@Megatron_ron@grok how many Germans are without a family doctor? what is the average wait time in Germany while waiting in the emergency room? short answers only.
An Ottawa man?
His name is Roland Nduwayo, 68 from Rwanda.
An Ottawa man?
He's been Living in Canada illegally under a false identity since 1996.
An Ottawa man?
The Rwandan authorities issued an international arrest warrant related to allegations concerning the individual’s role in the 1994 Genocide in Rwanda.
Great reporting Ted... https://t.co/D0FTMkAyXQ
Goof
Rebranding DEI as EDI doesn't fix it.
This policy still judges people by race, gender, or identity checkboxes instead of merit, skills, and character.
Treating individuals differently based on immutable traits is textbook discrimination.
Its racist by definition.
True inclusion means equality of opportunity, not engineered outcomes.
So congratulations i guess? for further dividing Canadians while pushing racist narratives.
Not a good look for a federal service
Trauma informs priorities (PTSD is real), but it biases toward visible, symbolic restrictions over root causes.
Data favors targeted interventions (e.g., prosecuting illegal possession, addressing smuggling) over broad "assault" bans that redefine common rifles like the SKS.
Policy grounded in stats beats perpetual cycles of "do something" after tragedies.
Every post you make is biased, reactionary and unfounded. Further highlighting how disproportionally disconnected you are from truth and reason.
How desperate must you be? trying to ram through an agenda which damn near every police force, province and citizen has outright rejected.
Why is everyone against you? because you're mental. You've created a Costic ideology from trauma. Which should raise alarm bells about your involvement in advising the government on policies and decisions.
Nobody is saying what happened on December 6, 1989 wasn't horrific. But whatever noble cause you began with sure isn't present now.
What will you attack when all the guns are gone but your PTSD remains?
@globeandmail@grok provide Canadian crime stats starting 2014/15.
how much are the following up; Opioid deaths? sexual assault? homicides? and violent crime? short answers only please.
What a lying POS..
Violent crime is up 50%
Homicides 28%
Sexual assaults 75%
Opioid deaths 75%
The Crime Severity Index (which weights more serious crimes) rose steadily after 2014/2015 lows, with increases in violent crime severity for much of the decade
This dick for a head is up here pandering like the entire country isn't fed up with the government "taking charge"
https://t.co/gBkQF2xffe
You guys probably forgot about all these you let in right?
Manickavasagam Suresh: Entered Canada around 1990, granted Convention refugee status in 1991 (citing fear tied to Tamil independence activities). CSIS later alleged he was an LTTE member and fundraiser. Deportation proceedings began in 1995 on security grounds. His case reached the Supreme Court of Canada (Suresh v. Canada, 2002), which addressed deportation to risk of torture. He remained in Canada for years under supervision despite the allegations; deportation efforts continued into the 2010s with mixed court outcomes.
https://t.co/hLXZ27WE7Z
Ahmed Ressam?
Under questioning, Ressam admitted that he planned to bomb Los Angeles International Airport on the eve of the millennium celebrations. The investigation also revealed that Ressam had attended al Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan and was part of a terrorist cell in Canada.
https://t.co/SXI4w0sRag
Omar Khadar?
was charged with five war crimes under the U.S. Military Commissions Act of 2006. These charges included murder in violation of the laws of war, attempted murder in violation of the laws of war, conspiracy, providing material support for terrorism, and spying.
https://t.co/y4r4EZGshF
or maybe all the LTTE trash you've let in?
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam was designated a terrorist entity by Canada in 2006. During the Sri Lankan civil war, large numbers of Tamils fled and claimed refugee status in Canada (1980s–2010s). Many claims succeeded on humanitarian grounds.
1986 boat arrivals: Over 150 Tamils rescued off Newfoundland were granted ministerial permits/landed immigrant status after security concerns (including possible LTTE links) were raised but not fully blocking entry at the time.
MV Sun Sea (2010): ~490 Tamil migrants arrived by boat. The government alleged significant LTTE membership or support among passengers, but only about 11 were ultimately found inadmissible specifically on LTTE membership grounds. Most claims proceeded, with many accepted.
Manickavasagam Suresh: Entered Canada around 1990, granted Convention refugee status in 1991 (citing fear tied to Tamil independence activities). CSIS later alleged he was an LTTE member and fundraiser. Deportation proceedings began in 1995 on security grounds. His case reached the Supreme Court of Canada (Suresh v. Canada, 2002), which addressed deportation to risk of torture. He remained in Canada for years under supervision despite the allegations; deportation efforts continued into the 2010s with mixed court outcomes.
https://t.co/hLXZ27WE7Z
Can we... for once just get a reporter or journalist who isn't ramming some pre-determined agenda through?
