🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada

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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada

🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada

@MeanwhileInCa

Shining the spotlight of public scrutiny on Canada's prosperity challenges | Build baby, Build 🍁🛠👷‍♀️🏗

参加日 Temmuz 2023
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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada
@wealthmoose Canada have an embarassment of resources that is being deliberatley held back. You forgot -Natural Gas -Forest/Lumber -Coastline -Fisheries -rare earths/cobalt -diamomds -aluminum -palladium -platinum -Hydroelectric power Lol...We couldn't defend it if any one wanted to invade
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Dean Baxendale
Dean Baxendale@DMCBaxendale·
This week, the Liberal’s had a big fundraiser in Markham. I was there and had a conversation with the controversial MP Michael Ma. Without moral clarity while attempting to reshape the forced labour discussion suggests Canada is willing to trade off human and labour rights violations for a path of diversification through China trade. @SundayGuardian @liberal_party Why China is not the solution to Canada’s trade diversification strategy. sundayguardianlive.com/?p=181507
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wealthmoose
wealthmoose@wealthmoose·
What does $90B actually look like? 🧐 It’s roughly 360 MILLION round-trip flights between Toronto and Montreal. 🛫 That’s enough to fly every single person in Toronto and Montreal back and forth... dozens of times over. We aren't talking about a few vacations; we’re talking about centuries of air travel covered by one budget line. And we are still building a High Speed Rail network … 🤔 Let that sink in. ✈️ 🇨🇦 #Canada #Cdnpoli #Rail #TaxDollars #CanadaEconomy #Toronto #Montreal
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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada がリツイート
🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada
Did you know that Canada invented commercial oil well drilling? In 1858 James Williams struck oil and ignited the oil boom in North America. Almosy 200 years later, Canada still doesn't have tidewater access to a deepwater terminal that loads VLCC tankers.
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Toronto Star
Toronto Star@TorontoStar·
Older Canadian women face tough choices about the life they can afford. That's why Susan, 76, has lived in her car trib.al/BHaOtC5
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The Carney Files 🇨🇦
The Carney Files 🇨🇦@TheCarneyFiles·
Bienvenue, chers Québécois. On vous attendait. 🍁 Voici ce qu’on a documenté jusqu’à maintenant : 🔴 35,8M$ de fonds publics versés à des entreprises où la femme du PM siège comme conseillère 🔴 Comment Carney saigne l’économie depuis 2009 🔴 Le lien direct entre le PDG d’Air Canada et les 2,1G$ de Brookfield — la firme du PM ∙Bien plus encore. Tout est dans l’onglet Highlights. C’est pas une question de Conservateur ou de Libéral. C’est une architecture financière bâtie pour déplacer l’argent public vers des réseaux privés — pis les Canadiens méritent de voir les preuves. Tout ce qu’on publie est sourcé : sites gouvernementaux officiels, médias, documents parlementaires. Pas de spéculation, juste de la documentation. La seule façon que cette information se rende aux électeurs de Terrebonne, c’est par vous. Les médias traditionnels n’en parleront pas. L’algorithme va l’enterrer. Taguez vos amis, votre famille, vos voisins dans la circonscription. Envoyez-leur ce fil. Partagez-le dans vos groupes. Une capture d’écran dans un chat, un lien à table en famille — c’est comme ça que ça perce. Le Québec, et les Terrebonniens mérites les mêmes reçus que le reste du pays. 🍁 #StandOnGuardCanada
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Jim Fawcett
Jim Fawcett@jfawcett101·
If you've ever traveled across our great country 🇨🇦 and observe all the blessings we have in terms of natural resources you will realize there should be never be a housing crisis, never a food crisis and never an energy crisis.
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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada がリツイート
🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada
@tobi @Cdn4Nortel @JohnNabuurs Canada invented commercial oil well drilling in 1858 in Southwestern Ontario. In the 168 years since, we still haven't built a tidewater port that can load a VLCC. Its beyond choices. Its either incompetence or deliberate.
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Chris Arnade 🐢🐱🚌
Chris Arnade 🐢🐱🚌@Chris_arnade·
@JuanSanchez0x0 but have you been to the University of Quebec campus near Berri? They really hate everything
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The Carney Files 🇨🇦
The Carney Files 🇨🇦@TheCarneyFiles·
Also — if anyone wants to do something powerful TONIGHT: I need 30-45 second video clips in French. Screen recordings of House of Commons debates, committee testimony, news coverage — anything that’s already public record. HoC footage is always fair use. CBC, CTV, YouTube, Global clips are public interest. Layer French text on screen with the key facts. No face needed. No voice needed. Just the receipts in motion. Terrebonne votes in 8 days. Most of this content doesn’t exist in French yet. You could be the first person to put it in front of those voters tonight. Tag @TheCarneyFiles and this account when you post. We amplify immediately.
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The Carney Files 🇨🇦
The Carney Files 🇨🇦@TheCarneyFiles·
New name. Same receipts. This account used to be @defigirlxoxo. Today it’s @TheCarneyFiles. I’m posting my old profile and analytics below so you can see the journey. Two weeks ago this account had 4,500 followers. Today it has 16,900. Three million impressions. Posts reaching 400,000 people. And I didn’t spend a single dollar. I’m going to share my analytics below so you can see it for yourselves. I started this account because I found something in the public record that I couldn’t unsource. So I kept pulling. And every thread led to another document, another filing, another court record, another report from the CBC or the UN or Amnesty International that most Canadians had never seen. I didn’t expect anyone to care. But you did. And then more of you did. And now I’m sitting here at the end of a very long day feeling more patriotic about this country than I have in my entire life — because of you. Here’s what I’ve learned in two weeks: The plan was to divide us. Liberals vs Conservatives. East vs West. French vs English. And it worked. Everyone is angry. But we’ve been angry at each other — when the record shows we should be angry at the same things. No matter who you voted for, you didn’t vote for a PM whose company was fined for slave labour. You didn’t vote for 4 floor crossings with no by-elections. You didn’t vote for 14 First Nations having to sue your government. You didn’t vote for a surveillance bill tabled the day after a majority-deciding vote. None of us did. Because none of us knew. And that’s the thing — there was a point where every single person reading this had no idea about any of this. Then you saw a thread, or a source, or a screenshot, and something shifted. You checked the links. You read the documents. And you changed your mind. Everyone else can do the same. The growth of this account is proof that when people see the record, they don’t look away. They share it. A lot of you are saying it’s hopeless. That there’s nothing we can do. That democracy is already gone. I understand why it feels that way. But I need you to look at what happened in two weeks with one account, no budget, and no team — and ask yourself what happens when it’s not just one account. So many of you have been asking how to help that I’ve started something tonight. @CanadaAuditors is a task force — a page for this community. It’s where tasks get posted, priorities get voted on, and anyone who wants to contribute can find a way in. Translate a thread. Make a video. Build a graphic. Write an article. Whatever you’re good at — there’s a place for it. I’ll set up official accounts on every platform and share more details tomorrow on how donations will be managed, how funds will be allocated, and how the community will make those decisions together — transparently. I’ll be honest with you: I am no good at managing operations. The research is what I do. So I am looking for someone to manage @CanadaAuditors day to day — posting tasks, tracking progress, running polls, keeping things moving. If that’s you, comment below or DM @CanadaAuditors directly. No DMs on this account. It’s being set up as a team account so more details tomorrow. One more thing. I want to thank you. Not for the follows or the impressions — for the fact that you proved something I wasn’t sure was true, when I started: that Canadians will act when they see the record. That the facts still matter. That this country still has people who refuse to look the other way. You didn’t need anyone to tell you what to think. You just needed to see the sources — and when you did, you made up your own minds. I didn’t build this movement. You did — by showing up and proving that Canadians still care deeply enough about this country to fight for its future in every way they can. Now let’s make sure every Canadian gets the same chance. 🇨🇦 🍁 #StandOnGuardCanada
The Carney Files 🇨🇦 tweet mediaThe Carney Files 🇨🇦 tweet mediaThe Carney Files 🇨🇦 tweet mediaThe Carney Files 🇨🇦 tweet media
The Carny Files Auditors@CanadaAuditors

