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Trust in our Institutions

Has your trust in our institutions changed?


  • Total voters
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Coyne is right. Our leaders need to grow the fuck up and get serious about this shit.

Sorry it’s behind a paywall.


He had, he said, been briefed on the names of certain Conservative parliamentarians – whether they were senators or MPs was unclear – who had “engaged” in foreign interference, or were at least at risk of doing so. And yet, he complained, he was unable to pass their names along to the leader of the Conservative Party, Pierre Poilievre, to take such action as was required, because the latter had refused to undergo the necessary security clearance to receive such classified information.
This was a remarkable statement, for two reasons. One, it has become a theme at the foreign interference hearings that this Prime Minister, like his officials, is more usually entirely in the dark about important national security matters, having either not been briefed, or not read the relevant memo, or never received it. How often has one senior Liberal or another insisted that they only learned of some shocking event after reading about it in The Globe and Mail?


Certainly that seemed to be the case whenever it was more convenient for them not to know, as for example with regard to a request from intelligence officers to put a senior Liberal power broker suspected of ties to the Chinese government under surveillance. But when the matter is alleged security risks in the Conservative party, suddenly the Prime Minister is supremely well briefed.
And yet, two, Mr. Trudeau conceded, under questioning, that there were also Liberal parliamentarians on the list, and that he knew their names, too. That knowledge did not appear to have spurred him to take any of the sorts of actions he expected of his Conservative counterpart. The value of a security clearance would seem to be the ability to choose which briefings to skip, and which to ignore.
Still, the Prime Minister has a point. It is an outrage that Mr. Poilievre refuses to make himself eligible for confidential briefings. (As a former cabinet minister he would previously have been cleared by security, though that would have no bearing on his current role.) It is understandable that he should not wish to be unduly constrained in what he can say about such matters. But that is more than outweighed in present circumstances, by the obligation to be aware of what members of his caucus might have been up to.
So, in the face of a serious national security crisis – credible allegations that members of Parliament on both sides of the House have been acting, in effect, as agents of a foreign power – we are presented with one leader who knew and did nothing, and another who knew nothing and did less
 
What, exactly, did Canada find during its national security review? Champagne said you’d just have to trust him. “I’m not at liberty to go into much detail, but I know Canadians would understand when you’re saying the government of Canada is taking measures to protect national security, that’s serious,” he said.
Fool us once….with this government:
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The new CRA Motto: Snitches get Stitches ;)

CRA launched 'witch hunt' against whistleblowers who exposed millions in bogus refunds, sources say​

Employees say they fear retaliation in aftermath of revelations​


The Canada Revenue Agency is on a "witch hunt" to find whistleblowers who may have spoken to the media and exposed how it has been repeatedly duped into paying out millions in bogus refunds to scammers, according to sources.

"The consensus is that management is nervous," one source said. "Any media contacts [they're saying]: 'Don't talk to them at all, don't talk to journalists.' I think they're very much trying to control the narrative."

According to multiple sources, the CRA's senior leadership is anxious, looking for ways to silence employees and to limit media coverage.


 
The new CRA Motto: Snitches get Stitches ;)

CRA launched 'witch hunt' against whistleblowers who exposed millions in bogus refunds, sources say​

Employees say they fear retaliation in aftermath of revelations​


The Canada Revenue Agency is on a "witch hunt" to find whistleblowers who may have spoken to the media and exposed how it has been repeatedly duped into paying out millions in bogus refunds to scammers, according to sources.

"The consensus is that management is nervous," one source said. "Any media contacts [they're saying]: 'Don't talk to them at all, don't talk to journalists.' I think they're very much trying to control the narrative."

According to multiple sources, the CRA's senior leadership is anxious, looking for ways to silence employees and to limit media coverage.



Yeah, that’s the right focus…don’t use those several thousand additional agents to recover the $15B in excess CERB payments that they actually KNOW WHO THEY ARE…

Talk about a bureaucratic ‘swamp’ if ever there was one.
 
Yeah, that’s the right focus…don’t use those several thousand additional agents to recover the $15B in excess CERB payments that they actually KNOW WHO THEY ARE…

Talk about a bureaucratic ‘swamp’ if ever there was one.
And given the cuts happening there I am sure plenty of people will be more than happy to sing.
 
And given the cuts happening there I am sure plenty of people will be more than happy to sing.
Heck, they could even go to Washington D.C. and speak with the media….I mean a Deputy Minister of GAC did, so there’s a precedent to allow subordinate bureaucrats to speak openly too, right? 😉
 
Yeah, that’s the right focus…don’t use those several thousand additional agents to recover the $15B in excess CERB payments that they actually KNOW WHO THEY ARE…

Talk about a bureaucratic ‘swamp’ if ever there was one.
Fire the senior bureaucrat. Now, 2 I/C takes over and if they don’t perform…
 
I guess this fits best here:


Having seen the effects of US-style govt shutdowns, it is not good for anyone.
 
I guess this fits best here:


Having seen the effects of US-style govt shutdowns, it is not good for anyone.
Anything that forces the despicable Trudeau regime out of office is a good thing.
 
Angus Reid taps a different kind of distrust in different institutions ....
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When is a Tik Tok "ban" not a ban? When it's done in Canada, eh?
And Team Red wonders why people are leery about them & the Chinese .....
Tik Tok Canada franchise: not so fast ....
Short & sweet on the why from the attached 16 page filing**:
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** - OIC: Order in Council; GIC: Governor in Council (aka Cabinet); ICA: Investment Canada Act; NSR: National Security Review
 

Attachments

Tik Tok Canada franchise: not so fast ....
Short & sweet on the why from the attached 16 page filing**:
View attachment 89687
** - OIC: Order in Council; GIC: Governor in Council (aka Cabinet); ICA: Investment Canada Act; NSR: National Security Review
Meh. Not the first time an ICA shutdown order has been fought by the subject company, won’t be the last. They have the right to challenge it, but that doesn’t mean they’ll succeed.
 
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