Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Mid-Week Post

Your mid-week amble through the ashes ...

 

The vanity election with the second lowest turn-out revealed that Canadians are fond of their scandal-ridden, black-faced retard:

If the strategists who allocated resources to the overall Liberal campaign are super-geniuses, the party’s sagging vote share hints at the existence of a second group of less brilliant people — Liberal dark matter? — who were responsible for trivia like the party platform and the prime minister’s image. (Perhaps not coincidentally, this is the department of the Liberal factory wherein Mr. Butts used to toil before he became a political liability and departed. Maybe this is the esoteric Straussian message encoded in his tweet: without me, microtargeting is all they’ve got.)

** 

Elections Canada last night calculated turnout in Monday’s general election was only the second-worst since Confederation. An estimated 58.9 percent of electors cast ballots compared to the record low 58.8 percent in 2008: “We will have to consider this.”

 

Wear it, Canada!:

Canada’s international influence has been declining for years, and the establishment of a new U.S.-led security alliance that intentionally excludes us is just the latest consequence of this. Indeed, this announcement was made in the midst of an election campaign, one in which Canada’s defence policies, and larger defence spending record, has been most notable for its absence (as has virtually any discussion of foreign policy).

It thus adds to the growing perception that Ottawa has effectively disappeared as an international actor, a development that few Canadians seem to be aware of (or care about). Other countries have noticed, though, and are adjusting their policies accordingly. As a result, I doubt many observers in Washington, London or Canberra will shed a tear for our ever-diminishing international influence.

 

Also:

And then on Monday, Chiu lost to Liberal Parm Bains by almost 3,000 votes, just two years after he was first elected, even as the Liberals more or less duplicated their 2019 performance.

His defeat — and that of other Conservative MPs in ridings dominated by Chinese Canadians, – has raised the question of whether proxies for the People’s Republic government managed to influence the election – just as security agencies and other watchdogs have warned could happen.

 

Um, what about 2013


And - stop being an @$$hole about this, Erin. You lost because you were a pastier Trudeau. Loads of failures and corruption to mention and you did none of that. You wanted to fail:

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole says he's triggered a review looking into his party's election loss, underscoring that he's committed to making sure the Tories are battle-ready for the next one.

 

Don't forget that some of the chaff was voted out and won't be getting a gold-plated pension as a result.

 



 

Today in "this entire COVID thing is a scam and we all know it!" news:

On the first day Ontario’s new COVID-19 vaccine certificate system was set to go into effect, the province’s portal to download vaccine receipts was  temporarily shut down for maintenance.

** 

The Quebec government plans to introduce a bill on Thursday banning anti-vaccine protests near schools and hospitals, and Premier François Legault says he wants it adopted within a day.

 

Hitler had stuff done in a day.

Just saying.

** 

The CBC has expressed regrets over a garbled online story that depicted re-elected Conservative MP Rachael Harder (Lethbridge, Alta.) as “callous and ignorant.” Records detailed snide questions from a CBC Calgary reporter who falsely accused the MP of spreading misinformation about Covid: “I agree we have failed.”  

**

Because the healthcare system is overflowing with medical professionals:

More than 100 staff members at a Windsor, Ont., hospital are being placed on unpaid leave for not receiving their first COVID-19 vaccine doses by a set deadline.

**

People voted for this:

Political aides in the Prime Minister’s Office offered a sole-sourced pandemic contract to a U.S. vendor by text, according to records. The message went to a Liberal Party contact at Tesla Motors Canada: “We will pay of course.”

 

More

Political aides in the Prime Minister’s Office offered a sole-sourced pandemic contract to a US vendor by text, according to records. The message went to a Trudeau Liberal contact at Tesla Motors Canada.

"We will pay, of course," texted Sarah Goodman, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's senior advisor on climate action. Goodman’s March 25, 2020 message followed a March 23 announcement by California’s governor that Tesla billionaire Elon Musk had made a "heroic" offer of 1,255 free ventilators.

"We see that Elon Musk was able to acquire some ventilators from China for California," texted Goodman.

"As you know, we are working all our pathways to get more supply here in Canada. If you have access or avenues to get ventilators, that would be most appreciated," she texted.

"We will pay, of course."

Tesla Motors does not manufacture ventilators. Ultimately no China-made ventilators were delivered by Tesla, according to the California governor’s office.

**

The Prime Minister’s Office from the earliest days of the pandemic knew of a “massive shortage” of masks that would have to be rationed, according to an internal document. The Public Health Agency at the time publicly stated Canadians had no need for masks: “Everybody wants it, we won’t have enough to go around.”

