🚨 You can’t make this up.
I caught a hotel worker at the Super 8 / Easters Inn in Prince George allegedly pouring yellow paint into BC sewer drains.
Management denied it.
The owner admitted it was wrong after seeing my camera… then allegedly tried offering me free hotel stays to keep quiet.
This is EXACTLY why independent journalists matter.
https://t.co/TVa57qaguL
In 1870, if you took a spade to the ground in Iowa, or Nebraska, or eastern Kansas, you could push it in to the haft and not hit anything that wasn't soil.
Six feet of topsoil. Black, friable, alive. The richest agricultural earth on the planet, by a margin so absurd that European visitors with farming backgrounds went silent when they saw it turned over.
Most arable land on Earth carries between one and eight inches of topsoil. The Great Plains carried seventy-two.
Nobody had ploughed it. Nobody had fertilised it. Nobody had irrigated it. It had been built, slowly and completely, by something else.
Stand back from the spade. Stand back from the field. Stand back far enough to see the continent.
A herd of bison, fifty miles wide, takes five days to pass the hillside you are standing on. Colonel Dodge recorded this in Arkansas in 1871, and he was not the only one. From the top of Pawnee Rock the herd ran to the horizon in every direction at once. The earth, observers wrote, trembled at three miles.
Sixty million animals. The largest gathering of large mammals the planet has ever held. They had been doing this for ten thousand years.
The grass grew tall because the bison grazed it hard and moved on. Their hooves broke the crust for seed. Their wallows held the rain. Their dung fed the microbes. Their carcasses fed them harder. The deep-rooted prairie grasses, big bluestem, switchgrass, Indian grass, drove their roots fifteen feet down, locking carbon into the soil at a depth no plough would ever reach.
The bison built the six feet of black earth. The bison were why it existed.
Then the hide market arrived. Five thousand bison a day, shot from train windows, left to rot. The U.S. government encouraged it openly, because starving the Plains nations was cheaper than fighting them. By 1889, of the sixty million, five hundred and forty-one remained.
The plough followed within a decade.
The grass was turned under. The hooves and the wallows and the dung had stopped. The soil, untethered from the system that built it, dried.
In April 1935 it rose into the sky as a black wall a thousand miles wide and travelled to the Atlantic.
Six feet of soil, built over ten millennia, blown into the sea in a generation.
There is no putting the bison back at that scale.
The cow is the closest analogue the continent has. Run her like a bison, on grass, on the move, in a tight mob. Watch what the land does.
I'm fucking tired of our ancestors being compared to the migrants today. They settled an undeveloped land and built a civilization. They didn't sneak in and sign up for welfare. Fuck off with that shit.
Some of you came from the "If you stop crying, I'll buy you something" generation.
I came from the "If you don't stop crying, I'll give you something to cry about" generation.
We're not the same!!
In 1955, an egg was an egg. The hen lived in the back garden or on the farm down the road.
In 2026, an egg can be:
- Caged (legally an "enriched colony cage": 750cm² per bird, roughly the size of an A4 sheet of paper)
- Barn (indoors, no cage, nine hens per square metre)
- Free range (legally requires daytime outdoor access, except since 2024, when "free range" eggs can be sold as such even if the hens are kept permanently indoors during bird flu housing orders, however long those last)
- Organic
- Burford Brown, Cotswold Legbar, Old Cotswold Legbar
- Omega-3 enriched
- "Happy Egg Co" with a smiling cartoon hen, owned by Noble Foods, which produces caged eggs under a different brand on the same shelf
The hen has not changed. The egg has not changed.
What has changed is the number of intermediaries between you and the bird, each of whom requires a label to justify their margin.
A word needs ten qualifiers when ten different things are being sold under it.
Find the farm. Skip the label.
Do all you can collectively to not allow this government’s planned transition to digital currency and ID -it’s all about overt and covert surveillance and control !
A stunning revelation from the front lines of medicine. Dr. William Makis is reporting unprecedented success using ivermectin for two of our most devastating neurological conditions: Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease.
His accidental discovery is yielding results that defy conventional expectations. For Parkinson's, high-dose ivermectin (60-72mg) is facilitating remarkable recoveries. Patients on maximum standard treatments, once barely mobile, are now experiencing dramatic improvements in movement and symptoms. One such patient, after a few weeks of treatment, returned to playing golf—an activity lost for years.
The outcomes in Alzheimer's are even more profound. Dr. Makis details how family members, following his protocol of low-dose ivermectin (12-24mg for a few days), are witnessing what can only be described as medical miracles.
Loved ones who had not recognized family members for years are suddenly reconnecting. Memories are flooding back; cognitive abilities are being restored. In one extraordinary case, a patient was taken off hospice after their condition improved so drastically.
The stories are heart-rending: "My grandma's back." Families are reclaiming precious time with loved ones they felt they had lost forever. All from a few pills of a medication with a well-established safety profile.
Dr. Makis challenges the medical establishment, noting that supportive preclinical research on ivermectin and Alzheimer's appears to have been scrubbed from mainstream search engines, a silent testament to the battle over this repurposed drug.
He urges the public to look at the evidence he shares on his platforms. The potential for a safe, accessible, and effective treatment for these neurodegenerative scourges is too significant to ignore.
The question remains: When the evidence is this compelling, and the reward is the reversal of human suffering, why isn't this being researched at the highest levels?
Louise Arbour @GGCanada Mark Carney’s pick is a contemptible globalist elitist, who has spent her entire career undermining Canadian sovereignty and traditional values. She pushes destructive woke ideologies that harm ordinary citizens, especially white men, and the military she now pretends to lead as commander in chief. This woman openly smeared Canadian soldiers as nothing more than white boys who like guns, but do not like women or anybody who does not look like them. That comment was a blatantly racist and sexist attack. It reveals her deep seated hatred for the very people who built and defended this country.
