We are a true Nationalist organization that wants to preserve our heritage, culture and traditional values through reforms to reflect our true Canadian core identity. A moratorium on all immigration, stopping third world immigration, a new immigration policy for a return to Canada's traditional ethnic demographics of Euro-Canadian pioneer settlers and Natives. Equal rights, eliminating affirmative action, discrimination against Euro-Canadians and an end to minority group special privileges.
Thursday, December 14, 2023
False Hate Crime conviction is being appealed, I was wrongly accused on trumped up charges by CAHN Richard warman
https://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/news/crime/the-message-was-clear-he-hates-gay-people-peterborough-white-nationalist-guilty-of-uttering-death/article_5c967a35-37a8-5980-a1a8-ab8abe5c0dfb.html
Sunday, December 10, 2023
Some Ukrainian immigrants leaving because it's so expensive
(It is pretty bad when actual valued European immigrants that we actually want and deserve to stay in Canada want to leave because its so bad now because of the mass immigration and the Turd Worlders that are burden on system and do not work.)
Some Ukrainian immigrants leaving because it's so expensive
High housing costs and underemployment among challenges
Not long after Russia began bombing Ukraine, Oleksii Martynenko packed his bags and fled Kremenchuk, a once-tranquil but now war-torn city roughly 190 miles (300 kilometres) from Kyiv. He moved to Stockholm and took a job as a line cook. One year later, as his work visa approached expiry, he relocated to Canada’s largest city.
The continental change of scenery proved challenging for the Ukrainian immigrant. It took Martynenko about two months to find a comparable job in Toronto’s bustling downtown, about an hour’s commute from his apartment in the city’s suburbs. It wasn’t enough to pay the bills, so he soon took a second job, also as a line cook, and now works seven days a week in fast-paced kitchens.
The strenuous work and high cost of living has taken its toll. Martynenko, 44, is now planning a return to Sweden. His monthly expenses in Toronto include roughly $100 for a phone plan , $150 for public transit, $400 for groceries, and $1,000 for a room in a rooming house, where the kitchen and bathroom are shared among four tenants. Any money left over is sent back to family still in Ukraine. At least in Stockholm he earned enough to have savings, he said.
“I’m tired all the time now,” Martynenko said in an interview. “I want to go back to Europe because it’s such a difficult life in Canada.”
Canada has long been a choice destination for newcomers seeking a better life in a prosperous nation. Nearly a quarter of all Canadians are immigrants and the country has welcomed nearly 200,000 Ukrainians since the war’s outset. But the daily grind of life in Canada’s busiest metropolises — not just Toronto but also Vancouver, Montreal and Calgary — along with soaring costs is making it increasingly hard to get by.
Trudeau’s ambitious plans
Social service organizations have warned that the country’s most vulnerable citizens — often newcomers — are affected most by higher prices, especially in housing. Andrei Zavialov, a settlement worker with Ukrainian Canadian Social Services Toronto, said he knows of at least 15 Ukrainians who have returned to their home country from the Greater Toronto Area since the war broke out. There isn’t one predominant reason for leaving, he said, but expenses are among the most cited factors.
“An individual becomes unable to find money, but they need to pay for very high rent, groceries,” said Zavialov. “And such expenses hit an immigrant’s pocket strongly. No job, no money, they return to Ukraine where everything is familiar.”
Anecdotal stories like these are supported by new research suggesting that more newcomers have chosen to leave Canada in recent years as worsening housing affordability, a strained health-care system, and underemployment spark disillusionment with the opportunities the country offers.
An acceleration of that trend would undermine Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s ambitious plans to stave off economic backsliding through relaxed immigration policies. Like many developed countries, Canada’s birthrate is declining and the population would shrink were it not for new arrivals. Real gross domestic product per capita has stagnated over the past decade, while soaring home prices have far outpaced disposable income.
The Trudeau government’s solution is a target of roughly half a million new permanent residents a year, on top of a recent boom in arrivals that pushed Canada’s annual population growth rate to 2.7 per cent in 2022, the fastest pace among advanced economies.
The challenge now is retaining them. Newcomers have to navigate a web of problems, starting with housing costs. Even smaller Canadian cities are facing tight rental supply as higher interest rates have discouraged would-be buyers, creating fierce competition for rental units. The average cost of rent in Canada hit a record $2,149 in September, up more than 11 per cent from a year prior, according to research firm Urbanation. In Toronto, it was $2,614, which represents almost the entire pretax income of a person working full-time for minimum wage.
Other costs are also rising. While inflation is decelerating, it’s still running at 3.8 per cent, “much too high for comfort,” according Benjamin Reitzes, a rates and macro strategist at the Bank of Montreal. Grocery costs increased 5.8 per cent annually in September, while gas prices jumped 7.5 per cent.
To be sure, many newcomers are keen to stay in the country. Zavialov said most Ukrainian newcomers he’s interacted with have expressed strong admiration for Canada — its diverse population, socialized health-care system and fraying but still-strong social net. The decision whether to return to Ukraine or stay in Canada is also inspired by factors beyond expenses — proximity to war, safety, or a sense of patriotic duty.
‘Want to help my country’
A combination of those considerations prompted Anna-Maria Lyakhovetska to plan a return to Ukraine as soon as it’s safe. The 17-year-old moved to Germany after her father died in the war, and then relocated to Canada, arriving in Toronto just seven months ago. Now she wants to go back, in part to escape the hurdles of life in a new country and in part to aid the war effort. Russia’s invasion, she said, encouraged her to pursue a career in political organizing.
“It’s expensive living here,” she said. “But I also want to go back to help my country.”
