Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Canada the Cruel

 Euthanising the weak and vulnerable for living room:

Medically assisted deaths jumped by 31 per cent in Canada last year as part of a continuing trend since the practice was legalized in 2016 for those with a serious and incurable illness or disability, a federal report says.

Health Canada says in the report that 13,241 people chose medical assistance in dying (MAID) in 2022, for a total of 44,958 deaths so far, and that the average annual growth rate has been 31 per cent from 2019 to 2022.

The fourth annual report comes before MAID is expected to expand next spring to include people with a mental disorder as the sole underlying condition, though some psychiatrists are calling for more addiction and mental health services.

The report says 63 per cent of people who received MAID last year had cancer and 19 per cent had heart conditions. All provinces except Manitoba and Yukon continued to experience a steady year-over-year growth in MAID.

It says nearly 78 per cent of patients received palliative care, a level similar to the previous three years, and that half of patients got that care for a month or more, similar to the level reported in 2021.

Nearly 20 per cent of MAID recipients did not receive palliative care, but almost 88 per cent had access to it.

"The receipt of palliative care services is more common amongst individuals with a main condition of cancer, while disability support services were more commonly received by individuals suffering from a neurological condition," says the report, released Tuesday.

In a message accompanying the fourth annual MAID report, Health Minister Mark Holland says Ottawa is collaborating with provinces and territories to ensure the safe and consistent delivery of the provision.

Just put a bullet in their skulls. It's quicker.

You DO want them gone, don't you?

Of course you do:

Last year 4.1% of all deaths in Canada were due to MAiD (medical assistance in dying), according to the country’s health ministry. This amounts to a total of 13,241 people who died under Canada’s MAiD programme in 2022, marking a 31% rise on the previous year.
These findings provide succour to claims made by MAiD critics that the programme has become too permissive. Federal guidelines stipulate that clients must have a grievous and irremediable medical condition, make a voluntary request for medical assistance in dying that is not the result of outside pressure or influence, and give informed consent to receive medical assistance in dying.
But towards the end of last year, the programme was criticised for allegedly driving citizens into assisted suicide on the grounds of poverty or lack of healthcare. Stories included two separate cases of cash-strapped women suffering from chronic health conditions who successfully applied to end their lives. Elsewhere, four Canadian military veterans were allegedly “pressured” to opt for medically-assisted death by a now-suspended Veterans Affairs Canada caseworker.
Health Canada’s fourth annual report on MAiD shows a staggering rise in deaths. Since the programme was launched in 2016, there has been a thirteenfold increase. The most cited underlying medical conditions for choosing MAiD included cancer (63%) as well as various respiratory, cardiovascular and neurological conditions. But in 463 MAiD cases, the person’s natural death was not reasonably foreseeable, up from 221 individuals in 2021.
There was also a 27% rise in the number of written requests for MAiD in 2022 (16,104) since 2021, 560 of which were deemed ineligible. The most commonly cited sources of suffering by people requesting MAiD were the loss of ability to engage in meaningful activities (86.3%), followed by loss of ability to perform activities of daily living (81.9%) and inadequate control of pain, or concern about controlling pain (59.2%).

 


Israel and Canada's Baffling Hatred of It

Another prejudice this government finds wholly acceptable.

Israel has not other choice than to destroy Hamas, the atrocities of which are as well-known as they are sickening.

Any stalling effort, any apathy towards victims, proves to Israel that Canada, once a friend to it, is no longer to be trusted:

Cabinet yesterday rejected a petition signed by almost a tenth of MPs demanding a ceasefire in Israel. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suggested a brief “humanitarian pause” instead. The 33 petitioners included nine Liberal committee chairs and parliamentary secretaries: “Every country has the right to defend itself.”

** 

At that point, Vital started making plans to return to her family in Israel. Still, she heard little from the Canadian government. Not until Wednesday afternoon at 3 p.m. did Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly find a few minutes to call the bereaved mother.

Vital says that Minister Joly informed her that an airplane would be leaving Ottawa for Athens at a time and date that had not yet been determined and that she was welcome to join the flight. But she would have to arrange travel from Greece to Israel on her own. And pay for it. Vital advised the minister she had already arranged a flight and was leaving for the airport within the hour, so she declined the offer.

In the early days after the attack, after the extent of Hamas’s savagery became clearer, Vital was being urged by people in Israel to make herself available to the media, in order to get her story out. Curiously, the advice she received in Canada was very different.

Vital says the RCMP advised her to stay quiet regarding Adi’s Canadian nationality, over concerns that once the information became public, the Canadian government might be pressured to pay a ransom to secure her release.

Vital initially followed that advice. But does so no longer. Her daughter was murdered.

The absence of the Canadian government during this conflict is being noted throughout the West. The Trudeau government has issued the barest condemnation of the Hamas attacks. Instead, Canada is straining to treat this, as it tends to do with all matters involving Israel, as an “on the one hand, on the other hand” conundrum.

And it is noticed. In an interview with the Post on Tuesday, Brig.-Gen. Yossi Kuperwasser — who, among other senior positions in the past, was the director of research and analysis in the Israel Defence Force’s Military Intelligence division — noted that most western leaders had visited Israel since Oct. 7, yet prime ministers Trudeau and Anthony Albanese of Australia were conspicuously absent. That is not an oversight.

“That these two very important members of the western world do not show up — being members of the Five Eyes — and considering the trust we have in them, well, it really raises an eyebrow when something like that happens. We need to solidify the camp of the western world because this is not a war that we fight only for ourselves and for our security,” he said.

**

Well, it IS Canada:

**

** 

The Conservative critic for Canadian Heritage is accusing CBC of being “on the side of terrorists” after an internal memo from the public broadcaster asked its journalists to refrain from using the term “terrorist” to describe Hamas in their coverage.

Rachael Thomas made those comments in a parliamentary committee meeting Thursday, in another attempt to summon top CBC executives to admonish them for the broadcaster’s decisions in its coverage of the Israel-Hamas war.

“For the CBC to make this decision is absolutely irresponsible, and it is to peddle disinformation. And it is to be on the side of Hamas, which is to be on the side of terrorists, which is to be against the Jewish population, which is wrong,” said Thomas.

