Carney and the liberals are doing some next level tyranny with the bills they are tabling. It’s heavy. It’s like…as bad as it is, it’s likely worse than we know…🤔
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A very interesting opinion piece by Keean Bexte. I haven’t been much of a fan of his for some time. I found his rants much like Rath’s…way over the top. However, maybe he’s mellowed because this has me thinking.
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Mark Carney does not have a one seat majority.
Not yet.
But Ottawa is already acting as though one more floor crossing is inevitable, as though it would be stabilizing, as though it would crown Carney as unassailable. That assumption is wrong. And it should give pause to any Conservative MP currently flirting with the idea of defecting.
If you cross the floor and hand Carney a one seat majority, you are not his greatest asset.
You are his hostage.
A government that survives by a single vote is not strong. It is deeply vulnerable. And the people with the most leverage in that environment are not the newcomers who just arrived. They are the vestiges of the Trudeau era who never left.
Steven Guilbeault. Karina Gould. Others who believe this party was theirs before Carney arrived and should be theirs again.
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IVAN RAND: THE CANADIAN WHO DEFENDED GOD-GIVEN RIGHTS BEFORE THE CHARTER EVER EXISTED
The Father of Canada’s Implied Bill of Rights (1884–1969)
Sign the petition to stop Bill S-206:
https://www.change.org/Kill_Bill_S-206
1. Early Life — A Child of the Maritimes, Born Into Hard Work and Self-Reliance
Ivan Cleveland Rand was born on April 27, 1884, in Moncton, New Brunswick, to a modest working-class family. His father, Nelson Rand, worked as a machinist for the Intercolonial Railway; his mother, Minnie, raised the family with the strong Christian discipline and work ethic typical of rural Eastern Canada at the time.
Rand grew up in a Canada that valued:
personal responsibility
faith
community
fairness
and suspicion of arbitrary authority
These early influences would shape his entire legal philosophy.
2. Education and Rise to the Supreme Court
Rand attended:
Mount Allison University
Harvard Law School (one of the few Canadians of his era to do so)
He practiced law, served as a law professor, and eventually became Attorney General of New Brunswick.
In 1943, he was appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada, where he served until 1959.
He died in London, Ontario, on January 2, 1969, leaving behind a body of ...