Just a girl stumbling through life, trying to leave a small footprint on the planet and a big one on some lives. Be kind to your neighbours. RT not endorsements
Document fraud is a serious crime in Canada.
It is against the law to lie or send false information or documents to IRCC. It’s called misrepresentation and can involve either falsifying or altering documents, such as:
• Passports and travel documents
• Visas
• Diplomas, degrees and apprenticeship or trade papers
• Certificates of birth, marriage, final divorce, annulment, separation or death
• Police certificates
You are responsible for all the information in your application, even if a representative fills it out for you. If you send false documents or information, we can refuse your application and forbid you from entering Canada for at least 5 years, among other consequences.
Learn what happens if you give false information: https://t.co/P309obqLel
#Immigration #Fraud
Canadian LifeLabs customers who had their data breached in a 2019 cyberattack may be eligible for compensation after an Ontario court certified a class-action settlement in October.
How to find out if you're eligible:
https://t.co/Mp1ot0IBIZ
A small town in northern Ontario will offer up plots of land for just $10 in the new year to keep the dream of homeownership alive.
https://t.co/6GPdAFCPJI
HHDL looking out at the view of mount Kanchenjunga in the early morning from his room in Gangtok, Sikkim, India on December 14, 2023. Photo by Ven Tenzin Jamphel
Stop the killing.
Everything else of any value comes after that .
#ceasefire NOW
For Palestine.
For Israel.
For the wounded and dead.
For those dying now in Gaza.
For the starving people.
For the hostages yet to be released.
To stop the rising tide of racism .
We do not accept THE LIE that any country’s security & safety must depend on the-extermination of another people.
Ambassador @AlyKhanRajani's recent visit to our project in Rejaf East highlighted inspiring progress in gender equality and women's empowerment. Impressed by the strong voices of women and youth, he urged them to keep sharing their powerful stories. @CanadaDev@WVSouthsudan
@tonya_ck That is absolutely heartbreaking, I am devastated at the loss of his 16 years; I hope at age 61, Mr. Broadwater can find peace and I hope like you said Tonya, that Alice Sebold does what is right and gives him the profit she earned off his life!
I'm so sad to hear of the passing of Ian, he was such a kind man, always had something funny or nice to say to everyone and always willing to listen. My deepest condolences to his family.
The Passing of the Honourable Senator Ian Shugart, P.C.
Read the Speaker of the Senate @SenGagne’s statement: https://t.co/SmnDIwZYrv
#SenCA#CdnPoli#OnPoli
Canada offers its deepest condolences to the people of Afghanistan who are dealing with effects of a devastating earthquake.
Canada stands ready to support the Afghan people on their road to recovery.
This is Sir Frederick Banting. He discovered insulin in 1923.
But he refused to put his name on the patent. Why?
Because Banting felt it was unethical to profit from a discovery that would save lives.
But pharmaceutical companies made huge financial offers to Banting for the patent, knowing they could make billions.
They even sweetened the deal, offering an insulin clinic, with Sir Banting in charge... a temping offer to almost doctor in his position.
Banting, however, said his discovery of isolated insulin was a gift to mankind. He felt this critical medicine should be available to everyone who needed it.
In 1923, Banting was just 31 years old when he was awarded the Nobel Prize.
Tragically, in 1941 while flying on a plane to personally protect scientific secrets from the Nazis, his plane crashed. He was killed.
Banting's co-inventors, in his honor, sold the patent for insulin to the University of Toronto for the appropriate sum they thought appropriate – one dollar.
Today, 30 million Americans with diabetes rely on his gift to mankind.
To honor Sir Frederick Banting, it should remain a gift to mankind.