Both the anti-convoy Ottawa residents and municipal government officials, as well as a few of the witnesses from various police forces, keep holding to the belief the convoy supporters in Ottawa were on the edge of committing mass violence, despite zero evidence.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford may have proudly said he “stood shoulder to shoulder” with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a recent press conference, in response to a question about Trudeau’s use of the Emergencies Act, while the Public Order Emergency Commission (POEC) was beginning its inquiry, but now he is less than reluctant to testify.
The response he receives from the Liberals’ Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault is limp and demonstrates the hollowness of the Liberals when it comes to affordability issues. Guilbeault tries to cite the damage forest fires and other natural disasters have done to justify the need for a second carbon tax, which has no realistic way of stopping any costly disaster.
What is most glaring about the report is just how open the Central Bank is about valuing a CBDC for the ability to centralize power over the currency, and economy, around the government. Although the report still uses soft-sounding language to make the idea of effectively making the government the gatekeeper of every Canadian money not sound like a massive overstepping of power.
The anti-Jowhari chants were started by Salman Sima, a former political prisoner in Evin prison. Salman Sima saw that Jowhari and his handlers had made it to the front of the rally, and took exception to the fact that he was trying to tie himself to a movement he has spent his entire career undermining.
After the event was over Negar Mortazavi went online to claim victimhood status and even claimed that there was a bomb threat because of her talk. (She even still has the tweet pinned on her Twitter page at the time this article was published)
Last week was bad enough with anti-Freedom Convoy activists and municipal politicians from Ottawa making fools of themselves by whining about “Uber Eats” and “microaggressions” in their evidence submissions and testimony, but this week the anti-convoy narrative is being absolutely shredded by Ottawa Police and OPP representatives.
After the brutal murder of Mahsa Amini by the Islamic Republic’s morality police, the people of Iran have returned to the streets to overthrow the regime that has oppressed them for the last 43 years. This time for whatever reason the world is paying attention to the Iranian people more than they did in 2017 […]
Ontario Premier Doug Ford at a press conference with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reiterated his support for the use of the Emergencies Act to clear the Freedom Convoy protest around the Parliament building in Ottawa.
The anti-convoy witnesses will have to do far better than making claims about “Uber Eats” and “microaggressions” in order to justify the use of the Emergencies Act to violently remove the peaceful protesters around Parliament.
[…] National Telegraph […]