I will have a discussion with anyone about any subject. But the moment you descend into name-calling and other childish behaviour, you will be muted. If you threaten, you will be blocked. Just so we understand each other.
This is not a coincidence, it’s a well coordinated plan to control what people can see online.
This is how it starts, it’s always under the guise of “keeping children safe”
If they are willing to ban entire age groups from accessing apps & websites, they are willing to ban everyone else from them when they see fit.
Inch by inch, day by day they have inserted their tentacles into every aspect of our lives.
“Most parents agree” “Canadians want” “Canadians have been asking”
The lines of snakes pushing through their agenda.
Your government is making Canada more racist, not less.
Priority hospital parking is usually for disability, mobility, medical need, or emergency access.
So what exactly are Yukon Hospitals and the government implying?
Race-based access to public hospital parking is not reconciliation.
It is racism with a nicer sign.
Guess everyone will be self-identifying now.
FACT CHECK: Nearly 70% of ICE arrests are criminal illegal aliens charged or convicted of a crime in the U.S. Many of the individuals the media counts as 'non-criminals' are actually terrorists, human rights abusers, and foreign fugitives who just don't have a rap sheet in the U.S.
We are going after the worst of the worst, including gang members, pedophiles, and rapists.
Samuel Davis (17) tried to buy tobacco in San Antonio, Texas and was denied by the store clerk because he wasn't 18 and therefor legally prohibited from buying it 🚬
Mr. Davis then stabbed the 25 year old store clerk *multiple times* until the clerk died, choking to death on his own blood, because he wouldn't sell him tobacco 🔪
Mr. Davis was then arrested and his bond has been set at $500,000.
Taxpayers will now spend months/years on his criminal trial and then spend millions of dollars housing him in a taxpayer funded jail.
There are multiple angles of security camera footage showing Mr. Davis killing the clerk; guilt isn't a question.
Advocate for the death penalty (quickly) in cases like this accordingly...
#CityLife #SanAntonio #texas #crime #3rdWorld #ego #IQtest #urban #stabbing #teens #democrats #Genesis96 #savages
Absolutely not! This has nothing to do with protecting anyone. It has everything to do with digital ID which the globalists wants so they can track us. This is the pre-cursor to the surveillance state. No! A thousand times no!
HARD STOP 🛑
Mark Miller says Protecting Kids is not a 🇺🇸🇨🇦 bargaining chip. We draw the LINE at kids.
Regardless what Trump says we will not back down on Digital ID (face recognition, govt ID upload ect) to access social media for all ADULTS.
President Trump told the New York Times the deal allows Iran to enrich uranium for non-military purposes. Cue the left and Obama rushing in to cast doubt, claiming it's "not significantly different" from his old deal that got ripped up.
Fox's Marc Thiessen just torched that narrative:
"It's the exact same deal... except for the 14,000 military strikes that buried their entire nuclear program under rubble so deep the Iranians can't even reach it.
We destroyed 82% of their defense industrial base.
Sunk their entire Navy.
Grounded their entire Air Force.
And oh yeah, the Ayatollah, Qasem Soleimani, and the top two tiers of their leadership are DEAD.
Other than that... totally the same as Obama's deal 😂"
HUGE differences:
Strait of Hormuz traffic resuming after the blockade is lifted
Nuclear "dust" from Operation Midnight Hammer being removed in the next 60 days
Sanctions relief only as they comply (performance-based)
Ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon
Trump didn't just sign a piece of paper, he broke their regime's back first, then negotiated from overwhelming strength. Obama gave them cash and breathing room. Trump gave them rubble and reality.
This is what winning looks like.
Tommy Robinson has just walked out of court with a victory that is already being called one of the most explosive free-speech moments in Britain.
The terrorism-related case against him — linked to his refusal to hand over his phone PIN to UK police — was thrown out after the judge ruled the stop unlawful and reportedly said Robinson had been targeted because of his political views.
This was not just about a phone. This was about power, politics, journalism, and whether the state can treat someone like a national security threat simply because it dislikes what they say.
