Mark Carney studders a new $3.2B plan to use your tax dollars to buy up vacant, overpriced condos that developers can’t sell.💸A third of these units cost over $1M. While ordinary families can't afford rent, the state steps in to rescue rich investors. Absolute policy failure🚨🇨🇦
Newly obtained Canada Revenue Agency records show temporary residents received more than $1.35 billion in Canada Child Benefit (CCB) payments between 2020 and 2023, including $369.1 million in 2023 alone.
Full details: https://t.co/cks4X52CC8
Randall Clark remembers the exact day when his son Wyndham became his hero; it was Aug. 12, 2013, a Monday. Ten days earlier, the Clark family’s matriarch, Lise, had lost her battle with breast cancer at age 55, and after his mom’s funeral, Wyndham flew straight from Colorado to the U.S. Amateur in Massachusetts to play big, just like she always told him to.
That same courage was on display Sunday at Shinnecock Hills, where Randall, fresh off an impromptu redeye to surprise his son on Father’s Day, watched the final round of the 126th U.S. Open play out from inside the clubhouse. Down in the arena below, Wyndham wasn’t just trying to fend off Scottie Scheffler and other world-beaters for his second national championship in four years.
No, this was Wyndham against the world.
“He was fighting everything, everybody,” Randall said. “He was out there alone. … He was a warrior today.”
Moments after Wyndham Clark captured the U.S. Open that almost nobody wanted him to win, he finally caught a glimpse of his dad greenside. Randall rushed in with both fists outstretched and wrapped Wyndham in his arms, telling him repeatedly, through tears hidden by dark sunglasses, how proud he was.
Randall then declared emphatically into his son’s ear, “Toughest round you’ve ever played!”
🚨 BREAKING: Canadian inflation hit 3.2% in May — highest since late 2023 when rates were at 4.75%.
Meanwhile, Mark Carney says “affordability is the best it’s been in a decade.”
Andrew Scheer points out the Mark Carney has skipped 75% of House of Commons question. During an affordability crisis.
Why because he refuses to face Canadians given, he has not delivered on one single promise he’s made
If you shoot at someone, never mind a militarily superior opponent, don’t cry when they fire back.
War is tragic but it’s not genocide. Though, the West should absolutely be angry with the IDF… for setting an impossible standard for our militaries re: casualty minimization.
During the Afghanistan War, no one sent leaflets and texted the Taliban in advance of a strike. No one fired doorknockers beforehand.
So you’re not only out to lunch on your false allegation, you’re also illiterate as my bio clearly states I’ve finished my term as an MP. But I proudly continue my advocacy in support of 🇨🇦’s democratic ally because true friends #StandTogether.
While Canadian families were getting absolutely hammered by record-high grocery bills and Trudeau-era economic sabotage, Anita Anand’s husband was cozy on the board of LifeLabs as it raked in over $250 million in fat federal COVID testing contracts — handed out while she sat in cabinet. And that’s not all: the same husband has managed a huge investor stake in the private operator of the Confederation Bridge, complete with government subsidy talks she claims to have recused herself from. None of this was a coincidence. It screams blatant cronyism, insider profiteering, and outright corruption at the highest levels of the Liberal machine.
Now these same scandal-plagued ministers expect us to keep shoveling taxpayer dollars their way, even as explosive new evidence reveals Canadian aid to Gaza getting funneled through murky channels straight into the hands of Hamas terrorists.
This nonstop Liberal festival of self-dealing, waste, fraud, and betrayal has obliterated whatever shred of trust remained in Ottawa.
Enough is enough.
SOS @UnderSecPD
Mark Carney undermined the election, bribing enough MPs to cross the floor, to steal a majority, allowing him to ram through censorship bills he otherwise couldn't.
We don't have the tools to stop this Orwellian future, but the U.S. can, through the USMCA.
Here is what should happen: the developers of these unwanted condos lower the price to what people are willing to pay.
The purchasers now have an affordable home, or a place they rent for cheap.
The developers lose money, sending the market signal that you shouldn't build that type of housing unless you can do it much cheaper.
The developers lose money. They might even go bankrupt. That sucks, but that is business.
Future developments are more suited to what people want and are willing to pay.
The taxpayer doesn't pay for any of it.
This is what the market is good at, and the government absolutely sucks at. Let the market do its job.
We always say antisemitism isn't just hatred of Jews — it's fuel.
This @Jerusalem_Post piece proves it with receipts:
Counterterror experts and former extremists themselves say antisemitism is the "connective tissue" linking Islamist, far-left, even white-nationalist radicalization.
One ex-Salafist turned CSIS counterterror operative put it plainly: hatred of Jews is the common denominator that lets opposite ideologies recruit off each other.
This isn't abstract. EU data show terror attacks in the West rising since Oct 7. The radicalization pipeline that produces tomorrow's attackers is being built today, on a foundation of "ordinary" antisemitism that too many ignore.
