There ain't no room
For the hopeless sinner
Who would hurt all mankind
Just to save his own
Have pity on those whose
Chances grow thinner
There's no hiding place
Against the Kingdom's throne
The day after Justin Trudeau claimed that the Indian government killed Hardeep Singh Nijjar and started a diplomatic mess, I made this video.
Turns out I was right, Nijjar was a Khalistani gangster killed by other gangsters likely due to some fight over nacro trafficking.
While the Soviet Red Army, with many Ukrainian soldiers, liberated Ukraine from Nazi occupation in World War II, a minority of Ukrainians collaborated with the Nazis.
🚨 Former Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland’s grandfather Mykhailo Chomiak was a despicable Nazi collaborator who edited the vile antisemitic propaganda newspaper Krakivski Visti during WW2.
🚨 The Liberal government under Mark Carney is shamelessly funding Zelensky’s reckless efforts to entangle NATO against Russia, courting World War III.
🚨 Mark Carney just announced another $900 million in support of this reckless war.
Over the past fifty years, the world has lost an area of Amazon Rainforest roughly the size of India.
That's equivalent to Uruguay every 5–7 years since 1970. Much of it is now baked laterite clay, as hard as concrete — and nothing can grow there now. Around 1.3–1.5 million km², or 20–24% of the original 6.7 million km², is gone — along with 10% of Earth's known species: 40,000 plants, 3,000 freshwater fish, 1,300 birds, 427 mammals and millions of insects (most are still unnamed).
The main drivers are expanding cattle ranching (70-80%), soy and palm plantations, illegal logging, mining and roads cut through the forest, like the Trans-Amazon Highway.
High-value hardwoods already vanish by the millions of cubic metres, but so does balsa for wind turbines. Between 2015 and 2025, an area of 20–25 million hectares was stripped in the western Amazon — much of it illegally.
A single 100-metre blade consumes 150 m³ of ancient forest. This 'balsa fever' has devastated watersheds in Ecuador and Peru, hitting protected areas and indigenous territories, feeding factories in China, Europe and the US.
Degradation and new frontiers in Bolivia and Peru keep the pressure on. Scientists warn that at 20–25% lost, large parts of the Amazon can flip irreversibly to dry savanna.
Every new turbine blade now carries a hidden Amazon invoice. That's the price of tragedy.
From 1964: "It seems readily apparent from all this that de-confederation would hurt Central Canada much more than the Prairies and the Maritimes."
The idea of de-confederation is interesting. Imagine if all the provinces decided to go independent. Which provinces would thrive and which would fail? Which provinces benefit the most from being part of confederation now and which provinces could do better if they weren't part of confederation?
What if we just simply stopped the equalization program? Yes, it would be difficult for provinces like Manitoba and Nova Scotia who benefit profusely from confederation to adapt, but much like what happens to a wealthy heiress in a movie who goes from riches to rags and must learn how to stand on her own two feet, these provinces could learn to take care of themselves too and develop stronger economies in the process.
And what of Quebec? Certainly life would have to change in Quebec; they'd be forced to finally develop their own resources to fund their lavish social agendas or they'd have to tighten their belts and start budgeting. It certainly would be interesting to see an independent Quebec learning how to actually be financially independent.
Of course, the 3 Western provinces would likely thrive on their own, finally able to be who and what they want to be, no longer held back by Laurentian Canada's constant power and control, no longer forced to put up with laws enforced and judged by the East, and with our economies no longer handcuffed by the ridiculousness of federal red tape. Oh how great De-confederation would be for the West.
@Electroversenet Unfortunately...
How the wind power boom is driving deforestation in the Amazon
Demand for balsa wood, which is used to make turbine blades, has spiked to the point that it is causing significant damage to indigenous communities in Ecuador https://t.co/BXFkQ0fnZh
A new nature plant study shows the average size of trees in the Amazon has been increasing by 3.2% every decade, directly tied to rising CO2 levels.
For years, models and media warned of Amazon collapse, but field data from almost 200 forest plots over 30 years show the opposite.
Both large canopy trees and smaller understory trees are growing bigger. In southwest Amazonia alone, between 11 and 17 gigatons of extra biomass are being added each year, carbon that the models didn't account for.
CO2 isn't killing the forest, it's feeding it.
The Amazon today is stronger, bigger and more resilient than it was a generation ago. The planet overall is greener, more CO2, more growth, more life.
Today’s CO₂ level of 426 ppm isn't a historic anomaly; it's simply a return to the same climate where complex life originally thrived.
