Words are words. Violence is violence.
Conflating the two, licences the idea that real violence is a legitimate response to free speech.
If there has been a rise in hate in Canada, it is not because we fail to police speech. It is because we fail to police actions.
You’ve done more for Hamas than you have for Canada.
You’ve had the support of Conservatives to unleash resources through energy corridors and to diversify trade, fix immigration, end Trudeau’s love affair of bail over jail, expand housing supply, fix the tax code.
Yet here we are. You’ve spent more than Trudeau. Failed to make a single G7 natural resource deal. And sometimes, I wonder if you’re intentionally failing to resolve American negotiations.
There is nothing principled, nothing courageous, and nothing diplomatic about handing victories to terrorists. Yet that is precisely what Mark Carney and his elite allies are doing, cloaking cowardice as statesmanship, and moral relativism as progress.
Let us call it by its true name: appeasement masquerading as virtue.
By rewarding terror with statehood, Carney isn’t just reversing decades of Canadian foreign policy. He’s dismantling it. He’s telling Canadians that October 7 didn’t matter. That the slaughter of innocents, the rape of women, and the abduction of children can be dismissed for a fleeting cocktail-party platitude.
This is not foreign policy. It is moral bankruptcy.
What Carney and his cohorts advocate is not peace. It is surrender. Worse still, surrender to barbarism.
Unilateral recognition of Palestinian statehood amid Hamas's horrors is not just reckless, it is dangerously naive. It tells every hostage in Gaza’s terror tunnels: your suffering is secondary to our politics. It tells Jewish diaspora facing antisemitic violence and mobs: you stand alone.
And it broadcasts to every terror syndicate, the lies they propagate, and the civilians they brutally subjugate: tyranny pays.
Look across the Atlantic. In Britain, Keir Starmer yields to his party's anti-Israel faction, betraying Churchill's indomitable legacy. In France, Emmanuel Macron, once lauded as a centrist, caves to the mob and hands Hamas a diplomatic victory. These stewards of great nations falter at the hour of moral trial.
The same West that once stared down fascism now can’t even summon the courage to stare down its modern reincarnation of terrorism. The same France that stood for liberty and equality now offers legitimacy to rapists and hostage-takers. The same Britain that held fast through the Blitz now folds under pressure from TikTok activists.
And now Mark Carney and Anita Anand, in their fantasy world of false equivalencies, reward a 20-year dictator with good intentions, and our friends with deep suspicions.
Let’s be clear:
The Palestinian Authority has not dispensed with its “pay to slay” policy, a policy that rewards terrorists and perpetuates violence with pensions funded by the West. Its leadership continues to indoctrinate children with fake history denying human dignity. It has not earned the trust that underpins Carney’s so-called “intentions.”
A glance at how things are going in the UK and France are hardly models to be inspired by, let alone seek to replicate, as Prime Minister Carney obsessively does.
Whether through terrorism or corruption, the Iranian-backed plan hasn’t been for coexistence. It has been eradication. October 7 was not a cry for statehood, it was a declaration of war on civilization itself.
To respond to that with diplomatic handouts is naïve, and it’s dangerous.
You cannot preach stability and reward savagery.
You cannot condemn violence and legitimize its perpetrators.
And you sure as hell can’t claim to represent the Canadian people while doing both.
Mark Carney aspires to lead this nation. True leadership demands moral clarity, not equivalence. It means standing resolutely with allies, not sniping from European lecterns. It means upholding the rule of law over mob rule.
Carney chooses appeasement over principle, acclaim over national interests, expediency over justice.
The consequences will be real on our streets, our communities, and embolden terrorists.
It is amazing this even needs to be said. Canada should not reward rapists and murderers.
Not now. Not ever.
If Carney wants to reward terrorism, he can do it without the Canadian flag draped over his shoulders.
After arriving in Canada as a 17-year-old at-risk refugee teen with no English, this country gave my family and me a blessed home and countless opportunities to reach our potential.
I have always tried to meet those big dreams and opportunities with hard work, grit, and resilience, finding ways every day to give back and serve this beautiful community—and to help make it the best country in the world.
#yyc #yyccc #ward9 #eastcalgary #Calgary
My mom showed me a photo of myself at five years old yesterday and laughed, saying, “You were always the hard-headed one who asked, ‘But why?’” — especially when I told you to keep quiet - keep your head down.
She said it with love — even though, during our time as refugees in Khartoum and Cairo, my constant questions and early sense of justice often got the whole family into trouble.
But maybe that’s where it all started.
I became a community advocate the day I realized that poverty and policy don’t just align — they often intertwine.
At 17 years old — a refugee, an at-risk teen with no English and barely a sense of direction — I had grit.
And I had these communities, in ward 9. A place I was blessed to call home.
I was surrounded by everyday heroes — people who met hard work with big dreams with grit and resilience. People who believed in something greater than their circumstances.
They reminded me that where you start doesn’t have to define where you finish.
This community gave my family and me countless opportunities — including the chance to defy the odds and eventually earn a Bachelor of Business Administration in Canada.
It gave me the path to become a community engagement specialist, serve in government institutions, and hold positions on various boards — including the Government of Alberta Attendance Board and the SAIT Board of Governors.
That belief — in people, in place, and in possibility — became my fuel.
But today, I see families in ward 9 are being priced out of the homes they love. Housing is going from bad to worse.
- I have seen young people facing struggles they never chose — parents worrying about their kids’ safety on the very streets they live on.
* - My own kids are teens now, and I worry every time they walk their own streets.
- I have lived my whole life knowing what it feels like to be unseen and unheard — especially in the moments you need help the most, or when your voice deserves to be heard.
*- It’s a frustration I know deeply — and one that many residents across Ward 9 and this city share.
I also see hope - I see strength - I see future leaders.
Because I’ve learned that poverty isn’t just about money — it’s about access, voice, and dignity.
It’s about being seen, being heard, and being given a real chance — not just to survive, but to thrive.
Not just to be in the room — but to be at the table.
That’s why I stopped waiting for change — and started becoming part of it.
And I hope you will too....take a political courage✨
#yyc #yyccc #Calgary #ward9 #eastcalgary #home
#yyc educators, CGY Classroom Crew registration is open for the 2025-26 school year!
A grassroots sports initiative, it offers schools the chance to run floor hockey or flag football programs with trained instructors over a multi-day period!
More info: https://t.co/WVp8gVl7Ra
ONE TWO FUCK YOUR SHOES
THREE FOUR FUCK THE DOOR
FIVE SIX BREAK THE JABRONIS NECKS
SEVEN EIGHT I SUPLEX THAT HOLLYWOOD BLOND JABRONI HULK HOGAN ON HIS FUCKING HEAD
TEN IF YOU ARE STILL READING THIS GO FUCK YOURSELF.