🇨🇦🇪🇺 Champagne Pitches Canada as Europe’s “Supplier of Choice”
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne says Canada can step in to fuel Europe’s future — from critical minerals to LNG and nuclear tech — as nations scramble to boost energy security and defence capacity.
Speaking in Denmark after meetings with EU finance ministers, Champagne declared:
“We are redesigning the world economic order at a speed and scale not seen in a generation. Canada can be that trusted supplier.”
Critical minerals were “front and centre” in Copenhagen talks, seen as essential to aerospace, auto, and defence industries. LNG, nuclear tech, and even Canadian shipbuilding were also pitched as exports that could reduce Europe’s reliance on hostile or unstable suppliers.
Champagne noted NATO states are ramping up defence spending — a market Ottawa wants Canadian firms to fill, drawing parallels to Canada’s WWII munitions boom.
The outreach comes as Trump’s tariffs squeeze Canada and the CUSMA review looms in 2026. On Thursday, PM Carney locked in a new “strategic partnership” with Mexico, signaling Ottawa is now hedging against U.S. trade volatility.
Champagne admitted it was “sad” that Canada’s biggest trading partner turned its back, but argued this forced Ottawa to diversify:
“We shifted the economy after the Second World War. For me, this is the same calling we have today.”
The pitch: Canada as a 21st-century arsenal of minerals, energy, and industrial know-how. The question: will Ottawa actually keep control of it — or just sell the crown jewels abroad?
#Canada #Europe
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne says Canada can step in to fuel Europe’s future — from critical minerals to LNG and nuclear tech — as nations scramble to boost energy security and defence capacity.
Speaking in Denmark after meetings with EU finance ministers, Champagne declared:
“We are redesigning the world economic order at a speed and scale not seen in a generation. Canada can be that trusted supplier.”
Critical minerals were “front and centre” in Copenhagen talks, seen as essential to aerospace, auto, and defence industries. LNG, nuclear tech, and even Canadian shipbuilding were also pitched as exports that could reduce Europe’s reliance on hostile or unstable suppliers.
Champagne noted NATO states are ramping up defence spending — a market Ottawa wants Canadian firms to fill, drawing parallels to Canada’s WWII munitions boom.
The outreach comes as Trump’s tariffs squeeze Canada and the CUSMA review looms in 2026. On Thursday, PM Carney locked in a new “strategic partnership” with Mexico, signaling Ottawa is now hedging against U.S. trade volatility.
Champagne admitted it was “sad” that Canada’s biggest trading partner turned its back, but argued this forced Ottawa to diversify:
“We shifted the economy after the Second World War. For me, this is the same calling we have today.”
The pitch: Canada as a 21st-century arsenal of minerals, energy, and industrial know-how. The question: will Ottawa actually keep control of it — or just sell the crown jewels abroad?
#Canada #Europe
🍁 Maple Chronicles
🤡22👍6❤1😁1🤔1
🇨🇦🇵🇸 Canada Formally Recognizes Palestine
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Sunday that Canada now recognizes the State of Palestine, joining the UK and Australia in a move that shifts Ottawa’s Middle East policy for the first time in decades.
The recognition comes with conditions — including Palestinian Authority elections in 2026 that exclude Hamas, and steps toward demilitarization. Carney framed it as a step toward peace: “This recognition is about strengthening coexistence, not legitimizing terror.”
Israel and Washington have blasted the decision, warning it rewards extremists and undermines negotiations, while Palestinians call it an overdue step after years of stalled talks and expanding settlements.
Canada has moved from cautious observer to official recognition — a symbolic, but historic, turn in foreign policy.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Sunday that Canada now recognizes the State of Palestine, joining the UK and Australia in a move that shifts Ottawa’s Middle East policy for the first time in decades.
The recognition comes with conditions — including Palestinian Authority elections in 2026 that exclude Hamas, and steps toward demilitarization. Carney framed it as a step toward peace: “This recognition is about strengthening coexistence, not legitimizing terror.”
Israel and Washington have blasted the decision, warning it rewards extremists and undermines negotiations, while Palestinians call it an overdue step after years of stalled talks and expanding settlements.
Canada has moved from cautious observer to official recognition — a symbolic, but historic, turn in foreign policy.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
❤17🤡12👎11👍10🤔4👏3🤬3😁1
🇨🇦 Poilievre: Canada Must Demand a Tariff-Free Deal with Trump, Not Settle for Sectoral Punishment
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says Canada should reject sector-by-sector tariffs in any trade deal with the United States, insisting on restoring the tariff-free access Canada once had.
“We used to have that privileged access to the American economy, and in exchange for that, we could provide more continental security,” Poilievre told CTV’s Question Period. “That’s the deal I would go for.”