The bulk of Canada’s Ukrainian immigrant intake is clustered in Ontario, the country’s most populous province, according social services group Operation Ukrainian Safe Haven. Based on financial assistance data, 40 per cent of recent Ukrainian immigrants have settled in Ontario while 21.4 per cent landed in Alberta and 10.3 per cent went to Manitoba.
Oleksandr Halyk, 50, arrived in Canada with his 25-year-old son in March, directly from Ukraine. An engineer back home, he took a job as a cabinet maker in north Toronto because he lacked a convertible degree. His son, meanwhile, found a better paying job at an airport.
https://financialpost.com/news/economy/canada-expensive-ukrainian-immigrants-leaving
Monday, November 20, 2023
Trudeau's open immigration policies are becoming a problem for Americans
Trudeau's open immigration policies are becoming a problem for Americans
Increasing number of illegal migrants, drug smugglers using Canada as backdoor entryway into U.S.
The foolish immigration policies of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals and their NDP backers have burdened Canada’s health-care system, inflated housing costs and are now starting to annoy Washington.
America’s immigration problems at its southern border are nightmarish by comparison, but some members of Congress have also voiced concerns that their northern border with Canada has become a backdoor entry into the United States for increasing numbers of illegal migrants and drugs.
Over two dozen Republicans formed a northern border security caucus earlier this year, which intends to identify and quantify the problem at the U.S.-Canadian border. In recent years, the surge in refugee claimants from the U.S. into Canada, via Roxham Road (closed in September) in rural Quebec, has been the biggest bilateral immigration issue and led to a new asylum pact with the U.S.
“What’s gotten less attention is the exponential surge in migration going the other way,” wrote Alexander Panetta, the CBC’s Washington correspondent. The northern border caucus is calling for more border agents and monitoring equipment, all of which will slow border crossings for those headed to the United States from Canada.
Remote areas are most affected. “We are being assaulted because we don’t have a border,” said Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana. “This is a national security problem and the northern tier has their own set of challenges.”
Americans have also complained about visa requirements for Mexicans who wish to enter Canada. Mexicans can fly and enter Canada if they obtain an eTA, or an online visa waiver, which entitles them to stay for up to six months. An unknown number are smuggled into the United States by vehicle.
Fox News reported in February that, “There has been a sharp increase in Customs and Border Protection (CBP) encounters of migrants at the northern border, jumping from 32,376 in FY 2020 to 109,535 in FY 2022. There have also been more recent increases in drug seizures, all while staffing levels have remained roughly static for years. The border, which is 5,525 miles, only has 115 ports of entry.”
According to Rep. Mike Kelly, “Migrants and smugglers are seeking alternative routes into the United States, and the northern border is increasingly their first stop.”
The CBC reported that, “Statistics from U.S. Customs and Border Protection show exponential growth in migration from Canada, with more than 55,000 encounters in the first four months of this fiscal year — almost eight times the 2021 rate.
“These encounters can include anything from an arrest to an asylum claim, and they’ve disproportionately involved citizens of India, Mexico and Canada.”
That’s a small amount compared to the flood of illegals getting across America’s southern border, but as controls along the Mexican border increase, migrants and drug smugglers will increasingly turn to Canada to bypass U.S. immigration controls.
The Americans don’t realize that Ottawa’s immigration system needs a complete overhaul. Toronto and Vancouver are being flooded with newcomers who are overwhelming hospitals and homeless shelters, and driving up real estate prices. Visa-free travel for Mexicans is a loophole that must be closed. And Canada’s loose student visa rules must be tightened immediately.
This growing controversy adds to the list of immigration problems that Trudeau has imposed on Canadians. Young people cannot afford to buy homes, older people cannot get family physicians and Canada has become a backdoor entry into the U.S. for illegal immigrants, criminals and drugs.
Financial Post
https://financialpost.com/diane-francis/trudeau-open-immigration-policies-problem-americans
Tuesday, November 14, 2023
Anti-White Communist art exhibit in Hongcouver
Anti-White Communist art exhibit in Hongcouver where you can use their Aryan recognition tool to compare your facial measurements to leaders of the Third Reich.
Vancouver Art Gallery has a new anti-white exhibit: Conceptions of White The exhibit tells white people to stop talking, enjoy discomfort, check their privilege, and vocalize their ignorance The gallery received $29 MILLION last year from the Canadian government
https://tnc.news/2023/11/08/shepherd-vancouver-art-gallerys-anti-white-exhibit/
https://app.aryan.tools
Saturday, November 11, 2023
No More Brother Wars! Lest We Forget! Remember them all!
Monday, September 11, 2023
Diane Francis: Co-captains Trudeau and Singh running Canada into the ground
"Under Trudeau, Canada is unable to accommodate the high immigration targets of his government"
Diane Francis: Co-captains Trudeau and Singh running Canada into the ground
This lack of smart leadership is why Canada slowly sinks
Published Sep 11, 2023
The Good Ship Canada is taking on water, and bringing in far too many unproductive crew, and its Captain Justin Trudeau simply re-arranges the deck chairs.
Suddenly, Canada’s economy contracted in the second quarter this year and heads toward a recession, the first high-income country to do so. Canadians threaten to mutiny — a recent poll showed that a majority want Trudeau and his governing sidekick, Jagmeet Singh, out of office.
“Canada is one of the only high-income countries yet to economically rebound from the COVID recession. Average income per person in Canada (adjusted for inflation) was $55,677 in the first three months of this year compared to $56,183 at the end of 2019. We’re poorer today than we were three-and-half years ago despite the avalanche of federal government spending and borrowing,” concluded the Fraser Institute in a July report.
Under Trudeau, Canada is unable to accommodate the high immigration targets of his government, thanks to inflation, higher interest rates, unaffordable housing prices, and a health care crisis. Many Canadians do not have a family physician and cannot get doctors’ appointments for months, a problem worsened by a growing population.
