The Trudeau govt has confirmed its Foreign Interference Commission Report will be published by the end of this month. I've reviewed some of the documents—here are my notes and some important themes you should be aware of.
1/ The Trudeau govt does not care.
Elections Canada identified "loopholes in leadership contests" as a serious concern. The decision to proceed with a leadership race without consideration for closing these loopholes shows the Trudeau Liberals just don't care about interference.
2/ The govt has done absolutely nothing about the issue.
Again, the recent decision to go ahead with a leadership race before submitting their final report on foreign interference shows a complete lack of political will to reduce or eliminate foreign interference.
3/ There are not one, but many, foreign interference threats.
Some of the most convincing documents I read were submitted largely by diaspora groups—Sikhs, Chinese expats, Russian expats, etc.. They reveal a multitudinous threat to Canada's democracy, sovereignty and security.
4/ There is disagreement on who represents the largest threat.
Chinese-Canadians identified the PRC as the biggest threat; Sikh-Canadians identified India; and so on. One thing is clear: the “post-national state” is being put to the test by a shrinking world—and it is failing.
5/ This isn't your mother's foreign interference.
Spies, bribery, intimidation, extortion and even murder. The Trudeau govt talks a big game about foreign interference and "protecting our democracy," but the issue has runaway on them and they're clearly powerless to stop it.
6/ There was almost no talk about U.S. foreign interference.
Interestingly, even amongst the "51st state" talk and a long history of American influence over Canadian politics, there was comparatively little talk in the documents about U.S. foreign interference.
7/ The commission seems less about protecting Canada's democracy, and more about protecting Trudeau.
Consider that most of the talk about U.S. foreign interference circulated around Trudeau and dispelling the Buffalo Chronicle story about his rumored "NDA" with a former student.
8/ The govt spent a fraction on Foreign Interference compared to the Convoy.
The cost for the Foreign Interference Commission, while in the millions, will surely pale in comparison to the hundreds of millions spent persecuting political prisoners and peaceful protestors.
9/ What was the point of all this?
The mandate of the Commission is to make recommendations on how to combat foreign interference. But how would a government in a state of prorogation even implement those recommendations? They can't. This Commission feels like a waste of time.
10/10 Foreign interference is a serious threat and this is a smokescreen.
Another addition to a legacy of wasted taxpayer dollars, this Commission offers a fitting mantle piece we can place next to the proverbial urn containing the ashes of Trudeau's disgraced political career.
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The next bail hearing for the only man charged in the largest drug bust in Canadian history is set to take place tomorrow. Here's everything you need to know about Gaganpreet Randhawa:
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1/ Most of the information out there on Gaganpreet Randhawa is sketchy or just plain wildly imaginative. Talk of "Trans-national” crime links by the RCMP has prompted all sorts of rumors and speculation—from alleged links to the Mexican Sinaloa cartel to the Khalistan movement.
2/ Not much is known publicly about Randhawa prior to 2016, when he appeared to be living a rather normal, if not unspectacular, Canadian life. At that time, CBC reports, he was going to accounting school before eventually determining the accounting business “wasn't for him.”
"I Found a Documentary Unlike Anything I've Ever Seen"
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Scott Kesterson's "Bards of War: Fighting Is Everything" is insane. Amidst the Canada-US spat and a lot of Canadians feel like a bag of dirt—this documentary will surely stir some maple syrup into your double double.
Here it is in all of its glory. I've been told that there was once a website where you could buy it—we all should.
This is the most captivating documentary I've ever seen.
1/ To understand how this documentary came to be you need to understand the wildman that is Scott Kesterson.
His story could be its own documentary: at 40-year's-old he had a midlife crisis, and instead of buying a Ferrari, he went beyond the wire to watch Canucks boink Taliban.
"Fake Programs By Fake People": The Unauthorized Story of the Trudeau-Singh Government's Legacy of Promising Everything and Delivering Nothing.
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From "free dental care" to "affordable housing" to "$10/day childcare" the legacy of the Trudeau gov't will be one of fakeness.
1/ Introduction:
In a world of photo ops and platitudes, the Trudeau-Singh government has mastered the art of politics as performance. But behind the curtain lies a trail of broken promises, half-baked programs, empty rhetoric, falsehoods and fraud. Let's unpack this legacy.
2/ Promise: Affordable housing for all.
Reality: Spiraling real estate prices, a rental market in chaos, and federal programs that benefit neither developers nor renters. Where are the homes for Canadians who need them? In their place we get one fake program followed by another.
The real scandal of the CBC's recent story about Patrick Brown isn’t Patrick Brown—it’s the story itself. This shoddy Pravda-like production offers a case study in how not to do journalism, and a stark reminder of why public trust in media is eroding. Let’s unpack this.
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Here's the crux of this story: according to unnamed and anonymous sources, the CBC says, Indian consular officials interfered in the Conservative Party leadership race, undermining the campaign of Patrick Brown - one supposes - to help Pierre Poilievre secure the victory.
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The piece accuses unnamed “Agents of the government of Indian” of serious improprieties, yet it’s riddled with unnamed sources, vague allegations, and zero hard evidence. It's an anonymous whisper campaign wrapped in the guise of investigative journalism.
As riots engulfed Montreal, Trudeau was spotted enjoying a Taylor Swift concert. He chose to “Shake It Off.” Critics argue this indifference further eroded public trust in his leadership.
Let's explore this and other infamous examples of abdicated responsibility.
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During the 9/11 attacks, President George W. Bush stayed seated in a Florida classroom reading The Pet Goat for several minutes after being informed "America is under attack." Critics saw it as symbolic of paralysis in a moment of crisis.
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The classical example from antiquity, as flames consumed Rome, Nero reportedly "fiddled." Though the story is likely exaggerated, like the exact number of friendship bracelets Trudeau collected at the Swiftie concert, it is nonetheless now disturbing mythological lore.