This is just messed up!
Do we need to use an officer's death in this political foolishness?
The suspect who took PC Pierzchala's life was already violating a lifetime weapons ban and multiple bail conditions.
The laws to keep him locked up already existed.
They were not enforced! Simple.
This isn't reform, it's using a tragedy to cover up systemic incompetence.
Maybe 2 out of the 80 laws will make a small difference!
The same goals could have been achieved under existing laws, and they all know it!
Politics in policing!
It is no wonder this country is not safe and a joke to the rest of the world!
Do Better!
@mark_slapinski Because??? Those “wealth tax”ed people actually created wealth within a tax system that doesn’t want them to succeed? How much of the wealth the person you reposted, @SenWarren, has come from providing jobs to the people who pay the taxes vs. a form of insider trading ?
@ScottAdamsSays So stupid but so true. Corporations rating its employees on surveys are aiming for the lowest common denominator it can profit from. Quite lazy IMO. They’re just looking a $$ and nothing more.
@MarkJCarney “Lipstick on a pig” is useless. Correcting the faults & eliminating the cause of the rupture will actually support the “build”. The scars of the rupture will always remain but a sincere repair can create so much more than ignoring the cause of the original problem ever will
@BasedTorba Wasn’t religion and state supposedly separated?The Jewish religion should have nothing to do with the politics of its believers. They aren’t the same. I’m glad the discussion is happening.
@MarkJCarney Your governments’ push to pass recent bills have denied every Canadian the guarantee provided in the Charter. I have a feeling you’ll be notified of it.
Danielle went to a hospital for a cough. 41 days later, she was dead. The hospital claimed she had COVID, put her on Remdesivir & 32 days on a ventilator. She had 5x more fentanyl in her system than reported in George Floyd.
Her mom is suing for homicide.
Life in Canada...
A 6 pack of sausages, some deli meat, and a brick of cream cheese: $35.
Receipt says I "saved" almost $13.
So full price was almost $48?????
Is this real life?
@MarkJCarney said to judge him on grocery prices.
OK. I'm judging: life without parole motherfucker!
2/6
🇧🇦 Bosnia: The Original Sin
In 1999, Kathryn Bolkovac, a Nebraska cop, signed on with DynCorp to work for the UN’s International Police Task Force in Bosnia. The pay was good—$85,000 for a short contract—and she had just lost custody of her kids in a divorce. She needed the money.
What she found was a fully operational child rape and trafficking ring run under the nose of the United Nations.
The facts Bolkovac uncovered, later substantiated by the US Army CID:
- DynCorp employees were purchasing women and children as sex slaves, keeping them in private residences
- One DynCorp site supervisor admitted to raping two girls and videotaping it
- Employees openly boasted in training sessions—before even deploying—about where to find “really nice 12- to 15-year-olds”
- Roughly 30-40% of the clients and 70% of the revenue from trafficking in Bosnia came from international personnel—SFOR, UN police, humanitarian workers
- Local police confirmed that trafficking in the region started with the arrival of the international peacekeepers
When Bolkovac sent her findings up the chain to 50+ people, including UN Special Representative Jacques Klein, the response was a masterclass in institutional protection. She was demoted to a desk job, then fired for allegedly falsifying time sheets. Another whistleblower, Ben Johnston, was fired too.
Both sued. Both won. But here’s the part that should make your skin crawl: zero DynCorp employees or UN personnel were ever prosecuted. Not one. The jurisdictional shell game worked perfectly—the US Army said civilians weren’t their problem, the Bosnian police weren’t sure about immunity under the Dayton Accords, and DynCorp simply fired seven employees and repatriated others. At least two men involved in the trafficking were later promoted to upper management.
DynCorp paid Bolkovac a measly $153,000 in damages—the cost of doing business.