While modern humans emerged during the lower-CO₂ cycles of the Pleistocene, our ancestral roots trace back 25 million years to the warm, ice-free Miocene, when CO₂ naturally sat between 400–500 ppm.
During the Last Glacial Maximum, CO₂ plummeted to 180 ppm — dangerously close to the 150 ppm absolute death line where most trees and crops face total photosynthetic failure.
Now it's back at 426 ppm, and the planet has narrowly avoided that collapse, with NASA satellites capturing a massive global expansion of green life.
CO₂ is the fundamental building block of the global food chain, and the historical data proves it is a catalyst for life, not a pollutant.
Humans easily tolerate these levels. Commercial greenhouses routinely pump CO₂ up to 1,250 ppm to boost food yields, and the US Navy submarine safety limit sits at a high 5,000 ppm.
The world isn't choking; it's breathing a sigh of relief.
IMAGE: Rainforest thriving in far north Queensland)
Being stupid and doing stupid stuff used to hurt.
People learned because there were consequences.
Now we spend more time protecting people from the consequences of their own actions than teaching them to make better decisions.
That’s a big part of what’s wrong with the world.
According to Abdul El Sayed, the Democrat Muslim nominee for US Senate in Michigan, Jews should expect to be attacked and anti-Semitism will be justified if they support Israel’s right to exist.
Abdul El Sayed refuses to say if Israel has a right to exist. And now he wants Jews to know they deserve to be victimized by anti-Semitism if they support Israel because he thinks it’s ok to harass people who support Israel because they are “tying themselves to Israel’s government”. 🤡
Disqualifying behavior. Another reason why Muslims should be banned from holding office in America.
I've noticed both Scott Moe and Danielle Smith lately, when criticizing federal policies, are careful to say "Trudeau Liberals" or "policies of the Trudeau government" and are careful to avoid criticizing Carney or the current government directly. Perhaps its just trying to be diplomatic on their part in an attempt to remain cordial but I find it infuriating because I see Mark Carney as far more dangerous and destructive to this country than Justin Trudeau ever was. Trudeau was an imbecile, a figurehead put in charge due to his family name, and I see Carney as the guy the WEF sent from corporate to replace him, to succeed where Trudeau floundered. Carney is a far worse villain than Trudeau.
From 1950: "Mr. Stuart said he deplored the continued centralization of industry in central Canada. He said the maritime provinces were forced through high tariffs to support monopolies in Upper Canada, but they found it harder to sell their products in central Canada than in the United States."
Newfoundland, facing economic turmoil and deep debt, became a province in 1949, after 52.34% percent of the population voted in a referendum to become part of Canada. By 1950, Newfoundlanders were coming round to realizing that joining Canada was not proving to be the panacea they hoped it would be.
Woke up this morning to see the Left having absolute meltdowns 😆😆over @LichTamara visiting a Consulate to celebrate July 4th with friends.
If they cared more about themselves and what our govt is doing instead of someone who is being politically persecuted by our govt, this country would be a better place.
245%. Canada's private debt-to-GDP peak (2020).
Japan's 1991 bubble peaked at 213%. The US hit 173% in 2007. 154% in 1929.
Every hard landing in modern history started below where Canada sits today (216%).
The setup is confirmed. Only the timing isn't.
https://t.co/AQhkFLzXvy
🧵From 2010 to 2020, Canada's GDP per capita grew by 0%. Nominal. USD.
A full decade of zero during the largest credit expansion in Canadian history.
In 2012, two neighbours were worth the same.
Same street the world's longest shared border.
Same income per person, roughly $52,000 each.
On paper, twins.
Then they made different bets.
One kept pouring money into the shop out back: software, chips, energy, research.
The other borrowed against the house.
Every year, the house was worth more, so every year he could borrow more.
He felt richer.
His net worth statement agreed.
Thirteen years later, the neighbour with the shop earns $89,000 a year.
The neighbour with the house earns $ 54,000 sixty-one cents on his neighbour's dollar.
And here's the part nobody says out loud: from 2010 to 2020, the borrowing neighbour's income didn't grow at all.
Not slowly. Zero.
A full decade of nothing — while running the largest credit expansion in his history.
The debt never brought income. It bought a price.
This isn't a story about any government or leader.
The same outcome appears anywhere the rules make it cheaper to lend against land than to lend to a business.
The system did exactly what its incentives told it to do
.
What this means for you: if your retirement plan, your business case, or your next career move quietly assumes the house keeps rising, that assumption is no longer your safety net.
It's your biggest exposure.