Unfortunately, Canadians could be stuck with the ruling trust fund duo until 2025, when their coalition deal ends. So Trudeau busies himself with giving MPs raises in pay plus creating the country’s biggest, overpaid cabinet in history. He now has 38 in place, none of whom have expertise in the domain over which they preside. (The U.S. has a cabinet of 25 and Australia of 20.)
Instead of drumming up trade, such as cashing in on supplying LNG to India or China so they can transition from dirty coal, he headed off to the G20 meeting in India to raise the issue of foreign interference by Sikh radicals in Canada with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Trudeau’s approach to this issue insulted India, and may be why he was unable to get a bilateral summit with the Indian leader. If he was pitching LNG or investments, he’d rise to the top of the list, but that’s out of the question, and this year Trudeau has nixed proposals worth billions made by Japan, Germany, and Spain to build gas liquefaction and export plants in Canada.
This lack of smart leadership is why Canada slowly sinks. “The Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a 38-member international organization, predicts that Canada will be the worst-performing advanced economy from 2020 to 2030, with inflation-adjusted per-person GDP growth of only 0.7 per cent per year over the decade. The same is true from 2030 to 2060,” the Fraser Institute’s July report notes.
In March, the Fraser Institute estimated the federal deficit will reach $40 billion in 2023, or $10 billion higher than forecasted, and that there is no plan to balance the budget.
In May, a report by Canada’s housing agency, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), said high household debts (due to high mortgages as a result of high housing costs) put the economy at more risk going forward. “Canadian households are more in debt than those in any other G7 country, and the amount they owe is now more than the value of the country’s entire economy,” the CBC reported.
The CMHC’s deputy chief economist warned that “Canada’s very high levels of household debt — the highest in the G7 — makes the economy vulnerable to any global economic crisis. When many households in an economy are heavily indebted, the situation can quickly deteriorate, such as what was witnessed in the U.S. in 2007 and 2008.”
Even so Canada’s Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland said in July “I think we can be really optimistic about the Canadian economy. Canada had the strongest economic growth in the G7 over the course of 2022.”
With mentality like that Canada heads for the shoals. In 2015, Trudeau promised modest budget deficits and balanced budgets by 2019. Instead, he’s spent like a sailor: Compensation paid to federal employees increased 52 per cent, from $38 billion in 2015 to $58 billion in 2021. Federal employment job growth is three times greater than in the private sector and, at the same time, management fees paid to consultants have skyrocketed from $10.4 billion when the Liberals took office, to an estimated $17.7 billion in 2022, a jump of nearly 60 per cent.
Franco Terrazzano, director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, nailed it when he recently wrote, “this government doesn’t care about fiscal prudence or helping taxpayers.”
This is why Canada’s co-captains must be dumped ashore as soon as possible.
Financial Post
https://financialpost.com/diane-francis/co-captains-trudeau-singh-running-canada-ground
Thursday, August 24, 2023
Food bank reports 95% of users not born in Canada
Food bank reports 95% of users not born in Canada
A Toronto-area food bank is sounding the alarm after it witnessed a dramatic increase in new clients – a vast majority of which were new immigrants.
According to Feed Scarborough, visits to its five locations across the region have spiked by 112% in the past year.
A total of 95% of those relying on Feed Scarborough were not born in the country, while 72% had only been in Canada a year or less.
“I can’t pay the bills. I don’t have any money. I don’t have any income, but I’m still surviving,” client and new immigrant Brigitte told CityNews.
“The situations I’ve passed through, the things I’ve passed through have been a lot, and at times I regret, I’m like ‘why did I leave?’ I would’ve stayed there. On the other hand, I say you have to face it and life has to move on.”
A report by the organization also found that 28% of those accessings its services were employed currently, while another 65% were students.
“Think about it, you’re working 40 hours a week, but you still can’t afford food which is a basic human right,” said founder Suman Roy.
Clients cited low income as one of the main reasons behind why they had to resort to visiting a food bank.
“That says that we have precarious employment [and] that says housing and other expenses are so high that food is somewhere where they compromise,” explained Roy.
Additionally, new immigrants made up the vast majority of those visiting Feed Scarborough.
Food bank usage has also extended to rural parts of Ontario.
Several organizations serving Simcoe County have also reported record rates of new visitors.
“We are forecasting to continue to see an upward trend in individuals accessing our services without a shadow of a doubt,” said director of Sharing Place, Chris Peacock in July.
“There are individuals that have never thought that they would be walking through the door of a food bank. But we’re in a time that a lot of individuals are not able to afford what many would consider to be life subsidies.”
https://tnc.news/2023/08/08/food-bank-reports-95-of-users-not-born-in-canada/
Wednesday, August 2, 2023
Justin and Sophie Trudeau separate after 18 years of marriage
*Turdeau and Jagoff Sing can finally be together in their gay relationship! And they called it Commie Love! Awwwwww When Turdeau and Sing hook up Turdeau does not use condoms... He wraps it in a Turban lmwao 👳🏻♂️*
Justin and Sophie Trudeau separate after 18 years of marriage
by David Ljunggren and Ismail Shakil
OTTAWA, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie said on Wednesday they were separating in an unexpected announcement that appeared to mark the end of the couple's 18-year high-profile marriage.
Trudeau, 51, and Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, 48, were married in late May 2005. They have three children, the eldest of whom is 15.
For Trudeau there are also painful historical parallels. His father, former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, separated from his wife Margaret in 1977, when he was in office.
Trudeau was only 43 when he became prime minister in late 2015 and the sharply-dressed couple quickly captured the attention of the world media.
Vogue magazine ran a glowing profile of the two in its January 2016 issue, complete with photos of them embracing. A long piece in the magazine about Trudeau said he "shocks some with his public displays of affection toward his wife".