She used her military review to paint the armed forces as a toxic, misogynistic institution filled with bigoted recruits. She demanded that it must be dismantled through forced diversity quotas and civilian meddling. Those efforts have only weakened readiness and morale, while rewarding incompetence.
As a United Nations high commissioner for human rights, she displayed an alarming willingness to cater to repressive regimes. At the same time, she hurled excessive criticism at Israel and the United States. This included threats of war crimes probes against Israeli commanders who were defending themselves. Canadian conservatives and watchdogs rightly labeled her actions as disgraceful and antisemitic. They saw her selective outrage as pure bias against the west. She gave passes to tyrants in places like Iran and China, but never missed a chance to lecture democracies. This shows her true colors as a hypocritical United Nations apparatchik, more interested in globalist narratives than genuine justice.
Her obsession with mass immigration stands out as particularly treacherous for Canada. As the United Nations special representative, she championed the global compact for migration. That document served as a blueprint for flooding western nations with migrants. She dismissed all concerns about housing shortages, wage suppression, cultural erosion, and strained services as misguided misinformation or self defeating nonsense. She demanded positive media framing to brainwash the public into accepting endless inflows. She sneered at countries that pulled out as bizarre or lacking reality checks. All of this proves she prioritizes foreign hordes and international bureaucrats over Canadian citizens, who bear the real costs of her utopian fantasies.
Even her family ties reek of elite insulation from the rules she helps impose on everyone else. Her daughters faced politically exposed persons scrutiny from banks that demanded intrusive financial details because of Arbour own status. Yet she whined about it as overreach, while ordinary Canadians get no such complaints when targeted by the same system. This appointment under Mark Carney reeks of partisan Laurentian elite rot. It serves as a reward for decades of service to globalist causes that sneer at native Canadian populations and traditional institutions. Arbour is wholly unqualified and unsuitable for governor general. That role is meant to represent all Canadians, yet she embodies the managed decline of the old Canada. She replaces it with rainbow flag symbolism and open border zealotry. She is a sold out traitor in the club, who lectures from Rideau Hall while real Canadians suffer the consequences of her poisonous worldview.
@MarkJCarney
Eduardo took eleven minutes to cross the field this morning.
The field is approximately 130 metres long. Eduardo, if he had wanted to, could have crossed it at a brisk alpaca walk in about three minutes.
He did not want to.
He stopped at the gorse bush. He stopped at the small section of clover near the gate. He stopped at the place where the badger crosses, which is not currently active but which Eduardo, by some assessment of his own, considers worth checking. He stopped at the dip where the rainwater pools, drank slightly, walked on. He stopped at the eastern fence post for ninety seconds and looked, by every visible indicator, at nothing in particular.
He arrived at the far gate at 7.46am.
The farmer, watching from the kitchen, made a cup of tea.
The farmer's wife, who has watched Eduardo cross this field most mornings for seven years, said: "He's slow today."
The farmer: "He's slow every day."
The wife: "He's slow on purpose."
The farmer: "...Yes."
This is the thing about Eduardo. The eleven minutes is not inefficient. The eleven minutes is the work. The work is to walk the field, attend to it, notice what has changed, register the gorse and the badger crossing and the dip and the fence post, and finish at the far gate having processed the morning.
Most useful animals, and most useful humans, work like this. The work is in the noticing. The noticing requires time. The time looks, to the casual observer, like the animal is doing nothing.
The animal is not doing nothing.
The animal is doing the most important part.
The phone in your pocket has, in the last decade, optimised the noticing out of most modern lives. The walk to work has become the scroll on the bus. The lunch has become the working lunch. The slow look at the eastern fence post has become the answered email.
Eduardo has not, at any point, optimised the noticing out.
This is, in the long run, why Eduardo is fine and you are tired.
Walk the field slowly. Notice the gorse. Be the alpaca.
This is what fiscal suicide looks like.
A former Conservative cabinet minister just dropped the truth on CBC:
By 2030 the Liberals will be spending **$81 BILLION per year** — just on interest payments on the debt.
Up 50% from $54 billion today.
That’s money ripped out of healthcare, infrastructure, and everything else… all so Carney can keep borrowing and spending like there’s no tomorrow.
Our kids and grandkids are getting stuck with the bill.
This is the Liberal majority in action — no excuses left
From the Daily Calm on FB
SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT: CARNEY DIDN'T SAVE CANADA IN 2008—JIM FLAHERTY DID! 🇨🇦🏛️⚖️
We are witnessing an incredible attempt at "Revisionist History" this week. Mark Carney is touring the country trying to take credit for Canada’s resilience during the 2008 financial crisis. There’s just one problem: He wasn't the Prime Minister, and he wasn't the Finance Minister
THE BIG QUESTION: Are you tired of the government trying to take credit for Conservative successes while blaming everyone else for their own failures?
Jim Flaherty, one of our greatest ministers of finance ever. RIP
Is it time for a leader who builds their own legacy instead of stealing one? 👇🗣️🔥
what say you?
The hard diplomatic work of trade with Europe was done long ago. We have free trade with them.
The barrier to selling to Europe is the Liberal government blocking our biggest export from getting out of Canada. They killed the Energy East oil pipeline to Saint John and blocked LNG export plants despite Europe begging for our energy.
I am challenging Mr. Carney to tell us when the first shipment of Canadian LNG will arrive in Europe.
Our biggest export cannot be speeches, handshakes, and photo ops.