Your middle-of-the-week moment of bewilderment ...
Now in, a hostage deal - of sorts - is being reached with Hamas, the very people who perpetuated the October 7th attacks and expect to be rewarded for it:
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire and hostage release deal, according to U.S. President-elect Donald Trump.
“This epic ceasefire agreement could have only happened as a result of our historic victory in November, as it signaled to the entire world that my administration would seek peace and negotiate deals to ensure the safety of all Americans and our allies,” Trump stated on Wednesday afternoon.
“I am thrilled American and Israeli hostages will be returning home to be reunited with their families and loved ones,” he added, noting that his national security team, through the efforts of Steve Witkoff, his nominee for special Middle East envoy, “will continue to work closely with Israel and our allies to make sure Gaza never again becomes a terrorist safe haven.”
“We will continue promoting peace through strength throughout the region, as we build upon the momentum of this ceasefire to further expand the historic Abraham Accords,” Trump stated. “This is only the beginning of great things to come for America, and indeed, the world.”
An Israeli source told the country’s Channel 12 News that the Palestinian terrorist group committed to the deal in writing, and Al Jazeera reported that a Hamas delegation, led by senior official Khalil al-Hayya, delivered the approval to mediators in Doha and Cairo. ...
The parties agreed to a six-week initial ceasefire phase that includes the gradual withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip and the release of the hostages in exchange for Palestinian terrorists held in Israeli prisons, an official briefed on the talks told Reuters.
Hamas is holding 98 hostages, 94 of whom were taken during the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre and four of whom were captured in 2014, according to the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office. Thirty-six are deceased, including two from 2014 (Israeli Defense Forces Hadar Goldin and Oron Shaul).
This is a bad deal.
The very idea of negotiating with Hamas for corpses should be unthinkable and the trade-off - terrorists - for hostages being released in stages is uneven, to say the least.
As if Hamas can be trusted.
Back at home, the clown show meant to drag out the Trudeau government continues unabated:
Former finance minister Chrystia Freeland will announce her intention to run for the Liberal party leadership just before the U.S. presidential inauguration, a source close to her campaign team said Monday.
The cost to service the federal government's sizeable debtload will spike in the years ahead — and those public debt charges will eat up much more of Ottawa's revenue than they have in recent years, according to Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's fall economic statement, tabled today.
Freeland's document suggests Canada will avoid a recession but predicts economic growth will slow to a crawl. Unemployment is set to rise nearly a full percentage point next year and tens of thousands more people could be out of work.
Freeland wants to spend about $20.8 billion more over the next six years than the federal government initially projected. Freeland is pitching the increase as smaller than in years' past and as a sign of fiscal prudence. Most of the new spending is earmarked for new housing initiatives, such as low-cost loans to builders, and climate-friendly projects.
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A massive spike in reported lost federal revenue, combined with reported losses—accidental and otherwise—of public property and money, made 2023-24 a record year for such losses at close to $649.5-million overall, the highest such total in the last 10 years of federal public accounts.
In 2022-23, losses across these three categories had totalled $534.2-million.
Then there is this clown:
In a pair of photos captured in 2013, Carney can be seen chatting with Ghislaine Maxwell. Taken at the Wilderness Festival — a U.K. music and arts festival that brands itself as a destination for “wholesome hedonism” — it shows a smiling Carney standing next to Maxwell along with his wife Diana Fox.
At the time, Maxwell was mostly known as a British socialite seen often in the company of charismatic U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein. Now, she’s serving a 20-year jail term for assisting Epstein in running an elaborate pedophile sex-trafficking ring. ...
There are no rules forbidding Canadian party leaders from holding dual citizenship. Technically, it would even be possible for a non-citizen to be prime minister.
But dual citizenship has been a point of controversy for Canadian politicians before, most notably with former Conservative leader Andrew Scheer, who held citizenship in both the United States and Canada. Although Scheer publicly announced his intentions to renounce his U.S. citizenship, he abandoned the effort after losing the 2019 election. “Knowing that I won’t be prime minister, I discontinued that process,” Scheer told CTV at the time.
Carney is a citizen of three countries. Born a Canadian, he obtained Irish citizenship in the 1980s, and then British citizenship in 2018 when he was Governor of the Bank of England. ...
As British financial columnist Matthew Lynn put it, Carney presided over low growth and the decline of London as the world’s leading financial centre. “The Bank printed way too much money, stoking an asset bubble, and ultimately triggering the highest inflation rate in the G7,” wrote Lynn.