Poilievre accused Prime Minister Mark Carney of negotiating “out of weakness,” pointing to concessions like scrapping Canada’s digital services tax and dropping counter-tariffs while Trump’s levies on steel, aluminum, autos, and copper remain in place. “Trump smells weakness,” Poilievre said.
He argued Canada’s over-dependence on the U.S. stems from Liberal “anti-development policies” — the oil and gas emissions cap, the carbon tax, and Bill C-69, which Conservatives call the “no more pipelines act.” According to Poilievre, Canada should be building pipelines, ports, and export routes to Asia and Europe so it can negotiate with the U.S. from a position of strength.
Pressed on what he’d do differently, Poilievre pointed to his proposed Canadian Sovereignty Act, which would repeal Liberal growth-blocking laws, cut the carbon tax, and eliminate capital gains taxes for reinvested business profits. “We should reward those who build,” he said.
Poilievre also promised to shrink Ottawa’s ballooning bureaucracy, saying there are “billions of dollars” in savings to be found.
Meanwhile, Canada heads into CUSMA consultations after Carney missed his self-imposed July 21 deadline for a new deal with Trump — leaving Canada’s economy exposed as tariffs pile up.
#Canada #USA
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says Canada should reject sector-by-sector tariffs in any trade deal with the United States, insisting on restoring the tariff-free access Canada once had.
“We used to have that privileged access to the American economy, and in exchange for that, we could provide more continental security,” Poilievre told CTV’s Question Period. “That’s the deal I would go for.”
Poilievre accused Prime Minister Mark Carney of negotiating “out of weakness,” pointing to concessions like scrapping Canada’s digital services tax and dropping counter-tariffs while Trump’s levies on steel, aluminum, autos, and copper remain in place. “Trump smells weakness,” Poilievre said.
He argued Canada’s over-dependence on the U.S. stems from Liberal “anti-development policies” — the oil and gas emissions cap, the carbon tax, and Bill C-69, which Conservatives call the “no more pipelines act.” According to Poilievre, Canada should be building pipelines, ports, and export routes to Asia and Europe so it can negotiate with the U.S. from a position of strength.
Pressed on what he’d do differently, Poilievre pointed to his proposed Canadian Sovereignty Act, which would repeal Liberal growth-blocking laws, cut the carbon tax, and eliminate capital gains taxes for reinvested business profits. “We should reward those who build,” he said.
Poilievre also promised to shrink Ottawa’s ballooning bureaucracy, saying there are “billions of dollars” in savings to be found.
Meanwhile, Canada heads into CUSMA consultations after Carney missed his self-imposed July 21 deadline for a new deal with Trump — leaving Canada’s economy exposed as tariffs pile up.
#Canada #USA
🍁 Maple Chronicles
🤡9❤7👏3🤮2💯2😁1
🇨🇦 Smith Floats Notwithstanding Clause to Protect Kids in Transgender Law Fight
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she won’t hesitate to use the notwithstanding clause if that’s what it takes to defend her government’s transgender legislation.
On her provincewide radio show, Smith responded to a leaked memo showing cabinet will consider invoking the clause Oct. 21 to shield three laws — including bans on puberty blockers for minors, restrictions on gender-based sports participation, and rules on pronoun use in schools.
“I’m prepared to go to court and battle it out. I think we need to,” Smith said. “But if it turns out the court process may take years and years and years to resolve, then we may have to take that measure in order to protect kids.”
The Premier pointed to puberty blockers as a red line: “By definition, they stop the process of sexual maturity and it means that you’re sterilizing children, and we’re not going to do it.”
Her government has already faced court setbacks. In June, a judge granted a temporary injunction halting the health law, saying denying blockers could cause “emotional harm.” Smith counters that children aren’t old enough to consent to life-altering medical interventions, no more than they can sign contracts or enlist in the military.
Critics call the move government overreach. Activist groups and even the Canadian Medical Association are lining up to fight the law. But supporters say Smith is doing what Ottawa and the courts refuse to: draw a hard line on protecting children from irreversible treatments.
The notwithstanding clause allows provinces to override certain Charter rights for up to five years. Smith has downplayed using it in the past — but with this battle escalating, she now says it may be necessary.
#Alberta
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she won’t hesitate to use the notwithstanding clause if that’s what it takes to defend her government’s transgender legislation.
On her provincewide radio show, Smith responded to a leaked memo showing cabinet will consider invoking the clause Oct. 21 to shield three laws — including bans on puberty blockers for minors, restrictions on gender-based sports participation, and rules on pronoun use in schools.
“I’m prepared to go to court and battle it out. I think we need to,” Smith said. “But if it turns out the court process may take years and years and years to resolve, then we may have to take that measure in order to protect kids.”
The Premier pointed to puberty blockers as a red line: “By definition, they stop the process of sexual maturity and it means that you’re sterilizing children, and we’re not going to do it.”