** 

It’s been a little over a year since the Department of Canadian Heritage cancelled an “anti-racism” grant that had funded the work of Laith Marouf, a pro-Palestinian activist known for his intense antisemitism. The money — around $123,000 — has not yet been paid back, despite the government demanding its return and sending it to collections.
So when members of the Liberal government give assurances that the $60 million they’re sending to Israel and Gaza will stay out of Hamas’s hands, it doesn’t exactly inspire a sense of security. If the government can’t retrieve public funds that accidentally went to a bad cause at home, it probably can’t do so in a war zone half way around the world.
Article content
Article content
Marouf was a consultant for a non-profit organization called the Community Media Advocacy Centre (CMAC), which had been given a grant of nearly $134,000 (of which all but $10,000 was doled out) by Canadian Heritage to design an anti-racist media strategy for the country. He held a couple of consultations as part of this work before the racket was ultimately shut down, due to his antisemitic and hate-filled posts.
** 

An Israeli government ministry has drafted a wartime proposal to transfer the Gaza Strip's 2.3 million people to Egypt's Sinai peninsula, drawing condemnation from the Palestinians and worsening tensions with Cairo. ...

Egypt would not necessarily be the Palestinian refugees' last stop. The document speaks about Egypt, Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates supporting the plan either financially, or by taking in uprooted residents of Gaza as refugees and in the long term as citizens. Canada's "lenient" immigration practices also make it a potential resettlement target, the document adds.

 
Oh, boy ...
 
In other news:

Israel struck over 300 Hamas targets and killed “numerous” terrorists in the Gaza Strip over the past 24 hours, including a senior commander, the Israel Defense Forces said on Tuesday morning.

Among the sites targeted were underground anti-tank missile and rocket launching positions and military compounds, according to the IDF.

Nasim Abu Ajina, commander of the Beit Lahia Battalion of Hamas’s Northern Brigade, was killed in an Israeli air strike on Monday. According to the IDF, Abu Ajina directed the Oct. 7 massacre of Israeli civilians in Kibbutz Erez and Netiv Ha’asara. He previously commanded the Hamas Aerial Array and participated in the development of the terrorist organization’s drones and paragliders.

“His elimination significantly harms the efforts of the Hamas terrorist organization to disrupt the IDF’s ground activities,” according to the Israeli military.

** 

China has removed Israel from leading online digital maps following the outbreak of the war against Hamas.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that Internet users in China are expressing bewilderment that Israel’s name no longer appears on major online digital maps from Baidu and Alibaba.

Baidu’s Chinese-language online maps demarcate the internationally recognized borders of Israel, as well as the Palestinian territories, plus key cities, but don’t clearly identify the country by name.

** 

Japan decided Tuesday to freeze the assets of nine individuals, including members of the Palestinian militant group Hamas, and a related company, imposing sanctions on the organization amid its war with Israel.

The punitive measures are the first imposed by Japan since Hamas launched an attack on Israel on Oct. 7, triggering a large-scale conflict between the Jewish state and the Islamist group.

Japan accuses those subjected to the asset freezes of being involved in fundraising for Hamas, according to a Foreign Ministry official.

The measures, implemented with immediate effect, follow similar sanctions by the United States in mid-October on the individuals and the firm.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told a news conference that Japan will continue to consider imposing additional sanctions "from the viewpoint of dealing with fundraising for terrorism."

The nationalities of the nine men are Palestinian, Sudanese, Egyptian and Jordanian, with one of them being a dual national of Turkey and Jordan, the ministry said.

They are key Hamas members, operatives and financial facilitators, according to the U.S. Treasury Department.

**

Hamas had its @$$ kicked by a bunch of girls:

Lt.-Col. Or Ben-Yehuda, the commander of this unit, now recounts her experiences in the southern Gaza Strip, where her battalion eliminated approximately 100 terrorists. She also has a clear message for those who question the capabilities of female fighters in the Caracal (Desert Lynx) and Tank Battalion.


 

Your Corrupt, Inept and Opaque Government and You

They never fail to be sleazy:

A public inquiry into federal COVID-19 pandemic management was rejected by Liberal MPs on the House of Commons Health Committee with cabinet instead seeking a closed-door review by advisers to Minister of Health Mark Holland.

 

(Sidebar: now you know why there is a show trial for the convoy organisers and why the government doesn't want anyone to know that the inquiry was an expensive waste of time. The police do NOT want anyone to have those internal files.) 

**

The Commons yesterday by a 205 to 114 vote rejected a private Conservative bill prohibiting any revival of federal Covid-19 vaccine mandates. The last mandates expired October 1, 2022: “The Prime Minister had the temerity to go on television about three months ago and claim he never forced anyone to get vaccinated.”

 

(Sidebar: much to the relief of the coward of the cottage.)

** 

In an unexpected move, the Liberals shut down a parliamentary committee that was about to hear from top RCMP officials on why it did not pursue a criminal investigation into Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s actions in relation to the SNC-Lavalin affair.

At the start of the meeting on Monday, Liberal MP Mona Fortier took the floor to complain that members of the parliamentary committee on ethics had only learned late Friday afternoon that it was switching gears from its study on TikTok and would instead hear from the RCMP.

** 

Federal Housing Advocate Marie-Josée Houle in a report to Parliament suggested MPs consider decriminalizing drug trafficking in tent cities. The proposal was among “potential solutions shared with the Advocate during her engagement so far.”

**

The trick is make sure that no one drives anywhere:

A new report by the fiscally-conservative Fraser Institute released Tuesday says the $5,000 federal government subsidy to consumers who buy eligible EV vehicles results in a cost to all Canadians of $355 to lower one tonne of emissions.

That’s more than five times the current federal carbon price of $65 per tonne of emissions and more than double the cost of $170 per tonne scheduled for 2030.

It’s also 36% higher than the Trudeau government’s estimate of the so-called “social cost” of emissions — the predicted economic damage caused by a tonne of emissions in Canada, currently $261 per tonne.

But that’s just for the federal subsidy.

Six of Canada’s 10 provinces also give provincial subsidies to EV buyers —  Quebec, B.C., New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, P.E.I. and Newfoundland and Labrador.

The study says those provincial initiatives increase the cost of reducing one tonne of emissions across Canada to as much as $857 — for example, in Quebec, which gives the highest subsidy of $7,000 for qualifying EV vehicles.

“By essentially paying people to buy electric vehicles, governments across Canada are spending a lot of money despite questionable benefits,” said Jock Finlayson, co-author of the study, “A Review of Electric Vehicle Consumer Subsidies in Canada.”