Carney was also one of the central figures of what the U.K. tabloid press has dubbed “Project Fear”; an organized effort warning of dire financial consequences if the U.K. followed through with its exit from the European Union. Carney’s successor, Andrew Bailey, has now publicly acknowledged that many of those warnings were overblown.
Carney has not veered away from attacking Pierre Poilievre and quite unimaginatively, too:
Carney wasn’t shy about attacking Poilievre after Stewart said Poilievre seemed “very off-putting” and “like a villain in a Karate Kid movie.”
Why IS Mark Carney campaigning in the US?
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Hardly an "outsider":
Despite being economic advisor to the Liberal Party, godfather to Freeland's kid and having Katie Telford making calls on his behalf as a candidate, Carney has the audacity to claim to be running as an 'outsider' on The Daily Show
— cbcwatcher (@cbcwatcher) January 14, 2025
Further, he admits the Liberal policies have… pic.twitter.com/JAi2VOpwEk
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Mark Carney is the Team Trudeau candidate. His campaign is being run by Butts, Telford, et al. - the ones who had to resign due to scandal, or who have been implicated in multiple scandals. The ones who reduced the Liberal Party to 16 per cent.
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 12, 2025
Carney = Trudeau. #cdnpoli
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He’s a made man — and, a consummate ‘insider.’
That might surprise watchers of Jon Stewart's Daily Show. In a recent episode, Carney told the unwitting Stewart that as a contender for the Liberal leadership, he was an 'outsider.'
Well, not really.
As Calgary MP Michelle Rempel-Garner says in her Substack, Carney is “a close advisor to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a key architect of the Liberal government’s much-criticized agenda, and a high-ranking member of the world’s most elite organizations.”
Think World Economic Forum then, and also the Bilderbergers, The Group of 30 — Carney is the G30 chairman — Chatham House and the Brookings Institution. They're Carney's crowd.
As Rempel-Garner said, 'He's not in the club, he runs the club.'
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While Carney seems a shoe-in to be installed, that hasn't stopped anyone else from throwing their hats into the ring:
Former B.C. premier Christy Clark and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne both announced on Tuesday they won’t run to become leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. Meanwhile, Liberal House leader Karina Gould is expected to launch her leadership campaign later this week.
This Karina Gould:
Government House leader Karina Gould stood up on Monday afternoon to ask for unanimous consent to adopt a motion calling to strike “from the appendix of the House of Commons debates” and from “any House multimedia recording” the recognition made by Speaker Anthony Rota of Yaroslav Hunka, 98, whom he described as “a Ukrainian hero, a Canadian hero.”
Rota has apologized but is now facing calls for his resignation by two of the four recognized parties in the House since it was revealed that Hunka was in fact serving in the First Ukrainian Division, also known as the Waffen-SS Galicia Division or the SS 14th Waffen Division which was a voluntary unit that was under the command of the Nazis during the Second World War.
(Sidebar: from the most "transparent" government in the country's history.)
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A “fact-checking” program launched in 2019 by then-Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould paid researchers nearly $370,000 to discourage media and the public from questioning authority, Access To Information records show. Researchers stressed the importance of invoking Canadian values to avoid being seen as Liberal partisans: “Dissenting voices, in some cases even just one, can weaken the power of a normative belief.”
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Government House Leader Karina Gould yesterday would not disclose records regarding a human rights case in which she complained of an inability to get along with co-workers. Gould is contemplating a bid to become Prime Minister: ‘She describes a series of incidents in which she believes she was treated unfairly.’
All of this so that the unaccomplished frat-boy doesn't have to leave office but others might:
Trudeau has only announced he "intends to resign" as prime minister and Liberal leader. As of writing, he is still very much the prime minister and Liberal leader. He could well use the genuine (post) national crisis facing Canada as his casus belli to call an election right now. The feckless Liberal caucus would be powerless to stop him, and it would abort the still nascent leadership race. He would still likely lose the election, but it would give him at least a prayer of a chance of fighting on.
Trudeau could (at least try) to fashion himself in the anti-American cloak worn by his father, promising to protect Canada from Trump and paint Pierre Polievre as a fifth column that would sell Canada out as the 51st state.
