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Always fresh maple syrup with a generous dosage of political analysis
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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Ottawa Cancelled an Irish Social Worker's Work Permit Without Telling Him โ€” Then Had Him Arrested

A youth mental health social worker from Ireland had his Canadian work permit cancelled by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada without notification and without any opportunity to respond. He found out when border guards arrested him on the street. He is now being deported back to Ireland.

Can the system that ran this operation โ€” silently cancelling a legitimate permit, skipping due process, then sending enforcement to pick someone up off the sidewalk โ€” explain why it simultaneously cannot manage the millions of irregular border crossings and asylum claims backlogged for years. The answer is institutional selection. The enforcement machinery works fine when it targets people who followed the rules, filed paperwork, and built lives in good faith. It's uniquely incapable when the volume is large, the optics are complex, or the political cost is real. One Irish social worker gets street-arrested. The backlog of 900,000-plus immigration cases grinds on untouched.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Don Cherry Order of Canada Petition Splits Conservatives โ€” Quebec MPs Balk

The Conservative push to nominate Don Cherry for the Order of Canada has run into resistance from Quebec Conservative MPs, reportedly souring on the idea as the party circulates a petition. Cherry was fired by CBC in 2019 after decades as the most-watched hockey broadcaster in Canadian history, purged for a monologue about immigrants and poppies that offended the professional grievance class but resonated with millions of ordinary Canadians.

The Order of Canada has been handed to activists, academics, and bureaucrats who spent careers dismantling the cultural fabric Cherry represented. Giving it to him would be a small act of course correction โ€” a signal that the country still has room for unapologetic Canadian identity. The Quebec caucus hesitation is a reminder of how deeply the federalist right has internalized the progressive veto on cultural rehabilitation. Cherry doesn't need the medal. The question is whether the Conservative Party has the backbone to make the nomination anyway, or whether they'll manage their optics all the way back into opposition.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Halifax Converts Mall Parking Lots Into Housing โ€” The Density Agenda Arrives in Atlantic Canada

Halifax has approved plans to transform the parking lots surrounding Mic Mac Mall in Dartmouth into a high-density residential neighbourhood housing thousands of people, confirmed by city council this week. The project is framed as a housing supply solution โ€” and on paper, adding units to an undersupplied market sounds reasonable.

But the density-above-all model being rolled out from Vancouver to Halifax was not designed organically by communities. It was engineered at the federal and consultancy level, endorsed by the same globalist urban planning framework that produced 15-minute city blueprints across the OECD. The actual question nobody in city hall is asking: for whom is this housing being built, and at what price point. Atlantic Canada has seen some of the fastest population growth in Canadian history over the past four years โ€” driven entirely by federal immigration targets set in Ottawa, not by local demand. Halifax isn't solving a housing crisis. It's retrofitting its infrastructure to absorb a population surge it never voted for.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Al-Quds Day Marches Through Toronto While Courts Block Ford's Last-Minute Injunction

An Ontario judge denied Doug Ford's emergency injunction to stop the Al-Quds Day rally in Toronto โ€” a rally linked to an Iranian regime tradition explicitly calling for the destruction of Israel, held steps from a U.S. Consulate that was recently shot up. Two arrests were made. The IRGC โ€” a designated terrorist group in Canada โ€” has ideological ties to this event's founding. Courts cited the Charter. The same Charter that can't seem to protect Canadians from having their synagogues riddled with bullets.

This is the country Trudeau built and Carney inherited: one where a pro-Iranian regime march gets judicial protection while the government that tried to stop it gets lectured about rights. Ford was right to try. The courts failed him. And Canadians living near those synagogues are left wondering who exactly the justice system is protecting.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Carney Jets to Norway โ€” Canada's Sovereignty Theatre Continues on Foreign Soil

Mark Carney wrapped up his Nordic tour in Oslo, meeting with the leaders of Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, and Finland to discuss Arctic security and what officials are calling trade used as a "coercive tool." This from a prime minister who inherited a country economically gutted by a decade of Liberal mismanagement and whose response to every crisis is another multilateral photo opportunity. The irony of Carney โ€” a former Bank of England governor and WEF regular โ€” positioning himself as a defender against coercive globalism is almost poetic.

Canada's Arctic is underfunded, underdefended, and increasingly contested by both Russia and the United States. The answer isn't summits with Scandinavian social democrats. It's pipelines, icebreakers, and a defence budget that doesn't embarrass us at NATO. Carney is performing sovereignty while avoiding the hard domestic choices that would actually produce it.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Alberta Separation, First Nations, and the Legal War Already Underway

The Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation has already filed for an injunction to block Alberta from even holding a separation referendum, and Treaty 6 chiefs met privately with King Charles at Buckingham Palace โ€” reaffirming their nation-to-nation relationship with the Crown while signalling they will not go quietly into an independent Alberta. With 138 First Nations reserves comprising roughly 1.3 percent of Alberta's land base, the legal and political complexity here is not trivial, as detailed at length by legal scholars tracking the file.