 **

Yes, it IS related to veterans, the very people you and the rest of your colleagues hate:

A Conservative motion to study the military’s decision to prevent chaplains from leading prayers during public functions has been rejected by other parties.
“I find this unacceptable,” said Bloc Québécois MP Luc Désilets in response to the motion presented at the Veterans Affairs committee on Oct. 24.
“I have a lot of respect for chaplains, but I’m going to vote against the motion because it’s not related to Veterans Affairs—the Canadian Armed Forces are responsible.”

 **

Let them fight:

Ottawa wants to pay class action lawyers roughly half the amount they're requesting in legal fees for a multi-billion dollar First Nations child welfare compensation case — the largest settlement agreement in Canadian history.

The federal government argued before Federal Court this past week that it should pay the class action lawyers between $40 million and $50 million, rather than the $80 million they've requested.

 **

A Federal Court judge has dismissed a challenge to a 2020 order-in-council that outlawed over 1,500 firearm models, ending a three-year court battle led by a coalition of plaintiffs, including Canada’s leading firearms advocacy group.

Filed shortly after the government’s May 1, 2020, directive, a group of applicants including the Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights (CCFR,) individuals and firearms-related businesses filed an application in Federal Court challenging the order’s constitutionality and arguing the government lacked the regulatory authority to enact it.

The 2020 directive instantly — without passing legislation in Parliamentreclassified around 1,500 popular firearms to prohibited status, including those described as so-called “military-style” or “assault” firearms.

In a ruling issued Monday, Federal Court Judge Catherine M. Kane said the order-in-council did not exceed the authority of Parliament, nor does it infringe on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Canadian Bill of Rights, or portions of the Criminal Code that deal with firearms.

**

Justin wasn't chosen because he's smart:

Trudeau believes housing has been commodified by investors and corporations that use “homes as an investment vehicle — rather than families using them as a place to live, grow their lives and build equity for their future.”

The prime minister’s comments, which reflect his understanding of the housing crisis, or lack thereof, should alarm Canadians, especially those facing acute affordability challenges. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC), the federal government’s housing agency, believes 5.8 million homes must be constructed by 2030 to restore housing affordability. CMHC further estimates, rather conservatively, that this construction will require more than $1 trillion.

If it doesn’t come from investors, where will $1-trillion-plus come from in the next eight years?

 


The Dwindling Economy

Not only are we not growing, we are stalled:

Canada's economy is showing clear signs of a slowdown, as after shrinking in June, the total value of all goods and services sold was essentially unchanged in July and August — and likely September, too.

Statistics Canada reported Tuesday that the country's gross domestic product was flat in August, as the service sector expanded a little but output from goods-producing industries shrank.

Canada's GDP in August came in at $2.082 trillion during the month. That's barely ahead of just over $2.081 trillion the previous month.

Final numbers for September are not yet available, but early indicators suggest the trend continued into September. That means there's a good chance that Canada's economy has not grown in any meaningful way since May.

The numbers for August were worse than the slight 0.1 per cent uptick that economists were expecting — and worse than the 0.1 per cent uptick that the data agency had forecast in its preliminary estimate.

**

There was a “record spike” in the number of immigrants who left Canada between 2016 and 2019, according to a new study that urged the government to make retaining newcomers a top priority to boost the economy.

On average, 0.9 per cent of people who were granted permanent residence in or after 1982 left Canada each year, according to the study conducted by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship (ICC) and the Conference Board of Canada.

However, in 2019, that figure went up to 1.18 per cent, which is 31 per cent higher than the average. There was also a spike in 2017, with the migration rate increasing by 43 per cent, to 1.15 per cent from 0.8 per cent in 2016. Put another way, about 67,000 people left Canada in 2019 and nearly 60,000 in 2017, the report’s researchers said at a press conference on Oct. 31.

This means that an abnormally high number of immigrants who were granted permanent residence between 1982 and 2018 preferred to leave the country between 2016 and 2019. The study also said the number of immigrants leaving the country has generally been on the rise since the 1990s.

“We are now seeing people who are coming to Canada and then saying, ‘Ah, no thanks,’ and moving on,” Daniel Bernhard, ICC’s chief executive, said. “And the number of those people are increasing. We have to believe that the lack of availability of housing, of health care, of other types of services are part of it.”

** 

But ... but ... slogans:

An analysis of educational attainment and economic outcomes shows limited evidence of broad systemic racism in Canadian society, despite what anti-racism activists and the mandate letters from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to his cabinet might insist, according to new research from The Aristotle Foundation.

“What this study tries to do is introduce some facts and evidence and logic into trying to (assess) the accuracy of this claim that we’re a systemically racist society,” said Matthew Lau, a senior fellow with the think tank who authored the research paper.

The paper points to weekly earnings of Canadian-born men and women in 2016. White Canadians are at the middle of the pack, earning $1,530 for men and $1,120 for women. In comparison, the average Canadian-born woman with Korean heritage makes $1,450 per week, while the average Canadian-born Black woman makes $1,080 per week. Even when controlling for various factors like education and occupation to produce more direct comparisons, the Statistics Canada data shows five minority groups that earn less than white Canadians (Black, Latin American, Filipino and “Other” racial backgrounds) and five others that out-earn whites (South Asian men, Chinese women, South Asian women, Filipino women, and Southeast Asian women.)

“If you take various minority groups, some of them earn more than the white population, some of them earn less. And that’s roughly what you would expect to see if Canada was a society that did not favour the white population,” Lau said. “If all of our institutions and the way our institutions are set up, set up on this notion that we discriminate against minorities, you would expect to see white people with the highest weekly average earnings.

**

Ontario-based Canadian Solar Inc.will build an $800-million solar panel factory insoutheastern Indiana that will employ about 1,200 workers once production isfully ramped up, the company said Monday.

Canadian Solar said it will build the new photovoltaic cell factory at the River Ridge Commerce Center in Jeffersonville, an Ohio River city located just north of Louisville, Kentucky.

 **

What can possibly go wrong?:

In response to growing concern over Canada’s capacity to welcome more newcomers, the federal government says it will incorporate housing, health care and infrastructure planning with provinces and municipalities when setting the country’s annual immigration targets.

On Tuesday, Immigration Minister Marc Miller unveiled a report on the current state of Canadian immigration — along with a road map for tackling those challenges.

“We aim to build a system that is easier to navigate, with an inclusive and co-ordinated plan that aligns our immigration programs and policies with the needs of the country,” Miller said in a statement released the day before he will table his 2024-26 immigration levels plan.

 


Who Did You Vote For?

Every election has its consequences.