🍁 #StandOnGuard We’re starting a digital movement. This is your task force. One goal: every Canadian sees the documented record before it’s too late. Research sourced from @TheCarneyFiles Pick a task. Go. 👇

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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada がリツイート
Josh Dehaas
Josh Dehaas@JoshDehaas·
According to Grok, you could cover the cost of everyone’s flights from Toronto to Montreal for 180 to 300 years with the estimated price tag to build Alto high-speed rail. On Alto, you would also have to pay hundreds per ticket and there would be a taxpayer subsidy.
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Hershel
Hershel@Hershel_Lives·
How do you think Canadians will react when we run out of oil in 2-3 weeks on the eastern seaboard Quebec and Atlantic provinces?
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Wally Layman
Wally Layman@wallylayman·
@Hershel_Lives Why are we going to run out of oil? Irving are purchasing crude from our NL offshore for the next two months at least to offset what they import from the Middle East. Quebec gets most of their oil from western Canada and the United States.
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Lisa
Lisa@YoungStreete·
Canadians have seen the posts speculating that Canadians may be taxed more to support the Liberal government’s increase to defence spending. As a Canadian, I’d like to offer a suggestion to Mark Carney and his MPs - cancel every dollar of foreign aid being spent on BS programs like this one instead of taxing Canadians more. #LiberalsMustGo
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nxthompson
nxthompson@nxthompson·
Anthropic researchers say that Claude has internal representations of emotions—which they categorized by vectors—that can influence alignment. This is what they found in that famous instance where it resorted to blackmail to avoid being shut down. anthropic.com/research/emoti…
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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada がリツイート
CTV News
CTV News@CTVNews·
‘How many people have to die?’: Five deaths tied to wait times in Manitoba hospitals ctvnews.ca/health/article…
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Senator Victor Oh
Senator Victor Oh@SenatorVictorOh·
🌹🇨🇦🇨🇦🌹 Fellow Canadian @AliFeizi’s firsthand account from multiple independent trips to Xinjiang is powerful and overdue. As someone who has long advocated for evidence-based Canada-China engagement, I’m struck by his clear-eyed observations: a region where Uyghur culture is actively preserved — from the restored Old City of Kashgar to thriving bazaars and vibrant traditions — not erased. The so-called “concentration camps” he saw are vocational training centres helping people build skills. Ottawa’s rhetoric must match reality. Accusations this serious demand proof, not politics. Strong, pragmatic Canada-China ties also deliver real benefits for Canadian livelihoods: restored market access for our farmers (canola, peas, seafood, beef) supports thousands of jobs and family incomes across the Prairies and beyond; affordable Chinese EVs and supply chain investments help build a stronger Canadian auto sector and lower costs for families; while diversified trade with China’s massive market drives economic growth, stability, and new opportunities from coast to coast. Canadians deserve foreign policy grounded in facts, dialogue, and mutual respect that puts our prosperity first. Thank you, Pastor Feizi, for speaking truth from the ground. #Xinjiang #CanadaChina x.com/alifeizi/statu…
Ali Feizi 费爱理 Adili@AliFeizi