What Ottawa refuses to admit is that its decades of paternalistic Indian Act governance โ€” keeping First Nations dependent on federal transfers โ€” is precisely why these communities are now being used as pawns against Alberta's democratic expression. The federal government created this dependency. Now it benefits from it. Danielle Smith's movement has a legitimacy problem not because separation is wrong, but because Ottawa spent fifty years engineering one.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Carney Discovers Oil Stability Matters โ€” Right After Spending Years Pretending Otherwise

Mark Carney stood beside Norway's prime minister and delivered a message of oil market stability amid Middle East war tensions rattling global supply โ€” as reported from Oslo. Norway, for context, has a sovereign wealth fund worth over a trillion dollars built entirely on oil and gas revenues. Canada, under the Liberal government Carney now leads, spent the past decade strangling its own energy sector with Bill C-69, tanker bans, and net-zero performance theater.

Norway got rich from its hydrocarbons. Canada got lectures. Now Carney wants to play energy statesman on the world stage while Trans Mountain barely got finished and LNG Canada took twenty years of regulatory torture to approve. The man who championed ESG frameworks and carbon pricing globally now wants credit for defending oil markets. The audacity is staggering โ€” and Canadians in Fort McMurray and Grande Prairie are watching every word of it.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Arctic Summit in Oslo While Canada's North Remains a Hollow Claim on a Map

Canada and five Nordic nations gathered in Oslo to discuss Arctic security โ€” Russian military risks, the U.S. posture on Greenland, and energy security โ€” following a massive NATO exercise in northern Norway. Canada showed up to the table. What Canada cannot show up with is credibility: we have no functional Arctic deep-water port, our icebreaker fleet is aging into irrelevance, our military presence in the high north is ceremonial at best, and we spend under two percent of GDP on defence.

While Trump eyes Greenland as a strategic asset and Russia operates freely above the Arctic Circle, Canada responds with summits, communiquรฉs, and Carney in a ski jacket. The Nordic countries actually defend their territory. They build infrastructure. They invest. Canada writes discussion papers and appoints task forces. Sovereignty is not declared at press conferences โ€” it is built, funded, and enforced. We are doing none of the three.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Carney's PMO Won't Touch the Don Cherry Order of Canada Petition โ€” Tells You Everything

A petition calling for Don Cherry to receive the Order of Canada has gained traction, driven by conservatives who see the hockey icon's cancellation as a symbol of everything wrong with Trudeau-era cultural purges. Carney's Prime Minister's Office has declined to weigh in. Not a no. Not a yes. A careful, calculated silence from a government that will loudly celebrate every DEI appointee and climate activist but cannot bring itself to acknowledge a man who spent decades telling Canadians to be proud of their country and their troops.

Cherry was fired in 2019 for telling immigrants to wear a poppy. The CBC cancelled him. The same CBC that still receives over a billion dollars annually in federal funding and whose editorial choices align perfectly with Liberal cultural priorities. The Order of Canada has gone to people far less deserving. Carney's silence is not neutrality โ€” it is a statement about whose Canada this government thinks it is governing.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Quebec Sovereignty Cafรฉ Opens in Montreal โ€” And No One in Ottawa Notices the Irony

A new coffee shop in Montreal called Club Pays has opened its doors plastered wall-to-wall with Quebec sovereignty slogans โ€” a visible symbol of a sovereignist sentiment that has never fully died in this country. While the political establishment dismisses Alberta separation as dangerous populism and scrambles to obtain court injunctions against referendums, Quebec's independence movement operates openly, culturally, and without apology โ€” and gets treated as a legitimate expression of identity.

The double standard is not subtle. Alberta demands resource sovereignty and Ottawa sends lawyers. Quebec celebrates independence over lattes and gets federal transfer payments. This country has never resolved its fundamental question of what holds it together beyond shared tax collection and bureaucratic inertia. The answer cannot simply be to suppress every expression of regional self-determination outside of Quebec. Eventually, the asymmetry breaks something that cannot be repaired with another unity commission.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Carney Promises to Revamp Athlete Funding โ€” Campaign Mode Dressed as Sports Policy

With a federal commission on the future of Canadian sport about to release its final report, Mark Carney has announced Ottawa will revamp funding for Canadian athletes and study the matter very deliberately over the next six months, as noted in a weekend dispatch from Oslo. Six months of deliberation. From a man who was not elected to anything six months ago and who now governs a country with a housing crisis, a broken healthcare system, and a military that cannot defend its own coastline.

