@philm4life@kristelxo Prob from kids like me when I worked there at 15 haha! I used to jump over the lane closure arms they put down when a till is closed lol 😂
Today, I spent almost 4 hours at the Department of Justice to once again look through the unredacted Epstein files.
It is very clear that there is evidence here that needs to be investigated.
I will not stop demanding accountability.
I hope that every single person that made an IGNORANT post about being on the cartels side in their fight against ICE feels like fucking idiots for once in their lives. Your brainwashed brain rot is being exposed, WAKE UP!
Many hard pills to swallow to come!
@albertaseparate Alberta and Saskatchewan -
Hardworking, Honest, Trustworthy, and Sincere. Unlimited Oil, Gas, Uranium, Coal, Potash, Soil, Water and Agriculture. The ultimate connection to Alaska and the Lower 48 - Honoured to be your Friend, Partner, and Ally.
The choice is yours!!!
Chiefs forget about their ancestors who fought for freedom against the federal way. Great way to honour them—choosing GREED over FREEDOM. All these Chiefs fought alongside the Northwest Rebellion (or Resistance) with Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont:
• Big Bear (Mistahimaskwa): A prominent Plains Cree chief who initially sought peaceful resolutions but whose band became involved after government inaction on treaties. His warriors, under war chief Wandering Spirit (Kapapamahchakwew), carried out the Frog Lake Massacre on April 2, 1885, killing settlers and officials, which escalated the conflict. Big Bear’s group later clashed with Canadian troops at the Battle of Frenchman Butte and the Battle of Loon Lake.
• Poundmaker (Pîhtokahanapiwiyin): A Cree chief who allied with the Métis cause, leading his warriors in the Battle of Cut Knife Hill on May 2, 1885, where they successfully repelled a Canadian attack led by Colonel William Otter. Poundmaker advocated for negotiation but fought in defense after his people faced famine and broken promises.
• Wandering Spirit (Kapapamahchakwew): A war chief under Big Bear, he led the attack at Frog Lake and was a key fighter in subsequent battles. Though not a hereditary chief like Big Bear, he held significant leadership in the resistance.
• One Arrow (Kahkewistahaw): A Willow Cree chief whose band joined the Métis at Batoche, participating in the final battles there in May 1885.
• Fine Day (Kamiokisihkwew): A Cree war chief who led Indigenous forces at the Battle of Cut Knife Hill alongside Poundmaker.
Why did they all sacrifice their lives? Today these Chiefs should be ashamed of themselves choosing
#GREEDoverFREEDOM
Chiefs forget about their ancestors who fought for freedom against the federal way. Great way to honour them—choosing GREED over FREEDOM. All these Chiefs fought alongside the Northwest Rebellion (or Resistance) with Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont:
• Big Bear (Mistahimaskwa): A prominent Plains Cree chief who initially sought peaceful resolutions but whose band became involved after government inaction on treaties. His warriors, under war chief Wandering Spirit (Kapapamahchakwew), carried out the Frog Lake Massacre on April 2, 1885, killing settlers and officials, which escalated the conflict. Big Bear’s group later clashed with Canadian troops at the Battle of Frenchman Butte and the Battle of Loon Lake.
• Poundmaker (Pîhtokahanapiwiyin): A Cree chief who allied with the Métis cause, leading his warriors in the Battle of Cut Knife Hill on May 2, 1885, where they successfully repelled a Canadian attack led by Colonel William Otter. Poundmaker advocated for negotiation but fought in defense after his people faced famine and broken promises.
• Wandering Spirit (Kapapamahchakwew): A war chief under Big Bear, he led the attack at Frog Lake and was a key fighter in subsequent battles. Though not a hereditary chief like Big Bear, he held significant leadership in the resistance.
• One Arrow (Kahkewistahaw): A Willow Cree chief whose band joined the Métis at Batoche, participating in the final battles there in May 1885.
• Fine Day (Kamiokisihkwew): A Cree war chief who led Indigenous forces at the Battle of Cut Knife Hill alongside Poundmaker.
Why did they all sacrifice their lives? Today these Chiefs should be ashamed of themselves choosing
#GREEDoverFREEDOM
As people organize independence convoys this Saturday (Feb 7) — including Red Deer Parkland Mall (12pm) to Sylvan Lake — I hope we set a high standard.
Be polite and courteous.
Follow all traffic laws.
No blocking roads.
No honking or being obnoxious.
Please stay spread out, don’t slow traffic, and always leave room for emergency vehicles.
This is about showing numbers and character. Peaceful, lawful, respectful participation matters.
Please RT
Please share this for progressive Canadians back East...
Greetings progressive Easterners. I have noticed that some of you are quite upset and even enraged by the current quest of many Albertans to have Alberta leave Canada.
Now hear me out.
If you consider it, you're taking this all wrong. Consider the progressive utopian paradise that Canada could be if "polluting", "knuckle-dragging", "bigoted", "backward" conservative Alberta was gone! I mean, that is what you think about us, right? I see those descriptions of us every day on social media, so imagine how great it'll be for y'all once we're no longer holding back your progressive goals and dreams!
With Alberta gone (maybe with Saskatchewan too if you're lucky) there will be no stopping your heart's most desired policies from coming true. Without us there could be:
✅ unlimited diversity and immigration
✅ true Net Zero with heavy taxes for CO2 emissions
✅ collective rights over individual rights
✅ severe hate speech laws
✅ gun confiscation
✅ almost no more conservative politicians
All this and much more can be yours for the low price of zero dollars. Just let us Albertans ride off into the sunset and your dreams will become reality.
So, turn that frown upside down!
Contemplate your amazing future without Albertans bumming you out constantly. There's no need to be upset about Alberta's independence petition. You're going to get what you said you always wanted: a country where progressives will be in charge, forever.
That is what you want, right?
Thanks for your kind attention, and future support for Alberta's independence from Canada.
I just don’t get why Treaty 6, 7, and 8 First Nations and some Métis groups are pushing back so hard against Alberta independence. Our ancestors fought tooth and nail against federal overreach—like Métis leader Louis Riel, who led the Red River Resistance in 1869–70 and the North-West Rebellion in 1885 to defend Métis and Indigenous rights, land, and self-governance, only to be hanged in Regina for it. They wanted real freedom in the West, not Ottawa’s boot on their necks.
But fast-forward to today, and chiefs from these treaties are suing over things like the Alberta Sovereignty Act (passed in 2022), saying it violates their treaties signed with the federal Crown in the 1870s—before Alberta even became a province in 1905. They argue separation could trash those sacred agreements, undermine their rights to land, resources, and self-determination, since treaties are with Canada, not Alberta. Groups like Treaty 8 First Nations flat-out declared in 2019 they’re “strongly opposed” to Western separation, calling it unconstitutional and a breach of international law without their consent.
Are they choosing federal cash and stability over true independence? Our forebears like Riel must be shaking their heads, wondering why this generation is opting for dependency instead of fighting for real sovereignty. Let’s talk about it—honour the past, but push for a free Alberta. What did our ancestors die for back then? Greed over Freedom! That’s what they all stand for today! #AlbertaStrong #IndigenousRights #cdnpoli