@mattforney Important to note that the vast majority of these are those who overstayed a student or temp worker visa which should be an automatic rejection. It should be a very short list that is updated frequently as to where asylum claims will even be looked at. The system is designed etc.
More than one X account in Canada has been targeted for posting osint exposing CCP political networks in Canada. Be careful out there. Also, when one gets to a level, interacting on DM becomes a risk. @nikitabier
Any business that takes TFWs can afford to be taxed 30k per worker. The TFW program needs to be shut down completely all of the people that came here remigrated home and then all the businesses that took the workers need to be punitively punished.
They’re panicking. Now is the time to boycott Walmart Canada, McDonald’s Canada, Shoppers Drug Mart, Loblaws, and every other corporate giant that has eliminated entry level jobs once available to young people and seniors through temporary foreign workers.
Great piece by @HadleyFreeman in Britain’s @thetimes about the Great unmarked graves social panic of 2021-26. The story makes Canadians look like gullible idiots, but it’s a valuable international case study in mass hysteria & journalistic incompetence
https://t.co/KiibJJ8HYB
CHARLEBOIS: The Canada Royal Milk story Ottawa doesn't want to explain📷
-Canadians deserve to know how much public money has been committed to the project-
The facility was never primarily designed to serve Canadian consumers. Early planning documents projected that approximately 85% of production would be exported to China. Canada was expected to account for only a small fraction of sales. In other words, from the outset, Kingston was envisioned as an export platform.
The documents also strongly suggest that exports have already occurred to markets including China and potentially the United States.
That fact alone raises important questions. And all of this is occurring while Canada continues to face periodic baby formula shortages and Canadian parents are paying the price. Over the past five years alone, baby formula prices have increased by more than 70% in Canada.
That is why newly released government records related to Canada Royal Milk in Kingston, Ont. deserve far more attention than they have received.
The story began a few years ago, when construction started on what would become Canada’s largest infant formula manufacturing facility. Owned by Chinese dairy giant Feihe, the project was celebrated as a major investment in Canada’s dairy sector.
After years of regulatory reviews and approvals, the company received authorization from Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency in March 2024. Production began shortly thereafter, and in July 2024 Canada Royal Milk officially launched its Niuriss infant formula brand.
On the surface, it looks like a success story. Jobs were created. Manufacturing capacity was added. Canadian farmers gained another customer for their milk. The company invested heavily in Canada.
But newly released documents reveal a much larger story.
What the documents reveal
The facility was never primarily designed to serve Canadian consumers. Early planning documents projected that approximately 85% of production would be exported to China. Canada was expected to account for only a small fraction of sales. In other words, from the outset, Kingston was envisioned as an export platform.
The documents also strongly suggest that exports have already occurred to markets including China and potentially the United States.
That fact alone raises important questions. And all of this is occurring while Canada continues to face periodic baby formula shortages and Canadian parents are paying the price. Over the past five years alone, baby formula prices have increased by more than 70% in Canada.
For decades, Canadians have been told that supply management exists to ensure domestic food security, protect Canadian farmers, and reduce dependence on foreign markets. Yet here we have a Chinese-owned processor operating within one of Canada’s most protected agricultural sectors, purchasing milk produced under a quota-protected system while pursuing opportunities beyond Canada’s borders.
The issue is not legality. There is no evidence that Canada Royal Milk has violated any law, regulation, or trade commitment.
The issue is consistency.
How much public money has been spent?
Canadians also deserve to know how much public money has been committed to the project. Public records show that at least $24 million in federal support has been provided. Newly released documents indicate the company sought additional assistance through Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s Supply Management Processing Investment Fund, while portions of the records remain redacted.
Questions that need answers
Canadians deserve answers to a few straightforward questions.
How much taxpayer money has ultimately been invested in the project?
How much supply-managed Canadian milk is being used to manufacture products destined for foreign markets?
What volumes have already been exported, and to which countries?
And perhaps most importantly: If supply management is about food sovereignty, why are Canadians being asked to subsidize a Chinese-owned dairy processor exporting products made from quota-protected Canadian milk?
Supply management remains one of the most politically protected policies in Canada. Liberals defend it. Conservatives rarely challenge it. The Bloc Quebecois treats it as untouchable. Yet public confidence in any public policy depends on transparency.
Canadians who pay a premium every time they buy dairy products deserve to know who benefits from the system, how it is being used, and whether public investments remain aligned with its original purpose.
This is really an accountability story. And before Canada enters another round of trade negotiations, Ottawa should be able to answer a simple question: If supply management is designed to protect Canadian food sovereignty, why are Canadians helping finance a Chinese-owned dairy plant whose original business model relied overwhelmingly on exports?