In the early years after Trudeau took office, he and Sophie were often seen together at social functions and on foreign trips. In February 2018, during a visit to India, the two of them dressed in colorful costumes most days, prompting derisive comments back home.
Trudeau, though, made clear even before he became prime minister that the two had faced challenges, telling the Canadian Broadcasting Corp in 2014 that "our marriage isn't perfect, and we have had difficult ups and downs."
In recent years, Sophie has curtailed joint appearances with her husband and signs of stress were clear.
On their wedding anniversary last year, Sophie said in a social media post that "we have navigated through sunny days, heavy storms, and everything in between and it ain't over."
She went on: "long-term relationships are challenging in so many ways".
The two of them did travel to London in May for the coronation of King Charles and were together when U.S. President Joe Biden visited in late March.
Trudeau gave a news conference on Monday and took a ride on the Toronto subway that night but has had no public appearances scheduled for the last two days. As recently as Monday, he was still wearing his wedding ring.
"Sophie and I would like to share the fact that after many meaningful and difficult conversations, we have made the decision to separate," Trudeau said on Instagram. Sophie posted an almost identical message on her own Instagram account.
Trudeau's office said the two had signed a legal agreement.
"They have worked to ensure that all legal and ethical steps with regards to their decision to separate have been taken, and will continue to do so moving forward," it said.
"They remain a close family and Sophie and the Prime Minister are focused on raising their kids in a safe, loving and collaborative environment," said the statement from Trudeau's office, which requested privacy. "The family will be together on vacation, beginning next week."
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Sunday, June 25, 2023
BREAKING: Muslim Canadians surround Justin Trudeau’s office, protest against far-left LGBTQ indoctrination of children
BREAKING: Muslim Canadians surround Justin Trudeau’s office, protest against far-left LGBTQ indoctrination of children
- Canadian News
- Jun 24, 2023
"Leave the Canadian flag alone!" The rest of the crowd began to chant, "No more silence!"
A group of Muslims gathered outside Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's office to protest the LGBTQ indoctrination and the replacement of Canadian flags with the rainbow 'Pride' flag on government buildings.
In a video posted on Twitter by Dacey Media, protesters chanted, "Leave our kids alone" and "The Flag has to go" while pointing to the Pride flag on the side of the building.Another man shouted, "Leave the Canadian flag alone!" The rest of the crowd began to chant, "No more silence!"
On June 16, Christians and Muslims came together in Calgary to protest the gender ideology being taught in schools. One man said, "We stand together, as a Canadian people as a Muslim and a Christian, to protect our children." Another man added, "From that" as he pointed to a group of LGBTQ activists across the street.
On June 9, Chris Elston, also known as Billboard Chris, joined an interfaith coalition in Ottawa to protest LGBTQ content promoted in schools.
"Everyone on our side of this has been too afraid to speak up, but those days are over," he told The Post Millennial's Beth Baisch. "People are learning about this, they're learning how to speak about this, and we're never gonna be quiet again."
People of the Muslim faith have also begun to speak out in the United
States. Earlier this month, an all-Muslim city council in Hamtramck,
Michigan, voted to ban Pride flags from being flown on public property
as parents in Montgomery County, Maryland, protested their school board
to be able to opt their children out of LGBTQ teachings.
Friday, June 16, 2023
Canada's supreme court upholds U.S. Safe Third Country Agreement
Canada's supreme court upholds U.S. Safe Third Country Agreement
June 16 (UPI) -- The Supreme Court of Canada on Friday upheld the Safe Third Country Agreement the country shares with the United States, declaring it is constitutional.
The nine-judge panel voted unanimously in favor of cementing the legislation, which stipulates refugee claimants must request protection in the first safe country they arrive in, unless they qualify for an exception.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had not commented publicly on the decision as of 12:30 p.m. EDT, which amounts to a victory for his government.
Immigration Minister Sean Fraser has also yet to issue a comment.
Oral arguments in the case took place in October.
The ruling means Canadian officials can continue to turn back those seeking to claim refugee status in the country that are arriving across the shared U.S. land border.
Anyone crossing a legal entry point is deemed not eligible for refugee protection in Canada as they would have already reached the United States.
The STCA was first signed in 2002 and came into effect in 2004.
It was modified in March and "helps both governments better manage access to the refugee system in each country for people crossing the Canada-U.S. land border."
The United States is the only country deemed a "safe third country" by the agreement.
Rules do not apply to American citizens or residents of the United States who are not citizens of any country.
Opponents to the ruling argued refugee claimants returned to the United States are often detained, mistreated or deported.
There are four exceptions to the current regulations as currently written. Exceptions exist for family members, unaccompanied minors, document holders as well as public interest exceptions.
Thursday, June 1, 2023
Statement - Maxime Bernier Candidacy Announcement in Portage—Lisgar
*This election is very important, if Maxime Bernier gets elected and holds a PPC seat this will be a great game changer for the PPC and Canada!*
Statement - Maxime Bernier Candidacy Announcement in Portage—Lisgar
Press conference, Portage la Prairie, MB, May 12, 2023
Good morning, everyone. Thank you for coming. Merci à tous d’être ici aujourd’hui pour cette importante annonce.
I have some big news to share with you. But first, I want to speak a little about what’s happening in our country. What I’m about to announce will make better sense if I give you the context.
Today, our country is at its lowest point in living memory. I say with the confidence of experience that we no longer have the country I grew up in. Canada has changed dramatically and for the worse.
For years, we’ve gotten less and less for our dollar, and what we get is not the same quality as before. Inflation is eating away at our standard of living. Government and household debt has skyrocketed. Our healthcare system is hopelessly broken.
