What we are witnessing in Canada is without historic precedent. The grassroots mobilization of thousands of 'normal' Canadians in the face of unconstitutional tyranny has never been witnessed in a nation typically defined by its apathy and reluctance to make waves. 1/7
The convoy to Ottawa that has started in the West and starts in the East tomorrow is stronger than first anticipated. It's easy to project meaningless #'s, but when you see the send-off in BC and then Calgary this morning, it confirmed that we are on to something historic. 2/7
Overpasses filled with families, remote prairie intersections lined with salt-of-the-earth farmers and families, and truck stop parking lots packed to the gills with the working class - something has snapped in the Canadian psyche. 3/7
We must guard against agitators that will try to hijack what is a perfectly peaceful and legal resistance against overbearing oppression from tyrants that have no regard for the supremacy of God and the rule of law. 4/7
This convoy has no intentions of violence and is spawning prayer meetings across the country to pray for a peaceful transition back to a free nation founded on the principles that recognize the fundamental freedoms that each of us were endowed with at birth by our Creator. 5/7
The enemy is enraged and will not give up easily. Many leaders have spoken out in this dark era in our nation's history. This may not be the moment that Truth wins decisively. 6/7
One year ago today, COVID-19 was declared a 'Pandemic.'
We had already seen the images of people collapsing on the streets of Wuhan, the headlines of cases skyrocketing globally, and the doomsday modelling if we didn't do something NOW. 1/13
Hindsight is 20/20 and we can all agree that COVID-19 is truly a fierce pandemic. A year later, we have witnessed a pandemic of fear-mongering, overdose, suicide, depression, loneliness, financial ruin, censorship, and social engineering of epic proportions. 2/13
This pandemic declaration unleashed the swiftest, tactical PR blitz we have ever seen. Time has a way of dulling our senses to change, even when it's extreme, yet subtle. 3/13