And Justin's "Screw the West, we'll take the rest" strategy would be at its foundation: putting an export tax on Alberta and Saskatchewan oil in a trade war to protect Eastern manufacturing (that is, votes).
This would rightly trigger an unprecedented national unity crisis. Peter Lougheed and his PCs may have been staunch defenders of Alberta's resources and constitutional space, but he's a choir boy compared with Danielle Smith and the UCP of 2025. She keeps a spigot on the major sovereigntist movement flowing through that party right now. Yet, another Trudeau looting Alberta for raw political gain this cynically would likely see it blow.
(Sidebar: like so.)
It worked for Pierre Trudeau but salted the earth for Liberals in these parts for two generations.
Will there even be an election in October?
Also - sir, the people have spoken and they wanted you gone. Apparently, fiscal prudence just wasn't a Canadian value.
But it IS an American one and that is why the Liberals are scrambling now:
Stephen Harper said it was Canadians, not economic pressure from U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, that led Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to say he will resign. ...
Harper said the prime minister was in a “no-win” situation when he travelled to Trump’s compound in Florida after Trump’s initial threat of 25 per cent tariff on Canadian imports. While his attendance made it “look like he was grovelling,” Harper believes choosing to ignore an invitation would have been seen as not addressing an international relationship in need of repair.
Canada’s 22nd prime minister also doesn’t have much hope for whoever picks up the mantle of new Liberal leader in late March.
Likening their plight to that of U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris, who had to carry forth the Democratic party’s record when she became its presidential candidate in July, Harper said a new Grit boss would quickly be faced with an election “where nobody wants that record to continue.”
“It’s hard for me to imagine how they could reframe the government that’s so unpopular and make themselves electable in the space of a few weeks,” he said.
(Sidebar: I can.)
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In his most explicit critique of his successor to date, former prime minister Stephen Harper said the government of Justin Trudeau has failed on basically every possible metric and has “denigrated” the country.
“All of the results of that government are bad; I mean virtually everything has been bad,” Harper told Florida-based podcaster Gabe Groisman this week.
On economics, Harper said “the damage is undeniable,” and he also accused Trudeau of pursuing a “woke agenda that has really denigrated the country’s culture and history and institutions.”
“I think Canadians have reacted more strongly against that than even the economic results,” said Harper.
More national news:
Dear Liberal & NDP geniuses: 🛢️
— Marc Nixon (@MarcNixon24) January 14, 2025
Here’s a map of Canada’s pipeline reality:
Alberta oil flows south to the US, then BACK to Eastern Canada.
Energy East? Cancelled by Trudeau’s climate crusade.
Jagmeet’s “threats” to cut off US oil? 🤡 Newsflash: Trump could cut YOU off first.… pic.twitter.com/DybDdhQLdl
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Readers trying to understand the many claims made about the number of children who died at residential schools can be forgiven for being confused about what they are being told. Various numbers, such as 3,201, 4,000, 6,000, and even 50,000 have been advanced by different people at different times.
So, what is the actual number of documented deaths of named children who died while attending a residential school?
In fact, Volume 4 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report provides the answer.
It is 423.
That is the total number of documented deaths of indigenous children who died while attending the 134 residential schools that operated in Canada from 1883 until the last one closed in 1998.
(An additional 409 “unnamed” deaths are recorded, but the TRC Report acknowledges the fact that many, or all, of them are likely duplicates of the named deaths).
So where did those other numbers come from?
The 3,201 is the total of the named deaths (423), the unnamed deaths (409) and a guess by the TRC that all of the former students who died within one year after their attendance at a residential school died as a result of their attendance at residential school. (see chart above)
An investigation into the death records of the children who died within one year of their residential school attendance quickly shows that the number is an overestimation. For example, some of those deaths were from accidents that occurred where the child lived on their home reserve, and had nothing to do with residential schools. Some occurred after illnesses contracted on their home reserve, and not at school.
But of even more significance, there is no good evidence that the children who died at, or within one year of attendance at a residential school, contracted their illnesses (usually tuberculosis) at the residential school. How many of those children would have died if they had not attended is simply unknown.
An unrelated example might be helpful to illustrate this point: English poet, John Keats, was one of the millions of adults and children who died of tuberculosis in previous centuries, before antibiotics were discovered. He died at age 25. Although he contracted the disease in England, he died at a residence in Rome. It would obviously be absurd to blame Keat’s death on that Roman residence, or on Rome.
