R.I.P to the great Charlie Kirk!
Quote from: Mark Carney on October 11, 2025, 11:00:20 AMI'm a crook.That aint news.![]()
Quote from: Herman on October 07, 2025, 06:45:26 PMMark Carney wants the Palestinian authority to run this so-called "State of Palestine". You mean the same authority that's been in power for 20 years without holding a single election? The same authority that rewards terrorists with salaries for killing Jews? And this is who Carney thinks should run a state? Absolute madness!Well that's likely got something to do with there being more than fifty sovereign islamic states in the area, none of whom are even remotely interested in accepting refugees out of Gaza. No, not even the ones that formally recognize Israel as a sovereign state in it's own right.
Quote from: Herman on October 10, 2025, 09:21:43 PMYou've got to understand what's really going on with Mark Carney and Brookfield, because the mainstream media isn't going to tell you. This isn't just politics, it's a well-oiled machine funneling public money into a private empire, and the Canadian taxpayer is paying for it all. Forty-two contracts. Forty-two. Every single one of them ended up in Brookfield's hands. Not by accident. Not because Brookfield is just "good at business." This was designed. Every energy project, every infrastructure development, every "green initiative" with government backing. Somehow, magically, it always went to Brookfield.I'm a crook.
Take the renewable energy projects, for example. The government announces a major solar farm initiative, promising jobs and clean energy. On paper, it's great for Canadians. But in reality, Brookfield swoops in with the contract, and suddenly they're raking in hundreds of millions. The taxpayers pay for the infrastructure, the incentives, the grants. But Brookfield gets the profits. The people who actually live in these communities? They get the roads paved, maybe some local jobs, but the real money flows straight to the top.
Then there's the infrastructure deals. Bridges, transit lines, public-private partnerships, contracts that should be awarded through competition somehow always land in Brookfield's lap. One project in Ontario alone, a transit expansion, cost billions. Brookfield managed it, they took a cut, the stock price jumped, and you can bet that insiders who knew the timing of the government approvals were making serious money before anyone else even heard the news. That's how the game works.
Even supposedly "new" initiatives are rigged. The energy transition fund? It was pitched as a bold move toward a cleaner future. But who got the fund management? Brookfield. Who made money when the projects they approved went live? Brookfield again. And who was in a position to influence which projects got approved? Carney. He may have stepped down from his official role at Brookfield, but influence doesn't disappear overnight. Policies, priorities, approvals, all of it funneled public money into a company he built and understood inside and out.
And you see it in the stock market. Every time a new contract is announced, Brookfield shares spike. Investors who understand the system, who know Carney's fingerprints are all over these deals. Cash in. Meanwhile, Canadians are paying through higher taxes, fees, and rising costs for services, all while Brookfield is pocketing billions. It's not theory. It's the pattern. Forty-two contracts, billions of dollars, and the same company benefiting over and over while the rest of us foot the bill.
The ethical questions aren't small. Can a Prime Minister truly be impartial when the companies that benefit from government contracts are the ones he used to lead? When the contracts themselves are essentially pre-sold to his former firm? Carney will claim transparency, he'll claim divestment, but the public sense of unease is justified. It's a system designed to look legitimate on paper, but when you follow the money, it's unmistakable: influence plus public funds equals private profit. And the ordinary Canadian? Left holding the bag while insiders laugh all the way to the bank.
This is how power really works. Forty-two contracts, one company, billions in profit, and a Prime Minister whose past ties to that company ensure that public money keeps flowing to the private elite. It's right there for anyone willing to connect the dots. The contracts are the evidence, the profits are the proof, and the taxpayers, well, we're the ones paying the price for a system that was never designed to serve us.
Quote from: Lokmar on October 02, 2025, 10:12:54 AMRather than comply, cucknadians should be arming themselves with military grade weapons. Time is short!The average hunter in rural Canada would not know where to get them even if they had the balls to use them on government enforcement agencies.
Quote from: DKG on October 02, 2025, 07:18:59 AMThe federal government just launched a gun confiscation pilot program in Cape Breton, but Ottawa also extended the amnesty period "until October 2026," according to the National Post.
Here's the bottom line: Prime Minister Mark Carney is pushing ahead with the gun confiscation, but gun owners don't have to comply for at least another year.
You know the gun confiscation would cost billions, but law enforcement experts say it won't make Canada safer. That's a waste of money.
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