Tuesday, July 07, 2026

No Country For Anyone

 This guy is a special kind of stupid:

Last Tuesday, attendees in a Montreal courtroom heard what seemed like a fantastical story from an admitted arsonist and his lawyer. Twenty-one-year-old Mohamed Ilyes Akodad was in court to be sentenced; he had already pleaded guilty to firebombing a synagogue and Jewish community centre. Yet he insisted to the judge that he had no idea the buildings were Jewish. Instead, Akodad and his lawyer Nazar Saaty claimed he was simply carrying out a paid “three barbecues” contract on unknown locations, arranged through Signal and FaceTime. Akodad told the court that the job came after he attended a party with a friend he refused to name at a place he claimed he could not remember due to stress and drug use.

(Sidebar: and we are to believe that, are we?) 

The Crown prosecutor told the court that Akodad could be released soon, a possibility which raises serious questions about the justice system’s ability to protect Jewish communities.

 

Behold, people who are more stupid than he!

** 

Newly-declassified records show Canadian diplomats 50 years ago this summer were so fearful of anti-Semitic violence at the MontrĂ©al Summer Olympics they pleaded with Israeli VIPs to keep their travel plans confidential. The MontrĂ©al Games were the first since the 1972 murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics: “On each occasion the visit was treated privately and no mention of it was made in the press.”

** 

You can always go back to China:

Liberal appointee Senator Yuen Pau Woo (B.C.) says he is personally embarrassed by Canadians’ refusal to publicly criticize Israel. “This is not the Canada I am proud of,” Woo told reporters. “This is not the Canada I believe in.” 

 

Then leave.

Canada means nothing to you, anyway. 

 

 

We Don't Have to Trade With China

And yet ... :

Prince Edward Island needs a new approach to land acquisition regulations amid today’s national security realities and Beijing’s subversion attempts, a former senior officer with the RCMP told a provincial hearing in Charlottetown on July 6.

Gary Clement, former national director of the RCMP’s Proceeds of Crime program, said that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is “one of the most ruthless transnational organized crime groups we’ve ever faced,” and that the province needs a more comprehensive approach when it comes to land ownership to protect public interest.

“The objective should not be more regulation. The objective should be smarter regulation,” Clement told a panel of the members of the Review of the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission.

The independent commission was formed by the province in May to examine the structure and responsibilities of P.E.I.’s Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission (IRAC), a regulatory body overseeing energy and land regulations and related appeals processes.

The commission’s formation follows revelations by a provincial legislative committee last year that IRAC didn’t publish a report on a 2016–2018 investigation related to major land acquisitions on the island by the groups Great Enlightenment Buddhist Institute Society (GEBIS) and the Great Wisdom Buddhist Institute (GWBI).

In October 2025, P.E.I. Premier Rob Lantz called for the RCMP and Canada’s anti-money-laundering agency, FINTRAC, to probe the issue, following a press conference by Clement and his co-investigators in Ottawa the previous month on security concerns related to land acquisitions and CCP interference on the island.

“These allegations primarily center around the activities of certain Buddhist groups and their affiliates operating in the province and build on years of public speculation and uncertainty,” Lantz wrote in a letter to the RCMP.

The July 6 hearing also featured presentations from a number of other members of the public and citizen groups, including Wayne Easter, a former P.E.I. Liberal MP and former Solicitor General of Canada, who is calling for a federal public inquiry into the operations of GEBIS and GWBI and their affiliates.

“Islanders deserve to understand who is investing in our land, what the long-term intentions are, and whether any external political interests could be influencing local decisions,” Easter said.

“We are living in a time of foreign influence, whether economic, political, or institutional. It is a global issue.”

GEBIS and GWBI didn’t return a request for comment.

GWBI says on its website that “there is no big business or government controlling GWBI, GEBIS, or Bliss and Wisdom,” and that allegations that their spiritual leader, teacher Zhen-Ru, has close links to the Beijing regime are false. GEBIS told The Epoch Times in a past statement that it has “absolutely no affiliation with the Chinese government.”

Clement has co-authored a book on the topic of CCP interference titled “Canada Under Siege: How Prince Edward Island Became a Forward Operating Base for the Chinese Communist Party.” His co-authors are Michel Juneau-Katsuya, a former senior manager with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, and Dean Baxendale, CEO of the China Democracy Fund and Optimum Publishing International.

Clement told the panel that P.E.I. needs a new Land and Economic Security Commission that is solely focused on matters related to “land ownership, strategic investments, beneficial ownership transparency, and economic security.”

He added that the province needs to establish stronger coordination mechanisms with federal security and intelligence agencies such as the RCMP and CSIS.