It is equally absurd to blame a residential school for killing a child, if that child had arrived at the school already infected with tuberculosis. Only if the child was not infected when he arrived at the school could the school and system be blamed. It is a fact that we simply don’t know how many children arrived at the schools already infected, and how many were infected at the schools.
However, the findings of the chief medical officer of the time, Dr. Peter Bryce, suggest that most of the children contracted tuberculosis on their home reserve. Bryce supervised the tuberculosis testing of Indian children from eight Indian reserves when they first arrived at residential school. Incredibly, every one of those children entering residential school for the first time tested positive for tuberculosis. This is proof that they contracted their tuberculosis on their home reserves. In all probability those children’s’ tuberculosis would have progressed and killed them even if they had stayed home.
Their report(see page 253).
Bryce’s investigations also found that a stunning 92.5% of all Indian students beginning their attendance at both day and residential schools tested positive for tuberculosis. Poor malnutrition, crowded housing, lack of basic hygiene in their prairie reserve homes all contributed to the shockingly high tuberculosis rates.
On some western reserves the death rate from tuberculosis was a staggering 9%. These were the reserves that the students came from, so it should surprise no one that some died.
Bryce is remembered as the brave doctor who blew the whistle on the bad tuberculosis conditions at residential schools that prevailed in the early 1900s. He is that.
But he also blew the whistle on the even worse tuberculosis conditions on the reserves where the students came from. The unfortunate children who died of tuberculosis while attending a residential school represent a tiny fraction of the many thousands of reserve residents who died of tuberculosis, but never saw a residential school.
It is simply not known how many of the 3201 children died because of their attendance at a residential school, and how many would have died if they had stayed home. The only things we can say for certain about the number “3201” is that it is an exaggeration, and a guess.
As for the other numbers that have been advanced, such as 4,100 and 6,000, these are simply that original 3201, with additional names arbitrarily added by the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR — the successor to the TRC) at the request of anyone who wanted to commemorate an ancestor who had once attended a residential school. So, Helen Betty Osborne, who was murdered years after her residential school attendance, and a former student who died at the age of 86, are two of the people named on that list.
Their deaths had nothing to do with residential schools. The NCTR “Memorial Register” is meaningless as an information source, and more closely resembles a Coutts Hallmark card.
And what about even larger numbers that have been claimed by indigenous activists? Former TRC Murray Sinclair claimed that “15-25,000, maybe more”, children died at residential schools; former National Chief RoseAnne Archibald said that “thousands, tens of thousands” were deliberately killed; Tk’emlups Chief Roseanne Casimir said “215” were secretly buried at Kamloops.
There is no credible evidence to support any of these wild claims The most likely inspiration for those numbers come from the fabulist, Kevin Annett, who was taken quite seriously by Canada’s mainstream media, including the Globe and Mail, and by Canadian university indigenous studies departments (despite his preposterous claims that 50,000 and more students were killed in every conceivable way, and were “buried between church walls all over Canada”).
Perhaps one should focus on more recent matters:
Nine years of reconciliation have not led to “any tangible improvements in the qualify of life for Indigenous people,” says a Privy Council report. In-house focus group research found First Nations, Inuit and Métis questioned the point of cabinet’s friendship when many communities had undrinkable tap water: “Most did not feel the prioritization of this issue had led to any tangible improvements.”
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Remember that Justin threatened to sue veterans for "asking for too much":
Canada should honour volunteers who served in the 1990 Persian Gulf conflict as legitimate wartime veterans, the Commons veterans affairs committee says in its final report to the 44th Parliament. The “legal semantics” of whether veterans were at war or not meant reduced disability benefits for 4,458 Canadians who served in Operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm: “Wrong answer.”
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Cabinet quietly polled Canadians on a home equity tax even after promising it would not introduce the measure, records disclose. Cabinet aides commissioned focus groups on the question as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attended an invitation-only meeting with home equity tax advocates in Vancouver last June: “We can all learn from each other.”
Canada the cruel:
When a Canadian child was rushed to the hospital after nearly drowning, his parents say doctors threatened to take the child off life support and suggested harvesting his organs.
“We had 14 days to prepare his funeral and say goodbye to him,” Nicolas Tétrault, the boy’s father and a former Montreal politician, told The Federalist in English, his second language. “They were promoting to harvest the organs and give them away.”
