
Jonny Fish
5.5K posts

Jonny Fish
@The_Fish01
Dream or Die.. Always remember everything in life happens for a reason!




Your urge to sleep may not start with neurotransmitters. A study published in Nature found that sleep pressure builds from mitochondrial electron leak in specific brain cells, and when the leak crosses a threshold, sleep fires.




NEW: the University of Calgary is pursuing a new on-campus stadium for varsity sports. The move is raising questions about where the Calgary Stampeders will play in the future. globalnews.ca/news/11771733/…


I JUST SUED THE TORONTO STAR FOR FAILING TO PUBLICLY REVEAL INFORMATION SHARED BY THE RCMP RE: JUSTIN TRUDEAU AND UNDERAGE PORN After much reflection, I finally decided to begin my litigation process related to events arising from the experiences I wrote about in 'In Trudeau's Kitchen'. I'm not even talking about the more specific details/consequences I shared in 'In Trudeau's Kitchen.' (i.e. how the Star may have been negligent with respect to not telling my story). Those will be explored soon. I'm talking about the bigger picture consequences of media not sharing important details about political leadership with the citizenry. Oh, how we suffer in their absence. In this case, I begin with something shared with me (2021) by then Toronto Star Journalist Robert Cribb, to the effect that the RCMP had informed them that then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was watching kiddie porn (underage porn) on his devices. It was their job to witness him, in order to ensure his devices weren't compromised by a foreign power. When asked (2022) if this story was going to go public, Cribb confirmed that the original source was credible, and affirmed that the story was coming ('where there's smoke, there's fire.'). It never came, and I believe it should have. I have struggled with this, and various other things shared with me by media, for a long time. At the link below is the filing itself, for anyone interested in following the story. It is for the court to decide, but it is my view that the Star, particularly in a situation where they are receiving funds from the government, had a fiduciary duty to bring this information to the Canadian public. It is surely in the public interest, and sharing it may well have made a huge difference with respect to cultivating the best outcome for Canadians. I explain more of my view in the documents. @dkennedyglans @MelanieBennet_ @TheMenzoid @ezralevant @scoopercooper @CandiceMalcolm @DavidKrayden @RealAndyLeeShow @LichTamara @JaneBrownNews @AlexpiersonAMP @cbcwatcher dropbox.com/scl/fi/2bywhzf…








All the talent has left Canada. What in the hell would you call this performance at the Juno awards?

Through Bill C-22, the federal government tells electronic service providers: "We're coming for Canadians' internet data, you're going to make it easy for us, and mum's the word." Bill C-22, introduced in Parliament on March 12, would enact the Supporting Authorized Access to Information Act. This legislation will establish significant federal government control over internet platforms (like Google or X), over telecommunications and internet providers (like Telus or Rogers), and over anyone else providing an electronic service in Canada. That's a long list indeed. If C-22 passes, the federal government will be empowered to order electronic service providers to develop capacity for extracting and organizing information for government or law enforcement review, to install devices that allow government and law enforcement to access information, and to retain metadata for up to one year. In addition, the government can order electronic service providers to keep requests for information secret. This legislation is about compelling electronic service providers to surrender Canadians' information to the federal government. The federal government is not coming for Canadians' internet search histories or social media activities (yet). Information later. Infrastructure now. And that's precisely what C-22 is: legislative and regulatory infrastructure designed to facilitate a vast flow of information from electronic service providers to government and law enforcement. Tell your MP that surveillance of law-abiding citizens will not be tolerated in Canada. Find your MP here: ourcommons.ca/Members/en/sea… Read the full text of C-22 here: parl.ca/DocumentViewer… Read internet and privacy expert Michael Geist's (@mgeist) analysis of C-22 here: michaelgeist.ca/2026/03/a-tale…






“If someone asks if you’re a separatist, just say nooo” How much of a creep is this guy?