When you vote in someone who has all of the financial acumen of a particularly innumerate turnip, then you will pay a literal price:

**

**

The study found that more than 640,000 children under 18 used the food bank in the same time frame, accounting for a third of the total number of clients. More than a quarter of all clients were newcomers who have lived in Canada for less than a decade — a figure that has doubled since 2016.

** 

The only thing the government needs to do is get out of the way, not hold your hand.

Typical Canadian:

She's now waiting for her employment insurance benefits to begin while looking for a new customer service job in the insurance industry, where she previously worked for eight years.

"I'm going to take some of my background and apply it," she said.

Meanwhile, to keep her Honda running, Finlayson said she has to travel with a jug of coolant and top up the radiator along the way to keep it from overheating.

Even with some family help, she's not sure she'll have the full rent when Nov. 1 arrives next week.

Her message to politicians is working Canadians with modest incomes are falling behind. 

"They need to understand that the costs of living have exceeded the wages," she said. "The economy can't survive in that situation. It just doesn't balance anymore. It will impede people's mental health — and we as a country will get weaker if they don't provide some support." 

**

Most Canadian homeowners now spend more than $200 a month for heat and light, says in-house research by the Department of Natural Resources. A fifth of Canadians, 21 percent, said “my home energy costs are a significant financial burden.”

** 

Follow the money. What Saudi company is getting rich off of this?:

Montreal will ban gas-powered systems in new construction starting next fall, with some notable exceptions.

The new regulation, adopted by the city's executive committee this morning, will apply to new, small buildings — up to three storeys and 600 square metres in area — as of Oct. 1, 2024, and larger buildings starting six months later.

Examples of soon-to-be prohibited systems include residential gas-powered stoves, indoor gas fireplaces, hot water heaters and furnaces that emit greenhouse gases and barbecues and pool or spa heaters that draw from gas lines.

The city says exceptions include emergency generators, commercial stoves in restaurants, gas-powered barbecues with removable tanks and temporary heating devices used during construction work.

Industrial buildings are also exempt, as are combustion heaters in larger buildings that draw only from renewable sources of gas.

The Commons public accounts committee yesterday agreed to summon federal managers to justify an $8 million expense for a solar-powered warehouse at Rideau Hall. It follows a separate report demanding that Governor General Mary Simon cut spending on Beef Wellington and silk jackets: “The list of ridiculous spending keeps growing.”



Wait! Is Winter Cold?

Justin only noticed that now:

Last Thursday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a three-year pause on the carbon tax for home heating oil. Technically, the pause applies to all Canadians subject to the federal scheme, but in practice, it’s really just Atlantic Canada that stands to benefit, since it’s the only region where this particular fuel is used to a significant degree.

Forty per cent of homes in Prince Edward Island use heating oil for warmth, according to Statistics Canada; in Nova Scotia, the figure is 32 per cent, while in Newfoundland and Labrador it’s 18 per cent.

Atlantic Canadians will surely welcome Trudeau’s reprieve — and rightfully so. They were shown to be among the worst hit by the country’s skyrocketing cost of living in a Leger poll released in September, with more than half saying they’re living paycheck-to-paycheck. It’s a struggle to keep up with the cost of necessities: P.E.I. leads the country in food insecurity, while Nova Scotia and Newfoundland lead in rent price growth.

The rest of the country isn’t so lucky. Heating oil is only used by a smidgen of homes in New Brunswick (seven per cent), Quebec (four per cent), Ontario (two per cent) and British Columbia (one per cent); the rest of the country doesn’t even make it onto the board. Even though they get cold too, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Ontario, Manitoba and British Columbia will face a steep punishment for relying on natural gas to keep warm.

Why the unequal treatment? Aside from its high reliance on home heating oil, Atlantic Canada is also high in Liberal votes, which magically makes the region less relevant to the fight against climate change.

The Liberals won each of Atlantic Canada’s 32 ridings in 2015, but dropped to 26 in 2019 and 24 in 2021. As for 2025, Trudeau’s Liberals aren’t looking at a win — they’re just trying to survive. The Oct. 29 projections at 338 Canada predict Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives will form a majority with 207 seats, with the Liberals scraping up a meagre 81.

Meanwhile, polling by Angus Reid shows that “the Liberals lead in only one region in the country Atlantic Canada.” It’s clear that the volume of the party’s voice in Parliament, post-election 45, will depend strongly on just how many Liberal MPs can cling to their Maritime seats.

Trudeau can’t roll the carbon tax back for everyone, because his reign is defined by his “kneecap the country, save the world” strategy. He needs to ease affordability in key ridings while keeping younger, climate-oriented voters from swaying toward the NDP. The country is thus left with the carbon tax — which, because it applies to virtually the entire economy, will end up costing Canadians more than they stand to gain from the rebate — and the upcoming net-zero electricity regulations.

None of these policies will make a dent in global greenhouse gas emissions, because Canada’s contribution to that grand total is a mere 1.5 per cent. But tough-on-climate appearances need to be kept up, hence the desperate bribe to Atlantic Canada.

To make the message — “vote for us or pay!” — extra clear, Rural Economic Development Minister Gudie Hutchings told CTV that provinces should elect more Liberal representatives if they hope to have their own carbon tax breaks.

 

(Sidebar: there is someone who should keep her fat yap shut.)

**

Trudeau didn’t try to hide the regional calculations: “We’ve heard clearly from Atlantic Canadians through our amazing Atlantic MPs that since the federal pollution price came into force ... certain features of that pollution price needed adjusting to work for everyone.” But he insisted that “We are doubling down on our fight against climate change and keeping true to the principles that we're supporting Canadians while we fight climate change.”
**

Moe, just do it:

**

So go Alberta and Saskatchewan, so go the special class:

With the Liberal government opening the door to exemptions to its carbon tax, an Ontario Grand Chief wants it pushed even wider to a full exemption to the levy on Indigenous lands.

**

Justin is digging his little heels in:

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says there will be no further carbon price carve-outs,including for natural gas heating, as criticism mounts of his decision to temporarily exempt home heating oil from the policy.

The promise is landing with a political thud, with both Conservative and NDP leaders accusing Trudeau of regional favouritism to save his political skin in Atlantic Canada, and former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney saying he would have found a different way to ease the rising cost of living.

Trudeau and multiple ministers, including those in charge of environment and energy, are defending the three-year home heating oil exemption today as a policy intended to ensure that Canadians who use the fuel have the time and money needed to transition to electric heat pumps.

They also say that home heating oil users are more likely to have lower incomes and live in rural areas without any other options for heating their homes.

