Years ago, I warned that the homeless were the next target of the Canadian far-right. In this thread I am going to show the host of people and organizations that are part of this movement against the impoverished and addicted.
Warning: this will be long.
The first organization to know about is BC Proud. They're an offshoot of the same Canada Proud, founded by former Conservative Party staffer Jeff Ballingall. torontolife.com/city/qa-jeff-b…
If you look at their Facebook page you will notice the standard far-right media, including anti-LGBTQ memes and support for people like Peterson.
But on the left hand side, you can see their page is managed by "Pacific Prosperity Network".
There are two figures connected to BC Proud. The first is their spokesman Aaron Gunn, who you might remember because even the BC Liberals said he was too far-right and toxic for them. vancouversun.com/news/politics/…
He first made waves when he marched alongside the Soldiers of Odin against the removal of the John A Macdonald statue in Victoria. pentictonwesternnews.com/news/protestor…
The second is Angelo Isidorou, director of the UBC free speech club, who first made waves as a board-member of the NPA when photos came out of him wearing a MAGA hat and doing a hand sign that, at the time, was being used by white supremacists as an identifier.
Angelo would later be kicked out of the party after it came out that he and Jeff Conaster were being paid by Pacific Prosperity Network to do political work with the party and run anti-homeless hate site Views of Vancouver.
The next is Marshall Smith, the Chief of Staff to Danielle Smith.
Marshall got in hot water a few years back when it came out that his addiction recovery center was getting millions in tax payer money and paying that back by using recovery patients to provide free labour on BC Liberal campaigns.
He has since become the architect of Alberta's drug policy, and specifically their pull away from harm reduction. thetyee.ca/Analysis/2022/…
Under Smith, Alberta commissioned a report panning safe supply. The report was written by 4 SFU researchers, including one Julian Somers. The report was not peer reviewed, heavily politicized, and kind of fizzled.
From the article above. Left to right, bottom image:
Julian Somers, SFU researcher. Ralf Kaiser, VPU president. Giuseppe Ganci(?) of Last Door recovery and Talk Recovery radio. Aaron Gunn, BC Proud. Angelo Isidorou, BC proud.
Not sure who the kid with the alt-right haircut is
Then in November Poilievre was back in BC again, this time using homelessness as a backdrop to his campaign and attacking safe supply: pressprogress.ca/why-pierre-poi…
Shortly after, Polievre is back tweeting the NatPo, which is declaring that researchers who disagree with harm reduction are being repressed! It's bullshit, of course, but who pops up? Yes, it's Julian Somers.
Don't some of these faces look familiar? Left to right:
John Clerides of Marquis Wine Cellars who has recently been vocal about how Vancouver "doesn't take crime seriously".
To his right is Michael Shellenberger, a climate-disaster denier and far-right PR agent who has recently been pushing the message that progressivism creates homelessness, drug addiction and mental illness.
Next to him I don't recognize. But next to that guy, at the center of the photo is of course Marshall Smith!
Then a woman I don't know, the new chief of the Seattle PD, a guy I don't recognize and... yes that's Angelo Isidorou of BC Proud!
Next to him is ex-Vancouver council candidate Mauro Francis, and next to him... yes it's Guiseppe Ganci again!
Funny how all these people linked to BC Proud events are showing up in the US too. Almost as if these movements are connected.
There's good news though. These people's success relies on people being too ignorant of who they are to realize that they are taking lines from PR guys and propagandists. Don't let that happen. Tell everyone who they are.
I've since learned that the guy with the alt-right haircut (not a kid at all, but he looks amazing for his age) is Cody Hall of Last Door. He's here because he was part of the documentary Vancouver is Dying by Isidorou and Gunn.
I want to add to this, a HUGE thanks to the following accounts for providing information and helping identify some of the people in these photos:
@Bambammon
@jenstdenis
@kwardvancouver
@jamesgemmill
@bobmackin
@_llebrun and all the folks at @pressprogress
Oh and did I mention that Marshall is the ex-chair of the BC Recovery Council and ex BC Center for Substance Use? The political ties between all these organizations run deep.
@Bambammon @JenStDenis @kwardvancouver @jamesgemmill @bobmackin @_llebrun @pressprogress Im an idiot and keep mentioning @jenstdenis instead of @JenStDen. Ooops, sorry @JenStDen.
Thanks to some people who reached out, I managed to get the following two screenshots. Yes, PPN/BCProud is fundraising for Last Door.
Ken Sim has some strange connections to shady businesses, which I've documented before, but I wasn't expecting last week's announcement of a Vancouver Bitcoin Reserve to be tied to a crypto-advocate who funded the convoy.
For those who haven't read my previous thread, Sim's declaration of investments includes Causis Group LTD, company of one Sri Ram Tulmuri who was involved with the Maltese Hospital Scam.
Well a name popped up on the mayors calendar recently, one J. Booth. Then, roughly a month later, Sim announces a strategic bitcoin reserve. So J Booth and crypto? Who could that be?
So Albertan's are providing BC Election ads and they're linked to some pretty interesting groups that I've talked about. This time, lets look at how these orgs connect across Canada, and how it all connects to the oil industry.
The organization behind these BC Political ads is West Coast Proud. They are run, ironically, out of Alberta by Andrew Crooks, who appears to be a director of Simon House Recovery Centre and a director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
He also serves on the Alberta Municipal Government Board, the province’s addictions advisory council and is the writer of this terrible blog.
Who are the BC Conservatives and how did they go from nobodies to possibly winning this election? Would it surprise you to learn that the answer involves shadowy right-wing orgs and the oil industry? Of course it wouldn't.
Buckle up. 🧵
This all starts in 2018 with the removal of a statue of John A MacDonald from the steps of Victoria city hall. Here "BC Proud spokesperson" Aaron Gunn marches alongside the Soldiers of Odin to protest its removal.
Shortly after, at the Hellenic Cultural Center the UBC Free Speech Club had invited (Kremlin stooge) Lauren Southern to talk alongside famous white nationalist Stephan Molyneux.
It feels a little insane, but every time I look at a right-wing movement, there is some connection to the International Democracy Union (IDU). Scandals, the convoy, the overthrow of the US government, even...
For those who don't know the IDU, it was founded in 1983 by the likes of Maragret Thatcher, Helmut Kohl, and Jacques Chirac, among others. In 2018 Stephen Harper became its chairman.
Has anyone looked at this account that @angelahaer retweeted at 5pm last night?
Their first post was at 4pm yesterday. Haer picked it up at 5 and until recently WAS ITS ONLY FOLLOWER. Gee, I wonder who could be behind it?
It's since removed them, but it also originally followed quite a host of characters. Also on the list: Mayors Office's Trevor Ford.
Stephen Jagger there is the co-founder of Addy investments. That surprised me. I read up on them recently after Ken Sim's recent disclosure that he was an investor in it (note, Causis is still there):
*Sigh* I just looked over @TranBC's plan for Hwy1, and I am once again disappointed. First, lets mention the core issues that this plan brings up, but then does nothing to resolve.
This is the central problem. We have increasing motor vehicle use, despite being in the middle of a climate crisis. This is what must be resolved before we can reduce congestion on this route. Simply put: you can't build enough capacity to make up for increasing traffic.
This is because as we devote more and more to motor vehicles, we encourage more motor vehicle use, countering the capacity gains we built. Further, we reduce resources and space dedicated to walkable/bikeable/livable space, driving those people into cars.