Tétrault said his two-year-old son, Arthur, drowned in October. An ambulance took Arthur to a hospital where doctors resuscitated him, and he was later transferred to Montreal Children’s Hospital, where he was stabilized. But doctors told his parents Arthur had brain damage and an abnormal breathing pattern. According to Tétrault, after approximately five weeks doctors gave an ultimatum — they would “unplug” the boy from life support on Nov. 29.
So Tétrault and his wife fled with Arthur to New Orleans, where he is being treated at Ochsner Medical Center and is off a ventilator.
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According to a recent report, “euthanasia regulators have tracked 428 cases of possible criminal violations” in Ontario between 2018 and 2023, and none were reported to police. One doctor in Vancouver repeatedly accused of violating MAID rules has helped kill hundreds of patients, as The Federalist reported. According to CTV News, one family recently named the doctor and her clinic in a lawsuit for alleged “unlawful administration of MAID,” claiming this resulted in a psychiatric patient’s “wrongful death.”
The MAID process may appear morbidly peaceful. In “clinician-administered” MAID, “a physician or nurse practitioner directly administers a substance that causes death.”
As laid out in the MAID protocol for the Northwestern territories, this often involves the injection of multiple chemicals, including midazolam, a sedative; propofol, which induces a coma; and rocuronium or cisatracurium, which paralyze muscles. Ireland called it the “stuff of nightmares,” noting this cocktail creates the appearance of calm while a patient experiences respiratory arrest.
The alternative method, often called “self-administered medical assistance in dying,” involves “a physician or nurse practitioner provid[ing] or prescrib[ing] a drug that the eligible person takes themselves, in order to bring about their own death.”
Ireland provided a signed affidavit to The Federalist from Pat Gray, an elderly patient Ireland said is now deceased. A doctor allegedly encouraged Gray to accept MAID, but she refused, according to the document.
“One day, she decided to offer me MAiD. I quickly said no and then showed her my bookmark that said, ‘With God all things are possible,'” the patient wrote. “[I]f God wants to use my life longer for even one more miracle, it will be worth it.”
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At least 15,000 Canadians died while waiting for surgery or a diagnostic scan over the course of a year, according to government data collected by public policy think tank SecondStreet.org.
The true figure for the fiscal year 2023-24 is likely nearly double owing to a “huge hole” in the data, said SecondStreet president Colin Craig. Missing are data from Quebec, Alberta, Newfoundland and Labrador and most of Manitoba.
Call it what it is:
"If there are 31 days in a month, I will work 31 days," one worker told the BBC.
Most said they only have one day off a month.
The BBC spent several days here: we visited 10 factories, spoke to four owners and more than 20 workers. We also spent time at labour markets and textile suppliers.
We found that the beating heart of this empire is a workforce sitting behind sewing machines for around 75 hours a week in contravention of Chinese labour laws.
These hours are not unusual in Guangzhou, an industrial hub for rural workers in search of a higher income; or in China, which has long been the world's unrivalled factory.
But they add to a growing list of questions about Shein, once a little-known Chinese-founded company that has become a global behemoth in just over five years.
If, in fact, South Korea has been seized by North Korean interests, things will get really bad:
Impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol was arrested and questioned by authorities in relation to a criminal insurrection investigation on Wednesday, saying he was only cooperating with what he called an illegal probe to avoid violence.
His arrest, the first ever for an incumbent South Korean president, is the latest head-spinning development for one of Asia's most vibrant democracies even though the country has a history of prosecuting and imprisoning former leaders.
Since lawmakers voted to stand him down after his short-lived declaration of martial law on Dec. 3, Yoon has been holed up at his hillside residence, guarded by a small army of personal security that blocked a previous arrest attempt.
He agreed to come in for questioning after more than 3,000 police officers determined to arrest him marched on his residence in the early hours of Wednesday.
"I decided to respond to the CIO's investigation — despite it being an illegal investigation — to prevent unsavory bloodshed," Yoon said in a statement, referring to the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO) that is heading the criminal probe.
A prosecutor accompanied Yoon in his car from his home in the upscale area known as Seoul's Beverly Hills to the austere CIO offices, where he slipped in through a back entrance, avoiding media.
Authorities now have 48 hours to question Yoon after which they must seek a warrant to detain him for up to 20 days or release him.
However, Yoon is refusing to talk and has not agreed to have interviews with investigators recorded on video, a CIO official said. The CIO said it had no information on why Yoon was refusing to talk.