.@UCPCaucus plunged in the polls because the ruling class enforced lockdowns against the people while they sneaked away to live the Before Times lifestyle.
@jkenney sacked the hypocrites which took out the stinger.
I predict @CommrRCMPGRC, Trudeau's highly partisan commissioner of the @rcmpgrcpolice, will enforce lockdown laws in Alberta brutally. Citizens won't understand that the RCMP is Trudeau's police force; they'll blame @jkenney.
Watch Mirror, Alberta tomorrow to see if I'm right.
The obvious answer is for @jkenney to a.) lift the lockdown and b.) ban police from enforcing it. Never before have police enforced health orders (e.g. restaurants closed for having mice, etc.). This is a new, police state tactic that is likely unconstitutional. Just end it.
A grand total of three people have died from catching the virus in any restaurant anywhere in Canada. By comparison, 10 Canadians a year die from lightning strikes.
As you can see from the same chart (published by Health Canada), not a single person has died from catching the virus in a hair/nails/barber salon or from a school or a child care centre. NOT ONE.
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Alberta’s unelected, unaccountable public health scold @CMOH_Alberta loves being a celebrity — and her $300K salary. She’s having the time of her life crushing the little people with her unscientific lockdowns. But when Hollywood celebrities asked for an exemption, she said yes!
I bet @CMOH_Alberta asked for a movie credit — “special thanks to Deena Hinshaw” — as part of her deal to allow Hollywood celebrities to be exempt from the lockdown that mere citizens are being forced to obey. I wonder if she asked to be credited as an associate producer!
No-one in Alberta should pay their lockdown fines. No-one. First it was lockdown cheaters like the wicked liar FireAllard.com. Now it’s lockdown cheaters like @CMOH_Alberta’s special Hollywood friends. If you’re not part of the ruling class — you’ll get a huge fine.
1. This is quite the standard to set. If accepting a $131 online donation from a racist -- who hid his full name; that was immediately returned by the MP when he found out -- is grounds to sack an MP, every single donation is a potential firing offence.
2. O'Toole has been looking to purge Sloan from caucus from the beginning. That's undemocratic, but he should have had the courage to do so. This is so obviously an excuse to sack him without due process or reasonable cause. But worse than anything, it sets the new standard.
3. Right now, the Liberal war room is going through public databases looking for any donor they think they can make sound "offensive". They'll find dozens, all unknown to the Tories. And they'll dump them when they need to wobble O'Toole, or cover for a Trudeau gaffe.
Just a reminder: Trudeau's senior Quebec cabinet minister, a convicted criminal named Steven Guilbeault, has been fighting AGAINST the Keystone XL pipeline since 2013: twitter.com/search?q=from%…
1. I think this will do it. I think you've finally convinced the Liberals and the Media Party to like you. I hear @rosiebarton and the CBC will now drop her lawsuit against you.
This is the seventh day in a row you have danced to their tune. Do you not have one of your own?
2. This doesn't really say anything, though. It's all boilerplate. It's defensive. Does it move a single vote? Why have you been silent on the key issues of our era -- censorship, lockdowns, cancel culture, carbon taxes, UN/WHO misconduct? Because the CBC disapproves?
3. You will always be in a controversy, because you are a politician in an adversarial system. You cannot wish that away. What you can do is choose better battles -- ones where you're on the offensive and the Liberals are on the defensive. Why not try that?
1. A huge legal defeat for @Twitter, surprisingly at the hands of Bill Clinton ally @Frank_Giustra. A Canadian court has ruled that Giustra is permitted to sue Twitter itself for defamation — something U.S. courts have not allowed. bccourts.ca/jdb-txt/sc/21/….
2. Twitter argued the lawsuit should be heard in the U.S., where it would have the protection of the First Amendment & s. 230 of the Communications Decency Act — which the court noted would make the lawsuit impossible. The court said that was a good reason to do it in Canada.
3. This line didn’t get a lot of treatment in the ruling but I couldn’t help but laugh: Twitter claims it “does not mediate or review” tweets. I’d pass on the good news to @realdonaldtrump but he’s been mediated and reviewed and is unavailable.
1. About Erin O’Toole — some conspiracy theorists wonder if we really had an interview with him. It’s a weird question, since you can read the interview here: rebelnews.com/exclusive_erin… The whole interaction was done over email, so I’ll share some screenshots.
2. As you know, we had the scoop of the year with our TheChinaFiles.com story. We broke the news, it was reported around the world, from the @globeandmail to @TuckerCarlson. Huge story, right on brand for @erinotoole who raised it in question period.
3. O’Toole had a press conference on the story (my scoop!) I dialed in but oddly enough I wasn’t chosen to ask a question. The CBC got two and so did CP, even though they never actually asked about the documents. That’s odd. So I sent a DM to O’Toole who follows me on Twitter.