Her government has already faced court setbacks. In June, a judge granted a temporary injunction halting the health law, saying denying blockers could cause “emotional harm.” Smith counters that children aren’t old enough to consent to life-altering medical interventions, no more than they can sign contracts or enlist in the military.
Critics call the move government overreach. Activist groups and even the Canadian Medical Association are lining up to fight the law. But supporters say Smith is doing what Ottawa and the courts refuse to: draw a hard line on protecting children from irreversible treatments.
The notwithstanding clause allows provinces to override certain Charter rights for up to five years. Smith has downplayed using it in the past — but with this battle escalating, she now says it may be necessary.
#Alberta
🍁 Maple Chronicles
👍20❤5👎3💯2
🇨🇦 Carney Courts the Global Elite in New York—But Whose Interests Is He Serving?
Prime Minister Mark Carney took to the stage at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York — the ultimate globalist club — to pitch Canada as the country that “has what the world wants.”
Carney boasted that Canada has the resources, talent, and ingenuity needed by international markets, presenting Canada as a “trustworthy trading partner with connections to every major market.” But the question remains: trustworthy for Canadians, or for the global elite?
The timing is telling. Just one day after Canada recognized Palestinian statehood — joining the UK, Australia, and Portugal, Carney used his platform to position Canada as a go-to supplier for a world undergoing rapid geopolitical shifts. Now he’s in New York for the UN General Assembly, where backroom deals and global frameworks are hammered out with little input from ordinary citizens.
Carney will also hold a fireside chat with CFR president Michael Froman — another reminder that Canadian sovereignty is being bartered away at forums where unelected think tanks and corporate interests pull the strings.
While Carney assures the world that Canada “has what it wants,” many Canadians are left wondering: what do we get in return, besides more taxes, more regulations, and a government that puts global priorities ahead of its own people?
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Prime Minister Mark Carney took to the stage at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York — the ultimate globalist club — to pitch Canada as the country that “has what the world wants.”
Carney boasted that Canada has the resources, talent, and ingenuity needed by international markets, presenting Canada as a “trustworthy trading partner with connections to every major market.” But the question remains: trustworthy for Canadians, or for the global elite?
The timing is telling. Just one day after Canada recognized Palestinian statehood — joining the UK, Australia, and Portugal, Carney used his platform to position Canada as a go-to supplier for a world undergoing rapid geopolitical shifts. Now he’s in New York for the UN General Assembly, where backroom deals and global frameworks are hammered out with little input from ordinary citizens.
Carney will also hold a fireside chat with CFR president Michael Froman — another reminder that Canadian sovereignty is being bartered away at forums where unelected think tanks and corporate interests pull the strings.
While Carney assures the world that Canada “has what it wants,” many Canadians are left wondering: what do we get in return, besides more taxes, more regulations, and a government that puts global priorities ahead of its own people?
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
💯11🤔6❤1⚡1
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🇨🇦 TMU Student Arrest Sparks Outcry
On Sept. 19, security at Toronto Metropolitan University forcibly arrested a student during a Dais Democracy Forum event featuring Evan Solomon.
📹 Videos circulating online show the student being restrained on the floor by security while shouting, “you’re hurting me.”
🔹 Witnesses allege the student had pressed Solomon to acknowledge the word “genocide” in relation to Gaza before being confronted by security.
🔹 Reports suggest she refused to show ID and attempted to leave, before being restrained and later handed to Toronto Police.
🔹 TMU confirmed the student was one of several individuals asked to leave for “disruptive behaviour” allegedly violating event guidelines. Others complied peacefully.
In a Sept. 20 statement, TMU Vice President Saeed Zolfaghari called the video “unsettling” and confirmed the contracted security officers have been reassigned pending review. The university stressed the incident is now a police matter, adding: “There is no higher priority for the University than the safety of our community.”
Allegations of excessive force and suppression of political speech are being raised. TMU says it will not hesitate to take further action if its review deems it necessary.
#Ontario
🍁 Maple Chronicles
On Sept. 19, security at Toronto Metropolitan University forcibly arrested a student during a Dais Democracy Forum event featuring Evan Solomon.
📹 Videos circulating online show the student being restrained on the floor by security while shouting, “you’re hurting me.”
🔹 Witnesses allege the student had pressed Solomon to acknowledge the word “genocide” in relation to Gaza before being confronted by security.
🔹 Reports suggest she refused to show ID and attempted to leave, before being restrained and later handed to Toronto Police.
🔹 TMU confirmed the student was one of several individuals asked to leave for “disruptive behaviour” allegedly violating event guidelines. Others complied peacefully.
In a Sept. 20 statement, TMU Vice President Saeed Zolfaghari called the video “unsettling” and confirmed the contracted security officers have been reassigned pending review. The university stressed the incident is now a police matter, adding: “There is no higher priority for the University than the safety of our community.”
Allegations of excessive force and suppression of political speech are being raised. TMU says it will not hesitate to take further action if its review deems it necessary.