Robinson says he refused to unlock his phone to protect journalistic sources. The state treated it as a terrorism matter. The court, according to Robinson’s reaction, saw something far more disturbing: political targeting.
Then came the detail that made the story explode worldwide: **Elon Musk reportedly helped finance Robinson’s legal defense**, stepping in where others stayed silent and turning the case into a global battle over free expression. Robinson thanked Musk publicly, asking why it had taken an American businessman to fight for justice in Britain.
“First of all, thank you, Elon Musk,” Robinson said, before adding that he was targeted because of his political beliefs and that counterterrorism police were allegedly used to get access to his phone as a journalist.
For supporters, this ruling is a brutal warning to the establishment: if terrorism powers can be used against controversial speech today, who will be next tomorrow? Critics will still call Robinson divisive, but this case has forced a bigger question onto the table — do rights only apply to people the government likes?
McDonald's announced they're replacing cashiers with kiosks in California just after the $20 minimum wage kicked in. Shocking to absolutely no one who understands basic economics. When you artificially price labor above its market value, employers find substitutes. Machines, automation, or they simply eliminate positions entirely.
The teenagers who desperately need that first job experience? Gone. The single mother trying to re-enter the workforce after years away? Priced out by someone with more skills. You've just created a legal barrier that prevents the least skilled workers from competing on the one thing they had going for them: willingness to work for less while they build experience.
Politicians pat themselves on the back for "helping workers" while unemployment among young minorities hits double digits. The workers who keep their jobs benefit (temporarily), but the invisible victims, those who never get hired in the first place, don't make headlines. Economics doesn't care about your good intentions.
There are over 100 mosques in Toronto, but they decided to pray in the middle of a busy street, blocking commuters and essencial services like ambulances and fire trucks. Why?!
🇨🇦 76% of Canada’s exports go to one country.
Not two. Not five. One.🇺🇸
📊 16.8% of our entire GDP depends on a single trade deal. 2.6 million jobs exist because America buys our stuff.
When CUSMA came under pressure in 2025 — with the deal still in place — exports fell 26% in a single quarter.
Manufacturing lost 51,800 jobs. Construction spending collapsed by a quarter.
⚠️ That was with the deal intact.
The July 2026 review is weeks away.
Canada wasn’t even in the room when the US rewrote the auto rules in Mexico City. Japanese, European, and Korean cars now get better tariff treatment than vehicles built in Ontario.
Ottawa’s response? Diversification.
📉 Non-US export growth in 2025 was mostly gold prices. Not new markets. Not new partners. Not new leverage. Gold went up. We called it a strategy.
🛢️ Alberta depends on US trade for 34% of its economy. New Brunswick: 33%. Saskatchewan: 25%.
This isn’t Bay Street’s problem. Every province bleeds if this breaks.
Canada doesn’t have a Plan B.
We have a deal, a deadline, and a neighbour who knows exactly how desperate we are.
That’s not a trade partnership. That’s a hostage situation with paperwork. 🔒
#Canada
🇨🇦 76% of Canada’s exports go to one country.
Not two. Not five. One.🇺🇸
📊 16.8% of our entire GDP depends on a single trade deal. 2.6 million jobs exist because America buys our stuff.
When CUSMA came under pressure in 2025 — with the deal still in place — exports fell 26% in a single quarter.
Manufacturing lost 51,800 jobs. Construction spending collapsed by a quarter.
⚠️ That was with the deal intact.
The July 2026 review is weeks away.
Canada wasn’t even in the room when the US rewrote the auto rules in Mexico City. Japanese, European, and Korean cars now get better tariff treatment than vehicles built in Ontario.
Ottawa’s response? Diversification.
📉 Non-US export growth in 2025 was mostly gold prices. Not new markets. Not new partners. Not new leverage. Gold went up. We called it a strategy.
🛢️ Alberta depends on US trade for 34% of its economy. New Brunswick: 33%. Saskatchewan: 25%.
This isn’t Bay Street’s problem. Every province bleeds if this breaks.
Canada doesn’t have a Plan B.