At the moment, Canadians only know part of the answer. That should concern us all.
Sylvain Charlebois is director of the Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University, co-host of The Food Professor Podcast. FROM: Moose On The Loose contributor Debbie Peters on Facebook.
@PierrePoilievre@MelissaLantsman@AndrewScheer@POTUS@realDonaldTrump@JDVance@NDP@BlocQuebecois@yfblanchet@fordnation@CPC_HQ @AndewLawton
🚨 The same judge that called this a "heinous crime of violence" -- praised his remorse and reduced his sentence.
A woman was beaten with a baseball bat in her bedroom after attackers kicked down her front door, all while her young children hid in terror.
Normally this offender would likely have faced a sentence of five years or more. Instead, his sentence was substantially reduced because he made himself better.
What about the family that lives in fear that their home will never be safe again?
It's time our justice system STOP being more concerned with the future prospects of violent offenders than the LIFELONG consequences endured by victims!
CBC: "Oh, you killed 16 people? A fifth chance at avoiding deportation is more than appropriate."
ALSO THE CBC: "Oh, you were falsely accused of sexual assault? No fresh start for you."
💥REPORT: Iraqi refugee turned Toronto Police Officer Parsa Hazeri has been charged with sexually assaulting a minor/child luring, and suspended without pay.
Immigration Canada is a national security risk.
This is the wildest World Cup story yet. If someone in Toronto sells a ticket above face value they get fined $25,000 yet the city of Toronto bought 3,500 World Cup tickets early and then sold them to taxpayers at a markup as a “revenue generation strategy.” What the hell man.
🇨🇦 Canada’s youth unemployment is now worse than:
— The 1990s recession
— The 2008 financial crisis
No war. No pandemic. No external shock.
Just policy.
Thank you @liberal_party 🚨
I long for the days when we can go back to squabbling between Anglo and Franco Canadians.
But right now we need to put aside our difference and unite in defense of our shared heritage.
Remigration is our shared struggle to protect what our ancestors built.
This is central to CUSMA negotiations.
“Canada’s border isn’t just broken by federal incompetence at managing vast obvious fraud - it’s become a global magnet for the worst criminal and terror syndicates in the world now.
Canada is now the #1 source nation - over 80pc - of all terrorists interdicted at US borders.”
This nanny position in Richmond is being offered through the temporary foreign worker program at twenty dollars and sixty cents an hour. It raises the question of what specific qualifications or availability issues prevent hiring from the local labour pool for this role. It also prompts consideration of whether the wage level aligns with what the employer claims is necessary to attract workers domestically. If you know any Canadians who might be interested in this nanny position, pass it along so they can apply, and share it in relevant Facebook groups or on X to help more people see these opportunities.
Repost to help more Canadians see this.
https://t.co/H23XecK571
💥PROJECT JETSETTER: Durham Police just arrested 46 foreign criminals and laid 1,400+ charges in a multi-million-dollar organized tourist fraud ring.
Canada’s open borders have welcomed international thieves to loot our country blind.
Immigration Canada is a national security risk.
I’m trying to think of a foreign democracy that will simply give me tens of thousands of dollars in grants, & I get it whether I finish the degree I’m getting the grant for, & I get it whether I can find work or not.
This isn’t even debated in most of these countries. Want to come to school in Japan or Spain? We can talk about loans - we don’t give grants. And we don’t guarantee a job. That’s life.
But Canada? We’re being “discriminatory”? It’s unreal.
https://t.co/zytLMGiFcm
New information about China's Canada Royal Milk in Kingston...
EDC, a federal crown corporation, had loaned Canada Royal Milk between $100 million and $250 million to support foreign direct investment.
This story is getting better and better.
Tim Hortons has permanently banned @RebelNewsOnline from every restaurant, drive-thru, parking lot, and corporate office in Canada - all because Rebel journalists dared to ask about Tim's Temporary Foreign Worker hiring.
At least 90 Tim Hortons locations are still actively recruiting Temporary Foreign Workers, according to the federal government's own job bank. Many of those postings are for entry-level positions.
You know who is not banned from reporting at Tim Hortons? You.
Let every good Canadian attend their local Tim Hortons store and report about the number of foreigners behind the counter, cleanliness, and health issues.
Because it's not just about Tim's betraying Canadians with jobs lost... it's about so many of their Temporary Foreign Workers who come from cultures where millions still defecate in the open and don't have even a basic understanding of hygienic toilet practices and proper food handling.
We want our Canadian Tim Hortons back - clean, friendly, good coffee and a fair sandwich.
That's not going to happen until they hire Canadians exclusively.
Meanwhile, "Would you like a side of flies or a cockroach with that Sir?"