What gets normalized today as "just rhetoric" becomes tomorrow's recruiter's opening line. The bill shows up in body counts.
https://t.co/mGhebAyDFH
Lebanese President to Iran: 'This is not your country.'
Hezbollah doesn't represent Lebanon, it's an Iranian proxy holding the Lebanese people hostage. It's time to free Lebanon from Iran's grip.
My new book has received zero mentions on CBC, CTV, Globe, Star et al. Zero.
It's been a bestseller for two months and is now in its second printing, despite that.
Actually, not "despite that." *Because* of that, I now think.
Carney and Eby are handing developers $3.2 billion to bail them out for building luxury shoeboxes nobody wants. Taxpayers now buying their unsold junk and slashing charges so the failures can continue.
This is subsidizing incompetence, pure and simple. "Too big to fail" corporate welfare while families get crushed out of the market. The NDP-Liberals won't let the market fix their mess.
British Columbians are sick of this garbage. Time to fire this government and get common sense back.
National champions crowned. 🏆
The UBC Okanagan Heat captured the men’s team title, while the UBC Thunderbirds claimed the women’s championship at the 2026 Canadian University/College Championship presented by BDO.
A dominant week from two of Canada’s premier university golf programs, showcasing the depth of collegiate golf talent from coast to coast. ⛳🇨🇦
Read the full recap: https://t.co/WbtXaHCcCJ
So if you are a family that can’t afford your mortgage because of a job loss, you are forced to sell at the current market price
But if you are a developer that built product that no one wanted, you get a taxpayer funded bailout
The stupidity is amazing 🤦♂️
A haunting, forgotten chapter of WWII:
In 1940, Canada imprisoned 2,300+ Jewish refugees — many of them teenagers and scholars fleeing Hitler — in internment camps alongside actual Nazis.
This is the uniform they were forced to wear.
Look at that red circle. It turned every prisoner into a walking bullseye.
They were shipped across the Atlantic in filthy holds (while Nazi POWs rode comfortably upstairs), then locked in places like Camp N in Sherbrooke, Quebec. One water tap for 900 men. Sadistic guards. Letters from home ripped up in front of them. A prisoner who panicked and ran for the fence was shot dead.
These weren’t enemy aliens. They were Jewish boys and men who had escaped the Nazis — only to be treated as threats by the countries they hoped would save them.
Many later became Nobel laureates, orchestra directors, and leading scientists.
A dark reminder of how even “safe” nations closed their hearts — and how resilient the Jewish people had to become.
Secure our borders, kick out IRGC agents, and deport visiting criminals who bring foreign wars and chaos into our communities.
Protect our people and put Canada First.
Archaeologists have found one of the oldest settlements in North America.
A remarkable archaeological discovery near Sturgeon Lake First Nation in Saskatchewan, Canada, has revealed an approximately 11,000-year-old pre-contact Indigenous settlement—one of the oldest known on the continent—that challenges conventional views of early North American history.
Located along the North Saskatchewan River, roughly 5 kilometers (3 miles) north of Prince Albert, the site known as Âsowanânihk ("A Place to Cross" in Cree) provides evidence of a long-term village rather than a transient camp. Excavations have uncovered fire pits, stone tools, lithic materials, charcoal layers indicating fire management practices, and remains of large bison, including the extinct Bison antiquus (which could exceed 4,400 pounds or 2,000 kilograms in weight). These findings suggest sophisticated hunting techniques, environmental stewardship, and sustained occupation shortly after glacial retreat made the area habitable.
The discovery aligns with Cree oral histories describing the region as a longstanding cultural and trade hub, offering physical corroboration of Indigenous presence and complexity far earlier than many archaeological models had assumed. It also prompts reconsideration of migration theories, such as the Bering Strait hypothesis, by affirming the deep, continuous roots affirmed in Indigenous traditions.
Researchers from the University of Saskatchewan (including Dr. Glenn Stuart) and the University of Calgary are collaborating with the community-led Âsowanânihk Council—a group comprising Elders, Knowledge Keepers, youth, educators, and archaeologists—to study and safeguard the site.
"This discovery challenges the outdated idea that early Indigenous peoples were solely nomadic," noted Dr. Glenn Stuart. "The evidence of long-term settlement and land stewardship suggests a deep-rooted presence."
Chief Christine Longjohn of Sturgeon Lake First Nation emphasized its broader significance: "This isn’t just archaeology. This is truth, memory, and proof. Our ancestors were here—building, thriving, and shaping this land long before history books began to notice."
Future plans include developing a cultural interpretive center and land-based education programs for youth. However, the site remains vulnerable to erosion and nearby industrial development, prompting urgent calls for protection from local, provincial, and federal authorities.
["11,000-year-old Indigenous village uncovered near Sturgeon Lake." University of Saskatchewan, 2024]