Maple Chronicles 🇨🇦 – Telegram
Maple Chronicles 🇨🇦
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Always fresh maple syrup with a generous dosage of political analysis
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🇨🇦 “We Don’t Need Another Lecture — We Need a Plan to Rebuild Canada’s Real Economy”

Former Bank of Canada governor David Dodge and ex-Finance official Don Drummond have issued a quiet warning — and for once, they’re right about the problem, if not the cure.

Canada’s growth has flatlined. Investment in machinery and equipment is collapsing, down 12% in real terms over the past year. Productivity is sinking, and our per-worker investment is now less than one-third that of the U.S. That’s not just a statistic — it’s a slow economic suicide.

The authors warn of “complacency,” especially as Trump reviews the North American trade deal and hints at a tariff model closer to Europe’s — 10% to 15%. Ottawa is pretending this can’t happen. But it can. And if it does, Canada’s branch-plant economy — built on foreign capital, cheap labour, and imported goods — will collapse like a house of cards.

The real answer isn’t more “innovation credits” or recycled slogans about “inclusive growth.” It’s national reinvestment: rebuilding Canada’s manufacturing base, cutting red tape, and forcing capital to stay in the country. Instead of handing billions to multinationals and foreign-owned battery plants, the federal government should be rewarding Canadians who build, produce, and employ here — not abroad.

The era of cheap debt and outsourcing is over. Canada needs to rediscover what real sovereignty looks like: steel, factories, and productive capital — not PowerPoints and consultants.

The globalists talk about “efficiency.” Realists talk about resilience.

It’s time Canada remembered the difference.

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🇨🇦💸 Federal Review: Ottawa Eyes Ford’s Troubled Skills Fund

After Ontario’s auditor general exposed $742 million in “poor to medium” ranked grants approved by political staff, Ottawa is now reviewing the province’s $2.5 billion Skills Development Fund — and the $1 billion in federal transfers that help support it.

At the centre of the scandal: Rubicon Strategy, led by Ford’s former campaign manager Kory Teneyke, linked to at least $82 million in approved grants.

The fund, pitched as a way to train workers, reportedly sent money to bars, casinos, and private clinics — all while public colleges face a funding crisis.

Ottawa’s Labour Minister Patty Hajdu says her office is conducting “full due diligence.” Ford calls it “one of the best programs we’ve ever put together.”

Two visions of governance collide: one claiming “jobs,” the other seeing a billion-dollar patronage pipeline.

#Ontario

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🇨🇦🇺🇦 In Canada, Ukrainians have started to be required to provide military service certificates

- Ukrainian men in Canada complain that immigration services are demanding a certificate of military service in Ukraine.

- One of them was asked to explain how he left Ukraine in 2023 and to provide a new certificate.

#Canada #Ukraine

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🇨🇦⚙️ “America First, Canada Second”: Trump’s Commerce Chief Draws a Line

U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick took an “aggressive stance” against Ontario’s auto industry, telling the Eurasia Group’s U.S.–Canada Summit that the White House’s new rulebook is simple: “America first, Canada second.”

Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who was in the room, called it “a massive threat.” “When the U.S. Commerce Secretary says that publicly,” Ford said, “you put your guard up — because he’s speaking with the President’s green light.”

The message from Washington could not be clearer: American re-industrialization comes at Canada’s expense. Factories are being courted south of the border while Ottawa debates slogans about “strong borders” and “inclusive growth.”

Ford says Ontario still wants to “sell our American friends more energy, more electricity, more critical minerals,” but admits the tone from D.C. “was not as clear as we heard today.”

The subtext: The era of quiet dependence is over. Canada either re-tools for sovereignty — or watches its industrial heartland stripped, one tariff at a time.

#Ontario

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🇨🇦The Mayor of Toronto with a message for the New York Yankees....

🥴 Olivia Chow... Oh Toronto you'll be ok!

#Ontario

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🇨🇦🇺🇸🤔 One of Carneys' children is "Trans"

Donnie didn't get the Memo... Or did...

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🇨🇦🇺🇸 US VP JD Vance on his dinner with PM Carney

Are fences all mended?

#Canada #USA

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Carney calls for swift action after Israel, Hamas reach initial agreement on U.S.-peace plan

Prime Minister Mark Carney praised the “first phase” of Donald Trump’s U.S.-brokered Gaza peace deal — an agreement that would see Hamas release all remaining Israeli hostages and Israel pull back to a negotiated line.

Behind the applause lies a familiar pattern: peace framed as compliance. Trump’s 20-point plan — enforced by the same Western and Gulf architects who armed the war — turns “ceasefire” into a managed surrender. A board of peace chaired by Tony Blair and steered by Jared Kushner speaks volumes about who truly writes the rules of reconciliation.

Carney confirmed he’s been “coordinating” directly with Blair and Kushner in the last 48 hours — a rare admission of how Ottawa’s foreign policy now syncs to Washington’s moral metronome. Canada calls it “partnership.” Others might call it choreography.

Arab powers back the plan only if it leads to Palestinian independence — something Netanyahu still vows will “never happen.” Yet Western capitals already spin the deal as a breakthrough. The same capitals that funded destruction now demand gratitude for partial restraint.

