Friday, September 08, 2023

Corruption

It is what North American governments run on now:

This spring, the Liberals initially named former governor general David Johnston as a special rapporteur to examine the issue and promised to follow his recommendations, including if he called for a public inquiry.

Johnston recommended against an inquiry, saying the fact that so many details could not be made public due to national security implications would not give Canadians the answers they want.

His report, issued in May, concluded that Trudeau’s government didn’t knowingly or negligently fail to act on foreign attempts to interfere in the last two federal elections.

Shortly after his report, Johnston resigned as special rapporteur, citing the highly partisan atmosphere that had surrounded his work.


Is that so?

And what about these, Uncle David?:







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And yet, no one seems to want to stem the tide of unvetted migrants and students who remain long after their official welcome wears out.

Strange.

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Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday would not say if she will use statutory powers to direct the Financial Consumer Agency to investigate public complaints. Access To Information records show the federal Agency did not contact any of 27,323 bank customers who wrote to complain of breaches of the Bank Act: “It is window dressing.”

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An honest government would not tank the oil sector, nor would it have piled on tax after tax on everything, including gas:

The Bank of Canada says it is worried by rising gas prices and will hike interest rates again this fall “if needed.” The Bank yesterday held its prime rate on interbank loans at five percent, the highest in 22 years: “With the recent increase in gasoline prices, inflation is expected to be higher in the near term.”


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Justin has yet to buy back these voters:

Younger people, who were key to Trudeau’s 2015 election victory, have now broken for the Conservatives at rates that haven’t been seen since the 1980s. A new Abacus Data survey found that Millennials were nearly twice as likely to vote Conservative as Liberal. And the Tories even led among the younger Generation Z; Canadians aged 18 to 27 favoured the Conservatives at a rate of 32 per cent against 24 per cent for the Liberals.


And they can be bought. 

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Banking whistleblowers first began raising alarms about Hunter Biden’s business deals as long ago as Spring 2015 while his father was still serving as vice president, flagging what they feared were “suspicious” transactions and “fraudulent" schemes. One of the bankers became so concerned he eventually escalated his concerns to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) only a few days before Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016, according to documents provided to Congress and obtained by Just the News.

“Due diligence on involved parties reveals less than clean records,” a Morgan Stanley investment bank compliance presentation from May 2015 stated, specifically providing a dossier about Hunter Biden’s background, his expulsion from the Navy, his association with the Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings and photos of the future first son with Barack Obama and Joe Biden.




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