The events of the last week should be very sobering to the Canadian public. It wasn’t just the political class that seemed to be willing to capitulate to the dangerous authoritarian regime in Beijing, the CCP has been making inroads in Western media and culture as well.
Last night, December 9, 2020, the CBC’s flagship program The National had absolutely zero coverage of the biggest story in the country, the fact that the Liberals wanted to train the Chinese military in winter combat.
Last week the Islamic Republic of Iran’s top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, was assassinated. Iran is currently blaming the Israeli Mossad for the hit, which would make sense since Iran has publicly declared multiple times that their ambitions are to gain nuclear weapons to first destroy Israel and then concur the world and establish a caliphate run by the Ayatollah.
The founder of Islamic Relief Canada (IRC) and current Chair of the board of directors, Hany Al Banna, has come under fire for his recent comments calling the Yazidi people “devil worshipers”.
We find ourselves in a sort of television show Ford has put on for Ontario’s biggest lockdown activists, the worst being the media. He is willing to sacrifice many small business owners’ and workers’ livelihood in order to symbolically appear to be taking the situation seriously, for the applause of the media, while small businesses go bankrupt.
The Great Reset theory was generally thought of a conspiracy theory involving a crisis being used by the international community to institute a new global government. Well in Canada it may be time to move this idea from the category of “conspiracy” to “public policy”.
The day the story broke I watched all of the CBC’s flagship program The National and exactly zero seconds were devoted to the story. It was like a major corruption scandal involving the Prime Minister and his family was not newsworthy.
The next few weeks will be the true test though. Macron and the French people need to decide whether they are willing, or not, to fight Islamism in the long term and reject the fear culture that comes with speaking out and taking action against the extremists’ views.
On Wednesday October 21st, Mehdi Amin, an outspoken dissident of the Islamic Republic of Iran, was found murdered in his home. As of yet, there are no major leads or suspects that we know of, so the motive behind his murder is unclear. However, there are good reasons that we should not rule out the possibility that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) was involved in the murder.
Today Queens University announced that it will be removing the name of Canada’s first Prime Minister, Sir John A MacDonald, from their law building, MacDonald Hall.
[…] National Telegraph […]