Dad. Tuscarora+Québecois. Passionate about public affairs. Wannabe Minecrafter, semi-retired musician. Walking in 2 worlds head high. I block+report bigots.
@TSN_Sports@TSN690 I get people being fired up on Xekaj but i think part of the issue is most of us didn’t get a close second look. I’m listening to you guys, not watching the tv now.
@TSN_Sports@TSN690 3 thoughts: Hutson to Caufield was a vintage NHL 94 goal; Dobes addressing the crowd with « ça va » means he’s never paying for a beer in this city again; TVA didn’t replay the Xekaj punch so i only got the one look and it seemed like several players were throwing (still not ok).
Alberta’s NDP Caucus has obtained video evidence that appears to show that a senior member of the United Conservative Party (UCP) party executive and a member of the UCP Caucus staff, people that are in the Premier’s inner circle, attended the April 16 online meeting of the Centurion Project. This meeting provided training to volunteers on how to use the separatists’ project database that is at the centre of this data breach of three million Albertans’ electoral data.
The Alberta NDP Caucus obtained a recording of the Centurion Project’s April 16 online meeting, attended by 80 individuals. The attendee list and a video recording of the call identify that a ‘Rob Smith’ and an ‘Arundeep Sandhu’ were in attendance. The President of the UCP is named Rob Smith and the UCP Caucus Director of Stakeholder Relations is named Arundeep Sandhu.
Alberta’s New Democrats have passed this recording on to the RCMP as they continue their investigation.
This obtained video also shows Centurion Project members demonstrating how to use a database to search for personal information of Albertans by searching for the name and address of former Alberta Premier Jason Kenney. Jason Kenney’s personal information was shared on screen with all meeting attendees. This video appears to show the database that was built using the unauthorized electors list that was the subject of an injunction issued by the Court of King’s Bench on April 30, 2026.
Premier Smith must immediately confirm whether Rob Smith and Arundeep Sandhu identified in the video are the same individuals that are associated with the UCP party and caucus. If these were the same UCP associates, the Premier must also explain:
-Why were senior UCP officials attending the meeting? Were they directed to attend?
-How she can claim, as recent as yesterday, that she only learned of this data breach from police statements on April 29-30, published almost two weeks after this meeting took place?
-Why was it not reported or disclosed by any UCP or any government official to the RCMP and Elections Alberta that the Centurion Project appears to have unauthorized access to the electors list?
-What actions, if any, she has taken to protect the privacy of Albertans?
Albertans deserve answers and transparency from Premier Smith and this UCP government, now.
I understand that my personal information, including my home address, was shared publicly on a screen at a recent Alberta separatist event. It was also recorded on video, and is now circulating.
This was apparently part of the outrageous data leak of Albertans’ private information, wherein Elections Alberta shared its entire detailed provincial voter database with the “Republican Party of Alberta,” which in turn shared it with some separatist group called the “Centurion Project,” whose leadership then shared my personal information publicly.
Over the past few years I have received no shortage of threats from people broadly associated with the separatist / antivax / far right movement in Alberta. So it is disturbing that my personal information is now broadly available, particularly in those circles.
While I have been targeted specifically, the broader data breach may also effect vulnerable Albertans, including victims of domestic violence, journalists, activists, judges, and other public servants for years to come.
I will retain legal counsel to seek advice on recourse regarding this outrageous and potentially dangerous violation of my personal privacy.
Hey @MitchyGallo Is it a little mean that I’m giggling at TVA having to broadcast all those clips of Pierre Houde during the Habs pregame in-building video?
@MitchyGallo@TSN690@LucaScott98 Re: the challenge on Bolduc’s goal. Marty St. Louis should send Patrick Roy a case of wine for being such an irredeemable a-hole that the Habs couldn’t give him the coaching job.
@HerbZurkowsky1 I think it would be very kind of Kent Hughes, in this moment of great pain for the Maple Leafs organization, to offer to take on Nylander’s contract in exchange for, say, Patrick Laine. Although to be fair, maybe the Leafs should have to throw in a mid-round pick or two as well.
A Disney employee threw himself in front of a runaway rubber boulder, getting injured as he shielded guests from the 400-pound prop during an Indiana Jones themed attraction, officials at the Florida park say. https://t.co/J8OLI8WTJ2
Here are my three takeaways from tonight’s 5–2 Montreal Canadiens loss to the Ottawa Senators, brought to you by Snap Bar Sportif in Rigaud.
1 — Losing to Ottawa hurts
Losing to Western Conference teams is one thing; losing to a divisional rival on home ice is something else entirely. Right now, the Canadiens’ top on-ice rival is the Senators, and dropping a key game to them in regulation is a tough pill to swallow for a lot of players. These two teams are in similar places in their rebuilds (yes, Ottawa is a bit ahead with their core slightly more mature and polished), and they’re likely to finish near each other in the standings with similar expectations.
The good news: there are still two games left between these teams and a ton of racetrack left in the season. It would be nice to finally see a game where both sides are healthy and at full strength. Still, this one was more embarrassing than any of the lopsided losses in November.
2 — The Habs had too many passengers
Too many players had nothing in the tank for a game of this magnitude, which is disappointing to say the least. Two players who were especially invisible were Josh Anderson and Jake Evans. There just wasn’t much happening for either of them, and for a guy who plays with emotion and should thrive in a matchup like this, Anderson was particularly quiet.
He showed a bit of life early in the third, but that was about it, and Martin St. Louis quickly cut his ice time.
Last season Anderson was praised for finding a new role and gutting it out while playing hurt most of the year. This season, though, his game has swung wildly from night to night, and the inconsistency is becoming hard to ignore.
3 — Zach Bolduc does nothing at home
The point splits for Zach Bolduc are pretty striking: he’s close to a point-per-game player on the road, yet he has just one point all season at the Bell Centre. On top of that, he goes long stretches without being noticeable. Just when it looked like some chemistry was forming with Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield, they accomplished very little at five-on-five against Ottawa.
Sure, it’s only one game, but Bolduc has to be relieved for whenever he finally gets that first home goal. Maybe once it goes in, the floodgates open.
*remember all RT and are appreciated*
headcannoning hc11 Mumbo as a man that lives in a junkyard trying to make it look nice who also farms geese, chickens, ducks, and guineafowl as a living send tweet