A merry October to you all! ππΊπ°π
The economy people voted for:
The company had 5,100 employees at the end of last year, according to regulatory filings, but has not yet said how the layoffs will impact the workforce at specific locations.
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The Privy Council only days before Prime Minister Mark Carney called an election polled Canadians’ support for an energy boycott of the United States, records show. Focus group respondents said cabinet should do what it took to protect the nation’s sovereignty: “They were presented with a list of actions that could potentially be taken by the Government of Canada.”
If the Emergency Act could be employed against citizens, why not quash the right to strike?:
Labour Minister Patty Hajdu faces Commons human resources committee questioning over cabinet’s unprecedented use of the Canada Labour Code to quash lawful strikes, an issue currently before the Federal Court. One Liberal MP called hearings a political ploy to embarrass the government: “This is a hot issue right now and everybody is talking about it.”
The RCMP kept a list of communists' getaways:
The Mounties from 1955 kept a blacklist of Canadian addresses designated as “potential hideouts” for traveling Communists, declassified records show. The list included homes, cabins, motels, fishing lodges, farms and trailer parks in seven provinces, and was updated annually for years: ‘We have noticed Communists visiting out of the way places to spend vacation.’
But no Nazi list will be revealed, nor did the RCMP make a note of existing communists currently moistening chairs as we speak:
In spite of multiple international statements framing internet access as a human right, the Liberal government is pursuing legislation that would allow them to unilaterally quarantine Canadian citizens from the online world.
Bill C-8, which is now undergoing second reading in the House of Commons, includes a provision under which Ottawa can pull internet services from “any specified person.”
The denial of service would requires only the personal order of the minister of industry, a position currently filled by MΓ©lanie Joly, in consultation with the public safety minister, a position currently filled by Gary Anandasangaree.
(Sidebar: consider that even paying your bills online is subject to the whims of these muppets.)
Bill C-8 would do this by amending the Telecommunications Act with a clause requiring telecom providers such as Rogers or Telus to pull the services of any individual customer singled out by Ottawa.
As the text states, the industry minister would be allowed to “prohibit a telecommunications service provider from providing any service to any specified person.”
None of this would require a warrant, and oversight only kicks in after the order is made.
Once a minister has ordered the internet of a “specified person” to be cut off, only then can a Federal Court subject the decision to judicial review.
Bill C-8 has been pitched by the Carney government as a way to combat “unprecedented cyber-threats.”
It's called communism.
The things the Liberals will do to avoid criticism and the free passage of unfiltered information.
Also:
Paskal echoed that China is “a country that kills people for their organs” and uses this “as a selling point,” noting the recently captured hot mic conversation between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin about using other people’s organs to live forever. ...
Burton said he has tried to raise awareness about China’s influence on Canada for nearly 15 years, by writing commentaries in the press, but he says elite capture has enabled the CCP “to dampen down any meaningful government response to the illegal activities of the Chinese state in Canada.”
Burton noted that a bill aimed at countering foreign influence became law in Canada in 2024, which requires a foreign influence commissioner to be appointed as well a foreign influence registry to be set up, meaning those who act as agents of a foreign entity need to publicly declare it.
Burton says Canadians should reject the CCP’s claim that all Chinese people in Canada support the CCP and that it is being racist toward Chinese people to criticize the regime’s human rights abuses or its actions to enable dictators throughout the world.
He said that to combat this, a grassroots movement by the name of Tuidang—or “Quit the CCP movement—has started to encourage fellow Chinese to quit the CCP and its affiliated organizations—the Communist Youth League and the Chinese Young Pioneers.
More than 450 million people have quit the CCP over the last 20 years as part of this movement, Jekielek said, noting this “quit the CCP” movement is “exactly the kind of grassroots effort” that is needed to deal with China’s totalitarian regime and end tyranny.
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