#Ontario
🍁 Maple Chronicles
🤡14🤔4🤬4👍2💩2❤1🤯1😱1
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🇨🇦🇵🇸 "In this context, Canada recognizes the state of Palestine"
Canada officially recognized Palestine yesterday, but PM Carney gets cheers when he tells the UN
Right before his mic mysteriously cuts off.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Canada officially recognized Palestine yesterday, but PM Carney gets cheers when he tells the UN
Right before his mic mysteriously cuts off.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
🤡11👏5💩3😁2
🇨🇦🇮🇳 Canada Pushes Back on India’s Trade Talk Claims
On Sept. 19, India’s Ministry of External Affairs announced that Canada had agreed to “reactivate bilateral dialogue” on trade, defence, energy, and more. Indian media portrayed this as the first step toward restarting stalled trade talks.
But Ottawa is flatly denying it. Global Affairs Canada says no negotiations on a free trade agreement are underway, stressing that the priority remains “well-established commercial ties,” not new trade pacts.
Deputy Minister David Morrison did meet with Indian counterparts last week, including Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, but Canada insists talks centered on security and sovereignty — not reopening trade.
Canada’s national security adviser Nathalie Drouin also held meetings, saying both sides agreed to refrain from “transnational repression” and pledged reciprocal intelligence sharing.
The timing is sensitive: these meetings coincided with the two-year anniversary of Hardeep Singh Nijjar’s killing in Surrey, B.C. — a case Canada linked to Indian operatives, sparking a major diplomatic rupture.
Relations only began to thaw after PM Mark Carney and PM Narendra Modi met at the G7 in June, agreeing to restore ambassadors. But once again, Ottawa and Delhi are telling two very different stories.
#Canada #India
🍁 Maple Chronicles
On Sept. 19, India’s Ministry of External Affairs announced that Canada had agreed to “reactivate bilateral dialogue” on trade, defence, energy, and more. Indian media portrayed this as the first step toward restarting stalled trade talks.
But Ottawa is flatly denying it. Global Affairs Canada says no negotiations on a free trade agreement are underway, stressing that the priority remains “well-established commercial ties,” not new trade pacts.
Deputy Minister David Morrison did meet with Indian counterparts last week, including Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, but Canada insists talks centered on security and sovereignty — not reopening trade.
Canada’s national security adviser Nathalie Drouin also held meetings, saying both sides agreed to refrain from “transnational repression” and pledged reciprocal intelligence sharing.
The timing is sensitive: these meetings coincided with the two-year anniversary of Hardeep Singh Nijjar’s killing in Surrey, B.C. — a case Canada linked to Indian operatives, sparking a major diplomatic rupture.
Relations only began to thaw after PM Mark Carney and PM Narendra Modi met at the G7 in June, agreeing to restore ambassadors. But once again, Ottawa and Delhi are telling two very different stories.
#Canada #India
🍁 Maple Chronicles
💩14👎3🌚3❤2😁1
🇨🇦🇺🇸 Buttigieg in Ottawa: U.S.-Canada Rift is a Trump-Made Storm
Potential 2028 U.S. presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg told an Ottawa crowd Monday that the “outrages” from Washington against Canada do not reflect the will of the American people.
Speaking at a Canada 2020 event alongside former minister Seamus O’Regan, Buttigieg admitted he “did not imagine we would find ourselves in a moment like this,” pointing to tariffs and Trump’s talk of Canada as the “51st state.”
In contrast to U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra, who last week lamented “anti-American sentiment” in Canada, Buttigieg argued the relationship remains strong at the people-to-people level. “What’s happening between us is a storm provoked by one government, not a rupture between our peoples,” he said.
He praised PM Mark Carney’s spring campaign on sovereignty, saying it resonated with progressive Americans and signaled a realignment “friends” can weather.
Buttigieg, a Biden-era transportation secretary and former mayor of South Bend, Ind., is openly weighing a 2028 run. Hinting at it Monday, he quipped when asked about Kamala Harris once deeming him too “risky” a VP pick: “There’s only one way to find out what the country can handle.”
#Canada #USA
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Potential 2028 U.S. presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg told an Ottawa crowd Monday that the “outrages” from Washington against Canada do not reflect the will of the American people.
Speaking at a Canada 2020 event alongside former minister Seamus O’Regan, Buttigieg admitted he “did not imagine we would find ourselves in a moment like this,” pointing to tariffs and Trump’s talk of Canada as the “51st state.”
In contrast to U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra, who last week lamented “anti-American sentiment” in Canada, Buttigieg argued the relationship remains strong at the people-to-people level. “What’s happening between us is a storm provoked by one government, not a rupture between our peoples,” he said.
He praised PM Mark Carney’s spring campaign on sovereignty, saying it resonated with progressive Americans and signaled a realignment “friends” can weather.