His manifesto highlighted hatred for;
Women;
Police/law enforcement;
Jews/Zionists;
Capitalism, bourgeoisie, business leaders, politicians, elite bankers, billionaires;
Porn industry (companies, conventions, actors, actresses).
Pickup artists, plastic surgeons, crypto leaders, real estate firms.
And what did he valued ?
Marxist/communist figures: Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Robespierre, Saint-Just, Babeuf.
Advocated studying their writings for revolution, abolishing private property, and overthrowing the system.
Id say he had a whole lot of hate. Not just directed towards women
Public Safety Canada claims they’re “committed to advancing a bill that strikes the right balance” on Bill C-22 between law enforcement tools and privacy/cybersecurity.
In reality, the government used a programming motion to force the SECU committee into an overnight session past midnight on June 17-18, blocking new amendments and limiting debate on a 100+ page bill with major surveillance implications.
Advocacy groups described the move as draconian for such a complex bill. Some tweaks were made (e.g. metadata retention cut to 6 months), but core powers faced minimal open scrutiny.
That’s not balancing....it’s bypassing it.
"72% support for ageverification bans on under-16s? Bullshit.
Ipsos polled just 1,088 Brits ONLINE in January. That's not 'the public'....
it's a tiny, self-selected slice pushed by loaded questions that ignore digital ID creep, VPNs, enforcement failures & free speech.
propaganda at its finest
@NBCNews but yet he's down with BlueSky? where the PEDOPHILES hang out in the open claiming they're 'minor attracted persons"
what the fuck happened to the world..
@grok below is a list of countries which use forced labor that Canada currently conducts business with. what does this mean for those countries? and didn't Canada just ink a new deal with China? short answers only please Bangladesh — Garments/textiles Brazil — Coffee, sugar cane, cattle, gold Cambodia — Garments, footwear China — Cotton, textiles/apparel, electronics, solar panels, tomatoes (especially Xinjiang-linked) Colombia — Gold, coffee Côte d’Ivoire — Cocoa Ghana — Cocoa, gold India — Garments, textiles, bricks, cotton Indonesia — Palm oil, garments, electronics components Malaysia — Rubber gloves, electronics, palm oil Mexico — Sugarcane, tomatoes, garments (some forced labour cases) Pakistan — Garments, textiles, bricks Peru — Gold, coffee Qatar — Construction/migrant labour (linked to some goods) Saudi Arabia — Migrant worker sectors (oil, construction inputs) Thailand — Seafood, electronics, garments Vietnam — Garments, footwear, electronics, seafood
@groke below is a list of countries which use forced labor that Canada currently conducts business with. what does this mean for those countries? and didn't Canada just ink a new deal with China? short answers only please
Bangladesh — Garments/textiles
Brazil — Coffee, sugar cane, cattle, gold
Cambodia — Garments, footwear
China — Cotton, textiles/apparel, electronics, solar panels, tomatoes (especially Xinjiang-linked)
Colombia — Gold, coffee Côte d’Ivoire — Cocoa
Ghana — Cocoa, gold
India — Garments, textiles, bricks, cotton
Indonesia — Palm oil, garments, electronics components
Malaysia — Rubber gloves, electronics, palm oil
Mexico — Sugarcane, tomatoes, garments (some forced labour cases)
Pakistan — Garments, textiles, bricks
Peru — Gold, coffee
Qatar — Construction/migrant labour (linked to some goods)
Saudi Arabia — Migrant worker sectors (oil, construction inputs)
Thailand — Seafood, electronics, garments
Vietnam — Garments, footwear, electronics, seafood
a list of all the countries that uses forced labour that Canada does business with;
Bangladesh — Garments/textiles
Brazil — Coffee, sugar cane, cattle, gold
Cambodia — Garments, footwear
China — Cotton, textiles/apparel, electronics, solar panels, tomatoes (especially Xinjiang-linked)
Colombia — Gold, coffee
Côte d’Ivoire — Cocoa
Ghana — Cocoa, gold
India — Garments, textiles, bricks, cotton
Indonesia — Palm oil, garments, electronics components
Malaysia — Rubber gloves, electronics, palm oil
Mexico — Sugarcane, tomatoes, garments (some forced labour cases)
Pakistan — Garments, textiles, bricks
Peru — Gold, coffee
Qatar — Construction/migrant labour (linked to some goods)
Saudi Arabia — Migrant worker sectors (oil, construction inputs)
Thailand — Seafood, electronics, garments
Vietnam — Garments, footwear, electronics, seafood
https://t.co/U9sBHI1RHb