“Foreign influence networks, money laundering organizations, and organized crime groups do not respect provincial boundaries. Neither can the response,” Clement said.

 

Nothing will happen.

 

 

Wait - Carney Said Something On Canada Day?

I hadn't noticed:

Two national days of celebration, two different countries, two different leaders with two very different messages.

On Canada Day, Prime Minister Mark Carney offered a polished message of unity, courage, and conviction. He does this well. “We are strongest when we are united,” he told Canadians, praising diversity, kindness, and the national habit of building together.

Only two days later at Mount Rushmore, President Trump marked America’s two-hundred-and-fiftieth anniversary by celebrating American exceptionalism — the oldest republic, the most free people in the world, the strongest military, and so on. Not much about the loveliness of diversity in togetherness.

What works for you?

Carney’s address was admittedly gracious. The old women (of both sexes) in eastern Canada who secured his majority would have been happy as he spoke of partnership over assimilation, of infrastructure forged in steel and determination, and of bold action on energy, hydro, LNG, and nuclear projects pursued with indigenous partners. He urged Canadians to “buy Canadian” and promised that courage, connections, and conviction would secure the country’s future. The rhetoric was inclusive and optimistic.

But to borrow a phrase, ‘where’s the beef?’

Which is the point here. Both speeches were intended to summon up national pride. But only one leader could offer the listener substantial accomplishments.

Take the recent pipeline and Pathways carbon capture announcement with Premier Danielle Smith.

Mr. Carney frames it as a nation-building project. Yet analysts estimate it is roughly 90% public ownership and funding. Taxpayers in Alberta and across Canada are being asked to shoulder the heavy lifting through investment tax credits, provincial incentives, and backstopped financing, while detailed cost-sharing “remains to be negotiated.”

Of course. Industry has long signalled it cannot carry the full burden of capital and operating costs for one of the world’s largest CCUS schemes.

Meanwhile, contrary to the US passion for protecting free speech, Canada’s Liberal government continues to expand the state’s reach over information and expression.

Bill C-9 removed longstanding religious “good faith” protections in hate propaganda provisions.

Bill C-34 would create a powerful Digital Safety Commission with broad discretion to define harmful content and set age-verification and speech rules. These measures are sold as safeguards. Their practical effect is to raise the cost and risk of dissenting speech — precisely the debate required for genuine problem-solving.

The results are visible in the numbers. Canadian GDP growth is forecast to remain modest, around 1.1% to 1.6% for 2026. That’s about half that of the US. Meanwhile, US unemployment hovers around 4.2%, compared to Canada’s 6.5% to 6.8%.

Per-capita performance has been weaker still. Capital and talent continue to weigh opportunities south of the border, where regulatory certainty and energy abundance are more reliably delivered.

President Trump’s Mount Rushmore address, by contrast, rested on tangible strengths. He honoured the founders and the constitutional order, defended national monuments against revisionism, and described an America that — whatever its divisions and debts — remains the world’s leading energy producer, technological innovator, and military power. They’ve just gone back to the Moon. (And were decent enough to take us along for the ride.)

The United States has posted stronger growth momentum, lower unemployment, and continued attraction of investment.

Trump could legitimately claim that, despite problems, America is still doing tremendous things: exporting energy, advancing AI, and projecting strength rather than managing decline. Most of it was done with private investment.

Ironically, Mr. Carney’s speech praised the very qualities his government’s policies often constrain. Expansive speech regulation, subsidy-heavy “green” megaprojects, and layered approvals create friction where speed and certainty are needed. Diversity and inclusion are celebrated in principle; in practice, compelled speech and administrative definitions of acceptable opinion narrow the space for open argument. Nation-building is invoked, yet the pipeline and CCUS deals shift massive costs onto taxpayers while private actors stand back.

These are not incidental side-effects. They are recurring design choices.

Canada still possesses the human capital, resources, and institutions to achieve far more. But eloquent appeals to unity and conviction will not substitute for policies that actually lower barriers to investment, protect open debate, and let private enterprise — not government commissions and guarantees — drive results.

President Trump could stand at Mount Rushmore and point to an America that continues to build, produce, and lead on a grand scale. Prime Minister Carney offered Canadians inspiring words. He had far less concrete accomplishments to talk about, largely because the policies his government advances so often work against the very objectives he praises.

 Canada can do better. We know that because in days gone by, we did. We were actually a more powerful nation at the end of the Second World War, with a population of 12 million, than we are today with a population of more than 40 million.

But talk won’t do it. Nothing has come out of the Major Projects Office that wasn’t well on the way before it was established last year. The future Mr. Carney talks about will be earned only when words are matched by outcomes that reward enterprise, safeguard liberty, and deliver measurable progress rather than managed expectations.