Buttigieg, a Biden-era transportation secretary and former mayor of South Bend, Ind., is openly weighing a 2028 run. Hinting at it Monday, he quipped when asked about Kamala Harris once deeming him too “risky” a VP pick: “There’s only one way to find out what the country can handle.”
#Canada #USA
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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TikTok Busted for Collecting Data on Canadian Kids 🚨
A joint investigation by Canada’s federal and provincial privacy commissioners has found TikTok’s age checks are largely ineffective, allowing the app to collect sensitive data from underage users.
🔹 TikTok admits it removes 500,000 underage users every year — but only after already harvesting their personal info and tailoring ads to them.
🔹 Investigators say TikTok collected, inferred, and used sensitive details from Canadian children, despite its own rules banning users under 13 (14 in Quebec).
🔹 “Youth may be less aware of privacy risks, and more susceptible to manipulative techniques,” warned Federal Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne.
🔹 TikTok has now agreed to tighten age verification measures — but watchdogs say they’ll be monitoring closely.
Observers say this is no different and perhaps hypocritical when looking at Alphabet's Google or Meta. This raises deeper questions: Why was a foreign-owned platform allowed to vacuum up children’s data in the first place — and will Ottawa ever put Canadian families’ privacy ahead of Big Tech profits?
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
A joint investigation by Canada’s federal and provincial privacy commissioners has found TikTok’s age checks are largely ineffective, allowing the app to collect sensitive data from underage users.
🔹 TikTok admits it removes 500,000 underage users every year — but only after already harvesting their personal info and tailoring ads to them.
🔹 Investigators say TikTok collected, inferred, and used sensitive details from Canadian children, despite its own rules banning users under 13 (14 in Quebec).
🔹 “Youth may be less aware of privacy risks, and more susceptible to manipulative techniques,” warned Federal Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne.
🔹 TikTok has now agreed to tighten age verification measures — but watchdogs say they’ll be monitoring closely.
Observers say this is no different and perhaps hypocritical when looking at Alphabet's Google or Meta. This raises deeper questions: Why was a foreign-owned platform allowed to vacuum up children’s data in the first place — and will Ottawa ever put Canadian families’ privacy ahead of Big Tech profits?
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
💩5🥱3👎2👏1😁1
🇨🇦💸 TSX Breaks 30,000 — But Who Really Benefits?
Canada’s S&P/TSX Composite Index has smashed through the 30,000 barrier for the first time, driven by soaring energy, base metals, and a belated catch-up in gold miners. Barrick surged 7.4% on news its Nevada project could yield 750,000 ounces annually, while Kinross climbed 3.8%. Shopify added a 2.7% boost, riding the tech tailwinds coming out of Wall Street.
In New York, the story was familiar: Nvidia jumped 3.9% after pledging $100 billion into OpenAI data centres, pushing U.S. utilities and tech stocks into overdrive. Apple rose 4.3% on strong iPhone 17 demand, while Oracle surged 6.3% after securing a deal to manage TikTok’s U.S. algorithm. Canadian markets rode this wave, even as Ottawa’s policymakers remain captive to trade uncertainty and American tariff brinkmanship.
But here’s the rub: is this “record high” really cause for celebration? For Bay Street elites, yes. For ordinary Canadians grappling with stagnant wages, housing costs spiraling out of reach, and food inflation biting into every grocery bill? Hardly. The disconnect between a roaring stock market and the lived reality of Canadians is widening.
Markets, we are told, are gripped with “momentum.” Yet this momentum is speculative, turbo-charged by gold spikes, energy profits, and the AI bubble expanding south of the border. The same cycle of financial euphoria played out before 2008, before dot-com, before every crash that punished working people while the top skimmed their winnings.
So the question lingers: is this the top? Or just another illusion, a psychological milestone masking a system that grows fat on speculation while leaving the average Canadian wondering how to pay next month’s bills?
#Ontario #Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Canada’s S&P/TSX Composite Index has smashed through the 30,000 barrier for the first time, driven by soaring energy, base metals, and a belated catch-up in gold miners. Barrick surged 7.4% on news its Nevada project could yield 750,000 ounces annually, while Kinross climbed 3.8%. Shopify added a 2.7% boost, riding the tech tailwinds coming out of Wall Street.
In New York, the story was familiar: Nvidia jumped 3.9% after pledging $100 billion into OpenAI data centres, pushing U.S. utilities and tech stocks into overdrive. Apple rose 4.3% on strong iPhone 17 demand, while Oracle surged 6.3% after securing a deal to manage TikTok’s U.S. algorithm. Canadian markets rode this wave, even as Ottawa’s policymakers remain captive to trade uncertainty and American tariff brinkmanship.
But here’s the rub: is this “record high” really cause for celebration? For Bay Street elites, yes. For ordinary Canadians grappling with stagnant wages, housing costs spiraling out of reach, and food inflation biting into every grocery bill? Hardly. The disconnect between a roaring stock market and the lived reality of Canadians is widening.