This is textbook Liberal pre-election positioning: find a popular, feel-good file, attach the PM's name to it, promise a review, and let the bureaucracy absorb the announcement without ever producing a result. Canadian athletes deserve actual structural reform, not a campaign prop. The timing โ€” right before a federal election โ€” is not coincidental, and no one covering this seriously should pretend otherwise.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ B.C. Man Who Sued the Late Shah's Son Found Dead โ€” Murder Charges Filed

Masood Masjoody, a 45-year-old Burnaby mathematician who had launched a lawsuit against the son of Iran's late Shah, was reported missing last month by concerned neighbours and has now been found dead. Two people known to him have been charged with first-degree murder. Police describe it as a targeted killing. The motive is listed as under investigation.

A man with a legal case against a figure connected to the Iranian royal family is murdered in a targeted attack in Canada. The IRGC โ€” whose ideological allies marched through downtown Toronto the same weekend โ€” is a designated terrorist organization operating with known networks inside this country. Canada has absorbed hundreds of thousands of migrants from regions with long-running political and factional conflicts, with essentially no capacity to monitor the threat vectors those conflicts import. The dots are not yet officially connected. They rarely are โ€” until it is too late.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ 54-Storey Tower to Shadow London's Last Historic Courthouse โ€” Heritage Means Nothing When Developers Call

A 54-storey residential tower is set to rise directly beside the Old Middlesex County Courthouse in London, Ontario โ€” a nationally designated historic site โ€” casting a literal shadow over the founding grounds of the city. Heritage advocates point to a gap in federal law that offers no real protection to nationally designated sites when provincial and municipal development approvals override them.

This is what the housing densification agenda looks like in practice: century-old institutions, cultural landmarks, and the physical memory of Canadian civilization steamrolled to accommodate towers that will be marketed to international investors and filled through mass immigration intake targets. The federal government that designated this building a national historic site is the same government whose housing and immigration policies created the demand pressure now destroying it. Canada is being asked to build itself out of its own history โ€” and the people giving those orders do not have a stake in what gets lost.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Carney Jets to London While Canada Burns Energy Dollars Abroad

Mark Carney and UK PM Keir Starmer held hands in London over the Middle East crisis, condemning Iran and wringing their hands about the Strait of Hormuz. Two globalist career technocrats, neither with a serious energy sovereignty plan, meeting to discuss an oil chokepoint that Canada could partially insulate itself from โ€” if it had built the pipelines and export terminals that Carney's ideological predecessors spent a decade blocking.

Canada sits on some of the world's largest hydrocarbon reserves. The Strait of Hormuz closes and we're scrambling with the British. That's not a foreign policy crisis โ€” that's the direct consequence of deliberate domestic policy failure. While Carney poses for the cameras in London, Canadian energy infrastructure remains hostage to the same regulatory swamp he has never once committed to draining. The photo op is the point. The pipeline is not.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Inflation Drops to 1.8% โ€” Don't Let Them Take a Victory Lap

Statistics Canada reported that Canada's annual inflation rate fell to 1.8 per cent in February. The same political class that unleashed the most reckless spending binge in Canadian peacetime history โ€” printing money, funding every conceivable ideological project, and exploding the deficit โ€” now wants credit because the number ticked down. The headline conveniently notes that the Iran war's impact is not yet reflected. So brace for the next spike they'll also refuse to own.

Mortgage renewals are crushing families who locked in before the rate hike cycle. Housing remains at generational highs. Groceries are still punishing. A 1.8 per cent headline number means nothing to a household that absorbed three years of 6โ€“8 per cent compounding damage. The Trudeau era left a structural wound, and a single Statistics Canada release does not close it. The media will celebrate. Canadians will still choose between groceries and rent.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Canada Can't Build Anything โ€” Ford Is Finding Out the Hard Way

Doug Ford wants to build highways, tunnels, nuclear plants, hospitals, and a new convention centre. The result is a symphony of injunctions, NDP screeching, activist judges, and municipal bureaucrats weaponizing bike lane litigation against a sitting premier. A court actually ruled removing bike lanes from major arteries was unconstitutional. A detailed breakdown of Ford's agenda reads like a catalogue of Canadian institutional failure โ€” every ambitious project met with delay, derision, or a court challenge funded indirectly by the same taxpayers being denied the infrastructure.