The Liberals are feeling intense heat after Rural Development Minister Gudie Hutchings implied on CTV Question Period on Sunday that Prairies provinces should elect more Liberals if they want their voices heard on the need for carbon pricing relief.

Housing Minister and Nova Scotia MP Sean Fraser says this carbon price pause is not about politics and that many policies affect different regions of the country differently.

 

Bull. Sh--.

Justin was polling badly in the Maritimes (whose votes he badly needs) so he made a vague promise that will kick in come spring time. If he walks back on this horrid tax, he will be clubbed to death faster than a baby seal in Labrador.


But that won't be the only thing Justin will battle:

If the Liberal government was to abandon the carbon tax entirely, inflation in Canada would drop 16 percent, says Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem.
Mr. Macklem provided this information while testifying before the House of Commons finance committee on Oct. 30.
“That would create a one-time drop in inflation of 0.6 percentage points,” said Mr. Macklem in response to a question from Conservative MP Philip Lawrence. Inflation is currently at 3.8 percent in Canada.

 

Tiff needs to cover his ever-at-risk butt. The economy is tanking and he is sugar-coating everything to avoid math-averse Canadians. He is a horrible governor of the Bank of Canada, though a well-compensated one:

Despite its governor warning business leaders not to factor soaring inflation into worker compensation, Canada’s central bank handed out millions of dollars in bonuses to nearly all of its top executives last year.

According to documents uncovered by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, all but two of the Bank of Canada’s 82 executives received some sort of “performance pay” in 2022, totalling $3.5 million.



Happy Halloween!

Winter is coming ...


Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Mid-Week Post

Six more shopping days until Halloween  💀🎃👻...



The oldest hatred in the world is not only one of the most accepted but emotionally retarded, as well. 

One would think that with the horrific images and stories floating about, the spitefuk haters would at least keep their exuberance to themselves. 

But no:

And another twist: nobody in the Allied nations openly rejoiced when images of Nazi death camps were made public, but some of Hamas’ “progressive” allies in the West jubilantly celebrate the terrorists’ evil deeds. Cornell University professor Russell Rickford, for example, told a pro-Palestine rally he found Hamas’ pogrom “exhilarating” and “energizing.”
The loathing of Jews among the Palestinian people did not begin with Israel’s occupation of Gaza following the 1967 war.
In 1961, during Egypt’s Gaza-occupation tenure, Martha Gellhorn, an outstanding war correspondent, spent time touring Palestinian refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon and Gaza, culminating in a 17,000-word article, “The Arabs of Palestine,” in The Atlantic.
Her angle was anthropological. She wanted to understand the Arab mindset. She chose to visit eight of 58 UNRWA-run camps, requesting that she be shown “your best and your worst camp, and if time permits, let us also look at the in-between.” She met Palestinians in their homes. The refugees talked, and she listened. She asked questions, and they responded with candour.
Article content
The remarkable essay she produced — which is still relevant, with much to offer any curious and objective reader at this existential moment in Arab-Jewish relations — is the product of a capacious and insightful mind.
Ironically, Gellhorn found Gaza — a hellhole today — the most attractive of the camps: idyllic weather, pristine white beaches, lush terrain, abundant cafés and a main square with “an array of parked Mercedes.” It was a “beehive of activity,” full of United Nations peacekeeping soldiers who “spend money in the town in their free time,” along with upper-class Egyptians.
“The refugees seemed to bring prosperity with them,” wrote Gellhorn. Ninety-eight per cent of the children attended school, dressed in neat uniforms. They put on shows for the parents. There were “Brownie babies, Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, girl gymnasts and boy gymnasts.” Daily life was calm, orderly and civilized.
The downside was that they were exposed “to the full and constant blast of Egyptian propaganda.… And having been so devastatingly beaten by Israel again, in 1956 … it only makes the orators more bloodthirsty.” The residents hated Jews and believed all manner of conspiracy theories about them.
Article content
One kindly schoolteacher told Gellhorn he believed the partition plan (the UN’s 1947 offer of two states, one for Jews, one for Arabs) was a good idea. Astonished, Gellhorn reminded him that the Arabs had rejected the 1947 offer of a state, instead gambling on a winner-takes-all war to finish off the Jews, and lost.
He conceded that was true. So she asked, “Now you say that you want to return to the past; you want partition.… If you had won the war, would you now accept partition? Would you … allow the 650,000 Jewish residents of Palestine — who had fled from the war — to come back?”
He unhesitatingly responded, “Certainly not. But there would have been no Jewish refugees. They had no place to go. They would all be dead or in the sea.”
From this exchange, Gellhorn said she realized she had “the missing clue” as to why, although she liked individual refugees she met, she could feel “no blanket empathy” for the Palestinians: it was the consistent absence of empathy in her subjects for anyone else’s suffering.
**

In other words, not a single word of the breaking news reports was true. American media failed a basic test this week, and it failed it spectacularly.
What went wrong? A lot, actually.
For starters, “Hamas says” should have been a red flag, not a green light. That the claim originated from a terrorist group should have prompted responsible newsrooms to add an automatic layer of additional scrutiny. There’s an old journalism aphorism that says, “If your mother says she loves you, check it out.” And if ever there was a group whose anti-Israel claims required “checking out,” it’s the one whose entire existence is dedicated to the destruction of Israel.
But the problems this week in American media go well beyond reporters simply taking Hamas officials at their word. There’s also the fact that no one repeating Hamas’s version of events bothered to check whether the hospital had, in fact, been destroyed. Making at least an attempt to put eyes on the facility before reporting on its supposed destruction could have saved newsrooms a lot of trouble and embarrassment.
Whatever happened to that basic rule of journalism: “It’s better to be right than to be first”?
There’s also the issue of the speed with which Gaza officials provided their death-toll estimate. Indeed, within an hour of the supposed “strike,” in the dark, under supposed “rubble,” Gaza officials put the number of dead at around 500, a claim that American newsrooms dutifully repeated. But to anyone with even an inkling of curiosity, the speed with which the number was provided should have raised red flags. Israel, which has a functioning government and the type of infrastructure that allows for swift search-and-rescue operations, is still counting its dead from the October 7 slaughter. Yet, despite what we know about the typical response time to mass-casualty events in even advanced countries with fleets of first responders, American media didn’t so much as hesitate to report the figures Hamas produced almost immediately following the suppose airstrike.
Why?
Not to put too fine a point on it, but U.S. media reported Hamas’s version of events because U.S. media wanted the story to be true. They wanted to believe that Israel had committed a war crime. There’s a reason for this. Call it the college-to-media pipeline.