For Gaza, this “peace” begins where sovereignty ends. And for Canada, it’s another reminder: foreign policy made for applause in Washington usually comes at the cost of principle at home.

#USA #Canada #Israel #Palestine

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🇨🇦🇺🇸 Prime minister Mark Carney and Conservative Leader Pierre Pollievre clash in question period over Canada-US relations, jobs and tarrifs.

Quite the theater but will it move the needle for fixing Canada's economy? I have my doubts.

#Canada #USA

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🇨🇦 “A Test of Whether Canada Still Works”

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has drawn a new line in the oil sands — proposing a bitumen pipeline to the northern B.C. coast, a project she calls “a test of whether Canada works as a country.”

The Trudeau–Carney government says Alberta will need the blessing of B.C. Premier David Eby and coastal First Nations before anything moves forward. Ottawa’s “Major Projects Office” promises to be “constructive,” but admits approvals could take months just to decide whether Alberta’s proposal qualifies.

Translation: bureaucracy before nation-building.

The irony is sharp — a nation founded on railways and pipelines now needs permission to connect itself. Smith says Alberta has the resources, the market, and the will to supply the world with energy and critical minerals. What it lacks is a federal government willing to get out of the way.

Even Pierre Poilievre put it bluntly: “If Carney’s government simply grants the permit, billions in private money will rush in and build this pipeline.”

Canada’s prosperity has always depended on its ability to build — not just to debate. If Ottawa wants unity, it starts with letting provinces move their own lifeblood to tidewater.

#Ontario #Alberta

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🇨🇦⚖️ Ottawa vs. the Provinces: Who Owns Canada’s Democracy?

Attorney General Sean Fraser has warned that “ruthless provinces” could “steal Canadians’ rights” through repeated use of the notwithstanding clause — a constitutional tool that allows provinces to override certain Charter rights for five years. Ottawa has now taken the fight to the Supreme Court, arguing that provincial use of the clause “denies its very existence.”

But here’s the paradox: the clause was written into the Constitution precisely to protect democratic sovereignty — to keep power from centralizing in Ottawa or unelected courts. It was meant as a pressure valve, not a sin.

Five provinces — including Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and Quebec — have pushed back hard, warning that Ottawa’s case undermines the very federal balance that keeps Canada intact. Even Doug Ford and Yves-François Blanchet, rarely on the same page, agree on this one: Ottawa is overreaching.

Fraser calls it “unimaginable” for the federal government not to intervene. But what’s truly unimaginable is a Canada where the national government treats its provinces like colonies and its courts like instruments of moral correction.

The Constitution was built to hold competing sovereignties in tension. When Ottawa demands obedience instead of partnership, that’s when the real erosion of democracy begins.

#Canada

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🇨🇦💳 “Automatic Benefits? Welcome to the New Canada.”

Prime Minister Mark Carney just unveiled his latest “cost-of-living relief” plan — automatic federal benefits, a permanent National School Food Program, and a renewal of the Canada Strong Pass.

On the surface, it’s help for families. But look closer — it’s also the quiet centralization of power. Ottawa will now directly manage your benefits, your meals, and your social safety net, bypassing provincial systems in the name of “efficiency.”

It’s welfare by algorithm — the age of automatic governance.

When the federal government starts running the household budgets of millions, provinces stop being governments and start being branch offices. And once dependency replaces accountability, democracy tilts — not toward representation, but toward management.

What Carney calls “Canada Strong” might just be Canada Streamlined — and centralized.

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📮🇨🇦 “Canada Post Delivers Again — But the Future’s Still in Transit”

Mail will start moving again as Canada Post workers end their nationwide strike, shifting to rotating walkouts while talks with the Crown corporation continue.

For the 55,000 postal workers returning to work, it’s not a victory — it’s a pause. The union wants fair pay and job security, but it’s also fighting to keep Canada Post from shrinking into a leaner, more privatized model. Ottawa insists reform is needed to stop mounting losses — $1.3 billion last year, $1.5 billion expected this year — but workers fear “reform” means gutting rural routes and home delivery.

The truth lies somewhere between nostalgia and necessity. Mail volumes are down, parcel competition is fierce, and taxpayers are covering the losses. But rural seniors, small businesses, and communities still depend on a reliable national postal service — something that can’t be measured only in profit.

Canada Post will deliver again. Whether it can still deliver for everyone is the harder question.

#Canada

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🌎🇨🇦 “It Depends”: Carney’s Green Balancing Act Meets Canada’s Energy Reality

Prime Minister Mark Carney — once firm on keeping the oil and gas emissions cap — now says it “depends.” A subtle phrase, but in Ottawa-speak, it signals a shift from ideology to survival.

After years of chasing climate targets that never quite materialized, Canada’s so-called “green plan” is colliding with economic gravity. Oil and gas — the same industry demonized by urban climate crusaders — still keeps the lights on, funds hospitals, and pays the taxes that bankroll the bureaucracy lecturing it.