But even worse than the state of our economy is the state of our culture. We are living in highly immoral times. Everywhere you look, you see examples of moral and cultural degeneracy.
Radical cultural Marxists have seized control of our educational system, the mainstream media, and governments. They push a program of anti-life, anti-family, and anti-Canadian values. Gender ideology and the trans movement are promoting confusion and the mutilation of children.
It is useless to debate with these extremists. There is no common ground. They seek only one objective—to destroy Canadian society as we know it and upend the traditional structures of life which have underpinned our civilization. Their insanity is undermining our traditions, our history, and our nation.
The Woke Cult is demolishing the traditional pillars of our society and aims to establish a twisted and profoundly sick vision of the future. They are moving at a rapid pace. Do you remember ten years ago? There was no drag queen story hour where children were indoctrinated into the cult of transgenderism. Ten years ago, it would have been unthinkable to indoctrinate seven and eight-year-olds and force sexuality upon them. Now you can go to jail for opposing the transition of your child!
We are living in a completely different society, one overtaken by evil. And do you want to know the worst part? As these perverted ideas are being pushed everywhere in Canada—there is not a SINGLE MP FIGHTING AGAINST THIS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS.
Let that sink in.
We are losing our society because few people are fighting for it. The elites are totally on board with this radical transformation of our society. And those who reject it are silenced and smeared as intolerant, racist and transphobic.
And you might ask the question, “Maxime, what about the Conservative Party of Canada?”
The so-called Conservative Party has conserved NOTHING since its inception in 2003 after the merging of the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservative Party. As I said when I left that party in 2018, they are morally and intellectually corrupt.
Whether it's gender ideology, mass immigration, climate hysteria, the cult of diversity, or abortion, the CPC has refused to fight the necessary cultural battles. They are too scared of negative coverage from the mainstream media and being called bigots. They have sat on their hands as the Radical Left has taken over our society.
What is the Conservative Party doing today? Some of their most prominent MPs, including their Deputy Leader, promote the so-called “Transgender Day of Visibility.” The men in that party walk around in pink high heels and prostrate themselves before radical leftists. They are not coming to the rescue. They will not stop the sexualization of our children. They will not stop cultural Marxists from rewriting our history. The Conservatives won’t save us. They have given up.
I am ready to fight. The PPC is ready to fight. I left the Conservative party for a reason. I know that if we do not fight for our values and culture, we will lose everything.
That is why I am proud to announce that I am putting my name forward in the upcoming by-election to be YOUR representative, you the people of Portage-Lisgar, in the House of Commons. Because families deserve a strong voice!
This riding has a strong tradition of electing conservative-minded members of Parliament. It elected a Reform Party member in the 1990s. And I am the right person, as leader of the People’s Party of Canada, to represent its voters today.
Today’s fake Conservative Party have no real arguments as to why you should vote for them instead of the PPC. They can’t compete with our policies and principles. All they can do is attempt to smear us and scare Canadians into voting for them.
Their tired argument that we “split the vote” makes no sense. The PPC and the CPC have very different policies and principles. It’s not us who are splitting the conservative vote; on the contrary, it’s the Conservatives who keep moving to the left to split the Liberal vote!
This “split the vote” argument is even less valid in the current situation. No matter the result of this by-election, the CPC will not form the government. We will still be stuck with Justin Trudeau. This is not an opportunity to get Trudeau out, but IT IS an opportunity to get a new voice in.
The Liberals and NDP are not competitive here. There is no concern about a radical leftist winning. This is a two-horse race between the People’s Party and the Conservative Party.
This by-election is about giving a voice to the people of Portage—Lisgar: it’s about YOUR values and who YOU want to represent you in Ottawa.
Do you want a strong voice for your families or another fake Conservative who will say one thing when he’s here in Manitoba but stay silent when he returns to Ottawa? Do you want a Member of Parliament who respects and will fight for family values or another so-called Conservative who takes your vote for granted?
Send me to Ottawa, and I will speak out against the anti-family policies pushed by the Ottawa elite.
I’m sure some of you are wondering, “What is this Quebecer doing running in Southern Manitoba? How can he represent us?”
Over the past few years since I founded the PPC, I’ve been lucky enough to make many stops across Portage—Lisgar, even more so in recent weeks and months as I’ve prepared for this by-election.
When I visit Winkler, Morden, Portage, and many other communities in this riding, I am reminded of Beauce, where I grew up, the riding I represented in parliament for 13 years. But I am also reminded of so many special corners of this country that I have had the privilege of visiting in my years campaigning to give a voice to the voiceless.
When I talk to people here and across the country, I keep hearing that they feel forgotten by an Ottawa-elite class focused on pet social issues that are irrelevant to them.
I have a message for those who feel forgotten here in Portage—Lisgar. You will not be forgotten anymore. I will be your voice in Ottawa. I have been defending the same principles and policies consistently for many years now. If you believe in these principles and want someone to fight for them in Ottawa, I am that man. I won’t change. I won’t compromise.
I will be in the House talking about the issues the fake Conservatives are too afraid to even discuss. And yes, I will work and vote with them whenever they find enough courage to act like real conservatives.
I know that the PPC already has a lot of support in this riding. In the last election we had our best result across the country here in Portage—Lisgar.
This is where we hosted the biggest PPC rally in the Party’s history. Near Winkler 3000 patriots came out to support our fight for freedom. It was the biggest rally held by any political party during the last election.
Just outside this riding, I was wrongly arrested two years ago for refusing to comply with immoral, unconstitutional, and tyrannical covid restrictions imposed on us.
These are just a couple of events that have drawn me to this area over the past few years. I feel a special connection to this riding. This is where the renewal of our country will begin.