But no:

The Israel Defense Forces on Tuesday issued photos it said showed fuel tanks in the Gaza Strip, asserting it had information that large amounts of fuel were being kept there by Hamas.

The photos were shared by the IDF’s Arabic-language account on X, formerly Twitter, depicting a location near the Rafah crossing, in the south of the Gaza Strip.

“This is what over half a million liters of diesel looks like,” wrote IDF Arabic spokesman Avichay Adraee, “while Hamas keeps claiming it does not have enough fuel to support hospitals and bakeries.”

The post was published a few hours after Hamas said that a power outage at the Indonesian Hospital in the northern Gaza Strip was a “crime against humanity” and called on Arab and Muslim countries and the UN to take steps to address the crisis.

The hospital was hit by a power outage on Monday night due to a fuel shortage. Al Jazeera reported that electricity was restored during the night, but the hospital only has fuel to operate generators for 48 more hours, after which lifesaving medical devices such as respirators and incubators will cease functioning.





Not bloody yours, mate:

In Canada, the conflict has also done something else. It has definitively exposed the true motivations for Liberal government’s seemingly incoherent and milquetoast foreign policy. Instead of standing for principle and the interests of our nation and its allies, the Trudeau Doctrine is dictated by diaspora politics and his party’s re-election prospects. This is true not only of its positioning on the current conflict, but on every major foreign policy issue in the past year.
Article content
It began with the Liberals trying at all costs to avoid a public inquiry into Chinese electoral interference. In February 2023, the Globe and Mail broke the story of how China implemented a sophisticated strategy to engineer the return of a Liberal minority government and defeat opposition Conservative politicians in the 2021 election. Allegations about this had been swirling for months, including reports on Chinese interference in the previous 2019 election.
But instead of seeking answers, Trudeau sought cover. He appointed “special rapporteur” David Johnston to examine the issue, effectively kicking the can down the road. Months later, Johnston quit in disgrace when the House of Commons demanded he resign after he had conveniently concluded that interference claims were based on “limited and partial intelligence” and thus did not warrant an inquiry.
Article content
Yet months later, when Trudeau was given information by CSIS that the agency was “actively pursuing credible allegations of a potential link”  between India and the killing of a Canadian Sikh separatist gunned down in the parking lot of a temple in Surrey, the government leapt into action.
Trudeau first raised the issue privately with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a G20 meeting in New Delhi. When that didn’t achieve the desired result, Trudeau publicly accused India of involvement in the crime in September, setting off a diplomatic firestorm that continues to burn. Canada’s trade mission to India was cancelled, 41 of our diplomats in India have been recalled, and our Indo-Pacific Strategy lies in ashes less than a year after it was unveiled.
Why did Trudeau act in such an incoherent way on these issues? Well, it’s math. A glance at the Canadian electoral map shows the importance of the Sikh and Chinese diaspora vote in both British Columbia and Ontario. There’s also the matter of Trudeau’s supply and confidence agreement with the NDP, led by Jagmeet Singh, who was strongly supportive of Trudeau’s stance.
And now, as war rages once again in the Middle East, there’s the Muslim vote to worry about, in electoral districts in Scarborough and the 905 belt around Toronto, as well as in Montreal. With the Conservatives soaring in the polls, ridings like Mississauga-Lakeshore, which the Liberals kept in the past byelection, could be in jeopardy if Muslim voters switch allegiances or stay home.
So once again, Trudeau is letting domestic policy dictate foreign policy. And this time, he’s not only throwing the Jewish community under the bus, but the values Canadians cherish, including the protection of minorities from hatred. And this weekend provided yet another example of that.

(Sidebar: he used his own kids as props. Should we be surprised that he would do or say anything to stay where he is? No. He divides, smugifies, lies, avoids conflict and brings in masses of unvetted migrants he hopes will vote Liberal one day. He will give such masses free reign because it will pay off come election time.  But now he realises that he cannot control the chaos of backward, hateful walking tinderboxes that could very well repeat here what was done in Israel. He can't even control the dissent in his own party on this matter.  No one, save the Chinese, wants him around. This won't end well.)
**

One of the clearest indicators of this bias is how Trudeau and Joly responded to a missile hitting the Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday.

They both suggestively pointed the finger at an Israeli bomb — based only on the word of the terrorist organization Hamas — and have been reluctant to change their position despite mounting evidence that a misfired rocket from within Gaza was responsible.

But Canadian military intelligence has now determined “with a high degree of confidence” that the strike on the hospital was “caused by an errant rocket fired from Gaza.” The news was announced Saturday in a statement by Bill Blair, minister for national defence.

By Sunday afternoon, Trudeau and Joly’s vocal response was: Nothing.

**

The leader of the Conservative Party in Canada and Justin Trudeau’s main opponent in the upcoming elections, Pierre Poilievre, has criticised the Canadian prime minister’s handling of the diplomatic row with Delhi once again and said he has reduced himself to a “laughing stock” in India.

“Justin Trudeau is considered a laughing stock in India – the world’s biggest democracy,” Mr Poilievre said in an interview with Nepal’s Namaste Radio Toronto.

Mr Poilievre, who is gearing up to challenge Mr Trudeau in the general elections in 2025, was asked about the “bitter situation” in the Canada-India relationship.

He put the blame on Mr Trudeau and said he was “incompetent and unprofessional” and vowed to restore a “professional relationship” with India if his party came to power.

Speaking of the worsening relationship between the two countries, which led to two-thirds of Canadian diplomats being asked to leave India this week, Mr Poilievre said: “This is another example of how Justin Trudeau is not worth the cost after eight long years,” Mr Poilievre told the outlet.