Poilievre is right that Canada has economic constipation. But the laxative isn't more federal summits โ€” it's dismantling the regulatory and legal architecture that lets a handful of well-organized obstructionists veto projects serving millions. Home purchases hit a 45-year low in 2025. Condo sales have all but ceased. Ford is building. The system is designed not to let him. That is not an accident.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Ottawa Kills E-Prescription Software, Offers Doctors Nothing in Return

A federally funded agency is scrapping an electronic prescription system used by Ontario family doctors โ€” with zero replacement plan in place. The result, confirmed by physicians themselves, is a possible return to faxing prescriptions in 2026. Fax machines. In a G7 country that just spent years lecturing the world about digital health innovation and pandemic preparedness.

This is what federal health bureaucracy actually delivers: it funds a system, gets comfortable, then yanks it without transition planning, leaving frontline doctors to absorb the chaos. The same government that spent billions on ArriveCAN, on consultants, on DEI health equity frameworks, cannot manage a software handoff for a basic clinical tool. Canadian healthcare is not underfunded โ€” it is catastrophically mismanaged, and the people paying the price are patients who will now wait longer while their doctor hunts for a fax number. Nobody in Ottawa will answer for this.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ FIFA Comes First, New Homeowners Can Wait

Toronto has banned most downtown construction between May 1 and July 31 to accommodate FIFA World Cup foot traffic. The result, as reported, is that thousands of new homeowners will face delays moving into properties they have already purchased and are likely already paying mortgages on. A city in the middle of a housing catastrophe is voluntarily halting homebuilding for three months so foreign soccer tourists can have clear sidewalks.

Let that sink in. Canadian families in a generational affordability crisis are told to wait while the city rolls out the welcome mat for an international sports event. Politicians love to invoke the housing crisis as a reason to do nothing structural, but when a concrete deadline arrives โ€” one they chose โ€” suddenly homebuilders are the ones who have to absorb the cost. The City of Toronto's priorities have never been clearer: the global brand comes before the people who actually live there and are trying to.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Ontario AG Wants Canadians to Be Able to Defend Themselves โ€” Ottawa Will Stall This

Ontario's attorney general is calling on the federal government to legalize pepper spray for self-defence and mandate DNA collection upon arrest for sexual offences. Both are commonsense measures that most Canadians would support without hesitation, which is precisely why Ottawa has avoided them. Under current federal law, carrying pepper spray for personal protection is classified as a prohibited weapon โ€” meaning a woman walking home alone at night faces potential criminal liability for trying to protect herself, as confirmed by this push for reform.

This is the legacy of a Liberal federal government that spent a decade prioritizing the optics of gun control theater while doing nothing to expand the practical safety options of law-abiding citizens. The same ideological framework that disarmed responsible Canadians also left women unable to carry the most basic deterrent available in virtually every other Western country. The AG is right. Carney's Ottawa will find a reason to bury it.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Canadians Are Boycotting the U.S. โ€” And the Media Is Treating It as a Triumph

Canadian return trips to the United States were down 25.4 per cent last year. Air travel to the U.S. dropped 18.7 per cent in December alone. February marked the 14th consecutive month of decline, matching pandemic-era lows, according to data from Statistics Canada and Airalo. The establishment press is packaging this as proud Canadian resistance. What it actually is: a managed emotional response to Trump rhetoric, cheered on by the same media class that has been feeding Canadians anti-American content daily for over a year.

There is a legitimate case for diversifying trade and travel dependencies. But Canadians fleeing to Mexico and Japan while their own economy contracts, their dollar weakens, and their southern trade relationship deteriorates is not sovereignty โ€” it is displacement activity. The boycott cosplay does nothing to solve the structural dependence. It just makes people feel righteous while the real negotiations happen without them. Carney is flying to London. Canada's problems are not in Tokyo.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Poilievre Rolls Out Auto Plan โ€” The Only Leader With an Industrial Strategy

Pierre Poilievre has unveiled a new auto sector plan aimed at securing tariff-free access to the U.S. market, reported as the trade war continues to grind Canadian manufacturing. While Carney barnstorms global capitals collecting photo ops and signing agreements nobody has read, Poilievre is putting forward a concrete sectoral proposal for one of Canada's most exposed industries โ€” one that employs tens of thousands of Ontarians whose jobs are directly on the line.

The auto sector does not need another federal task force, another DEI-compliant supply chain audit, or another ministerial statement about building back better. It needs a government willing to negotiate hard, cut regulatory drag, and treat industrial policy as a matter of national interest rather than climate branding. Whether you like Poilievre or not, he is the only party leader currently operating as though Canadian workers in Windsor and Oshawa actually exist. That contrast is going to matter when Canadians finally go to vote.

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