Both speeches were intended to summon up national pride. But only one leader really had much to offer.

To put it simply, it’s time this country got out of its own way.

 

But all that Canadians want is words.

Actions requires effort, accountability, and ultimately satisfaction from a task done.

That is not how we do things here.

The Americans prefer the real thing.

That is why Trump, mere hours after being sworn in, got right to work signing orders.

That's a work ethic of an accountable leader for you, not one of an installed profiteer.

 

It's Just An Economy

Would that accountability were a thing:

About a fifth of businesses anticipate a continued slowdown over the next 12 months, the Bank of Canada said yesterday in its first Business Outlook Survey since the economy fell into recession. The latest data were issued ahead of the next interest rate announcement due July 15: “Business sentiment has deteriorated.”

** 

The Public Health Agency in an internal memo confirms it lost millions’ worth of medical equipment in a 2024 flood. The newly-disclosed incident is the latest in a string of mishaps and mismanagement at the National Emergency Strategic Stockpile: “We are doing sort of some interim course corrections as we go.” 

 

 

Why Not Conscription?

Don't disguise your true intentions.

Let the delicate masses know you want them for cannon fodder:

A group of prominent Canadians is urging the federal government to support plans for a voluntary National Youth Service program that would include basic military training.

Engage Canada submitted a proposal to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance in May, seeking support to develop the program. Under the proposal, young people aged 18-25 would complete the military training before serving in areas such as emergency preparedness, climate resilience and community service.

(Sidebar: because you can go to war against the weather.) 

The proposal has attracted support from business, military, Indigenous, academic and community leaders, including former Quebec premier Jean Charest, former British Columbia premier Christy Clark, Paralympian Rick Hansen and Chief Wilton Littlechild.

Michael Burns, chair of Engage Canada, said the initiative is designed to address two challenges facing the country: helping young people transition into the workforce while strengthening Canada’s ability to respond to national needs.

(Sidebar: they used to have jobs for that. But, you know ...) 

“I think Canada is facing two significant challenges at the same time,” he said in an interview with National Post. “First, young people are entering adulthood without a clear pathway for employment. A lot of them are lacking skills, a sense of purpose, resiliency, and a sense of belonging.

(Sidebar: again, that's what schools and part-time jobs were.) 

“The second is that the country has some urgent national needs, including emergency preparedness, climate resiliency, community service, support for seniors, defence, and security issues. A modern national service program for youth could help address both those things. It would give young Canadians a meaningful paid opportunity to serve and build their future, while also strengthening Canada’s capacity to respond to national challenges that we face today.”

(Sidebar: you can't fight a tornado, we kill our elderly, and we don't fund our military.) 

Engage Canada is asking the federal government to allocate $18.75 million over two years in Budget 2026 to support the program, which would include a competitive application process and compensation for participants’ work — though Burns says the question of what would be a fair wage is yet to be determined.

(Sidebar: slave labour wages? Or is that un-Canadian?) 

The organization argues that the proposal comes at a time when Canada is “debating sovereignty, defence readiness, labour shortages, emergency preparedness, and how to better prepare the next generation for civic leadership.”

 

Twaddle.

There are already organisations that teach skills to youth.

This is a taxpayer-funded soon-to-happen debacle. 

Call it what it is: conscription for some untrained and unarmed excess teen-agers. 

 

Korean Shipbuilder's Stocks Go Down After Carney Accepts German Deal That Won't Result In a Single U-Boat

To wit:

Shares in South Korean shipbuilder Hanwha Ocean plunged almost 24% on Tuesday, after the company lost a multibillion-dollar contract for Canadian submarines to German naval shipbuilder TKMS.

Kiel-based TKMS is to supply the country with up to 12 submarines, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney announced in Halifax on Monday.

According to media reports, the contract - including maintenance and operations - is worth 100 billion Canadian dollars ($70.4 billion) over several decades.

Disappointment at the South Korean rival runs deep.

"We were not able to overcome the barrier posed by the NATO alliance, despite making all-out efforts backed by the government's full support," Hanwha Ocean said in an initial statement, implying that the company saw the Canadian government's choice as a strategic decision.

Unlike Germany, South Korea is not a full NATO member, although it is regarded as a key partner nation of the military alliance in the Indo-Pacific.

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, who is attending the NATO summit in Ankara, also commented on the decision.

"Our submarines have proven their excellent performance and technology through square competition with the world's submarine powers," Lee wrote on his Facebook account.

While the desired result had not been achieved, he said valuable experience had been gained to strengthen South Korea's competitiveness.

 

And after hitting up the Koreans for the blackhole that is Ukraine.

Tsk.