Together, we will redefine what it means to be a conservative in Canada. One more or less CPC MP will not make a difference. But one PPC Member of Parliament will offer more opposition against the Radical Left than the entire so-called Conservative Party!
We saw during the covid years just how morally bankrupt and ineffective the 119 CPC MPs truly were. For two years, every last one of them stayed silent, including their leader Pierre Poilievre. They did nothing as the Liberals and NDP worked hand in hand to steal our freedoms, destroy our economy and coerce millions to take unnecessary covid shots.
We have a special opportunity here. The opportunity to jump-start a much-needed political revolution in this country. To make history by electing the first ever PPC MP and adding a badly-needed true conservative voice to the House of Commons.
This situation reminds me a lot of the Reform Party. Back in 1987, the Reform Party was founded to give a voice to frustrated conservative Canadians here in Western Canada. The People’s Party policies are very similar to those of the Reform Party back then.
The Reform Party first entered Parliament in 1989 when they won a single seat in a by-election. In the subsequent general election in 1993, 51 more MPs were sent to Ottawa. The following election saw them become the official opposition. All the populist-conservative Reform Party needed was a foothold into Parliament, a single seat, and then the floodgates opened.
Despite never forming government, the years with the Reform Party in Parliament saw some of the most conservative governance in my lifetime. The Liberal minority governments with Reform in opposition were arguably more conservative than the subsequent Harper government!
The PPC will pick up the torch from the Reform Party, and it starts right here in Portage—Lisgar. We have learned from the mistakes of the Reform Party. We will never compromise our values. We won’t merge with a corrupt party. We will fight until we win and restore sanity in this country.
In 2023, a true conservative voice is more necessary than ever. The Radical Left has been unopposed for too long, and the impact that it has had on our culture is obvious. We need a strong voice for families in Ottawa. The Liberals and NDP attack you and your families. At the same time, the so-called Conservatives forget about you until your vote is convenient during an election.
This by-election is the start of a major turning point in Canadian politics. Let’s begin this common sense, populist, conservative revolution right here today. For the people of Portage—Lisgar. And for all of Canada!
Quebec will require economic immigrants to speak French before arriving: Legault
*A great way to preserve french Euro-Canadian ethnic makeup and heritage as Euro-Canadians are quickly becoming a minority and Quebec may be the last bastion in the future of core Euro-Canadian culture in Canada!*
Quebec will require economic immigrants to speak French before arriving: Legault
The Canadian Press
Published Friday, May 26, 2023
Months after saying that accepting more than 50,000 immigrants a year would be “suicidal” for Quebec, the province’s premier is considering increasing the number of immigrants who arrive in the province to 60,000 a year.
Premier François Legault said that will be possible after an immigration reform announced Thursday, which will require the vast majority of people who come through the province's economic immigration system to speak French before they arrive.
"From the moment we are able to, because there's real openness on the part of the federal government, say that the increase is only francophones, or people who have mastered French, that completely changes the situation," he told reporters Thursday in Quebec City.
Legault said the potential rise in immigration would come entirely from an increase in the number of people accepted through the Quebec-controlled economic immigration stream.
Sixty-five per cent of immigrants to Quebec come through the economic stream, which is controlled by the province, with the rest coming through the federally-controlled family reunification and refugee programs.
Legault said that when he described increased immigration as suicidal last year, he believed that the federal government would require increases in those two categories if Quebec accepted more economic immigrants.
“I thought, at the time, that the federal government wouldn't permit us to increase only the percentage of economic immigrants and, so far, with the discussion we’ve had with the federal government, they are more than open to accept that, so it's changing the picture completely," he said.
He said the increase is one of two scenarios the province is considering and that the other scenario would maintain immigration at 50,000 people a year.
If the increased threshold is adopted, Legault said immigration levels would rise gradually to reach 60,000 people a year by 2027.
The actual number of immigrants the province accepts could be even higher, he said, because that figure doesn't include people who come through a fast-track program for graduates of Quebec universities.
However, that program -- which currently requires applicants to have a higher level of French than many workers who would be accepted under the province's new plan and is open to graduates of all Quebec post-secondary institutions -- will be restricted to students who graduate from programs taught in French, or who attended high school in French.
Legault said that as premier of Quebec his primary responsibility is to protect the province's French character.
"Since the last 10, 15, 20 years, we see that the percentage of people speaking French is decreasing, so we have to do something and I think it's important that we request that they speak French before being accepted," he said.
Christine Fréchette, Quebec's immigration minister, said the reform -- which will go ahead whether the province decides to increase its immigration threshold or not -- will change the way Quebec selects immigrants, moving away from a point system that rewards, but does not require, knowledge of the French language.
The point system will be replaced by a system where certain criteria, such as French-language knowledge, must be met.
While graduates of English-language programs at Quebec universities will no longer be eligible for the fast track, known as the Quebec Experience Program, Fréchette said graduates of those programs who do speak French can still apply as skilled workers.
"So it's not like the door is closed, it's that there's another path that will have to be taken," she said.
She said that under the new plan, 96 per cent of people who apply to immigrate to Quebec through the economic stream will be required to speak French.
That would increase the number of all immigrants to Quebec who speak French from 68 per cent in 2022, to 72 per cent by 2027, if the increase is adopted, or 70 per cent by 2027, if the number of immigrants remains at 50,000 people a year.
Legault said he's not yet committed to the increase, adding that he wants to consult with experts first.
Business groups generally welcomed the reform and the possibility that the province will raise immigration levels.
The Conseil du patronat du Québec, a large employers group, said the reform appears to find a balance between promoting the French language and helping employers find skilled workers.
Opposition parties, however, criticized the reform for failing to address the issue of temporary foreign workers.
There are around 346,000 temporary residents in the province, including international students, temporary workers and asylum seekers.
