☎️CALL TO ACTION FOR CHRIS LYSAK☎️☎️ Why was Chris made to take down his Canadian Flag after 18 months of hanging in his window or risk losing his cleaning job? Chris has numerous health issues that need immediate attention: Torn rotator cuff, numbness from elbow running into half his hand due to nerve damage. Chris needs physical therapy, the doctor recommend weights or an elastic band, why can’t he get proper treatment? Chris has soft tissue damage and bone on bone pain in his knees, Chris is in need of proper pain management and a stationary bike to help with pain and pysical therapy. The Lethbridge facility does not have a stationary bike. Chris is 6”4 and 315 pounds with a mattress that’s 2 1/2 inches thick and only fits the length of his ankles, he is in desperate need of a proper mattress for his weight and height to prevent any further health problems. Vitamins seem to be a problem to order on the canteen list why? Chris is a master electrician, to keep in compliance he needs to complete a mandatory training course (proof of code update) the lethbridge facility said they can’t offer him this. This course requires a book, calculator and a few necessities, why can’t the books be brought for Chris to complete his course so he can get right back to working when he gets home. Let’s help Chris get the help he needs, we will update an AHS file# tomorrow when Chris receives it. Let’s call and email to get Chris the proper help. Please SHARE this post
Mike Ellis
Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Services
1-780-415-9550
[email protected]
Lethbridge Correctional Center
1-403-388-3000
Nathan Neudorf MLA Lethbridge East
1-403-320-1011
[email protected]
Adriana LaGrange Health Minister
[email protected]
1-780-427-3665
https://www.westernstandard.news/news/bank-of-canada-reveals-cash-still-popular/66871
“Most Canadians still keep bills in their wallet and banknotes at home even as governments and banks tighten restrictions on large cash transactions, according to a Bank of Canada study released yesterday.
The average Canadian now carries $156, up from $140 in 2023, and keeps another $200 at home, most often in $20 bills, said the Methods of Payment Survey Report: Cash in an Era of Alternatives. Cash was used in 21% of all transactions, with older Canadians using it most frequently.
Per Blacklock's Reporter, about 32% of Canadians withdrew money from an automated banking machine in the past week, taking out an average of $176. Most people withdrew cash twice a month, said researchers, who surveyed about 4,000 people nationwide.
Asked if they expected to go cashless, 79% said no. The share of Canadians without cash has ranged from 10% to 19% since 2019, peaking at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The ...
Khalistan extremists are now forming militias inside Canada
The Liberals have imported absolute garbage into our country
We asked them to bring doctors and engineers over here
They gave us gangsters, scammers, terrorists instead
What a mess
https://x.com/truckdriverpleb/status/1956466395501457722?