Markets, we are told, are gripped with “momentum.” Yet this momentum is speculative, turbo-charged by gold spikes, energy profits, and the AI bubble expanding south of the border. The same cycle of financial euphoria played out before 2008, before dot-com, before every crash that punished working people while the top skimmed their winnings.
So the question lingers: is this the top? Or just another illusion, a psychological milestone masking a system that grows fat on speculation while leaving the average Canadian wondering how to pay next month’s bills?
#Ontario #Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
💯11❤2🎉2
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🇨🇦 Mark Carney is back with the buzzwords. This time: “Authoritarianism has risen.”
But notice what he doesn’t say. Where exactly? Who? What policies? Nothing. Just a vague, sweeping claim designed to scare you into thinking only he can protect “democracy.”
It’s the same playbook every time: invent a shadowy threat, never provide details, and then use it to justify more control. Fear is the product, compliance is the goal.
Canadians deserve straight answers, not globalist slogans. If “authoritarianism” is rising, let’s see the evidence. Otherwise, spare us the lecture.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
But notice what he doesn’t say. Where exactly? Who? What policies? Nothing. Just a vague, sweeping claim designed to scare you into thinking only he can protect “democracy.”
It’s the same playbook every time: invent a shadowy threat, never provide details, and then use it to justify more control. Fear is the product, compliance is the goal.
Canadians deserve straight answers, not globalist slogans. If “authoritarianism” is rising, let’s see the evidence. Otherwise, spare us the lecture.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
💯18💩5❤2👍2😁1🤯1
🇨🇦 Only in Canada…
The Supreme Court just granted a stay of execution — not for a convicted killer, but for ostriches.
Yes, 400 giant birds at a B.C. farm were about to be wiped out by federal order over avian flu fears. Now, thanks to Canada’s highest court, they’ve won a temporary reprieve.
So here we are: in a country where pipelines stall, court cases drag on for years, but when it comes to ostriches? Justice moves at lightning speed.
Only in Canada, folks. 🪶
#BC
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The Supreme Court just granted a stay of execution — not for a convicted killer, but for ostriches.
Yes, 400 giant birds at a B.C. farm were about to be wiped out by federal order over avian flu fears. Now, thanks to Canada’s highest court, they’ve won a temporary reprieve.
So here we are: in a country where pipelines stall, court cases drag on for years, but when it comes to ostriches? Justice moves at lightning speed.
Only in Canada, folks. 🪶
#BC
🍁 Maple Chronicles
🤨11🤬9🎉7😁3❤1💩1
🇨🇦 RBC Employee Charged After Allegedly Accessing Carney’s Banking Info
The RCMP has charged 23-year-old RBC employee Ibrahim El-Hakim for allegedly accessing Prime Minister Mark Carney’s banking profile — and even a profile under the name Justin Trudeau.
Court filings allege El-Hakim was recruited through a Telegram account called “AI WORLD”, which investigators suspect is linked to organized crime.
He admitted to creating fake bank profiles, securing fraudulent lines of credit, and snooping accounts — including Carney’s — in exchange for $500 per request. Police say he pocketed about $5,000 before being caught.
El-Hakim was arrested in July, released under conditions, and is set to appear in court next week. RBC says he’s been terminated and is “fully cooperating” with the investigation.
RCMP insists there was no threat to national security — but Canadians are asking: if the PM’s banking data isn’t safe, whose is?
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The RCMP has charged 23-year-old RBC employee Ibrahim El-Hakim for allegedly accessing Prime Minister Mark Carney’s banking profile — and even a profile under the name Justin Trudeau.
Court filings allege El-Hakim was recruited through a Telegram account called “AI WORLD”, which investigators suspect is linked to organized crime.
He admitted to creating fake bank profiles, securing fraudulent lines of credit, and snooping accounts — including Carney’s — in exchange for $500 per request. Police say he pocketed about $5,000 before being caught.
El-Hakim was arrested in July, released under conditions, and is set to appear in court next week. RBC says he’s been terminated and is “fully cooperating” with the investigation.
RCMP insists there was no threat to national security — but Canadians are asking: if the PM’s banking data isn’t safe, whose is?
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
🤡13😁6🌭2❤1
🇨🇦 Canada Scrambles to Patch Up Its Military
Defence Minister David McGuinty, meeting with Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth in Washington, confirmed Canada is now scrambling to rebuild, rearm, and finally invest in its long-neglected military.
🔊 McGuinty emphasized Canada’s commitment to NORAD and modernizing joint defense systems with the U.S. — a partnership now under strain as Trump’s “America First” forces Ottawa to face uncomfortable truths.
For decades, Canada coasted under America’s security umbrella, assuming Washington would always foot the bill. But in 2025, that illusion has collapsed.