We have a deal, a deadline, and a neighbour who knows exactly how desperate we are.
That’s not a trade partnership. That’s a hostage situation with paperwork. 🔒
#Canada
🚨 JUST IN: Iran did NOT GET what they wanted in President Trump's strong Iran deal — the US is NOT leaving the region, and Iran is getting $0 in unfrozen assets unless they comply
The Strait of Hormuz is set to OPEN fully on FRIDAY 👏🏻
"They wanted US forces to leave the Middle East and abandon all bases. That's not going to happen...even if there is a drawdown of the military, there will still be thousands of forces prepared."
"There is this economic leverage, they won't get sanctions relief they want and need if the US doesn't get everything they want." @TreyYingst
“One of the main problems in the countryside is dogs. Muslims don’t like dogs.”
Liberal commentator complains that the British countryside is racist and Muslims avoid going there because too many people walk their dogs, which are haram in Islam.
These people are truly insane.
Classic Konstantin Kisin street interview.
Bloke marching with a big sign demanding a “socialist intifada” for the New Workers’ Party.
Kisin: “What’s a socialist intifada?”
Bloke: “If I’m being honest with you, I just got this at the stand over there… I don’t actually know the definition of the word intifada.”😂🤣
Zero clue what he’s chanting for, but the sign looked revolutionary so why not? Peak protest cosplay.
The slogans are loud, the understanding… nonexistent.
Much love and respect to @KonstantinKisin@triggerpod 👊🏼
Canada’s institutional obsession with land acknowledgements and historical guilt has officially jumped the shark.
Every university lecture, corporate meeting, school event, and government memo now seems to begin with the same rehearsed confession about whose land we are supposedly standing on. It has become a civic ritual, complete with liturgy, original sin, and mandatory public piety.
Strip away the administrative sermonizing and the whole thing rests on a very shaky version of history.
We are expected to pretend pre-contact North America was a peaceful, static, eco-friendly paradise where distinct peoples lived in permanent harmony until Europeans arrived and ruined everything.
That is not history. That is mythology.
Worse, it is patronizing. It strips Indigenous peoples of their full humanity by pretending they were somehow immune to the normal forces that shaped every other society on earth: ambition, conflict, trade, migration, alliance, conquest, revenge, and expansion.
The actual history of this continent was not a postcard. It was dynamic, complex, and often brutal.
The Haudenosaunee expansion during the Beaver Wars reshaped huge parts of what is now Southern Ontario. The Huron-Wendat, Neutral, and Erie peoples were devastated, displaced, or absorbed through war and political domination.
On the plains, the Blackfoot Confederacy, the Iron Confederacy, and others fought long struggles over territory, trade, horses, resources, and survival. Peoples moved. Borders shifted. Alliances formed and collapsed. Some groups conquered. Some retreated. Some disappeared into larger political orders.
History did not begin when Cartier sailed up the St. Lawrence.
This land was already a theatre of power, movement, conflict, diplomacy, and displacement long before Europeans arrived.
The modern Canadian narrative treats European colonisation as a unique cosmic crime, as if conquest and territorial displacement were invented in 1492. They were not. Europeans arrived as a technologically dominant global power and did what powerful groups had done across human history, including on this continent.
That does not make the suffering harmless. It does not erase broken treaties, residential schools, forced relocations, or government abuse. Those things happened, and they matter.
But a serious country cannot build its future on a childish version of the past.
Every habitable part of the world has been taken, lost, fought over, inherited, traded, defended, and taken again. The people Europeans encountered were not frozen in moral perfection. They were human beings living inside history, not outside it.
The guilt industry does not repair the past. It often paralyzes the present.
Canada cannot move forward by treating itself as a permanent crime scene or by dividing citizens into inherited moral categories of “settler” and “Indigenous.”
We can tell the truth about cruelty, conquest, broken promises, and injustice without pretending history had a correct stopping point right before European ships appeared.
A mature country does not need ritual guilt.
It needs honesty, equal citizenship, legal clarity, and the courage to build a future instead of endlessly prosecuting the past.