A Canadian’s Disappointment: What I Actually Saw on the Ground in Xinjiang vs. What Ottawa Claims As a Canadian, I have always taken pride in my country’s commitment to human rights, due diligence, and evidence-based foreign policy. We are a nation that prides itself on “peacekeeping,” not warmongering; on diplomacy, not hyperbole. That is why I find myself profoundly disappointed—not just as a Canadian, but as a citizen of a country that claims to value truth—when I listen to the Parliamentary Questions coming out of Ottawa regarding Xinjiang. The language used in is alarming. Terms like "concentration camps" are thrown around with a casual certainty that bears no resemblance to the reality I have witnessed with my own eyes. Having made three trips to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in the last nine months, I have seen a reality that is diametrically opposed to the narrative being pushed by our Members of Parliament. I am not a journalist embedded with a government delegation; I am a Canadian who traveled independently. I went expecting to verify the headlines we see in Canadian media. Instead, what I found was a region vibrant with culture, actively preserved and proudly showcased. Here is what I observed on the ground, and why I believe Ottawa’s rhetoric is not only wrong but dangerously disconnected from the facts. The Cultural Reality I Witnessed During my three trips, I spent time in Kashgar, Urumqi, Tashkurgan and the surrounding areas. The narrative I was sold in Canada was one of cultural erasure. The reality I experienced was the exact opposite. 1. The Old City of Kashgar One of the most striking examples of cultural preservation is the Old City of Kashgar. Canadian politicians describe a region being "flattened" or "assimilated." Yet, I walked through the labyrinthine alleyways of this ancient Uygur city, which has been meticulously preserved as a historical site. The local government didn’t tear it down; they invested in upgrading the infrastructure, running water, natural gas lines, and earthquake proofing, while maintaining the traditional Uygur architecture, wooden pillars, and intricate brickwork. In the evenings, I watched in the alleyways while children ran through streets paved with traditional kuzi bricks. This wasn’t a ghost town; it was a living, breathing historical center. 2. The Grand Bazaar and Livelihoods The Id Kah Bazaar in Kashgar is not only open; it is thriving. I saw Uygur artisans selling hand-engraved copperware, traditional atlas silk, and locally grown dried fruits. Far from being forced into labor, I spoke with shop owners who explained that tourism encouraged by the government’s infrastructure investments had allowed them to expand their family businesses. If the goal were cultural genocide, as some Canadian MPs allege, why would the state invest billions into preserving the mihrabs in mosques, restoring the Id Kah Mosque (one of the largest in China), and promoting Uygur cuisine and music festivals? It simply doesn’t add up. 3. Videos from the Ground I am sharing some videos in my posts to show the reality. In one clip, you can see Uygur dance another a traditional wedding I went too. The Disconnect in Ottawa As a Canadian, this embarrasses me. We claim to be a nation that stands for truth and reconciliation. Yet, when given the opportunity to send independent observers or journalists to verify facts, our government often chooses to boycott or criticize the very invitation for transparency. If our Parliament is going to make accusations as severe as "genocide" and "concentration camps," the onus is on them to provide evidence. My three trips over the last nine months provided evidence of the opposite: a region where Uygur culture is not only preserved but celebrated, and where the so-called "camps" are actually vocational training centres, facilities I drove by I that looked into them focused on giving people skills in Mandarin and industrial skills. #Xinjiang

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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada がリツイート
Dan Mazier
Dan Mazier@DanMazierMP·
Former Parliamentary Budget Officer Jason Jacques revealed the Interim Federal Health Program will cost Canadians more than $1.5 billion a year by 2030. The Health Committee then ordered a further investigation into the program and Jason Jacques committed to delivering it. Shortly after, the Liberals refused to renew his contract and ousted him as PBO. Now the PBO office is suddenly offering a watered-down version covering only 3 of the 11 items the committee ordered. To make matters worse, they appear to be prioritizing Liberal policies that haven't even taken effect yet. Is this what the PBO now looks like under Liberal pressure? An out-of-control program with a $1.5 billion annual price tag deserves full scrutiny, not a watered-down analysis designed to protect the government.
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