, more divided, and then attempted to dress our endurance up as its achievement.
Our resilience is not your accomplishment.
It is proof of a people who carried each other while being lectured by someone who does not recognize the difference.
And Canadians are done applauding the performance.
My advice to you Mr. Carney?
Before defining Canadians, try surviving as one.
As always,
Melanie in Saskatchewan
Link in description and below👇🏻
@MarkJCarney@liberal_party #cdnpoli