Monsef Derraji, immigration critic for the Opposition Liberals, said the government should make French-language programs available to temporary workers.
Québec solidaire immigration critic Guillaume Cliche-Rivard said the government needs a plan to encourage immigrants to settle outside of major cities, and should do that by giving temporary workers a path to permanent residence.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 25, 2023.
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
York Catholic school board nixes flying Pride flag
*Thank God! ✝️ Yet another Catholic School Board in Canada joining others to take a stand against the Communist/Woke/Gay Grooming agenda! 👌*
York Catholic school board nixes flying Pride flag
Straight Pride Flag should be flown
Story by Kevin Connor
The York Catholic District School Board has voted against flying the Pride flag next month.
On Monday night, trustees voted 6-4 against flying the Pride flag outside the board’s Aurora building during Pride month.
The issue had been discussed for some time and drew many to the public gallery of the meetings at the Catholic Education Centre.
There were those for and against flying the flag and the discussions at times were tense with police even called to some meetings.
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/world/york-catholic-school-board-nixes-flying-pride-flag/ar-AA1bT60H
Thursday, May 25, 2023
This is our Positive response to the Drag Queen Story Time…
This is our positive response to the Drag Queen Story Time…Please join us for fun, age appropriate stories & songs to emphasize what a normal child story time should look like. Please share with your family, friends and groups!
Drag Queen Story-time Protest at Peterborough Public Saturday may 6th 2023 library was a great success!
Drag Queen Story-time Protest at Peterborough Public library Saturday may 6th 2023 was a great success!
Was a Great Anti-Drag Queen Story-time Child Abuse protest at the Peterborough Public Library! Had 20 to 30 supporters of children on our side this time I was not alone!
I would like to thank all the couple dozen people and groups that showed up at the Peterborough Public Library to protest against Drag Queen story time.
Save Canada and various other Christian and non-Christian groups and people. We stood against Communists and Evil in quite a large group for an event in Peterborough! Not sure if we can top that but we sure as Heck will try and keep fighting! Deus Vult! End Child Grooming and Abuse!
Communist Propaganda being handed out at Peterborough Public Library.
Sunday, May 21, 2023
Why human smuggling attempts are on the rise on the U.S.-Canada border
"As the numbers of migrants attempting to cross the border between official ports of entry escalate rapidly, experts predict that more and more people will turn to human smuggling – unless Canada shores up its border enforcement."
Why human smuggling attempts are on the rise on the U.S.-Canada border
Akwesasne has long been a gaping hole in the U.S.-Canada border – exploited by smugglers to ship tobacco, guns and, most horrific, people.
Organized crime rings have targeted it for its strategic location, wedged between Quebec, Ontario and New York state. And sometimes, those who believe in its reputation as an undefended portal to a better life end up paying with their own lives.
As the numbers of migrants attempting to cross the border between official ports of entry escalate rapidly, experts predict that more and more people will turn to human smuggling – unless Canada shores up its border enforcement.
In late March, two migrant families – one from Romania and one from India – died in a failed smuggling attempt on the St. Lawrence River. But they were not the first.
In 2015, two men from India drowned and a third was rescued while attempting to be smuggled into the U.S. on the St. Lawrence in a Seadoo when it capsized. Last year, an Indian family died near Emerson, Man., in a failed attempt to cross into the U.S.
Across the 9,000-kilometre stretch of U.S.-Canada border, encounters with migrants are on the rise, statistics from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) show.
In the year to March 2022, CBP officers recorded 109,535 attempts by migrants to cross into the U.S. Six months into the 2023 fiscal year, there have already been 84,555.
On the Canadian side, migrants typically leave from Cornwall, Ont., or nearby, boarding a boat helmed by a local. From there, it’s about a 15-minute trip to New York through the Mohawk Nation at Akwesasne First Nation – an Indigenous reserve split in half by the U.S. and Canadian border.
Cornwall and Akwesasne police, as well as U.S. authorities, are routinely apprehending migrants using smuggling “agencies” – a clandestine operation linking brokers in Toronto and Montreal to locals in Cornwall and Akwesasne to ferry them over the river to a better life.
Locals speak of the smuggling industry with an air of indifference. For many, it’s been going on so long, it’s become part of the fabric of the area.
“The town has become apathetic towards it,” the owner of a local cafe, who asked not to be named, says.
“There was a restaurant who was busted for it a few years ago, and people will say, ‘Sure, they were done for smuggling but, you know, they do good shawarma.’”
In 2015, provincial police broke up a gun trafficking ring in Cornwall that operated out of a shawarma restaurant directly across the street from a police station.
Experts have differing ideas on what Canada should do to secure its land borders.
Kelly Sundberg, a retired Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officer and now Mount Royal University professor, says the current land border security system – run by the CBSA and the RCMP – is “inefficient,” and the RCMP must be booted off the job for it to improve.
“If we’re really serious about people smuggling … the CBSA needs to be really ramped up. It needs resources. And it needs to be held accountable,” he says.
But the people of Akwesasne would disagree. If they had jurisdictional control over their community, local historian and journalist Doug George-Kanentiio says, the people smuggling industry would be “stopped overnight.”
“We’d have a Mohawk militia out on those waters and we know we could stop this ourselves.”
But all agree on one point. With an increasing number of migrants heading for the border, and the recent closure of Quebec’s Roxham Road – once a key route for people hoping to apply for political asylum in Canada – people will put themselves in increasing danger for a shot at a better life.
The Swanton Sector’s human smuggling industry
The St. Lawrence River is a treacherous expanse of water, separating Canada from the U.S., and in parts, Quebec from Ontario. On its northern banks sits Cornwall, Ontario’s easternmost town – which, like Akwesasne, is deeply entrenched in the smuggling industry.
