I am aggressively pro America and deeply critical of Canada but Harrison is entirely right.
The Canadian government shouldn't capitulate like this, especially when it's the tax payer who will be footing the bill.
Sometimes good faith negations means bending a bit but it also means standing your ground when it's needed.
Canada belongs to US!
not the entire Third World.
Mass immigration is replacing our people, overwhelming our streets, and erasing our culture.
Blood and soil built this nation.
Open borders = national suicide.
Our people come first.
Trump: Get that JEW Bibi on the phone and tell him the fairy Ayatollah is HIS problem
Vance: We just have to get to the midterms. We just have to get to the midterms. We just have to get to the midterms. We just h
Marco Rubio Subplot:
Indeed, from the moment Virginia dropped its conciliatory attitude toward the Indians in 1622, every settler was supposed to possess a personal weapon for fighting Indians--that massive threat to public order
"From the Colony's earliest settlement, there was to be found in the hands of private citizens a large quantity of arms of every sort, which they were ready to use when summoned to resist an invasion. The need of such arms as the property, not of the public, but of the planters themselves, was an urgent one during almost every part of the Seventeenth century; for there was not a household residing in the frontier's vicinity which, in time of war, was not in constant apprehension of an Indian assault; and this fear was only slightly allayed in time of peace. But one instrument of protection against this treacherous foe existed, namely, the rifle, and this the colonist could employ with unerring skill. It was not, however, simply for defence against the savages that the gun was valued; during that early period, when the greater part of the country's surface was overgrown with the original forest, the settler was compelled to be on his guard against such fierce wild beasts as bears, leopards, and wolves, and he, no doubt, rarely entered the thick woods, even in the older divisions of Virginia, without such a weapon in his hand. A passionate love of hunting also induced the colonists of that day to purchase fowling pieces, which, in an emergency, could be turned against an enemy," Philip Alexander Bruce notes in The Institutional History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century
There was more to it than that, of course. They also were expected to participate in the militia and be drilled as an organized force, rather than just armed individuals. But being armed as individuals was critical to the colony's survival