The Canadian mainstream media is giving Carney the biggest open ice EVER in recent political history.
Punishing food inflation? Housing starts falling? Bigger deficits than Trudeau? They don’t care.
They even write articles about Canada being worse off than Alabama but act like it happened all of a sudden - like the weather.
Meanwhile, Carney hasn’t removed a single anti-development law, or approved a single new project out of his Major Projects office.
His response to food inflation is a recycled Trudeau policy that didn’t work back then.
He promised during the election that he would get a deal on US tariffs and so far things have just gotten worse.
Meanwhile, the media gush over trade deals that have already been signed by previous governments, regurgitate Liberal spin as headlines, and spend more time scrutinizing the opposition than the government.
We all know the Liberals subsidize them. But the Parliamentary press gallery could at least pretend to be objective by telling the truth on Carney’s actual results versus his rhetoric.
The third world crime wave should be the biggest news story in Canada. But instead, our state-sponsored media are in week two of hyperventilating over Trump
Oof this is infuriating. Canada has the fastest rate of food inflation in the G7. MPs average salary is $209k and they’re giving themselves a raise in April lmao. They laugh because their stomachs are full and they don’t experience real world problems.
Heading to Davos to give a 7 minute speech asking everyone to keep their thermostats at 55 degrees this winter.
Together, we can reverse climate change.
It should be obvious by now that many people who pretended to be concerned with civilian deaths in Gaza were really just trying to provide cover for the Islamist terrorists who were losing that war. And now they side with the same Islamist terrorists killing thousands in Iran.
Canada had 20 years to integrate its God-given oil and natural gas with the U.S.—its closest ally—through projects like Keystone.
Instead, it chose virtue signaling over national interest, punished its own producers, and normalized ~65% effective tax burdens.
Now the U.S. will source the oil it needs elsewhere.
This is what elite-driven, anti-growth policy looks like in practice: self-imposed impoverishment.
I went back to Luke this morning just to revisit the story of Christmas… and Luke 2:7 hit me like an arrow to the chest:
“She gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him in cloths and laid him in a manger because there was no room for them in the inn.”
We romanticize that line so much that we forget how brutal it actually is. If the gospel narrative is true, then that’s not a cute nativity detail. That is the most explosive statement in human history.
The God who created galaxies entered His own creation… and there was no room for Him.
No royal welcome, no palace, no safety, no honor, not even a bed. He comes into the world He made, and the doors are closed in His face.
This is the single greatest scandal of Christianity: God doesn’t supervise salvation from a throne. He steps into it. He doesn’t arrive in glory. He arrives vulnerable. He doesn’t come intimidating humanity into submission. He comes as a child who can’t even hold His own head up. If you were inventing a religion, this is not the story you’d write.
Luke is quietly showing something staggering about God’s character:
He wins, not by force, but by love.
He saves, not by domination, but by self-giving. He comes close, not as a King demanding space, but as a Savior entering even when there is “no room.”
And that manger isn’t sentimental. It’s confrontational.
It confronts our pride, cos humanity has always had space for power, wealth, celebrity, and status… just never space for God unless He serves our plans.
It confronts our illusions of strength cos God is showing that real power isn’t the ability to crush. Real power is the courage to empty yourself for the sake of others.
It confronts religion, cos God bypassed temples and elites and arrived where animals feed… then announced His coming not to emperors, but to shepherds.
Luke 2:7 tells us who God is.
He is not distant, He is not indifferent, He is not cold sovereignty. He is the God who chooses weakness so He can stand with the weak. He is the God who walks into human pain instead of observing it from afar. He is the God who would rather be rejected with us than reign without us.
If this verse is true, Christianity isn’t just another belief system. It’s a radical claim that the deepest power in the universe is love; not might, not fear, not spectacle.
So yes… this verse broke me today.
Because if this is who God is… then hope isn’t sentimental. Grace isn’t theoretical. And Christmas isn’t “cute.”
It’s God stepping into history quietly…
exposing us gently… and saving us completely. Luke 2:7 isn’t a children’s story. It’s a revolution.
Merry Christmas 🎄❤️
“Aha, that’s so crazy that happened haha we live in a simulation.”
No, you moron. God is real. This is how He taps the glass. Synchronicity. Small winks. Precise hits that land too clean to be random, the names that keep repeating, the doors that open on the day you were ready to quit
You hide behind ‘simulation’ so you never have to admit Someone is actually calling you to do something with your life