The Canadian Army is buckling under:
• chronic recruitment shortages
• broken procurement pipelines
• outdated kit & crumbling infrastructure
Only 45% of Canada’s air fleet and 46% of the naval fleet are considered “combat-ready,” according to a damning report in 19FortyFive.
Canada is now paying the price for decades of neglect — and scrambling to prove it can still pull its weight.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Defence Minister David McGuinty, meeting with Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth in Washington, confirmed Canada is now scrambling to rebuild, rearm, and finally invest in its long-neglected military.
🔊 McGuinty emphasized Canada’s commitment to NORAD and modernizing joint defense systems with the U.S. — a partnership now under strain as Trump’s “America First” forces Ottawa to face uncomfortable truths.
For decades, Canada coasted under America’s security umbrella, assuming Washington would always foot the bill. But in 2025, that illusion has collapsed.
The Canadian Army is buckling under:
• chronic recruitment shortages
• broken procurement pipelines
• outdated kit & crumbling infrastructure
Only 45% of Canada’s air fleet and 46% of the naval fleet are considered “combat-ready,” according to a damning report in 19FortyFive.
Canada is now paying the price for decades of neglect — and scrambling to prove it can still pull its weight.
#Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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🇨🇦💊 Tylenol, Autism, and Ottawa’s Rush to Dismiss
Health Canada has wasted no time dismissing Donald Trump’s claim that acetaminophen (Tylenol) use during pregnancy may increase autism risk. Within hours, officials declared there is “no conclusive evidence” of a link, calling the drug safe when used as directed.
But here’s the issue: while Ottawa insists the science is settled, families around the world have launched lawsuits precisely on this point. In the U.S., federal courts have been flooded with cases alleging prenatal Tylenol exposure contributed to neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism. Several studies have raised red flags, suggesting correlations that regulators continue to brush aside. “Not conclusive” doesn’t mean “not possible.”
Instead of caution, Canadians were told by Health Canada to carry on as usual. The same department reassures us its advice is based on “robust assessments” — the same language that was used for opioids, Vioxx, and countless other drugs later proven dangerous after years of denial. Millions of Canadians may have already used Tylenol in pregnancy; the stakes could not be higher.
Trump’s blunt warning — “Don’t take Tylenol. Fight like hell not to take it.” — rattled the medical establishment, but it struck a chord with parents who feel their concerns have been ignored. Health Canada, in lockstep with Big Pharma and international regulators, seems more concerned with protecting corporate liability than protecting families.
It is no coincidence that Trump’s comments also came with a call to revisit the vaccine-autism debate, another area where dissent is silenced. Whether one agrees with him or not, the fact remains: Ottawa’s reflex is always to defend multinational corporations first, and investigate later.
Canadians deserve transparency, not top-down decrees. If there’s even a shred of credible evidence, parents should hear it, not be told the science is closed. History shows that when governments rush to say “safe,” it often means they have much more to hide.
#Canada #USA
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Health Canada has wasted no time dismissing Donald Trump’s claim that acetaminophen (Tylenol) use during pregnancy may increase autism risk. Within hours, officials declared there is “no conclusive evidence” of a link, calling the drug safe when used as directed.
But here’s the issue: while Ottawa insists the science is settled, families around the world have launched lawsuits precisely on this point. In the U.S., federal courts have been flooded with cases alleging prenatal Tylenol exposure contributed to neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism. Several studies have raised red flags, suggesting correlations that regulators continue to brush aside. “Not conclusive” doesn’t mean “not possible.”
Instead of caution, Canadians were told by Health Canada to carry on as usual. The same department reassures us its advice is based on “robust assessments” — the same language that was used for opioids, Vioxx, and countless other drugs later proven dangerous after years of denial. Millions of Canadians may have already used Tylenol in pregnancy; the stakes could not be higher.
Trump’s blunt warning — “Don’t take Tylenol. Fight like hell not to take it.” — rattled the medical establishment, but it struck a chord with parents who feel their concerns have been ignored. Health Canada, in lockstep with Big Pharma and international regulators, seems more concerned with protecting corporate liability than protecting families.
It is no coincidence that Trump’s comments also came with a call to revisit the vaccine-autism debate, another area where dissent is silenced. Whether one agrees with him or not, the fact remains: Ottawa’s reflex is always to defend multinational corporations first, and investigate later.
Canadians deserve transparency, not top-down decrees. If there’s even a shred of credible evidence, parents should hear it, not be told the science is closed. History shows that when governments rush to say “safe,” it often means they have much more to hide.
#Canada #USA
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇨🇦💊 Look what Canadian state media was saying about Tylenol use during pregnancy just 5 years ago!
"a growing body of evidence suggest that prenatal exposure to acetaminophen might alter fetal development"
Today? they're "debunking" Trumps claims! INSANE!
