I can venture a guess as to how a mother would feel in a courtroom watching the trial of the person who murdered her child and how badly she would want them to pay dearly for their crime. My daughter, step daughter and step son as well as their spouses and possibly their children did as they were told by government and medical people and got injected. I am so angry about that fact I can’t even express in words what I would like justice to look like. I birthed, nurtured and raised my child guided her throughout her life encouraging her NOT to follow the pack off the cliff then supported her when teachers tried to squash her independence. Now here I am talking to my husband about the possibility of having to raise her children and those of my step daughter if something happens suddenly leaving them orphans.
I don’t know if those in this group who are jabbed. worry about their health, their lives but I know I fear for my kids and grandkids.
https://open.substack.com/pub/jeffreyr/p/why-alberta-cant-afford-to-wait?r=17btaf&utm_medium=ios
“This short video breaks down the cold, hard numbers and why now is the time to act.
📊 Ottawa has siphoned more than $400 billion from Alberta in just the last decade
📈 A free Alberta would run a projected $48 billion annual surplus, enough to eliminate provincial income tax, fund Indigenous development, build our own pension and policing, and still have billions left over
These aren’t hopes. They’re facts
And the longer we wait, the deeper the financial hole becomes”
The worst government in the history of western society
https://x.com/stephen_taylor/status/1942667377067381242
Ah yes…and so it begins. The devil is in the details isn’t it?
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An economist says Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and the federal government need to come on board to facilitate Alberta and Ontario’s latest trade deals, including the construction of a pipeline.
Premier Danielle Smith and Premier Doug Ford announced Monday that the two provinces have signed two new agreements aimed at expanding interprovincial trade, building new rail lines, ports and pipelines, and developing energy corridors to link Alberta’s oil, gas, and critical minerals with global markets.
“It’s great that the two of them want to commit to deepening ties, but if they look at a map, they’ll see that there are two very large provinces that separate them,” Moshe Lander, a Concordia University economics professor, told the Western Standard.
Lander says while Prime Minister Mark Carney has been trying to get everyone on board with the meetings of the premiers to remove interprovincial trade barriers, there is a need to prioritize ...