**

One of the most notorious outgrowths of the Trudeau government’s anti-racism push was the more than $500,000 in federal monies handed over to Laith Marouf, an anti-racism contractor with a history of virulently anti-Semitic comments. At the time, the outrage wasn’t so much that Canada had so badly misallocated half a million dollars, but that Marouf had apparently thrived within an ecosystem in which near-daily social media posts decrying Israelis as “little castrated b—-hes” and “European garbage” didn’t raise any eyebrows.
Article content
Canadian anti-racism materials cite heavily from the workbook Dismantling Racism, one of the seminal works of the Critical Race Theory movement.
Dismantling Racism does mention Jews, but only as a quick aside to say that Jews have opted to “become white” in order to benefit from white supremacy. “Becoming white involves giving up parts of your original culture in order to get the advantages and privileges of belonging to the white group,” it reads.
Virtually every Canadian DEI workshop ends with a recommendation to read How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi. Within the elaborate hierarchies of oppression that Kendi describes in the book, there is no mention of Jews, but it implies that any group that is persevering within the current “systemically racist” system is necessarily a collaborator.
“One either allows racial inequities to persevere, as a racist, or confronts racial inequities,” writes Kendi.
As a 2022 column in the Canadian Jewish publication TheJ.ca put it, critical race theory was bound to come down on Jews eventually, if only because they didn’t fit the narrative as victims of the Canadian system.
Article content
“Jews, just two per cent of the population of Canada, have succeeded in White Christian society. They don’t fit CRT theory. CRT theorists and antisemites have therefore included them in the class of White Christian oppressors,” it read.
**

** 


 

The Liberals will not answer for the SNC-Lavalin scandal, the Ukrainian Nazi scandal, Chinese election interference, funding Hamas, or any other screw-up, malfeasance or spate of gross incompetence:

In an unexpected move, the Liberals shut down a parliamentary committee that was about to hear from top RCMP officials on why it did not pursue a criminal investigation into Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s actions in relation to the SNC-Lavalin affair.

(Sidebar: oh, it wasn't unexpected.)

At the start of the meeting on Monday, Liberal MP Mona Fortier took the floor to complain that members of the parliamentary committee on ethics had only learned late Friday afternoon that it was switching gears from its study on TikTok and would instead hear from the RCMP.

RCMP Commissioner Michael Duheme and Sergeant Frédéric Pincince, who was in charge of the investigation into SNC-Lavalin, were scheduled to offer a “briefing session” on the matter after questions arose from documents released last week by the group Democracy Watch that shed light on the federal police force’s decision to shut down their investigation after four years.

Fortier mentioned that any changes to the schedule of a committee usually require a 48-hour notice period and said the move to invite the RCMP officials was made at the “last minute.”

“This had not been discussed whatsoever by the committee. I think the committee should have at least had the opportunity to debate a motion and to present it in due form,” she said, before moving a motion to adjourn the meeting, resulting in a shouting match from both sides.

Conservative MP Michael Barrett said the government MPs were “looking to shut down a hearing on a very serious matter with respect to a criminal investigation into the prime minister” and said the situation was “not acceptable.”




Who did you vote for, Canada?:

A House of Commons committee is asking the heads of Canada's major grocery chains to appear before MPs and explain their plans to stabilize food prices.

The agriculture committee passed an NDP motion last Thursday to invite the grocery executives, or summon them if necessary, to testify about the measures their companies are taking to address food inflation.

Earlier this fall, Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne announced the major Canadian grocery companies — Loblaw, Metro, Empire, Walmart and Costco — had presented to the government their plans to tackle rising prices, which he says included discounts, price freezes and price-matching campaigns.

Champagne offered few details about these promotions at the time, saying he wanted the grocers to compete with one another.

Most grocers have also not confirmed the details of their plans. The motion at the parliamentary committee is asking the grocers to submit "a comprehensive report on their strategies and initiatives taken to date and on further actions aimed at the stabilization of grocery prices in Canada." The deadline for the submissions is Nov. 2.


This is how the Liberals pretend to care about the mess that they've created: by dragging the food monopoly before them and demanding answers to questions for which they know the answers.

Food isn't expensive because the grocers (who were somehow never greedy opportunists when the government locked down the country) are jacking up prices. Taxes upon taxes are making food outrageously expensive.

Why point that out?

**

A new survey suggests the number of Canadians struggling with their monthly mortgage payment is on the rise, along with worries of potentially higher payments when it comes time to renew with their lender.

Around 15 per cent of borrowers say they find the financial aspect of their mortgage “very difficult,” up from 11 per cent in June and eight per cent in March, according to data released on Monday by the Angus Reid Institute.

**
**


Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault will not release letters he claimed to receive from Canadians grateful for the carbon tax. Guilbeault said he had thank-you notes from a woman named Jill in Regina and “Bob, a teacher.”
**

The size of the federal government’s payroll is worrisome, Budget Officer Yves Giroux said yesterday. The number of employees has increased 26 percent since 2015, by official estimate: “But we haven’t seen similar improvements when it comes to service.”






Cabinet will take measures to curb housing demand, says Housing Minister Sean Fraser. The Minister in a letter to MPs said increasing the housing supply alone is insufficient: ‘Canada will need careful well-calibrated measures to moderate housing demand.’

The housing demand that you cannot meet.

Right.





The joke is on you.

This country is broke. 


A Federal Court judge has verbally approved a landmark $23-billion settlement that will see Ottawa compensate more than 300,000 First Nations children and their families over chronic underfunding of on-reserve child-welfare services.





Canada's air force will have to wait a few extra years to get the armed drones it has been promised for more than a decade — because, among other things, the pilotless aircraft require special modifications to fly in the Far North.

The federal government had planned to acquire by 2025 a fleet of MQ-9 Reaper drones, built by U.S. defence contractor General Atomics.

But the Department of National Defence (DND) acknowledged recently that the acquisition date has been pushed to 2028 — more than 11 years after drones were identified in the Liberal government's defence policy as an important priority for modernizing the country's air force to meet modern threats.





On a Friday afternoon in Nashville last October, several hundred people gathered in a plaza near the state Capitol for an event billed as the "Rally to End Child Mutilation."

The rally was organized by a right-wing pundit who had been claiming the transgender care clinic at a Nashville hospital was drugging and mutilating children.

Local media outlets debunked the claims. But on the day of the rally, people showed up with signs accusing the clinic's doctors of being "groomers"; one sign called for them to be killed. 

The crowd, according to published reports, was a mix of religious conservatives, masked members of the Proud Boys and the leaders of the Republican state caucus.

By the end of the rally, the politicians had vowed to ban what's known as gender-affirming care for minors, which usually involves hormone treatments rather than surgery. 

Within months, a ban was signed into law.


If it weren't for the ham-fisted way in which this article was written, Canadians wouldn't know the dangers of opposing gender surgeries.

But, as no one needs the CBC, they still don't!


Also:

Nearly half of Canadians say they support their province using the notwithstanding clause to ensure that schools tell parents if their child wishes to use a different name or pronoun, a new poll suggests, and more people support that idea than oppose it.

New data also suggest a majority of Canadians believe teachers should have to notify parents of such changes. Just under half said that should be the case even if a child tells their teacher they don't feel safe informing their parents.