#USA #Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
"a growing body of evidence suggest that prenatal exposure to acetaminophen might alter fetal development"
Today? they're "debunking" Trumps claims! INSANE!
#USA #Canada
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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🇨🇦 Ford Moves to Ban Speed Cameras in Ontario
Ontario Premier Doug Ford says speed cameras are nothing but a “cash grab” — and his government will introduce legislation to ban them across the province.
Ford argued Thursday that the cameras don’t actually slow people down and promised instead to fund “proactive traffic-calming measures” like speed bumps, raised crosswalks, roundabouts, and flashing school zone signs.
But experts and municipal leaders are pushing back hard:
• The Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police insists speed cameras “have been proven to reduce speeding and make roads safer.”
• SickKids Hospital published a study this summer showing speeding around Toronto schools dropped by nearly half after cameras were installed.
• Ottawa reports compliance jumped from 16% to 81% in school zones, and Brampton saw speed reductions of up to 20 km/h at some sites.
Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow blasted Ford’s move, saying it signals the government is “OK with speeding” and will make roads more dangerous. The Liberals and NDP both called it reckless.
Ford counters that only 37 of 444 municipalities actually use cameras, and many drivers resent being repeatedly fined for going just a few km/h over the limit.
The ban would end a program Ford’s own government enabled in 2019. Toronto alone has collected more than $30M in fines this year.
👉 Is this Ford standing up for drivers against what he calls a tax grab — or is he stripping away tools that keep kids safe in school zones?
#Ontario
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Ontario Premier Doug Ford says speed cameras are nothing but a “cash grab” — and his government will introduce legislation to ban them across the province.
Ford argued Thursday that the cameras don’t actually slow people down and promised instead to fund “proactive traffic-calming measures” like speed bumps, raised crosswalks, roundabouts, and flashing school zone signs.
But experts and municipal leaders are pushing back hard:
• The Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police insists speed cameras “have been proven to reduce speeding and make roads safer.”
• SickKids Hospital published a study this summer showing speeding around Toronto schools dropped by nearly half after cameras were installed.
• Ottawa reports compliance jumped from 16% to 81% in school zones, and Brampton saw speed reductions of up to 20 km/h at some sites.
Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow blasted Ford’s move, saying it signals the government is “OK with speeding” and will make roads more dangerous. The Liberals and NDP both called it reckless.
Ford counters that only 37 of 444 municipalities actually use cameras, and many drivers resent being repeatedly fined for going just a few km/h over the limit.
The ban would end a program Ford’s own government enabled in 2019. Toronto alone has collected more than $30M in fines this year.
👉 Is this Ford standing up for drivers against what he calls a tax grab — or is he stripping away tools that keep kids safe in school zones?
#Ontario
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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🇨🇦 New Brunswick Psychiatric Facility Under Fire
A scathing report by Ombudswoman Marie-France Pelletier has exposed disturbing practices at the Restigouche Health Centre in northern N.B.
The report detailed patients restrained for hours — sometimes left in their own urine and feces — and others locked in seclusion rooms without the ability to contact staff.
🔹 Vitalité Health Network, which runs the hospital, has apologized, admitting the incidents violated its own recovery-focused philosophy of care.
🔹 The Ombudswoman found staff used restraints without proper medical authorization, directly against policy.
🔹 Pelletier issued 21 recommendations and promised annual updates to ensure compliance.
🔹 Both Vitalité and Horizon Health Networks have accepted all recommendations and pledged reforms.
Progressive Conservative MLA Kris Austin said reading the report felt like a “punch to the gut.”
Green Party Leader David Coon blamed political neglect: “When parties go shopping for votes, the mentally ill are not a target audience for them.”
Officials insist reforms are underway, but for families and patients, the revelations reopen painful questions about dignity, leadership, and the treatment of society’s most vulnerable.
#NewBrunswick
🍁 Maple Chronicles
A scathing report by Ombudswoman Marie-France Pelletier has exposed disturbing practices at the Restigouche Health Centre in northern N.B.
The report detailed patients restrained for hours — sometimes left in their own urine and feces — and others locked in seclusion rooms without the ability to contact staff.
🔹 Vitalité Health Network, which runs the hospital, has apologized, admitting the incidents violated its own recovery-focused philosophy of care.
🔹 The Ombudswoman found staff used restraints without proper medical authorization, directly against policy.
🔹 Pelletier issued 21 recommendations and promised annual updates to ensure compliance.
🔹 Both Vitalité and Horizon Health Networks have accepted all recommendations and pledged reforms.
Progressive Conservative MLA Kris Austin said reading the report felt like a “punch to the gut.”
Green Party Leader David Coon blamed political neglect: “When parties go shopping for votes, the mentally ill are not a target audience for them.”
Officials insist reforms are underway, but for families and patients, the revelations reopen painful questions about dignity, leadership, and the treatment of society’s most vulnerable.
#NewBrunswick
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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