Two years before the shawarma restaurant was busted, the Cornwall Regional Task Force busted a massive marijuana ring operating in the area, arresting about 37 people.
Human smugglers are busted, too, from time to time. But they are usually arrested and charged in isolation while the system continues to operate in the background.
In 2018, 39-year-old Louie McDonald of Snye, Que., was found guilty at trial on two counts of manslaughter and a breach of a probation order related to smuggling after two Indian men drowned while he was ferrying them across the St. Lawrence River on his Seadoo in 2015. He was sentenced to 13 months and 25 days in jail.
A co-accused in the case, Jacob Wesley Martin from Hogansburg, N.Y., was due to stand trial in 2017 but instead crossed into Canada and was deemed a “fugitive,” according to U.S. court documents. Later, the RCMP arrested him on charges related to the case.
Global’s attempts to track him down via the RCMP, the Correctional Service of Canada, the CBSA and his lawyers yielded no results.
Steve Shand, a Florida man facing smuggling charges linked to the deaths of four migrants who froze to death during a blizzard in Manitoba last January, will stand trial on July 18.
Two people were arrested by the RCMP on human smuggling charges in Cornwall late last year.
Global News asked the RCMP headquarters, as well as their Ontario and Quebec divisions, the CBSA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, for human smuggling data.
Border security is a shared mandate between the CBSA and RCMP. The CBSA is responsible for enforcing legislation at designated ports of entry, while the RCMP enforces the law between those ports.
The Ontario RCMP said in 2022 in Cornwall, they apprehended 142 people attempting to be smuggled southbound into the U.S., and just seven heading north into Canada. The disparity is likely due to Roxham Road still being operational in 2022.
From January to April 2023, Cornwall RCMP say they have intercepted 20 southbound human smuggling occurrences, with an unconfirmed number of people involved.
The CBSA said between 2016 and 2022, they opened 386 human smuggling criminal investigations across Canada. The agency laid charges in 167 of them.
The CBSA initially agreed to provide the entire 10 years of human smuggling statistics but later declined “after further review.” It also declined to break down the statistics by year.
Each of the other agencies refused to provide data.
The CBSA also would not comment on the case of the Iordaches, a Romanian family facing a deportation order who were one of the two families who died in the St. Lawrence River in March. Instead, it provided a general statement on removal orders.
“All individuals who are subject to enforcement action by the CBSA have access to due process and procedural fairness. Once individuals have exhausted all legal avenues of appeal and due process, they are expected to respect our laws and leave Canada or be removed,” the statement said.
Migrant numbers at the U.S.-Canada border are increasing
Experts worry that as the number of migrants heading to the U.S.-Canada border increases, many will resort to human smugglers and risky modes of transport.
Just six months into 2023, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has recorded 2,670 “apprehensions or encounters” with migrants crossing from Canada across the Swanton Sector – the most popular crossing point on the U.S.-Canada border. That’s more than double (1,065) what was recorded in 2022 as a whole.
The CBP defines an apprehension as “the physical control or temporary detainment of a person who is not lawfully in the United States, which may or may not result in an arrest.” An encounter is those who are either apprehended and expelled from the country or apprehended and allowed to go through routine removal proceedings.
January’s total of 367 surpassed the preceding January apprehensions for the past 12 years combined, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Canada’s data is harder to track due to its convoluted border management system.
Statistics from the Immigration and Refugees Board (IRB) show that irregular border crossings into Canada leading to refugee claims have been climbing for months. In the first quarter of 2022, there were 2,772 claims from irregular border crossers. By the fourth quarter, that number had almost tripled.
The RCMP intercepted 39,611 irregular migrants entering Canada in 2022. Between Jan. 1 and March 31 this year, that number was already at 13,748.
Quebec RCMP noted a “significant increase” in southbound activity in recent months, but a “noticeable decrease” in northbound traffic following the closure of Roxham Road.
“Most times, these individuals that are interdicted by our officers are legally in Canada, sometimes having arrived in Canada days earlier through Toronto or Montreal airports,” a Quebec RCMP spokesperson said.
Experts worry that with the increase in numbers, and without the unofficial border crossing at Roxham Road, asylum seekers will attempt riskier crossing methods – leading to more deaths.
“People’s situations are not going to change just because Canada closed the border,” refugee and immigration lawyer Maureen Silcoff says.
“They still need a safe haven. That’s the dangerous part because we know people will fall prey to agents or smugglers who will put people in perilous situations.”
Not enough time has passed since the closing of Roxham Road for its impacts to be gauged, Silcoff says, but she believes other routes will likely open up along the border. She believes that the smuggling industry will “easily adjust itself” to Canada’s new rules, but “more people will be in harm’s way.”
“The government can still invoke public policy exemptions to mitigate that loss of life,” she says.
“People’s need for protection will not change.”
'The RCMP … do a substandard job’
Sundberg says the increase in the number of travellers attempting land border crossings is a reflection of global instability: a migration crisis, namely, owing to ongoing global conflicts.
Canada’s border services, he says, aren’t equipped to deal with it.
“Two organizations in many regards are addressing the same issue – to monitor irregular migration and protect our borders. It’s inefficient. The RCMP are our defacto border control, and they do a substandard job of it. They don’t have the bodies or the resources to do a better job,” he says.
To improve Canada’s border security, Sundberg says, Ottawa should consolidate border security and migration control under one agency: the CBSA. Officers should also be specially trained in geopolitics, migration and the psychology of human smuggling.
Sundberg also says there should be more officers abroad, especially at high commissions, and a closer working relationship with Homeland Security to understand human-smuggling patterns. Given that airport border security is now largely automated, the CBSA could pull its staff from there to support these new roles, he says.
“We have control of our airports, but we definitely don’t have control of our land borders.”