** 

And let's not forget that plethora of shots one must endure when the efficacy wears off and all that is left are some lingering side-effects:

Cole goes on to state that as a result of this vaccine-induced “killer T-cell” suppression, he is seeing an “uptick” of not only endometrial cancer, but also melanomas, as well as herpes, shingles, mono, and a “huge uptick” in HPV when “looking at the cervical biopsies of women.”  

This is not the first time the COVID-19 vaccines have been linked to serious issues regarding women’s health. 

According to a German research study, polyethylene glycol, an ingredient found in the Pfizer and Moderna jabs, has been found to pose a “potential toxicity risk” to women’s ovaries.  

Dr. Michael Yeadon, a former vice president at Pfizer, has cited the German study as a possible explanation for the large number of menstrual irregularities and miscarriages being reported by vaccinated women.  

Yeadon warns young women to avoid the vaccine for, in his expert opinion as a toxicologist, the shots will likely impede a woman’s ability to get pregnant and carry a baby to term.  

Dr. Cole states in his video that, not only are melanomas showing up more frequently, like endometrial cancers, the melanomas are also developing more rapidly, and are more severe in younger people, than he has ever previously witnessed. 

“Most concerning of all, there is a pattern of these types of immune cells in the body keeping cancer in check,” stated the doctor. 

“I’m seeing invasive melanomas in younger patients; normally we catch those early, and they are thin melanomas, [but] I’m seeing thick melanomas skyrocketing in the last month or two,” he added.

**

In the table footnotes, the following content should have been appended to the double dagger footnote: “No denominator was available to calculate a risk estimate for spontaneous abortions, because at the time of this report, follow-up through 20 weeks was not yet available for 905 of the 1224 participants vaccinated within 30 days before the first day of the last menstrual period or in the first trimester. Furthermore, any risk estimate would need to account for gestational week–specific risk of spontaneous abortion.”

These so-called vaccines:

**

In response, 52% of people polled were either totally against the idea or preferred that employers recommended a booster shot instead of making it mandatory. 

When broken down even further, 34% opposed mandates but supported recommending booster shots while 18% were against employers having any kind of stance on COVID-19 booster shots.

On the other hand, 48% of those polled said that they would support a mandatory booster shot if their employer required it.


 

Apparently, unemployment isn't a thing here

A federal agency, the National Research Council, is recruiting foreign workers after claiming it is “often not possible to find qualified Canadians” to work at its labs. Canada has produced 19 Nobel Laureates including prize winners in chemistry, medicine and physics: “Foreign workers may be hired to work in any NRC location across Canada.”

 

Don't we know it!



Water filtration plants are also terrible consequences of "colonisation":

Each morning, when O Canada plays over the speakers at River East Collegiate, 15-year-old Skyla Hart remains seated. 

"This country is a colonized country and I don't want to stand for a colonized country," Skyla said. "People always say, like, it was a long time ago, [but] we're still … going through it — all the trauma from it."

 

Like drinking clean water.

Air-lift yourself to North Korea, dear. 

 

 

Some Americans with a pulse voted for this:

 


No, Cuba has not been forgotten:

Suarez said that while protests still take place, the Communist regime passed a law in August called Decree 35, “basically threatening people who videotape, who share things on social media with fines and prison, and also encouraging their cadres to physically assault them.”


Why, it's like a petty, vindictive government that I know.



Can China drown in this debt?

One hopes so:

China itself is one big Evergrande.
One big debt crisis.

For years massively over-levered shadow banks masqueraded as propcos, got drunk on credit, flirted w/ default & called for bailout like a late-night uber.

Contagion has begun ...

 

Tolkien's experiences in the meat-grinder that was World War One contributed to his works:

The grim battles and fire-breathing beasts of J R R Tolkien’s The Hobbit drew inspiration from the author’s own real experiences fighting on the Somme in World War I.

The author had two close friends die in the battle, and fought across ground filled with rotting dead bodies in one of the deadliest battles in human history. 

One million people were wounded or killed at the Somme in the summer and autumn of 1916. 

The vast battles of Tolkien’s books and much of the grim imagery of Middle Earth were inspired by his World War I experiences, says John Garth, author of the biography Tolkien and the Great War.

(Sidebar: put that on your reading list.)

Garth said in an interview with the Mirror, "I think he wrote The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings partly because he was trying to exorcise the trauma he suffered. It was part of the healing process.”

 

 

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