Beerus Sama
5.1K posts

Beerus Sama retweetet

The Nakba exhibit hasn’t even opened, and it’s already a scandal.
The Canadian Museum for Human Rights is moving ahead with a Nakba exhibit despite serious concerns from Jewish Canadians that it lacks context and transparency.
The museum consulted anti-Zionist voices, met with the Palestinian representative to Canada, and refuses to tell the full story — including the 850,000 Jewish people forced to flee Arab countries after Israel’s founding.
That is not education. That is political activism dressed up as human rights.
Public money should not be funding one-sided political narratives.

English
Beerus Sama retweetet

The term "metadata" appears only once in the 74-page Bill C-22. Without defining "metadata," the Bill grants government power to order companies to retain Canadians' metadata for up to six months. The Criminal Code defines "transmission data." It does not define the broader term "metadata." Undefined terms should not be the foundation of surveillance powers.

English
Beerus Sama retweetet

Thousands of Canadians have already spoken out. The Justice Centre is encouraging Canadians to take action by using our online tool to send a pre-written letter to their Member of Parliament and Prime Minister Mark Carney opposing Bill C-34, the federal government’s proposed Safe Social Media Act.
jccf.ca/stop-bill-c-34…
Read more about the proposed legislation here:
westernstandard.news/news/justice-c…
English

@AFpost French people are immoral or should I say the degenerates in the government and the people who support it. What imbeciles
English
Beerus Sama retweetet

In 2023, French sexual assault victim @thaisescufon on TV: “The main danger for women is immigrant men, Africans, blacks, and Arabs.” She was charged with hate speech. The prosecutor sought a year in prison and 45,000-Euro fine. She got a 1,000-Euro fine. europeanconservative.com/articles/news/…
English

@JoshDehaas @ThaisEscufon That's why they have grooming gangs scandal. They allow their own women and children to be graped by perverts and they let them get away with it in the name of anti racist. Disgusting
English
Beerus Sama retweetet

🚨🇨🇦 Canada Just Passed Bill C-9 That Can Silence Regular People
Bill C-9 (called the Combating Hate Act) has passed and will soon become official law.
What the law does:
~ Makes new “hate” crimes
~ Bans some symbols
~ Makes it much easier to charge people for “promoting hatred”
~ Removes old protections for religious talks (like quoting the Quran or Bible)
~ Police can now start cases without special permission
This law can be used as a weapon against netizens, pastors, critics, and everyday Canadians. Because the rules are vague, anyone can complain and trigger a police investigation.
~ Your tweet, Facebook post, or sermon could get you in trouble
~ One angry complaint = police at your door
~ The government or activists can target people they don’t like
Canada didn’t just make an anti-hate law; it created an easy tool to control speech and punish regular people.

English

Ruby Sahota acknowledges in the House of Commons a "foreign entity" hired the Toronto gunmen
"A “foreign entity” has hired gunmen to shoot at synagogues in Toronto, Secretary of State for Combatting Crime Ruby Sahota said in the House of Commons on Wednesday.
Ms. Sahota made the remark in an exchange about the government’s lawful-access bill, which would require electronic service providers, such as internet companies, to provide police and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service with surveillance and monitoring capabilities."

English

@cbcwatcher Let's see if they go after this criminals. They are so incompetent, the liberals can only criminalize thought not actual crime. Losers
English
Beerus Sama retweetet
Beerus Sama retweetet

Tech companies on Bill C-22
• Shopify @Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke @tobi warned that Bill C-22 could become a “death blow to Canadian tech viability” and make Canada “essentially unviable for those with choices on where to build.”
• Signal's @signalapp VP of Strategy & Global Affairs Udbhav Tiwari stated, "In its current form, Bill C-22 would convert the everyday tools Canadians rely on into a sprawling, insecure surveillance apparatus."
• Apple @Apple Senior Director of User Privacy & Child Safety Erik Neuenschwander warned that Bill C-22 allows the Government of Canada to force companies to break encryption by inserting backdoors into their products - “something Apple will never do.”
• Google's @Google Director of Government Affairs and Public Policy Jeanette Patell warned that Bill C-22 “goes well beyond lawful access regimes in other G7 democracies, and risks creating new surveillance infrastructure that would introduce serious security vulnerabilities, undermine user trust and hinder our ability to innovate and offer pro-privacy technologies.”
• Meta @Meta warned that Bill C-22 could require companies to build or maintain capabilities that weaken encryption and that could force providers to "install government spyware directly on their systems."
• Proton VPN @ProtonVPN General Manager David Peterson warned that complying with Bill C-22 could conflict with Swiss and European privacy obligations. He said, “Complying with foreign surveillance orders without Swiss legal process is a criminal offence...We’ll defend our Canadian users and never compromise them.”
• NordVPN @NordVPN stated that “there isn’t a scenario in which we would compromise our no-logs architecture or encryption protections" and that it would consider limiting or removing its Canadian presence.
• ExpressVPN @expressvpn warned, “Legislation that mandates data retention or technical access, however well-intentioned, undermines the security that millions of users rely on."
• DuckDuckGo @DuckDuckGo stated that "if the bill passes, we will be forced to stop offering our VPN in Canada."
• Windscribe @windscribecom stated, “...they want to destroy the entire essence of our service to basically spy on its own citizens."
Privacy protects citizens. It also protects innovation.
Note: These statements were made before Bill C-22 was amended on June 18, 2026. In our view, those amendments did not meaningfully address concerns raised by tech companies, privacy experts, or civil liberties organizations. The companies above are free to tell Canadians whether the amendments have changed their assessment.
English

Alberta Senator Paula Simons says her personal safety was threatened by public disclosure of a provincial voters’ list.
“The situation in Alberta is very grave.”
— @Paulatics
blacklocks.ca/alberta-unsafe…
@YourAlberta @ABDanielleSmith #abpoli #cdnpoli

English

