Canadians have the government they voted for.
It won't end well:
“Climate action can’t wait. Since 2015, Canada has been a committed partner in the fight against climate change, and as we move to a net-zero future, we will continue to do our part to cut pollution and build a cleaner future for everyone.”
After which Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau flew somewhere in the area of 400,000 kilometres in private jets over a six-year period. As reported by the National Post in April, 2022, Trudeau has flown nearly 128,000 km in the past 10 months.
“Citing security concerns, the Canadian government has asked U.S. civil aviation authorities to filter Canadian military flights from popular online flight tracking services, a move that has complicated the ability to track the prime minister’s flight habits.”
You can't travel, however, because you are not Justin:
The government website once read, "It only takes minutes to help keep each other safe." Now it says, "ArriveCAN is not only keeping travellers safe, but is part of our ongoing efforts to modernize our border."Last week, in Windsor, Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino told reporters, "ArriveCAN was originally created for COVID-19, but it has technological capacity beyond that, to shrink the amount of time that is required when you're getting screened at the border."
The app was first designed as a COVID-19 screening tool that allowed travellers to report their trips and prove vaccination status.
Those who don't comply face flight delays, 14-day quarantine, and even a $5,000 fine.
Now, Mendicino suggests that the app is here to stay as part of Canada's cross-border experience. The latest version of ArriveCAN (v.2.3) allows travellers to submit custom declaration forms upon arrival.
"So that's the vision is really to utilize the platform to decrease the amount of time, so CBSA officers can really focus on the problem areas, like if you're trying to smuggle a gun or trying to smuggle drugs," he told reporters in Windsor.
Even though updates were made quietly, Canadians noticed and are not happy.
Make Justin go through an independent committee every time he wants to burn jet fuel.
Let's see what that douche does when he is refused.
Also:
The passport office in a briefing note says it knew a year ago there would be increased demand for travel documents. Management admitted delays in processing applications are now longer than they were before the pandemic: “Passport services are not yet back to normal.”
And - no app needed:
Nigeria is the biggest source of people crossing at Roxham and just 30% of the more than 16,000 who crossed there between February 2017 and March 2022 were accepted as valid refugees. For the more than 10,000 Haitians who crossed — the second-largest source country, just 23% were accepted.
Roxham Road has become a way for those looking to skip the long delays in legal, economic migration to get into Canada.
This isn’t how a properly functioning immigration and refugee system should work, but very little of what the Trudeau government is doing these days is working properly.
Authorities in German are said to have begged for Canada to surrender a part needed for its Russian gas pipeline by arguing that the essential component was needed to prevent “popular uprisings”, a report claims.
In the hopes of persuading authorities within Justin Trudeau’s leftist government to relax sanctions against Russia enough to allow the export of an essential energy pipeline part, German authorities reportedly told their Canadian counterparts that, without the component in question, Germany would be forced to fend off internal “popular uprisings”.
While authorities have since tried to play down their own statements on the matter, these claims made by German authorities are consistent with previous statements from ministers, with one decrying the possibility of so-called “right-wing extremists” gaining popularity should the country’s government be unable to manage the country’s energy situation.
According to a report by Die Welt, Germany’s foreign affairs minister, Annalena Baerbock, told Canadian authorities that Germany would no longer be able to support Ukraine without the Siemens-produced turbine, which has been deemed an extremely important part for the Nord Stream 1 pipeline between Russia and Europe.
The absence of the part allegedly due to Western sanctions had been used as a raison d’être by Russian President Vladimir Putin to drastically reduce the amount of Russian gas being supplied to Germany, a reduction that launched the central European state head-first into a crippling gas crisis.
Just print more money:
Cabinet yesterday disclosed it approved another $500 million loan for Ukraine. The announcement came the same day Ukraine confirmed with creditors it suspended payments on its foreign debt: “It is in the national interest.”
**
The CBC has 143 executive directors including eight directors of finance, nine directors of legal services and 26 directors of “technology and infrastructure,” according to Access To Information records. Individual pay and benefits were not disclosed though one former executive put his yearly bonus at $80,000: “That requires visionary talent.”
Also - do you see what happens when you let some hairy savage tell you what to think?:
The initiative funded by Canadian Heritage is meant to promote “civic, news, and digital media literacy through funding third-party educational activities and programming to help citizens become resilient against disinformation,” according to a statement.“These projects will give Canadians skills and tools to tell fact from fiction online. We live and work better as a society when we have a common set of facts,” stated Minister of Canadian Heritage Pablo Rodriguez.
I already have the tools to discern fact from fiction. It's called a brain.
Pablo doesn't have one.
Is anyone paying attention to the residential schools that were Pierre Trudeau's fault and not the Church's?
No?
Chief Supt. Darren Campbell became involved in the response on the night of April 18, 2020, as killings began in Portapique, N.S., and he remained involved the next day as the killer continued his rampage before being shot by police.
Campbell approved deploying a critical incident commander to the scene at 10:46 p.m. on the first night and stayed in contact with RCMP officers on site as the killer drove a replica police car through the province.
The question of who was in charge in those crucial early hours was criticized in an earlier occupational health and safety report, which found RCMP employees did not have the necessary supervision and operated in an “environment of confusion.”
Trudeau has done a few things wrong 👇👇 pic.twitter.com/nB9zddLUGM
— Bond (@bondzie007) July 24, 2022
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