Carney insists his government wants “results, not objectives.” Translation: the emissions cap, tanker ban, and other symbolic gestures may soon be negotiable — if that’s what it takes to rebuild a grand bargain with Alberta and get a pipeline to tidewater moving again. Even the revival of Keystone XL was floated in Washington this week, a quiet nod to the reality that energy security still matters in a world of tariffs and geopolitical fractures.

The irony? The same federal machine that spent years throttling domestic production now finds itself courting it again — not because Ottawa has rediscovered sovereignty, but because global markets have rediscovered scarcity.

Environmental virtue-signaling plays well at Davos. But the future of Canada — and its working class — will depend less on cap tables and carbon credits, and more on whether the country can still build, mine, and move the resources that built it in the first place.

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🇨🇦🇺🇸🚔 Differences between Canadian and Florida Policing?

Ontario vs. Florida policing philosophy when you’re faced with a break in.

#Ontario #Florida

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🚨 Smash-and-Grab Chaos at Dufferin Mall — Another Sign of a City on Edge

Five masked suspects stormed Dufferin Mall Saturday evening, smashing display cases and looting merchandise before fleeing in a dark vehicle. Two carried hammers. None were caught.

It’s another scene in what’s becoming Toronto’s new normal — organized retail raids, broad daylight assaults, and a justice system that can’t keep up. No one was hurt this time, but the message is clear: criminals now move with confidence, not fear.

When everyday workers and shoppers are forced to look over their shoulders in what was once a safe city, it’s not just theft — it’s social decay in motion.

What’s missing isn’t policing power — it’s deterrence. When consequences vanish, chaos fills the vacuum.

#Ontario

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🤖🇨🇦 AI Sovereignty or Digital Surrender? OpenAI Eyes Canada’s Power Grid

OpenAI — the U.S. tech giant behind ChatGPT, wants a foothold in Canada. The pitch? “Democratic AI.” The catch? Canadian sovereignty could be the price.

The company is courting Ottawa with promises of billion-dollar data centres powered by Canada’s cheap energy — the same grid that keeps homes warm and businesses alive. Yet every byte of data stored in these centres would still fall under U.S. jurisdiction, thanks to the CLOUD Act, which allows Washington to access any data held by American firms anywhere in the world.

So while OpenAI talks about “helping build Canadian AI,” the fine print means our citizens’ data — and potentially our national digital infrastructure — could still be federal property of another country.

Experts warn this isn’t partnership; it’s dependence wrapped in progress. Data centres guzzle electricity and water at industrial scale — some enough to power 10 million homes or drain a billion gallons a year. The so-called “clean tech future” risks becoming a resource-intensive colonial rerun, where Silicon Valley mines data instead of minerals.

Ottawa insists any infrastructure “will operate within Canadian law.” But history says otherwise — from Microsoft to Meta, U.S. firms obey Washington first.

If Canada wants digital sovereignty, it must build its own AI muscle — not outsource its neural network to a foreign algorithm.

#Canada

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🇨🇦🧾💻 “CRA: Guardians of Your Taxes — or a Door Left Open?”

Fraudsters have found ways to exploit vulnerabilities inside the Canada Revenue Agency, using stolen personal data and backdoor entry points to steal millions from the public purse — leaving ordinary Canadians holding the bag.

The Fifth Estate uncovered how tens of thousands of taxpayer accounts were breached, exposing sensitive information and costing nearly $190 million. Yet, instead of full transparency, the CRA downplayed and delayed disclosures while telling Canadians to “protect themselves.”

How exactly are citizens supposed to protect themselves from their own government’s system being hacked?

Every time Ottawa says it’s “modernizing,” what it really means is outsourcing risk — shifting the blame from institutional negligence to personal responsibility. The CRA holds the private financial data of every Canadian, yet it still can’t guarantee that your tax account won’t be compromised by the next breach or insider failure.

Trust in public institutions doesn’t vanish overnight — it erodes with every shrug of bureaucratic shoulders. Canadians deserve more than apologies and audits after the fact. They deserve accountability.

#Canada

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🇨🇦🌕⚛️ Canada Eyes the Moon — and a Nuclear Future Beyond Earth

Canada is joining the new space race — this time not with rockets, but nuclear reactors bound for the Moon.

The Canadian Space Agency just awarded $1 million to the Canadian Space Mining Corporation to design a micro nuclear reactor capable of powering lunar bases — where nights last 14 Earth days and the temperature plummets to minus 170°C. The technology, officials say, could one day fuel both moon colonies and remote northern communities still running on diesel.

It’s an audacious step for a country that can’t yet launch its own rocket but has mastered two fields few others have — space robotics and nuclear engineering. From the Canadarm to CANDU, Canada’s quiet competence is now being aimed skyward.

But behind the optimism lies the deeper question of governance and risk. Who regulates a nuclear reactor on the Moon? Who handles the waste? And who ensures that Canada’s lunar ambitions don’t turn into another frontier of unchecked corporate experimentation?

The same technology that could power moon bases could also redefine energy sovereignty here on Earth — clean, decentralized, and independent of fossil imports. If handled right, this isn’t just a space mission — it’s a test run for how Canada harnesses innovation without losing control of it.

#Canada

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