The Bloc Québécois leader and a podcaster dismissed Alberta’s culture, prompting a rebuttal from Conservative MP @MichelleRempel, who said "Alberta's culture is what drives Canada."
Georgia might be the most overlooked country on Earth.
Wine older than Rome. Mountains that rival the Alps. Monasteries carved into cliffs. Yet most travelers still skip it.
These 14 places will make you wonder how Georgia stayed a secret for this long.....🧵
We're launching Bridge today 🌉
An AI engine that builds virtual homes. Blueprint in, walkable home out. Every plan, every option, structural changes included.
What took 3D artists months now takes days. Homebuilders can finally show buyers every home they sell.
https://t.co/QrwlM5FUjP
🇬🇧‼️🚨 IMPORTANT: The poor guy who was attacked by the migrants is special needs, a disabled man who was helping immigrants move in and settle down.
One of his eyes was gouged out, the other one is blinded now, and his nose was cut off apparently.
-> Why would you attack a person who is helping you? A disabled person!
A woman close to the poor guy explained what she knows and heard.
This is biblical.
A woman in her eighties. Ten years into Alzheimer's. Hadn't spoken a full sentence in five years.
Takes one, 5 gram dose of psilocybin.
She slept 19 hours and woke up and spoke for hours about her life, recognized family and held real conversations. She regained bladder control after five years, walked on her own. and dressed herself. Gains held for weeks.
Ray’s Rock - Omaha Beach
On the morning of June 6, 1944, 23 year old Staff Sergeant Arnold “Ray” Lambert came ashore with the first wave of the 1st Infantry Division on the eastern side of Omaha Beach. At this small patch of concrete he saved nearly 20 lives:
The division came under intense fire from several German bunkers surrounding the entrance to the Colville Draw (one of two exits off Omaha Beach). Ray, a medic, immediately went to work.
He was shot in the arm. Moments later he was hit by shrapnel in the leg, but Ray kept pulling men to safety. He pulled nearly 20 wounded soldiers to cover behind this 8ft wide obstacle, treating each soldier before going out in search of others.
After several hours under fire, while pulling a wounded soldier from the ocean, he was struck by a landing craft. It dropped its ramp on top of him, breaking his back. He fell face down in the water, drowning. The craft backed up and nearby soldiers pulled an unconscious Ray to safety, eventually evacuating him off the beach.
Remarkably, Ray had already earned two Silver Stars and three Purple Hearts in Sicily and North Africa, prior to landing in France. But here in Normandy his war would end.
He awoke in a hospital back in England a day later. In the next bed over was his brother, who had also been wounded at Omaha.
When asked about his work on D-Day, Ray simply said, “I did what I was called to do.”
Ray Lambert passed in 2021 at 100 years old. He exemplified the best of American grit and why remembering this day is so important.
Out of 16.4 million Americans who served in WWII, only about 40,000 are still alive.
They’re dying at a rate of ~100 per day.
These are the heroes who saved the world from tyranny.
Find one. Thank one. Listen to their stories.
While you still can.
Kamloops residential school 'graves' could have been septic pipes all along.
Five years after the explosive announcement of 215 children's graves, the only way to know what's under the ground is to excavate, writes Tristin Hopper https://t.co/4HOOaj9c7D
Western civilization rests on three pillars:
1. Greek reason
2. Roman law
3. Christian moral order
All three are being demolished at the same time, and the chaos you feel is the predictable downstream effect of pulling out the load-bearing structures of your own house.
In 2021, Canadian media and institutions basically hallucinated the discovery of 215 children’s bodies in a mass grave near a former Catholic residential school. The evidence: radar saw soil disturbances that could have been tree roots. A wave of church arsons ensued.
People making the case for censorship often urge that destructive manias like this can be suppressed/soothed if we prevent people from communicating about them. And here was a perfect case: false information was being recklessly (or maliciously) amplified, leading to literal hate crimes. Shouldn’t the censors do something?
But the mass-grave craze infected the censorship class, so opposition got targeted instead. At least one “disinformation” NGO categorized skepticism as “hate speech,” and Canada even saw efforts to criminalize so-called “denialism” (drawing an absurd comparison to the Holocaust).
Good for the Globe and Mail to come clean.
Canada is a textbook case of how bad policy turns a resource‑rich nation into a declining one: attack energy, overtax work, bury business in regulation, and then act surprised when growth stalls and separatism rises.