Jesus answered him, “You would have no authority over Me at all, if it had not been given to you from above; for this reason the one who handed Me over to you has the greater sin.”
I hope that you're paying attention, electorate:
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s controversial decision to invoke the Emergencies Act and freeze the bank accounts of Freedom Convoy protesters continues to be an object of criticism in the European Parliament.
On Apr. 19, Dutch MEP Marcel de Graaff compared the Liberal government’s actions to a “social credit system” akin to China’s while debating the introduction of a “Digital Euro” in Brussels.
“Citizens’ greatest concern is that in the future the government will be able to limit what citizens spend their money on, such as meat products and fuels. Or that we get a form of a social credit system like in Canada, where your account is blocked if you are critical of the government,” said de Graaff.
“That is why the digital euro must meet the following requirements: purchases must not be traceable to the product, the balance must also be immediately withdrawable as cash and the balance must not be programmable. This must be laid down in law.”
No, it must not even be thought of.
**
"Brokenist" isn't a word, moron.
Wasn't Poiliviere's comment on a broken Canada inaccurate, anyway?
Not that Justin has the fortitude to face him.
(SEE: coward; full of himself):
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged to a crowd of Liberal faithful to lead the party into a fourth election as he attacked Pierre Poilievre over his “brokenist” Conservative politics.
Also - it's called being a real leader:
The president of NATO's newest member nation said the military alliance's two per cent defence spending target seems "self-evident" to him — even as a debate rages over the fact that most NATO members, Canada included, are not meeting the target.
In an interview airing Sunday on Rosemary Barton Live, Finnish President Sauli Niinistö said the Nordic country is committed to its current level of defence spending — around two per cent of GDP. NATO members pledged in 2006 to spend two per cent of their national GDP on defence.
"I think that it's self-evident ... To me, as a Finn, we usually do what we agree [to do]," Niinistö told host Rosemary Barton.
"It's an agreement. To follow it is self-evident."
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Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley says it’s appropriate for her to continue campaigning as wildfires rage on in the province’s north because Alberta is in an election period.
Notley’s comments came at a campaign stop in Calgary North East on Monday afternoon where she pitched increasing home care for seniors by $100 million.
Our Premier & NDP Leader, Rachel Notley cut the fire fighting budget to 86 million from 500 million. Last year the province spent 375 million. Despite the very dry winter and early fire season. The government chose to make the cuts, limiting contracts & lowering the funding. The fire started May 1, 30 km away from Fort McMurray, On May 3, it swept through the community, destroying approximately 2,400 homes and buildings and forcing the largest wildfire evacuation in Alberta's History. Why were the water bombers not called in ???
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