The real threat to this country is waitresses who donate twenty dollars to a popular grassroots movement marked by children's inflatable entertainment:
Ottawa’s interim police chief says he did not ask the federal government to invoke the Emergencies Act during the “Freedom Convoy” in February.
Bell said two protesters collided with the horses, then got back up on their feet and continue to protest. Earlier, police said a protester threw a bicycle at a horse.
Just get the Americans to do your spying for you:
Canadian special forces operated an aircraft equipped with surveillance equipment over protests in downtown Ottawa despite a military directive that was supposed to prohibit such activities.
The Jan. 27 directive stipulated that Canadian Forces vehicles and personnel were to avoid the Ottawa protest and Royal Canadian Air Force planes were not to fly over the “Freedom Convoy” demonstration.
But Canadian special forces leaders reasoned they didn’t have to follow the military directive since the surveillance plane they were using was owned by a private defence contractor.
Someone gave the order.
But no one can find axe-wielding maniacs:
Nearly three months after masked, axe-wielding assailants attacked a B.C. work camp in the dead of night, a team of more than 40 RCMP investigators have yet to announce any leads into the identities, funding or methods of those responsible.
On Feb. 17, between 20 and 40 masked attackers carrying torches, flare guns and axes swarmed a Coastal GasLink work camp near Houston, B.C., doing several million dollars in damage.
In the wake of the attack, a statement by B.C. Premier John Horgan called it a “violent and criminal act” and promised a “thorough investigation to identify and apprehend those responsible.” Within hours, the B.C. RCMP announced they had earmarked 40 investigators for the case.
Just last week, another violent incident — this time in Montreal — appeared to be linked to the Coastal GasLink project. A Jaguar and Land Rover parked in the driveway of RBC executive Michael Fortier were both lit on fire. Service de Police de la Ville de MontrĂ©al are currently investigating the arson’s connection to a string of recent vandalism incidents targeting the homes of RBC executives, ostensibly due to the bank’s financing of the Coastal GasLink project.
The Feb. 17 incident, which happened to occur during a brief period when the Emergencies Act was in force to clear anti-mandate blockades in Ottawa, was also prominently mentioned during last Wednesday’s Conservative leadership debate. When asked what he would do to counter illegal blockades, frontrunner Pierre Poilievre accused moderator Tom Clark of failing to mention “the axe-wielding terrorists who have been attacking our pipeline workers in Western Canada.”
And there you have it.
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