The charges are stayed, not dropped.


Crown prosecutors are staying the bail-related charge for a key organizer of what became the Freedom Convoy because of delays in her criminal trial.

Currently on trial for mischief, obstructing police, counselling others to commit mischief, and intimidation, Tamara Lich had also been accused of breaching her bail conditions.


Only thousands of Islamists can block streets and call for Jews to be killed.

But if you question Justin even once ...






Author Salman Rushdie called Sunday for the unconditional defence of freedom of expression as he received a prestigious German prize that recognizes his literary work and his resolve in the face of constant danger.





We don't have to trade with China: 

The Canadian government has given Chinese law enforcement assistance in their pursuit of fugitive Chinese nationals living abroad for decades, an investigation by CBC's The Fifth Estate has learned.

In Canada, that help has sometimes come as a result of quid pro quo deals, people with first-hand knowledge of the relationship, including two former Canadian ambassadors to China, told The Fifth Estate. 

Calvin Chrustie, a former RCMP operations officer in British Columbia, said in an interview that he received direction "from Ottawa at the highest level" to "assist and collaborate with" Chinese officials regarding a "high-profile fugitive that they were after in the Vancouver area." 

Chrustie said he refused to facilitate a meeting for the Chinese officials, who wanted to interview the fugitive and convince the person to voluntarily return to China to face prosecution.

China has ensured Canada's continuing co-operation by bartering on trade, offering assistance fighting illegal drugs and by negotiating the release of Canadians arbitrarily detained in China, The Fifth Estate investigation found.

"Our economic interests sort of drove this," said veteran Toronto immigration lawyer Lorne Waldman, who represents a number of people now in Canada who are wanted by Chinese authorities.

"We turned a blind eye to the lack of rule of law in China and turned a blind eye to the fact that we should be way more skeptical about the evidence coming from China. And as time went on, we turned a blind eye to the fact that Chinese agents were acting in Canada."

**

A former deputy minister of public safety yesterday testified it was “not my job” to warn a Conservative MP he was targeted by Chinese agents. Rob Stewart told the House affairs committee that foreign agents target “many people in Canada” that he never warned: “It was not my job to inform them.”

**
“We have seen in the past, acquisition of land, acquisition of different companies ... when you start to dig a little bit further, you realize that ... there is another intent,” said Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) Director David Vigneault in an interview with U.S. network CBS.
“And we have seen and blocked attempts by the PRC [People’s Republic of China] to acquire locations near sensitive, strategic assets of the country where we knew that the ultimate purpose was for spying operations,” he added, without providing additional details.

Is that why the Chinese still run not-at-all secret police stations in the country?

**

The Chinese communist regime employs a "mass collection" approach to subvert its target countries, sending numerous operatives abroad to gradually infiltrate different facets of society, says a former senior manager with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS).
In an interview with The Epoch Times "American Thought Leaders" program, Michel Juneau-Katsuya spoke on the interference tactics used by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that he has observed over the past several decades. They involve collaborating with gang members and tycoons who have immigrated to Canada and made investments there, he said.
"They simply overwhelm us in so many different fields, that it's difficult for Western agencies to understand," said Mr. Juneau-Katsuya, who formerly headed the Asia-Pacific unit at the CSIS.
**

Chinese President Xi Jinping green-lighted Russia's invasion of Ukraine and is supporting that war with lethal and other assistance. In North Africa, Beijing, in conjunction with Moscow, has been fueling insurgencies that resemble wars. In the Middle East, China is backing Hamas's monstrous attacks on Israel.

Hamas fighters, for instance, appear to have Chinese-made weapons, presumably supplied through Iran. Moreover, the U.S. Navy in 2021 and this year seized Chinese weapons in transit to another proxy of the Islamic Republic, the Houthi militia in Yemen.

"Tehran for some time has distributed Chinese weapons to its terrorist proxies throughout the region," Jonathan Bass of energy consultant InfraGlobal tells Gatestone. "The Middle East, thanks in no small measure to Beijing, is soaked with blood."

What is the Communist Party of China up to?

Xi, who reveres Mao Zedong, is taking a page from his hero's "peasant revolution" playbook. Mao in 1949 prevailed over his enemy, Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist government, by "encircling the cities from the countryside."

Ukraine, North Africa and Israel, as Beijing sees it, are parts of the "countryside" today. So, what is the "city"?

The main enemy of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is the United States of America.

The CCP declared a "people's war" on America in a May 2019 landmark editorial in People's Daily, the self-described "mouthpiece" of the regime. The CCP views the U.S. as an existential threat. As an initial matter, America stands in the way of Beijing from ruling tianxia, or "all under Heaven."

Moreover, the Party believes it must destroy the U.S. because of what America stands for. An insecure ruling organization is worried about the inspirational impact of America's form of governance and values on the oppressed Chinese people. This means the United States will never have amicable relations with China as long as the Communist Party rules it.

Today, therefore, the CCP is waging proxy wars against America, such as Russia's campaign to annex Ukraine, or backing Iran, which has for decades been calling for "Death to Israel" and "Death to America." Beijing's takeover of North Africa looks like an attempt to control the migration routes to Europe. Splitting off Europe from America, in turn, would be another step in starving the U.S. Similarly, China is buying friends in, among other places, Latin America, the Caribbean and the Pacific Ocean as a means of further isolating America.

The Chinese regime is not bashful in revealing overall strategy. "While in the countryside, the Communist Party mobilized the masses of peasants and established base areas, thus opening up a road of encircling the cities from the rural areas and seizing political power by armed force," states China.org.cn, a Chinese propaganda site, in "An Illustrated History of the Communist Party of China."

President Joe Biden is either unwilling or unable to defend the world from malicious Chinese communism. The catastrophic withdrawal from Afghanistan, completed in August 2021, signaled that American policy was in collapse. As a result, in the "countryside" there are many soft spots for Xi to attack.

China's leader will continue to attack them, especially as Biden pays what are essentially ransoms and thereby provides incentives for further disorder. The ransoms include the unfreezing of $6 billion in connection with a hostage swap with Iran — announced on the 22nd anniversary of 9/11 — and the October 18th announcement of "humanitarian assistance" to Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, apparently to free Americans held by Hamas.

**

A Chinese coast guard ship and an accompanying vessel rammed a Philippine coast guard ship and a military-run supply boat Sunday off a contested shoal, Philippine officials said, in an encounter that heightened fears of an armed conflict in the disputed South China Sea.