Tensions were high. I was glued to my television to see if we would be deployed. All of my gear was at the Regiment in my locker, packed and ready to rock. My bug out bag was available and stowed by my condo door. If a notice to move order came, all I had to […]
In 2018, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Canadians that senior facilities would be regulated by the BC government, “ensuring the rules for the care of seniors continue to be followed.” In British Columbia, the CCP owns more than 20 homes in BC, where at least three have been subject to dozens of complaints about “neglect, emotional abuse, staffing shortages, health and hygiene issues and dangerous facilities.”
Thousands of our seniors continue to be abused, neglected and have died. They amount to over 80 per cent of the province’s COVID-19 related deaths. The report highlighted serious concerns about staffing shortages, shortages of personal protective equipment, and failures to follow procedures needed to keep both staff and residents safe.
With the CPC in desperate need of leadership, yet it’s base at wits-end, it’s hard to see how the base stands united moving forward. Conservatives are too busy arguing over which candidate is not a liberal, as the threat of further division looms. We have two federal conservative parties and neither can take on the cult of Trudeau at the present time. While conservatives have a knack for rebranding every so often, the Liberal Party. Liberals only have one shade of red. While Trudeau is the author of many embarrassing mistakes, the party stands by his leadership, as a united front. Those who did not tow the company line faced disciplinary action were marginalized from party ranks, and eventually banished from caucus. Case in point, Jody Wilson-Raybould and Jane Philpott. While the goal is to defeat Trudeau and remain electable, unity is key as not to say whose conservative beliefs are a better shade of blue than mine and vice versa.
World trade increases competitiveness in the marketplace and reduces costs to the customer, but it should never be done at the expense of the health and safety of our citizens. Canadians do not trust China nor do we want to be involved with and dependent on China any longer.
We can trust oil to heat our homes and fuel our cars in times of need. Oil is alive and well, gaining strength and is our future for decades to come. Oil is not dead; the green movement is dead.
The green movement is about self-preservation and keeping the donations flowing. It’s all about the money; the leadership doesn’t care about the environment. If it weren’t for the hysteria and deception, they would not have a following nor get elected.
Environmentalists are in a full-blown panic; they know that they only have an audience when oil is at $ 100 dollars a barrel. So, what does Elizabeth May and the Green Party do this week to get attention? She has one of her minions, failed Green Party Candidate for Ottawa Tom Milroy, post a rude tweet to his twitter account attacking Albertan’s.
[…] National Telegraph […]